Will Ken Paxton's divorce be a turning point in the Texas Senate race?New Foto - Will Ken Paxton's divorce be a turning point in the Texas Senate race?

WASHINGTON – The news of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton'sdivorce from his wifeof 38 years may be a gift to at least one Texan: his Republican primary opponent, incumbent Sen. John Cornyn. Paxton and Cornyn have been barreling towarda bruising 2026 primary battleto represent Republicans in the Texas Senate race next fall. Polls have repeatedly indicated Cornyn, who has served in the Senate since 2002, was headedtoward a drummingin a primary election against Paxton. That has been causing major anxiety for national Republicans, who fear that Paxton – dogged by indictments and an impeachment – wouldstruggle in a general electionand create an opening for Texas Democrats who have long sought to flip a statewide seat. On July 10, Paxton's wife and longtime political ally, state Sen. Angela Paxton,announced shewould be divorcing himfor adultery"in light of recent discoveries." Ken Paxton wrote that the couple would "start a new chapter" after "facing the pressures of countless political attacks." TheNational Republican Senatorial Committeeand other national Republican leaders have endorsed Cornyn in the race and have been urgingPresident Donald Trumpto do so as well. "What Ken Paxton has put his family through is truly repulsive and disgusting," NRSC spokesperson Joanna Rodriguezposted on X. "No one should have to endure what Angela Paxton has, and we pray for her as she chooses to stand up for herself and her family during this difficult time." Cornyn's team also immediately began boosting the news on social media, repostinganother NRSC staffercirculating a photo of Cornyn and his wife, anda state House membercalling Paxton "morally unfit to hold office." Paxton has served as Texas Attorney General since 2015, winning three elections to the statewide office after more than a decade in the state legislature. He is a staunch ally of Trump's and emerged as a leading conservative opponent of former PresidentJoe Biden, suing the Democratic administrationmore than 100 times. Paxton is also no stranger to controversy. The three-term Texas Attorney General was reelected despite being underfelony indictmentfor securities fraud. Thecharges were droppedafter Paxton agreed to pay restitution to his accusers. Eight of his top aides separately told the Federal Bureau of Investigation that he was using the power of his office to benefit a donor. He was alsoimpeached in 2023by the GOP-led state House foralleged bribery and abuse of office. He was acquitted in the state Senate. And in early 2025, a judge ruled that Paxton hadimproperly firedfour of those aides who had reported him to the FBI. Republicans currently control the U.S. Senate 53-47, a narrow majority that has nonetheless helpedshepherd GOP prioritiesthrough Congress along party lines. The party is well-positioned to retain control of the chamber in the 2026 midterm elections, when 35 of 100 seats will be up for reelection.Three open racesin seats currently held by retiring Democrats – in Michigan, New Hampshire and Minnesota – create an opening for Republicans in otherwise liberal-leaning areas, while a toss-up race in Georgia will pull nationwide resources and media attention. The vast majority of Senate Republicans up for reelection in 2026 are in safely GOP states. But that could change for Texas depending on who comes out of the GOP primary on top. Paxton's legal troubles, which he has repeatedly framed aspolitical persecution, have helped him garner a passionate fan base among Texas' Republican base. Cornyn has conservative policy bonafides, but he is perceived as an establishment Republican – a dynamic that is reflected inprimary pollingbetween the two. Whoever comes out on top is likely to faceformer Democratic Rep. Colin Allred, who unsuccessfully ran for Senate against Sen. Ted Cruz in 2024. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why Ken Paxton's divorce could be a problem in Texas Senate race

Will Ken Paxton's divorce be a turning point in the Texas Senate race?

Will Ken Paxton's divorce be a turning point in the Texas Senate race? WASHINGTON – The news of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton'sd...
Cuomo, Adams face calls to unite behind 1 NYC mayoral candidateNew Foto - Cuomo, Adams face calls to unite behind 1 NYC mayoral candidate

Just weeks after New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdanideclared victory in the primary, other candidates set to be on the ballot -- particularly incumbent Mayor Eric Adams and former Gov. Andrew Cuomo – are facing calls to unite behind another candidate in order to stymie Mamdani's bid, even if that means dropping out themselves. The calls come as Mamdani consolidates other support for his mayoral bid. He has received newfound endorsements from groups and people who had endorsed Cuomo in the primary, including the Hotel and Gaming Trades Council AFL-CIO and the 32BJ SEIU property service workers union. On Thursday, New York Rep. Adriano Espaillat alsoendorsed him after having previously endorsed Cuomo. MORE: Influential Latino leader Espaillat endorses Mamdani in New York mayor's race Other Democrats have sounded a sharply different tone. Former New York Gov. David Paterson, in a press conference on Monday, called on mayoral candidates to unite behind one candidate in order to stop Mamdani. He framed Mamdani as "antagonistic" and too inexperienced to run a city as complex as New York. Paterson -- who supported Cuomo in the primary -- brought up a recent suggestion by independent candidate Jim Walden that an independent poll should be run close to the election, and the candidates that lose in the poll would endorse whoever won and stop campaigning. MORE: Mamdani's New York mayoral primary win exposes Democratic divide "What we are really doing is calling on the candidates who are still in the race to find a way to unite behind one of them," he said. When asked for a response to Paterson's remarks, a Mamdani campaign spokesperson said, "More than 545,000 New Yorkers voted for Zohran Mamdani, the most votes any Democratic primary candidate has received in 36 years," and noted the campaign "looks forward to growing this coalition." A spokesperson for Cuomo said that the Cuomo campaign would review the poll proposal from Walden, but did not make any commitments. "Jim proposed a fair independent survey be taken in September to determine whose candidacy and vision for New York is strongest in a one-on-one race in November. Today, Governor David Paterson supported that proposal. While this is unorthodox, these are unusual times. We are at a dangerous moment for our city," spokesperson Rich Azzopardi wrote, adding that their campaign does not see any path to victory for Adams. Adams did not run in the Democratic mayoral primary and is running in the election as an independent. Cuomo conceded in the Democratic primary, but hasqualified for an independent ballot linein the general election. Cuomo has not yet said if he'll actively campaign. Adams told ABC station WABC-TV on Monday, "I've said that over and over again, over and over again, that -- do the right thing for the people of this city and mobilize around one candidate so we can look at the extreme threat that we're having with Mamdani." Adams, in an appearance on CNBC on Monday morning, claimed that Cuomo had asked him to step aside from the mayoral race. Asked for comment on Adams' claim, a spokesperson for Cuomo did not deny it, but said the campaign would not discuss private conversations. Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa will also be on the ballot and has rebuffed calls to withdraw as well. "Andrew Cuomo couldn't defeat Zohran Mamdani in a primary, and Eric Adams has failed to win the support of either party and is now polling dead last," he said in a statement after Paterson's comments. "I'm running on the issues, and I will beat Mamdani on November 4th. I will bring this city back." Laura Tamman, a political science professor at Pace University, said it does not look likely any candidate will withdraw, given how candidates such as Adams and Sliwa have indicated strongly that they'll stay in. She said she could predict some scenarios where Cuomo could endorse a different candidate. "There just aren't really incentives for anyone to get out of the race, because Mamdani looks so certain to win," she told ABC News. MORE: Zohran Mamdani tells ABC News he plans to win over moderate Dems, other voters after upset win in NYC mayoral primary It's also unlikely an independent candidate would win anyways, she added, and Mamdani is still the favorite. "It's not because he's the Democratic nominee, although he is, but because [Mamdani] demonstrated that he has such broad appeal during the primary election campaign, he won over voters from almost every demographic, and there wasn't a clear ideological split … he appealed to moderate Democrats as well as progressive, left Democrats." Some real estate and business interests in the city have also aligned against Mamdani. Tamman told ABC News that "there are business interests that think a Mamdani mayoralty will be bad for their pocketbooks, so they have a financial incentive to oppose his candidacy." Mamdani hasreached outto members of the business community to meet with and hear from them. One major outside group involved in the race is hedging its bets. Fix the City, an independent expenditure group thatspent more than $14 million supporting Cuomoin the primary, may choose a candidate to support in the general election. A source close to the super PAC said that some donors want Fix the City to support "a free-market candidate with the experience to govern effectively." "Fix The City is currently assessing the evolving situation and has yet to decide what role it intends to play in the general election," spokesperson Liz Benjamin told ABC News. Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, who donated hundreds of thousands to the Fix the City, saidearlier this monththat he met with both Cuomo and Adams and said he believes Cuomo should step aside to let Adams take on Mamdani.

Cuomo, Adams face calls to unite behind 1 NYC mayoral candidate

Cuomo, Adams face calls to unite behind 1 NYC mayoral candidate Just weeks after New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdanideclared vict...
LIV Golf tries again to get world ranking pointsNew Foto - LIV Golf tries again to get world ranking points

LIV Golf has applied again to be included in the Official World Golf Ranking, without any indication how it will operate differently from whentheir first application was rejectednearly two years ago. The OWGR said in a statement Friday it had received the application and has started the review process to determined if the Saudi-funded league of 54 players would be included. "The OWGR Board is committed to a thorough evaluation process of all applications, and LIV's application will be reviewed in accordance with OWGR's criteria to ensure fairness, integrity and consistency," the OWGR said in a statement. The OWGR board has an annual meeting next week at the British Open. The OWGR denied the first application in October 2023 — the first full year of the league — saying it could not fairly measure LIV Golf with two dozen other tours around the world because of what amounted to a closed shop, along with the individual competition potentially being compromised by scores counting toward a team result. LIV now has 54 players — 13 four-man teams and two wild cards — and keeps the roster all season except for alternates used in case of injury. Other tours have various forms of qualifying that allow for changes in the field among a larger membership. LIV began a "promotions" event that offered three spots at the end of 2023, but that was reduced to one spot last year. The leader of the Asian Tour's International Series also gets a spot in LIV provided he's not already a member. World ranking points have been seen as critical to LIV because the four majors — all of which have a seat on the OWGR board — use the ranking to help determined the field. The U.S. Open and British Open this year added a category for top LIV performers. The Masters and PGA Championship use invitations at their discretion to get whom they consider deserving. LIV, which once tried to get ranking points by becoming part of the MENA Tour in Africa, formally withdrew its first application in May 2024. Scott O'Neil has replaced Greg Norman as CEO of the Saudi league. Hemet with Trevor Immelman, the new OWGR chairman at the Masters this year, and Immelman told the AP he has spoken a few times on the phone with O'Neil. Immelman had said the rejection letter sent to LIV in October 2023 was "quite clear" with the position the board had at the time and any change would start with LIV applying anew. "We appreciate the interest of LIV Golf — and all the tours — in contributing to the global landscape of men's professional golf through OWGR," the statement said. ___ AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

LIV Golf tries again to get world ranking points

LIV Golf tries again to get world ranking points LIV Golf has applied again to be included in the Official World Golf Ranking, without any i...
Trey Smith not sweating franchise tag deadline, contract extension with ChiefsNew Foto - Trey Smith not sweating franchise tag deadline, contract extension with Chiefs

TheKansas City Chiefsmade significant changes to their offensive line during the 2025 NFL offseason, but they wanted to make sure star guardTrey Smithremained with the team. Kansas City slapped Smith with the franchise tag to avoid letting the two-time Super Bowl champion hit the open market as a free agent. As a result, Smith is set to play the 2025 season on a one-year, $23.4 million contract, making him the highest-paid guard in NFL history. But will the Chiefs sign the 2024 Pro Bowler to a long-term extension? The two parties must agree to one before July 15 – the NFL's annual deadline by which to agree to an extension with a franchise-tagged player. Otherwise, they may end up doing the same song and dance during the 2026 NFL offseason. Despite this, Smith doesn't seem overly worried about his future, as he expressed inan interview on FanDuel TV's "Up and Adams"Thursday. "I leave it to the hands of my agents," Smith said of any potential contract negotiations. "Obviously, the front office staff of the Chiefs are elite, and you know, at the end of the day, I just let them take care of it. I just have to focus on being the best version of myself, being the best football player and being prepared for training camp because St. Joe's is around the corner." NFL UNIFORM RANKINGS:Where do Commanders, Saints land after revealing new alternates? It isn't clear whether Smith and the Chiefs will agree to an extension before the deadline. However, the 26-year-old has earned an endorsement from quarterbackPatrick Mahomes, who called Smith "one of the best protectors in the business," according to Kay Adams. "For him to say that means a lot to me," Smith said. "Like I said, I lose sleep thinking about protecting Patrick. I know the things that I need to get better in my game to be the best protector that I can and just be an asset for my team and help my team out." Kansas City has just under $10.9 million in cap space remaining for the 2025 NFL season. Extending Smith could create more, as the team could try to lower his $23.4 million cap hit for the upcoming campaign. An extension would also replenish the long-term guard stability the Chiefs lost by trading perennial All-ProJoe Thuneyto the Chicago Bears during the offseason. JOE THUNEY TRADE GRADES:Bears score high marks as they continue building O-line However, the Chiefs are projected to be $37.2 million over the cap in 2026, perOverTheCap.com. That could complicate potential extension discussions, or at least force Kansas City to consider restructuring some contracts to give itself better maneuverability in 2026 and beyond. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trey Smith not worried about Chiefs contract, franchise tag deadline

Trey Smith not sweating franchise tag deadline, contract extension with Chiefs

Trey Smith not sweating franchise tag deadline, contract extension with Chiefs TheKansas City Chiefsmade significant changes to their offens...
The White House aide driving Trump's aggressive immigration agendaNew Foto - The White House aide driving Trump's aggressive immigration agenda

(Fixes hyperlink in paragraph 11) WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Marines on the streets of Los Angeles. Masked immigration officers at courthouses and popular restaurants. Bans on travelers from more than a dozen countries. For senior White House aide Stephen Miller, the architect of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown, things were going according to plan. He'd set an aggressive quota of 3,000 arrests per day in late May, and the efforts to meet that goal pushed U.S. immigration officers into more communities and businesses, triggering protests and political tensions with Democrats. Then the president called Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who was in Los Angeles with other immigration officials in mid June, according to three former U.S. officials with knowledge of the call. "He said: 'We're going to do this targeted,'" one of the three former U.S. officials said. "Everybody heard it." U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement paused raids on farms, hotels, restaurants and food processing plants after the call, the former officials said. Trump was not aware of the extent of the enforcement push, one of the former officials told Reuters at the time, and "once it hit him, he pulled it back." The pause was short-lived. ICE rescinded the guidance days after it was issued, leaving some officials confused about how to proceed. The episode illustrated a moment of dissonance within Trump's immigration team, which has otherwise appeared to be in lock step on strategy, two of the former officials said. It was a sign that Miller's no-holds-barred approach could go too far, even for the president, they said. A White House official said there was no daylight between Miller and Trump and Miller's approach to immigration enforcement had not made farms a primary target. The official also said the initial ICE directive pausing raids had not been authorized by top administration leaders. Miller, 39, has long been known as obsessed with immigration but now wields immense power over multiple areas in the West Wing as deputy chief of staff for policy, an increase in influence since Trump's 2017-2021 presidency. Under his leadership, the Trump administration has doubled immigration arrests, pushed the legal limits of deportations, blocked travelers from 19 countries, moved to restrict birthright citizenship and helped Republicans pass a spending law that devotes an estimated $170 billion to immigration enforcement. Miller also has been a prominent voice on many of the president's other priorities, including countering diversity initiatives and targeting transgender rights. He is one of a small group of White House staffers who approve all executive orders, a person familiar with the matter said. But when it comes to immigration, Miller pushes experimental policies that test the bounds of the Constitution, three former colleagues said, including a challenge to birthright citizenship, enshrined in the 14th Amendment. "He just has a worldview that he is 100% sure of," one Republican official said. In a social media post urging Republicans to support the spending package Trump signed into law last week, Miller suggested society could crumble if the bill failed to pass. "Republicans have spent generations promising Americans full, complete and total border security," he wrote in a post on X. "Now is the moment to fulfill the promise on which the fate of civilization itself depends." Critics say Miller is stoking nativism for political purposes and endorsing policies that seem crafted for cruelty rather than effectiveness. Administration officials, including Noem, praised Miller for his loyalty to Trump and said he was instrumental in shaping the administration's immigration agenda. "Stephen's passion, patriotism and persistence help fuel this administration in our efforts to carry out the largest deportation of criminal illegal aliens in the history of our republic," she said in a statement to Reuters. UNPRECEDENTED INFLUENCE Trump recaptured the White House in part by campaigning to curb illegal immigration, saying millions had entered unlawfully under former President Joe Biden and portraying them as dangerous criminals who needed to be removed. Miller was a central figure driving that narrative and championed the policies that have fueled Trump's aggressive crackdown. Initially, immigration was Trump's strongest-polling issue, but public approval slipped to 44% in mid-June from 47% a month earlier as the crackdown accelerated, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll. The unprecedented influence Miller now has over the U.S. immigration system stems from his lengthy and close relationship with Trump, colleagues said. "He was there from the very, very beginning of the Trump phenomenon," said Marc Short, former chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence. "He has stayed loyal throughout the first administration to the president and to this day." Miller, who is married with three young children, established himself as a major policy figure during Trump's first term. He was remarkably driven and assertive, and used the same tone with colleagues as he did in appearances on TV, a former Trump administration official said. "It was hard to get a word in edgewise," the former official said. "He's not very interested in what you think. It's not a collaborative conversation. If you try to engage, he will talk over you." Miller called senior homeland security officials so often that they needed a dedicated staffer to talk to him, the former official said. The direct outreach to agency staffers has carried over into the current administration, according to one current and one former official. Two former officials said the threat of crossing Miller and then getting fired and potentially blacklisted by Trump and his political allies also contributed to his authority. Miller co-founded the conservative advocacy group America First Legal after Trump left office in 2021, which filed or supported lawsuits over immigration policies and other issues. In the second Trump administration, in addition to his deputy chief of staff role, Miller helms the White House's Homeland Security Council, which coordinates immigration and other domestic security policies within the administration. Miller came in with all of his staffers in place, a contrast to other areas within the National Security Council, and appears to operate more independently, a person familiar with the matter said. "He was ready to rock and roll on Day One," the person said. While dozens of officials were fired from the NSC as part of a downsizing, Miller's homeland group remained unaffected, the person said. 'XENOPHOBIC WORLD VIEW' Miller grew up in Santa Monica, California, where about a quarter of residents are foreign born. He embraced conservative ideas as far back as high school and developed a reputation early in his political career as a provocateur. He attended Duke University in North Carolina where he stood out for his defense of white lacrosse players who had been accused of raping a Black woman working as a stripper in 2006, writing about the prominent case in newspaper columns and appearing on Fox News. The accusations were determined to be a hoax, which the woman admitted last year. Democrats have criticized Miller as the driving force behind Trump's harshest policies. A group of congressional Democrats who in 2019 called Miller "a far-right white nationalist with a racist and xenophobic world view" included Karen Bass, who is now the mayor of Los Angeles and has clashed with the Trump administration over ICE raids there. Miller's wife, Katie Miller, was an aide to billionaire Elon Musk during his roughly four-month stint at the White House. She departed to work for Musk after he left in late May. Current and former Trump officials gave no indication that Trump's off-and-on friction with Musk had caused tension between the president and his longtime aide. Nearly a month after Trump's call and the back-and-forth over ICE raids, Miller's crackdown continues. On Tuesday, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said agricultural workers would not receive "amnesty" and that the administration wants an entirely American workforce. In Los Angeles, federal agents flanked by heavily armored U.S. troops marched through a city park in a show of force that angered local officials. Trump called Miller "our star" when introducing him last week at the opening of a migrant detention center officials dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" because of its location in the Florida Everglades, a subtropical wetland teeming with reptiles and other wildlife. Speaking at a roundtable with Miller and Noem, Trump said even Miller would respect how Noem had handled her role. "I don't think he likes anybody," Trump said. Miller, in turn, praised Trump for empowering ICE and Border Patrol to step up immigration enforcement and using legal tools and diplomacy to ramp up deportations. "Watching what you've done, sir, has been one of the honors of a lifetime," Miller said. "I'm proud to be able to play any role in it." (Reporting by Ted Hesson and Jeff Mason in Washington, and Kristina Cooke in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Michael Learmonth)

The White House aide driving Trump's aggressive immigration agenda

The White House aide driving Trump's aggressive immigration agenda (Fixes hyperlink in paragraph 11) WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Marines ...
Opinion - With 'Epstein list,' Trump is hoist by his own conspiracy-theory petardNew Foto - Opinion - With 'Epstein list,' Trump is hoist by his own conspiracy-theory petard

If you live by the sword, you die by the sword — and if you live by conspiracy theories, you'll probably choke on them. So it should come as no surprise that President Trump and his administration now find themselves in the awkward position of having to play the grown-ups and talk their own base down from the ledge. Judging by his sour tone, it's a role that Trump loathes. At a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, a reporter asked Attorney General Pam Bondi about theJustice Department's claimthat Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide and, inconveniently, left no "client list."Trump, clearly annoyed, cut in: "Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy's been talked about for years. You're asking — we have [deadly flooding in] Texas. We have this. We have all of the things. And are people still talking about this guy, this creep?" Ah, yes. The man who built an entire political career out of winking at every fever dream about elitesdrinking baby bloodnow wants us to stop asking all those pesky questions so he can focus on serious matters. You don't have to be a genius to savor the irony, nor a sadist to enjoy the spectacle of MAGA-world being hoist by its own petard over the mythical "Epstein list." From the beginning, Trump's rise was powered by weaponized paranoia. His entry ticket into presidential politics was the racist birther lie about former President Barack Obama. Later, he gladly rode the wave of QAnon — a movement obsessed with Satanic pedophile rings and sex-trafficking cabals — and happily soaked up the support of every tinfoil-hatter who would have him. Naturally, these same people became convinced that the release of Epstein's "list" would finally unmask the sinister elite cabal that has secretly ruled the planet since the dawn of time — with the added benefit of humiliating Trump's enemies. The fantasy went something like this: The Deep State was hiding the truth, but Trump (their glorious truth-teller) would win in 2024, root the traitors out of big government and jail the globalist cosmopolitan elites preying on our children. Instead? We got Bondi — whoonce boastedshe had the files "sitting on my desk right now" — suffering a sudden case of amnesia. Which raises some questions. Which Bondi was lying? Fox News Bondi, who claimed to have the goods? Or Cabinet room Bondi, who claims she's never seen such a list? Then there's Elon Musk — the richest man on earth and erstwhile Trump superfan — who not long agotweeted angrilythat Trump was on Epstein's client list, only to delete the post later. Was Musk lying? Is Trump really on the list? These questions aren't difficult to ask, although they are apparently difficult for Trump's supporters to answer. Either Bondi and Musk are outrageous liars (and should be fired or shamed out of polite society), or Trump is actually guilty of heinous crimes. It's not a logical leap to put these things together, so why do the MAGA faithful — who can somehow find hidden codes in the words "cheese pizza" — now seem incapable of seeing the obvious contradictions? At some point, Democrats may need to get better at helping people connect the dots. Not that serious Democratic leaders should go full Q, but it wouldn't hurt to have a few shameless surrogates "just asking questions" — like so many of Trump's MAGA influencers. After all, there are plenty of pictures of Trump and Epstein together looking chummy, and Trump himselfonce calledEpstein a "terrific guy" who "likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side." How hard could this be? Then again, most of the Americans open to conspiracy theories have sorted into the Republican Party, and there's not much hope of turning them against Dear Leader. Indeed, many of the same Republicans whoscreamed about Epsteinwhen they thought the matter would take down former President Bill Clinton have now gone curiously silent. To be fair, a few conspiracy diehards —Alex Jones among them— have grumbled that Trump is hiding the truth. But most have simply invented elaborate rationalizations claiming that Trump is somehow both personally innocentand covering for others. In a sane world, such a cover-up would be outrageous, explosive and disqualifying. But we're not in a sane world. We're in a world where the same people who recently claimed Trump was about to start World War III when he bombed Iran are still making excuses for him. Whether Trump's name is on "the list" — which likely doesn't even exist — is beside the point. What has been established, and what the Trump White House desperately wants you to ignore, is that once again the powerful are lying to you. Again. As always. Matt K. Lewisis a columnist, podcaster and author of the books "Too Dumb to Fail" and "Filthy Rich Politicians." Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Opinion - With ‘Epstein list,’ Trump is hoist by his own conspiracy-theory petard

Opinion - With 'Epstein list,' Trump is hoist by his own conspiracy-theory petard If you live by the sword, you die by the sword — a...
ESPN's Dan Orlovsky admits he was 'furious' after losing Sports Emmy to Charles BarkleyNew Foto - ESPN's Dan Orlovsky admits he was 'furious' after losing Sports Emmy to Charles Barkley

Not a ton of people pay attention to the Sports Emmys, but ESPN's Dan Orlovsky apparently had some feelings going into this year's show. During an appearance on "SI Media with Jimmy Traina," the former NFL quarterback provided an unusually candid walkthrough of his emotions when he lost Outstanding Personality/Studio Analyst to future coworker Charles Barkley in May. Put simply, he wasn't happy: "Of course I was [furious] ... I was like, 'Man, I really believe that I've had a strong run here. I really believe that I've separated myself.' I take pride in that. And I know who I was going up against, the greats of the great. And so I was like, 'I feel very confident about analyst.' I really did. "And so when Charles won, I texted him. I have no business having Charles Barkley's number, by the way, but I do, so I texted him, and I said something along the lines of 'Will you stop winning?' And he responded back with a laughing emoji face, 'You know it's a team effort.' And so, that one bothered me." Barkley won the award for the sixth time in his broadcasting career, beating Orlovsky, Nate Burleson of CBS, Ryan Clark of ESPN and Kirk Herbstreit of ESPN. Orlovsky was the only nominee who had not previously won the award. Orlovsky, an 11-year NFL veteran, has worked at ESPN since 2018 and has appeared all over the network's football coverage. He was part of three nominations going into the show: the analyst award, the George Wensel Technical Achievement Award (for a VR project) and Outstanding Studio Show – Daily (for ESPN's "NFL Live"). Orlovsky said he originally didn't want to go to the awards after the nominations came out, due to concerns about going 0-for-3, but he was convinced by his wife and ESPN. After Barkley won, he said, "I immediately go to my wife like a child: 'I want to go home.'" His project fell short in the technical achievement award as well, and he was apparently pessimistic about "NFL Live's" chances after another ESPN show, "College GameDay," won the award for Outstanding Studio Show — Weekly. However, that award ended up working out for his people: "I was like, 'No way ESPN will win two in a row.' So I'm just sitting there going, 'Well, we're not going to win. I was here for the night, blah, blah, blah.' And then we win. And I was like, 'Oh my God.' I was thoroughly shocked when the show actually won because of the way it went. "But I thought, analyst, I would have a chance. And I turned into a baby." All in all, it was a very human night for Orlovsky, who joked with Traina that it would've been great if he had made a big scene walking out of the show with his wife. He also said it feels like he hasn't won a trophy since a college bowl game and acknowledged that he is a "wildly intense and wildly competitive human," which is how one gets so invested in an award such as this one. We'll see if Orlovsky has better luck next year. At the very least, he'll be on the same team as Barkley, whose "Inside the NBA" show will be syndicated on ESPN after TNT lost its NBA rights.

ESPN's Dan Orlovsky admits he was 'furious' after losing Sports Emmy to Charles Barkley

ESPN's Dan Orlovsky admits he was 'furious' after losing Sports Emmy to Charles Barkley Not a ton of people pay attention to the...

 

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