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The Winnipeg Jets were playing with heavy hearts on Saturday even before they lost to the Dallas Stars because star Mark Scheifele’s father Brad had died unexpectedly the night before.

Scheifele chose to play, scored the game’s opening goal in the second period and hauled down Sam Steel to prevent a breakaway in the final 15 seconds of the third period with the score tied 1-1.

Scheifele was sitting in the penalty box when Dallas’ Thomas Harley scored in overtime, ending the Jets’ season.

Players streamed over to comfort Scheifele after the game.

‘Just an awful day for him,’ Jets captain Adam Lowry said in near tears during his postgame news conference. ‘You want to give him strength. You want to get that (penalty) kill so bad. We just couldn’t do it.’

Afterward, Scheifele went through the handshake line, where the victors and their opponents show respect for each other no matter what happened in the series.

One of the players he met was Stars captain Jamie Benn, who was fined $5,000 Friday for sucker-punching Scheifele in Game 5. They shared a long hug on Saturday, exchanging several pats on the back.

The Jets won the Presidents’ Trophy with the league’s best record this season, which rarely guarantees postseason success. Winnipeg looked on the ropes in the first round but staged a furious rally in Game 7 and won in double overtime on a Lowry goal.

Trailing 3-1 in the second round, the Jets got a home shutout in Game 5 to extend the series. But they couldn’t get it done in Game 6, despite a strong effort, and fell to 0-6 on the road in the postseason.

‘I’m really proud of this group, the way they handled everything, the way we fought back,’ Lowry said. ‘We just came up short.’

Coach Scott Arniel liked how the team rallied about Scheifele and how the No. 1 center played.

‘For him to go through what he had to go through and perform the way he did, I’m so proud of him,’ Arniel said. ‘His dad would be so proud of him.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Technology and rules changes eventually brought down the Deadball Era. The steroid era was drug-tested into oblivion.

And now, another of baseball’s scourges is on its last, dying breaths.

RIP to the Tanking Era, a particularly odious period of the game where extreme sucking and emaciated payrolls bred top draft picks and, eventually, a pivot to greatness.

The Houston Astros were the godfathers of it, the Chicago Cubs adopted it and those franchises won consecutive World Series titles in 2016 and ’17. One year later, an architect of the Astros’ burgeoning dynasty was hired in Baltimore as general manager as the Orioles were coming off a 115-loss season.

Yet Mike Elias was only just beginning to tank.

Like his headmaster in Houston, Jeff Luhnow, Elias stripped the roster to the studs and held the equivalent of multi-year open tryouts, producing grim baseball (108 and 110 losses in 2019 and 2021) and turning Charm City into a baseball ghost town.

Oh, the fortunes turned. Those high draft picks turned to gold, with the 2019 draft combo of Adley Rutschman (the reward for finishing 30th) and Gunnar Henderson (gotta love the massive signing pool that comes with 108 losses) signaling brighter days ahead with their arrivals in 2022.

A year later, the group won 101 games and the AL East, and Elias and his fellow Astros acolyte, Sig Mejdal, looked like they simply sprinkled some Old Bay atop the ol’ Houston recipe for success.

But tanking has its limits.

Eventually, the cynical art of losing to win must be replaced by executive acumen, and ownership support. And Saturday morning, Elias admitted the Orioles don’t have the goods.

Oh, Elias still has his job. Yet in firing manager Brandon Hyde, his hand-picked dugout leader and gravel-voiced executor of this new Oriole way, Elias has put himself on an island.

This is entirely his roster that staggered out to a 15-28 start and probably played its way out of playoff contention before Memorial Day. He has fallen on the sword at all appropriate times, including Saturday, when he said in a club-released statement that “the poor start to our season is ultimately my responsibility.”

And the Orioles’ record – as well as their future prospects – are evidence that rebuilding is one thing, but building a championship ballclub is quite another.

An arms deficit

Two things can be true: Elias, a fantastic scout who helped St. Louis and Houston stockpile championship cores, has his fingerprints all over an Orioles clubhouse that features three All-Stars 27 or younger: Rutschman, Henderson and infielder Jordan Westburg.

Yet he’s also the guy who, in assessing the club’s second-half offensive swoon, jettisoned a pair of hitting coaches only for the lineup to return even more flaccid this season, particularly with runners in scoring position, where its .192 average is last in the majors.

And he’s the guy who sent Hyde into battle with a pitching staff whose 5.31 ERA ranks 28th, and whose “big investment” – 41-year-old Charlie Morton, whom the Orioles are paying $15 million – is now out of the rotation with an 8.35 ERA and the club sporting an 0-11 record when he throws a pitch.

Certainly, both malfunctioning units can blame injuries for part of their woes. Zach Eflin, Grayson Rodriguez, Andrew Kittredge and Albert Suarez are on the IL, while Tyler Wells and Kyle Bradish are nursing arm reconstructions from a year ago. Westburg, Tyler O’Neill and Rookie of the Year runner-up Colton Cowser are or have been shelved from the lineup.

But it was Elias who centered the revamped lineup around O’Neill, a muscular 29-year-old who’s only managed to play more than 100 games twice in his career.

And it was Elias who only offered outgoing free agent ace Corbin Burnes a four-year contract – albeit worth $45 million per year – and failed to replace him. Who last year burned a pair of decent trade chips in Connor Norby and Kyle Stowers – the latter with 10 homers and a .938 OPS in Miami this season – for lefty starter Trevor Rogers, whose history of injury and ineffectiveness was visible to the layman.

The pitching paucity has been exacerbated by the club’s draft strategy under Elias, which is, essentially, don’t draft pitchers. The club did not draft a pitcher earlier than the fifth round in Elias’s first three drafts, and just 10 of their top 50 picks in all six of his drafts were arms.

It’s not the worst strategy, especially when drafting elite bats has yielded a farm system often bursting with offensive prospects, one of which – infielder Joey Ortiz – was flipped for Burnes. Yet while Elias once turned Dylan Bundy into Bradish, similar deals for Cade Povich and Chayce McDermott have not yielded rotation stability. And just one pitcher drafted in the Elias regime has thrown a major league pitch.

Last of their kind

The regime change from the Angelos family – which hired Elias and Co. – to David Rubenstein was supposed to bring peace and prosperity to the ballclub. But the GM and owner’s first winter together was a bad one.

Both their legacies are still just in the early stages. Yet in his first winter with cash to burn, Elias seemed bent on a strategy that’s addled many analytics-inclined GMs: To strike the most optimal deal or no deal at all. As Dodgers GM Andrew Friedman once said, sometimes you need to be a little irrational.

Meanwhile, Rubenstein couldn’t get to spring training without tossing “salary cap” into his vernacular.

All this came to roost for Hyde. He handled the dark years with grace, learning on the job but proving the rare rebuild manager who survives to see brighter days. He was the AL’s Manager of the Year in 2023, an honor earned through 101 wins yet also a nod to steering through the dark times.

Meanwhile, Elias will be tasked with hiring Manager No. 2, and the first of the Rubenstein era. Elias and Hyde seemed to work well together, and perhaps dismissing the manager was simply part of the life cycle of both jobs.

But as that reality settles in, just one question: Was it all worth it?

The Orioles put such an ugly product on the field that MLB and the players’ union essentially legislated away tanking: They installed a draft lottery in time for the 2023 season, so that there could be no consecutive top five picks, no award for sustained losing other than taking a number toward the back of the losers’ line.

That, more than anything, will kill tanking. So consider these Orioles the last of an era, enjoying the bounty of four top-five picks in as many years – yet without a playoff win to show for it.

Saturday, Hyde lost his job for it. Now, Elias will go it alone in his quest to prove he can do more than lose to win.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In an emotional and widely shared moment, President Donald J. Trump spoke directly with Edan Alexander, the 21-year-old American-Israeli soldier who was recently freed from Hamas captivity, during a phone call captured on camera and released by the White House.

‘Mr. President,’ Alexander greeted Trump at the start of the call, visibly moved. ‘You’re the only reason I’m here. You saved my life.’

The phone conversation, which took place while Alexander was recovering at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, came just days after his dramatic release from Gaza, where he was held hostage for over 580 days following his abduction by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023.

President Trump greeted Edan with a bit of humor and humility, saying ‘I’m very nervous talking to you, Edan, because you’re a much bigger celebrity than I am.’

Trump also expressed American solidarity and the administration’s commitment to bringing all hostages home while on the call.

‘You’re an American, and we love you,’ Trump told Alexander. ‘We’re going to take good care of you. And your parents are incredible. I saw your mother. She was pushing me around a little bit—putting a lot of pressure on me.’

‘Like a good mom!’ exclaimed Edan’s mother in the background.

The heartfelt exchange was posted online by the official White House account and has quickly gone viral, drawing praise from across the political spectrum for its display of humanity and international unity.

Alexander’s release came amid intensified U.S. diplomatic pressure and quiet negotiations, coordinated in part by senior envoys Steve Witkoff and Adam Boehler. 

Trump had previously signaled his determination to secure the freedom of American citizens held abroad and made Alexander’s case a top priority.

The Alexander family issued a statement thanking President Trump directly, along with the negotiation team and the Israeli Defense Forces, calling the outcome ‘a miracle rooted in strength, diplomacy, and prayer.’

Edan Alexander’s homecoming has reignited calls to bring home the remaining hostages still held in Gaza. 

A coalition of 65 former hostages recently signed a letter urging both President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ‘build on this breakthrough’ and intensify efforts for a comprehensive agreement to ensure every hostage’s safe return.

Prime Minister Netanyahu acknowledged the success of this combined effort, stating, ‘This was achieved thanks to our military pressure and the diplomatic pressure applied by President Trump. This is a winning combination.’

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino issued a sharp and public condemnation of the bureau’s former director, James Comey, Saturday, accusing Comey of disgracing the agency as authorities investigate Comey’s controversial ’86 47′ Instagram post.

In a statement posted to X, Bongino said Comey’s actions are another example of failed leadership that continues to haunt the agency.

‘Former FBI Director James Comey brought shame to the FBI badge, yet again, this past week,’ Bongino wrote. ‘The Director and I spend an inordinate amount of time cleaning up messes left behind by former Director Comey. And his latest actions are no exception.’

Comey, dismissed by President Donald Trump in 2017, sparked outrage after posting a photo to social media Thursday showing seashells arranged to say ’86 47,’ a phrase widely understood to mean to ‘get rid of’ the 47th president. Though Comey later deleted the post and claimed it was misunderstood, many, including Trump, say the meaning was clear.

‘He knew exactly what that meant. A child knows what that meant,’ Trump said Friday on Fox News. ‘If you’re the FBI director, and you don’t know what that meant, that meant ‘assassination,’ and it says it loud and clear.’

Comey offered a follow-up statement online, saying he ‘didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence’ and that it ‘never occurred to me.’

Bongino strongly rejected that explanation, describing it as part of a larger pattern of misconduct. In his post, Bongino wrote:

‘As the Deputy Director of the FBI, I am charged, standing with Director Patel, with managing the most powerful law enforcement agency in the world. The Director and I are also responsible for looking at grave mistakes made by people within the FBI in the past, and ensuring they never happen again.’

He stressed the FBI’s continuing commitment to supporting federal law enforcement partners investigating any threats involving public officials, past or present.

‘While the FBI does not have primary investigative responsibility for investigating threats against the POTUS, and we do not make prosecutorial decisions, we do have the ability and authority to support other federal agencies for violations of federal law,’ Bongino said. 

‘And we certainly have a responsibility to comment on matters involving former FBI officials, and allegations of law-breaking.’

The U.S. Secret Service has already interviewed Comey about the incident. FBI Director Kash Patel said in a separate statement that the bureau is ‘in communication with the Secret Service and Director Curran.’

Bongino noted that this latest controversy is part of a general legacy of dysfunction inherited from Comey’s leadership, which he and Patel are working to fix from the inside out.

‘As I’ve stated in the past, I cannot post openly about all the things the Director and I are doing to reform the enterprise, but I assure you, they are happening,’ Bongino wrote. ‘Sadly, many of those agenda items are the result of former Director Comey’s poor decision-making and atrocious leadership.

‘And to those who doubt me, I assure you, when you see what the Director and I see from the inside, it’s even worse.’

Bongino said he chose to post his statement now because his scheduled interview with FOX Business anchor Maria Bartiromo, which will air Sunday on Sunday Morning Futures,’ was recorded earlier in the week, before the Comey post was made public.

‘I’m addressing this now, rather than on our interview with Maria Bartiromo [Sunday], because we recorded that interview earlier in the week prior to the incident with Comey,’ he explained.

He closed with a message to the country that echoed his support for the law enforcement community and the reforms underway at the FBI.

‘God bless America, and all those who defend Her,’ he said.

Bongino, a former NYPD officer and longtime Secret Service agent, was appointed deputy director of the FBI earlier this year. 

His leadership under Director Kash Patel reflects a broader effort by the Trump administration to restore accountability and integrity to the FBI after years of what many see as politically motivated misconduct.

The FBI did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for further comment.

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The White House on Saturday released a study estimating that 8.2 to 9.2 million more Americans could be without health insurance as a result of an ensuing recession if President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ on the budget does not pass. 

The finding comes from a White House Council of Economic Advisers memo titled, ‘Health Insurance Opportunity Cost if 2025 Proposed Budget Reconciliation Bill Does Not Pass.’ 

The research assumes that the U.S. had approximately 27 million uninsured people in 2025. If the budget bill does not pass, that could increase to approximately 36 million uninsured people, far closer to the approximately 50 million people who were uninsured before the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, in 2010, according to the memo.

The memo says the estimate is ‘based on the assumption that states which expanded Medicaid with relatively generous eligibility will pull back to meet balanced budget requirements and try to provide more unemployment support during a severe recession.’ It also qualifies its conclusions by saying the analysis assumes ‘no policy countermeasures,’ which the White House describes as a ‘very unlikely but plausible worse case’ scenario. 

The White House projects that the expiration of the 2017 Trump tax cuts in 2026 and other shocks would trigger a ‘moderate to severe recession.’ The economic advisers report that a ‘major recession’ would result in reduced consumer spending as a result of higher individual taxes, lower small business investment and hiring as a result higher pass-through individual taxes, global confidence shock including concerns about U.S. competitiveness, and dollar deflation tightening credit and pushing real interest rates higher. 

According to the advisers’ ‘upper bound’ estimate of the impact of not extending the Trump tax cuts, U.S. GDP could contract by approximately 4% over two years – similar to the 2008 recession. Unemployment could increase by four percentage points, resulting in approximately 6.5 million job losses. Of those 6.5 million job losses, 60% had employer-sponsored insurance, so the White House projects approximately 3.9 million people would lose coverage and become uninsured as a result. 

The memo also anticipates a loss of individual and marketplace coverage, as those already without employer-sponsored insurance are no longer able to afford to purchase insurance themselves. The White House expects a 15% drop from approximately 22 million enrolled in 2026 to approximately 3.3 million losing coverage. 

Without the passage of the ‘big, beautiful bill,’ Medicaid and ACA subsidized plan enrollment could experience 10% enrollment frictions, resulting in approximately 500,000 to 1 million people losing or failing to gain coverage, the memo states. The expiration of the 2017 Trump tax cuts would disproportionately affect non-citizens, gig workers and early retirees, according to the White House. The advisers assess that individuals in those working classes without employer-sponsored insurance would no longer be able to afford coverage as a result of a recession, leading to 500,000 to 1 million insurance losses among ‘vulnerable segments.’

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is laboring to get the ‘One Big Beautiful Act’ through the House by a self-imposed Memorial Day deadline despite divisions among Republicans, who maintain control of the lower chamber by a razor-thin margin. 

The 1,116-page bill includes more than $5 trillion in tax cuts, costs that are partially offset by spending cuts elsewhere and other changes in the tax code, and would make permanent the tax cuts from Trump’s first term. 

It also realizes many of Trump‘s campaign promises, including temporarily ending taxes on overtime and tips for many workers, creating a new $10,000 tax break on auto loan interest for American-made cars, and even creating a new tax-free ‘MAGA account’ that would contribute $1,000 to children born in his second term.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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You may have noticed that there is a reckoning going on in the liberal media over the last month as journalists admit what everyone else already knew, that Joe Biden belonged in a nursing home, not the White House for most of his failed presidency.

This week, at long last, we heard the audio from the sworn interview given by Biden to then-Special Counsel Robert Hur in the case of Biden’s obvious mishandling of classified documents. It was two things everyone expected: damning and sad.

The thing is, if we are finally admitting that Biden had less command of his faculties than Ivy League university presidents, then how can we allow any of his supposedly signed orders to stand?

Most importantly, what are we to make of Biden’s last-minute pardons, including one he swore he would never grant?

Indeed, it is the underwhelming nature of what should be shocking audio that hammers home the point that Biden was unfit, that we all knew it, and that we must seriously question any and all ink spilled by his heavily used autopen.

This is a smoking gun, but it was fired more than a year before the 2024 election. The rank smell of its duplicitous gunpowder was already wafting in the air as Democrats like Dean Phillips and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. pleaded for a real primary.

These days, all the chastened and solemn Democrats on television swear they have learned a lesson, that if they had known then what we know now, Biden would not have been allowed to run. 

But those in a position to stop Biden did know then, and they continued to abuse the confused old man, anyway.

So why were the people who did know that Biden wasn’t fit to run a Wendy’s so eager to keep him in the White House?

Let’s consider for a moment the fact that no top-level official was ever fired in the Biden administration, and not for lack of opportunity.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin oversaw a disastrous exit from Afghanistan and was not fired.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas let millions of illegal aliens flow across the border and was not fired.

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said just days before Hamas launched its October 7 offensive that the Middle East was as ‘quiet as it had been in decades.’ He too, was not fired.

The problem with the current reckoning going on over the lie of the century is that there are few consequences. Journalists aren’t being fired, they are getting rich selling books in which they detail their own incompetence.

Nice work if you can get it. You see, when the boss was upstairs struggling to get the lid off his tapioca pudding, the White House staff could do anything they wanted, no matter how harebrained, and there were no consequences.

This brings us to the issue of Biden’s pardons, especially those granted to his family and public figures like Dr. Anthony Fauci. Put simply, did Biden have any idea what he was doing when his autopen scratched the surface of those presidential papers?

In the case of the pardon for his son Hunter, Biden is on the record just months earlier saying he would never ever do that. Sure, it’s possible that he was lying, but he did give us his word as a Biden.

If, as Democrats and their media allies insist, Biden’s decline was so swift, starting in 2023, that it caught everyone off guard, then shouldn’t we question whether the Joe Biden who signed Hunter’s pardon wasn’t deeper in the throes of dementia than the one who promised not to?

The worst part of the mendacity from the Biden administration is that all those smarmy spokespeople like Ian Sams and all his bosses knew that the harm they were doing probably could not be undone, even if the actions were born of lies.

They knew that, as a practical matter, it is likely impossible to deport 10 million illegal aliens, and they knew that it would be almost impossible to challenge Biden’s pardons, even if he thought he was signing a pool pass for Corn Pop.

The problem with the current reckoning going on over the lie of the century is that there are few consequences. Journalists aren’t being fired, they are getting rich selling books in which they detail their own incompetence.

Likewise, Hunter Biden, who is shadier than an apple orchard in a thunderstorm, is now free from all consequences. It’s like none of his corruption or crimes ever happened.

Maybe the Biden administration won this round with dirty tricks. Maybe no court can reverse these zombie pardons, but we won’t know until we find out.

If there are crimes to charge Hunter Biden with, he should be charged, and the same goes for Fauci. Let the courts decide if old man Biden was competent enough to make those calls. 

For now, there is every reason to believe that Biden’s condition, which was hidden from us, makes his pardons, all of them, null and void.

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President Donald Trump called himself the ‘fertilization president’ during Women’s History Month, but some experts cited claims that ‘baby bonuses,’ such as the $5,000 plan Trump floated, have been tried in the past and had mixed results.

Singapore, Hungary and Australia are three examples of countries where such programs have been instituted.

Singapore has been subsidizing parenthood for decades, with the latest endowment per child reaching S$ 11,000 (US $8,000) as of 2023, but the tiny Asian nation still has one of the lowest birth rates in the world.

Gabriella Hoffman, an official at the Independent Women’s Forum, wrote on social media that baby bonuses did not work in Hungary.

‘Why would we replicate this here?’ she asked. 

That country, led by Trump-favored President Viktor Orban, also incentivizes its residents to have more kids, including through tax breaks for families with three or more offspring. Hungary’s birth rate rose slightly about a decade ago but returned to and remains close to one.

Australia’s program began in 2004 and indexed to inflation in 2008 what was then an A$ 5,000 (US $3,180) for parents per birth. The government’s self-reported birthrate statistic was about 1.5 as of 2023.

Paula Lantz, a social demographer from the University of Michigan, told the Guardian that in the U.S., the percentage of families having more than one child has dropped and that ‘there is something else going on’ – including non-financial considerations like quality of life effects.

An official at the liberal Center for American Progress told the outlet she had a child a few months ago and that the promised $5,000 credit ‘wouldn’t do much’ even with good insurance and paid occupational family leave.

Andrea Ippolito, founder of maternal health tech platform SimpliFed, told Fox News Digital that while the $5,000 is a ‘nice boost,’ the initiative ‘just lightly scratches the surface of the support that is needed for families, especially in the early years with childcare and healthcare support that is largely missing from the postpartum care experience.’

‘In order to increase the birth rate, much more is needed to support and ensure that both mom and baby’s health is prioritized,’ Ippolito said. ‘That means both physical health needs (which are not right now as demonstrated with doubling the preeclampsia rate doubling) and mental health needs.’

On the other hand, Emily and Nathan Berning – co-founders of crisis-pregnancy support site LetThemLive.org, said that the baby bonus touted by Trump ‘is a positive step, but it doesn’t go far enough.’

‘Financial aid after delivery is helpful, but the real need is stability throughout pregnancy—rent, food, counseling, and emotional support,’ the Bernings said. ‘If we want to raise birthrates and protect children, we must act earlier and ensure no woman feels forced into a decision out of fear or isolation.’

They touted the benefits of pregnancy clinics that are founded by both pro-life and pro-choice advocates, saying that is how to prioritize ‘compassion over politics.’

Meanwhile, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, introduced a proposal for the feds to provide $1,000 in an account for each American child.

The ‘Invest America Act’ would create ‘a private tax-advantaged account,’ and Cruz said in a statement last week the investments can be placed in a broad, low-cost fund that tracks the S&P 500, growing tax-deferred until the individual reaches age 18. Distributions after age 18 would be taxed at the capital gains rate.

Fox News Digital reached out to Cruz for any comment on claims from critics that past iterations of the accounts have not been successful.

Fox News Digital also reached out to the White House for comment on criticisms.

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