South Korea's parliament has voted to impeach acting President Han Duck-soo, plunging the country deeper into political chaos, as suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol is set to face trial. The motion led by opposition parties passed with 192 of the 300 votes amid rowdy scenes by ruling People Power Party members who surrounded the speaker's podium chanting the vote was invalid and parliament had committed "tyranny." The impeachment of Han, who has been acting president since Yoon was impeached on 14 December for declaring martial law on 3 December, has thrown South Korea's once-vibrant democratic success story into uncharted territory. How South Korea's martial law chaos unfolded, and what could happen next Ahead of the parliamentary session, opposition leader Lee Jae-myung said accused Han of "acting for insurrection". "The only way to normalise the country is to swiftly root out all the insurrection forces," Lee said in a fiery speech, adding the party was acting on the public order to eradicate those who have put the country at risk. The plan for a vote to impeach Han was unveiled on Thursday by the main opposition Democratic Party after he declined to immediately appoint three justices to fill vacancies at the Constitutional Court, saying it would exceed his acting role. Source: Getty / Jung Yeon-JE/AFP Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok will assume the acting presidency by law. Choi had warned that impeaching the acting president would seriously damage the country's economic credibility and asked political parties to withdraw the plan. "The economy and the people's livelihoods are walking on thin ice under a national state of emergency and it cannot cope with any greater political uncertainty that will result from another acting president assuming the acting presidency," he said. The South Korean won weakened to a low of 1,486.7 to the dollar on Friday, the weakest since March 2009, as analysts said there was little to reverse the negative sentiment stemming from the political uncertainty. The vote to impeach Han came on the same day the Constitutional Court held its first hearing in a case reviewing whether to overturn the impeachment and reinstate Yoon or remove him permanently from office. Speaking for the court in a preparatory hearing, Justice Cheong Hyung-sik said the court will move swiftly on the case considering its gravity. The hearing follows weeks of defiance by Yoon ignoring requests by the court to submit documents as well as summons by investigators in a separate criminal case over his martial law declaration. Yoon shocked the country and the world with a late-night announcement on 3 December that he was imposing martial law to overcome political deadlock and root out "anti-state forces". South Korea's Yoon Suk Yeol suspended from presidential duties after impeachment vote The military deployed special forces to the national assembly, the election commission, and the office of a liberal YouTube commentator. It also issued orders banning activity by parliament and political parties, as well as calling for government control of the media. But within hours 190 lawmakers had defied the cordons of troops and police and voted against Yoon's order and about six hours after his initial decree, Yoon rescinded the order. Yoon and senior members of his administration also face criminal investigations for insurrection.
A deal with independents will require Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael to back Wexford TD Verona Murphy as Ceann Comhairle next week. Formal talks between the two main parties and the nine TDs forming the Regional Group are to begin next week, but they are expecting support for Ms Murphy who is their nomination for the powerful position of Ceann Comhairle. Tipperary North TD Michael Lowry urged the leaders of both Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael to back Ms Murphy. “Her nomination marks a significant milestone in the political landscape and will further reflect the necessity for inclusivity and diversity in Dáil Éireann,” a spokesperson for the group said. The Wexford TD would be the first woman to hold the powerful position, if elected by secret ballot when the Dáil returns next Wednesday. Mr Lowry is to lead the early engagement between the Regional Group and the two main parties, with the Tipperary TD to meet with both Fianna Fáil’s Jack Chambers and Fine Gael’s Helen McEntee early next week. Following this, it is expected that the Regional Group will formally appoint negotiators. Soc Dems may continue talks Meanwhile, the Social Democrats are set to decide before the end of the week whether or not to continue with government formation talks . Senior members of the Social Democrats met with both the Taoiseach and Tánaiste at Government Buildings yesterday evening, with deputy leader Cian O’Callaghan describing the meetings as having a “good level of engagement”. Mr O’Callaghan said that he would be updating the Social Democrats parliamentary party today, before any decision is made on whether to continue negotiations. “There could be further engagement after tomorrow,” Mr O’Callaghan said. There were “detailed discussions” on issues around climate, housing, childcare, healthcare, and disability, Mr O’Callaghan said. There was “some interest” in the party’s red line on having a standalone senior minister for disabilities, and it wasn’t “rejected outright”, he said. Mr O’Callaghan said the most challenging discussion was around climate — with the party having called for a revised climate action plan during the election campaign. Mr O’Callaghan said: Probably the most challenging area in terms of discussions we’ve had so far was in terms of climate, but there’s challenges in other areas as well. In a statement following their meeting, Fine Gael leader Simon Harris said he was “grateful” to have sat down with the Social Democrats to discuss policy. “I look forward to hearing from them in the coming days,” he said. While these early talks took place with the Social Democrats, negotiators from Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil held their first full day of talks yesterday. A joint statement from the two parties said they had a “positive and constructive initial discussion on the future programme for government”. The statement added: Both parties will continue to engage on issues over the coming days. It comes as neither Micheál Martin nor Simon Harris would set out who would become taoiseach first when a new government is formed. Mr Harris said that he would not speculate, while Mr Martin said that he would respect the talks between Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael.
Stock market today: Wall Street gets back to climbing, and the Nasdaq tops 20,000
BOSTON (AP) — UConn coach Jim Mora pulled a move that would make Bill Belichick proud while preparing the Huskies to play the notoriously churlish former New England Patriot's next team in his old backyard. Mora and his players were more than 45 minutes late for what was scheduled as a 30-minute media availability a day before Saturday's Fenway Bowl against North Carolina. Mora then gave a non-apology straight out of Belichick’s playbook. “We practice at a certain time the day before a game,” Mora said. “And we stuck to the script.” A six-time Super Bowl winner in New England with Tom Brady, Belichick was fired after going 4-13 in 2023, leaving him just 14 wins short of matching Don Shula’s all-time record for NFL victories. Unable to land a pro job at the age of 72, Belichick signed on with North Carolina — his first college gig — when they fired 73-year-old Mack Brown. Belichick hasn’t taken over on the Tar Heels' sideline yet; interim coach Freddie Kitchens — another ex-Cleveland Browns coach — will lead them in the Fenway Bowl. But the future Hall of Famer's potential return to a football field in Boston has been the biggest story ahead of Saturday’s game. Belichick did not attend media day, and Fenway Bowl executive director Brett Miller tried to preempt questions about him by asking reporters “to keep questions focusing on the players and coaches out here today.” “I don’t need to beat around the bush any more than that,” he said in comments that would have been cryptic if it weren’t so obvious to everyone who he meant. “I know there’s probably a lot of questions that you guys have about next year, particularly one side. Please do your best to keep it to these guys, because they’ve earned the right to be here.” The request wasn’t completely successful, with Kitchens taking a question about Belichick specifically and saying he talks to his new boss every day. Earlier this month, Kitchens said: “He asks questions; I answer the questions.” “I’m going to try to soak in all I can from him, and be a better coach because of it,” Kitchens said after Belichick was hired. “I love Carolina, I want what’s best for Carolina, and I know that right now at this moment in time, coach Belichick is what’s best for Carolina. “At the end of the day, he’s a ballcoach,” he said, “and I enjoy working for ballcoaches.” Mora also brushed off a question about whether the next Carolina coach would have any impact on Saturday's game. “It's irrelevant to us," said Mora, who was 0-1 against Belichick in four seasons as an NFL head coach. "We can't control the emotions of our opponents. And as far as I know, coach Belichick will not be taking the football field on Saturday, so it's not relevant to this football team in our preparation. How they got here North Carolina (6-6) will be playing in a bowl for the sixth straight year – the second-longest streak in program history. The Tar Heels climbed from back-to-back nine-loss seasons in the final years of Larry Fedora to reach into The Associated Top 25 in each of the previous four seasons under Brown, who also coached them from 1988-97 in one of the most successful eras of Carolina football history. After starting out 3-0 this year, the Tar Heels lost four straight — including a 70-50 loss to Sun Belt Conference team James Madison. They won three more to gain bowl eligibility before a loss to Boston College that sealed Brown's fate, and a season-ending loss to rival NC State. UConn is playing in its second bowl game in three seasons under Jim Mora, bouncing back from last year’s 3-9 record to post its first eight-win season since Randy Edsall took the Huskies to the Fiesta Bowl in 2010. An independent, UConn won all of its games against the non-Power 4 conferences and lost to Syracuse, Wake Forest and Duke of the Atlantic Coast Conference and Maryland of the Big Ten. Fenway Bowl history Miller said the bowl, which has struggled to find traction in a city more focused on the success of its professional sports teams, sold more tickets this year than in its first two. The Belichick angle is certainly part of that, but the game has also had some good success picking teams, hosting Louisville in 2022 -- the year before the Cardinals climbed into The Associated Press Top 10 – and then SMU last year, one season before the Mustangs made the College Football Playoff. “Could one of these teams be next,” Miller said. “We’ll see.” Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
Aaron Rodgers, Garrett Wilson, Sauce Gardner on Jets' woeful season: 'We're ready ... then we get our ass kicked' | Sporting NewsCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Dominic Zvada kicked a 21-yard field goal with 45 seconds left and Michigan stunned No. 2 Ohio State 13-10 on Saturday, likely ending the Buckeyes ’ hopes of returning to the Big Ten title game. Late in the game, Kalel Mullings broke away for a 27-yard run, setting up the Wolverines (7-5, 5-4) at Ohio State’s 17-yard line with two minutes remaining. The drive stalled at the 3, and Zvada came on for the chip shot. Ohio State (10-2, 7-2, No. 2 CFP) got the ball back but couldn’t move it, with Will Howard throwing incomplete on fourth down to seal the Wolverines’ fourth straight win over their bitter rival. This loss might have been the toughest of those four for Ohio State because the Wolverines were unranked and were wrapping up a disappointing season. The Buckeyes were supposed to win, but records rarely mean much when these two teams meet. Ohio State needs No. 4 Penn State and No. 10 Indiana to lose later Saturday in order to make it into the Big Ten title game next week. No. 7 TENNESSEE 36, VANDERBILT 23 NASH.VILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nico Iamaleava threw for 257 yards and four touchdowns rallying No. 7 Tennessee from a 14-point deficit within the first five minutes to rout Vanderbilt. (10-2, 6-2 Southeastern Conference; No. 8 CFP) needed a big victory to impress the College Football Playoff committee enough to earn a home playoff game in December. They beat (6-6, 3-5) for a sixth straight season. Better yet, they rebounded from a nightmare start giving up the first 14 points by scoring 29 straight points. They led 24-17 at halftime on Iamaleava’s first three TD passes. Junior Sherrill returned the opening kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown for Vanderbilt to stun a mostly orange crowd. Dylan Sampson fumbled on the Vols’ second play from scrimmage, and Sedrick Alexanader’s 4-yard TD run on a 26-yard drive put Vandy up 14-0 quickly. No. 16 SOUTH CAROLINA 17, No. 12 CLEMSON 14 CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — LaNorris Sellers’ 20-yard touchdown run with 1:08 to play gave No. 16 South Carolina its sixth straight win, a victory over 12th-ranked Clemson. Sellers, a freshman in his first season as starter, finished with 166 yards rushing and two scores as the Gamecocks (9-3, 4-1 SEC, No. 15 CFP) continued a run that has seen them defeat four ranked opponents this month. Clemson (9-3, 5-2 ACC, No. 12) drove to the South Carolina 18 with 16 seconds left — well within reach of a tying field goal — when Cade Klubnik was intercepted by Demetrius Knight Jr. The Gamecocks, who were 3-3 after losing at Alabama in mid-October, have given the College Football Playoff selection committee plenty to consider with their second-half charge. Much of the credit goes to the maturing Sellers, who has played with poise under most circumstances. He shook off an early fumble and a late interception in this one as South Carolina won its second straight at rival Clemson. No. 22 ILLINOIS 38, NORTHWESTERN 28 CHICAGO (AP) — Aidan Laughery rushed for three touchdowns and No. 22 Illinois topped Northwestern to reach nine victories for the first time since its 2007 Rose Bowl season. Pat Bryant dashed in to score off Luke Altmyer’s 43-yard pass early in the third quarter as Illinois (9-3, 6-3 Big Ten) struck for touchdowns just over 4 minutes apart early in the third quarter to open a 28-10 lead in what had been a tight game. Altmyer, who threw for 170 yards, had a TD himself on a keeper from the 1-yard line early in the second quarter. David Olano added a field goal in the fourth to cap Illinois’ scoring. Laughery, a sophomore running back, rushed for a career-best 172 yards and topped 100 for the first time. He entered with only one TD this season and two for his career. He had a career-long 64-yard run for a score early in the second half. Northwestern’s Devin Turner intercepted Altmyer twice, including for a 13-yard touchdown return late in the first quarter. Thomas Gordon caught Jack Lausch’s 15-yard TD pass with a minute left, then the Wildcats added a two-point conversion to complete the scoring. No. 25 ARMY 29, UTSA 24 WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) — Bryson Daily tied the American Athletic Conference record for single-season touchdowns and threw for a season-high 190 yards and a score to lift No. 25 Army to a 29-24 win over UTSA. Army (10-1) finished the regular season 8-0 in the AAC and earned the right to host the championship game on Friday. Daily rushed for 147 yards, his academy-record ninth straight 100-yard game, and two touchdowns. Casey Larkin sealed Army’s 10th victory of the season, picking off Owen McCown at the Black Knights’ 10 with 1:14 left. Daily scored his conference-tying 25th rushing touchdown, a 42-yard run on the second play following Matteson’s pick with 10:26 remaining in the game Army finished its regular-season home schedule with a perfect 6-0 record. UTSA fell to 0-6 away from the Alamodome.Eknath Shinde Health Update: Caretaker Maharashtra CM Unwell, Down With Fever in Satara Amid MahaYuti Govt Formation Efforts, Says Report
The Green Party is facing the possibility of total wipeout across the country with leader Roderic O’Gorman suggesting it may have just two seats in the 34th Dáil. The party had 12 TDs in the last Dáil and was the third stool in a three party government. Speaking at the count centre in Dublin West, party leader Mr O’Gorman said it was clear his party had “not had a good day” and it was likely that it could drop from 12 seats to two or three. “I know a number of my colleagues are a bit scared they will lose their seats,” he said. READ MORE: Follow live updates and reaction as results are declared READ MORE: Early tallies in Dublin Central show Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch performing well with first preferences “We’re in the fight in a couple of places, including here in Dublin West. I’m fifth now on the tallies in a five seater,” he said. “I’m narrowly ahead but ahead for the fifth seat. In a number of constituencies, we’ll be in contention for the final seat. “Undoubtedly, it is a disappointing result for our party today. We got a mandate in 2020, and that was a mandate to go into government to act on climate change and to support families and children all over the country. We did that. “We worked hard over four-and-a-half years. We have our lowest carbon emissions in the last 30 years. We’ve invested in public transport, we halved the cost of childcare. We’ve made very significant legislative reforms as well. “But it is hard for a smaller party in government. That’s long been the tradition, the history in Ireland. We hoped going into the election we’d buck that, but we haven’t been able to buck that today. “I think at this stage, it is probably looking at two to three [seats]. I think that is what we are looking at at the moment. Some very good colleagues who have worked incredibly hard over the last four and a half years, and some fantastic candidates as well won’t be making it over the line, this time around.” With 100% of boxes tallied in Dublin South-West, Francis Noel Duffy looks likely to lose his seat with just 2.9%. His wife, Catherine Martin, is also in danger in Dublin Rathdown. In Dun Laoghaire, Ossian Smyth is fighting for his seat but trailing behind two Fine Gael candidates, Fianna Fáil, People Before Profit and Sinn Féin in the four-seater constituency. In Dublin Fingal West, Joe O’Brien was on 6.2% first preference when all the boxes were tallied and is unlikely to keep his seat in the three-seat constituency. In Dublin South Central, Patrick Costello was on 6% and also looks unlikely to keep his seat, as does Neasa Hourigan in Dublin Central where she was also on 6%. Marc Ó Cathasaigh is also likely to lose his seat, winning just 3% of first preference votes in Waterford. Brian Leddin is also expected to lose his seat in Limerick City. Mr O’Gorman is still in the running in Dublin West, but is facing a very, very tight race. At the RDS, former Green Party leader Eamon Ryan told reporters that smaller parties should not be put off going to government. He said: “We're all committed to delivering a green future for this country.” He added: “No matter what the result today, there will be a strong Green Party in Ireland” Follow updates, breaking news and top stories as they happen below. Join our Election 2024 WhatsApp group here to get live election results and updates. You can leave the group at any time if you don't like it.No. 15 Houston rides balanced offense into league opener at Oklahoma St.Kyverna Therapeutics sued by shareholder alleging drug information was withheld ahead of IPO
BOSTON (AP) — UConn coach Jim Mora pulled a move that would make Bill Belichick proud while preparing the Huskies to play the notoriously churlish former New England Patriot's next team in his old backyard. Mora and his players were more than 45 minutes late for what was scheduled as a 30-minute media availability a day before Saturday's Fenway Bowl against North Carolina. Mora then gave a non-apology straight out of Belichick’s playbook. “We practice at a certain time the day before a game,” Mora said. “And we stuck to the script.” A six-time Super Bowl winner in New England with Tom Brady, Belichick was fired after going 4-13 in 2023, leaving him just 14 wins short of matching Don Shula’s all-time record for NFL victories. Unable to land a pro job at the age of 72, Belichick signed on with North Carolina — his first college gig — when they fired 73-year-old Mack Brown. Belichick hasn’t taken over on the Tar Heels' sideline yet; interim coach Freddie Kitchens — another ex-Cleveland Browns coach — will lead them in the Fenway Bowl. But the future Hall of Famer's potential return to a football field in Boston has been the biggest story ahead of Saturday’s game. Belichick did not attend media day, and Fenway Bowl executive director Brett Miller tried to preempt questions about him by asking reporters “to keep questions focusing on the players and coaches out here today.” “I don’t need to beat around the bush any more than that,” he said in comments that would have been cryptic if it weren’t so obvious to everyone who he meant. “I know there’s probably a lot of questions that you guys have about next year, particularly one side. Please do your best to keep it to these guys, because they’ve earned the right to be here.” The request wasn’t completely successful, with Kitchens taking a question about Belichick specifically and saying he talks to his new boss every day. Earlier this month, Kitchens said: “He asks questions; I answer the questions.” “I’m going to try to soak in all I can from him, and be a better coach because of it,” Kitchens said after Belichick was hired. “I love Carolina, I want what’s best for Carolina, and I know that right now at this moment in time, coach Belichick is what’s best for Carolina. “At the end of the day, he’s a ballcoach,” he said, “and I enjoy working for ballcoaches.” Mora also brushed off a question about whether the next Carolina coach would have any impact on Saturday's game. “It's irrelevant to us," said Mora, who was 0-1 against Belichick in four seasons as an NFL head coach. "We can't control the emotions of our opponents. And as far as I know, coach Belichick will not be taking the football field on Saturday, so it's not relevant to this football team in our preparation. North Carolina (6-6) will be playing in a bowl for the sixth straight year – the second-longest streak in program history. The Tar Heels climbed from back-to-back nine-loss seasons in the final years of Larry Fedora to reach into The Associated Top 25 in each of the previous four seasons under Brown, who also coached them from 1988-97 in one of the most successful eras of Carolina football history. After starting out 3-0 this year, the Tar Heels lost four straight — including a 70-50 loss to Sun Belt Conference team James Madison. They won three more to gain bowl eligibility before a loss to Boston College that sealed Brown's fate, and a season-ending loss to rival NC State. UConn is playing in its second bowl game in three seasons under Jim Mora, bouncing back from last year’s 3-9 record to post its first eight-win season since Randy Edsall took the Huskies to the Fiesta Bowl in 2010. An independent, UConn won all of its games against the non-Power 4 conferences and lost to Syracuse, Wake Forest and Duke of the Atlantic Coast Conference and Maryland of the Big Ten. Miller said the bowl, which has struggled to find traction in a city more focused on the success of its professional sports teams, sold more tickets this year than in its first two. The Belichick angle is certainly part of that, but the game has also had some good success picking teams, hosting Louisville in 2022 -- the year before the Cardinals climbed into The Associated Press Top 10 – and then SMU last year, one season before the Mustangs made the College Football Playoff. “Could one of these teams be next,” Miller said. “We’ll see.” Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers’ signing of Blake Snell became official Saturday, adding the two-time Cy Young Award winner to front a starting rotation stocked with question marks. Snell, who will turn 32 next week, agreed to a five-year, $182 million contract that includes a $52 million signing bonus and $65 million in deferred salary. That deal was pending a physical which Snell passed. The 2018 American League Cy Young Award winner with the Tampa Bay Rays, Snell won the National League Cy Young in 2023 after going 14-9 with a 2.25 ERA for the San Diego Padres. He became a free agent last winter but stayed on the market well into March looking for a long-term deal that never materialized despite his Cy Young history. The Dodgers were involved with Snell at one point before he signed a two-year, $62 million contract with the San Francisco Giants that included an opt-out clause. He exercised that opt-out after going 5-3 with a 3.12 ERA in an injury-interrupted season with the Giants. He had 145 strikeouts and just 44 walks in 104 innings. But he made just 20 starts due to two trips to the injured list with a groin injury (likely related to his late signing affecting his preparation for the season). The 20 starts were his fewest in a full season since his rookie year in 2016 (19 starts). Snell goes to the front of a rotation that includes a number of players returning from injury and/or surgery. Shohei Ohtani is expected to return to pitching after undergoing his second Tommy John surgery in September 2023. But his return to the mound will be delayed by surgery on his non-throwing shoulder following the World Series. Yoshinobu Yamamoto finished the 2024 season healthy but missed three months with a rotator cuff strain. Neither he nor Ohtani will be asked to pitch on less than five days of rest and the Dodgers are planning to go with a six-man rotation in 2025. Tyler Glasnow’s 2024 season ended early with an elbow injury and his status for 2025 is uncertain. Tony Gonsolin will be returning from Tommy John surgery. Dustin May did not pitch in 2024 while recovering from his own elbow surgery and a torn esophagus. Emmet Sheehan is expected back at some point in 2025 after his Tommy John surgery. Clayton Kershaw is expected to re-sign at some point. But he underwent foot and knee surgeries in November and is not likely to be available for a full season. Walker Buehler and Jack Flaherty are free agents. The Dodgers will start the 2025 season early again with another trip to Asia. They are scheduled to open the regular season with two games against the Chicago Cubs on March 18 and 19 in Tokyo.Tears, hugs, and an unexpected reunion
DENVER — The touchstone wore diamonds and spun gold. Shedeur Sanders, the greatest pure passer to ever run behind Ralphie, takes a Colorado snap for the last time Saturday night. Flex your watches accordingly. “I don’t see how you don’t consider him the best QB that ever played at CU outside of Darian Hagan, because (Hagan) got the national championship,” former Buffs QB Steven Montez, no slouch himself, told me recently when the conversation shifted to Shedeur. “I feel that Hagan having won the national championship, he’ll probably always be No. 1 in my mind. “And then after that, there are some other names in there. Kordell Stewart is someone I think about when I think of all-time (best). But don’t get me wrong, Shedeur is absolutely up there.” The son of CU coach Deion Sanders split the difference between John Elway and Harry Houdini, a dash of Patrick Mahomes with a pinch of Harry Potter. You’ll miss the way he painted the corners like Greg Maddux. The way he made third-and-forevers look like layups, a skill you took for granted — until a Buffs bye week, when 99.8% of Sanders’ peers tripped all over themselves trying to do the same. He was bruised. He was beaten. He was unbowed. Shedeur’s only weakness was occasionally playing the hero for a second or two too long. The only assured way to beat him was to take the rock, run it and hog it until the clock mercifully ran out. Any time was too much time. “Yeah,” Stewart, another Buffs giant, told me earlier this fall, chuckling like a proud uncle. “I’ve got some company.” Julian Lewis, CU’s key high school get from the Class of ’25 and one of the best prep QBs in the country, has been practicing with the Buffs during their Alamo prep, a taster for what’s to come. Like Sanders, he’s been raised for massive moments and big stages. But fair or not, every Buffs signal-caller from now on will feel the shadow of No. 12 looming. Starting with Ju Ju. Shedeur would’ve completed that. Shedeur would’ve seen the rusher. Shedeur would’ve kept the play alive. Shedeur would’ve scored. The younger Sanders is one passing touchdown at the 2024 Alamo Bowl away from tying Montez and Cody Hawkins for CU’s lifetime record of 63 scores. Hawkins did it in 45 games; Montez in 47. Sanders is about to do it in 24. “I will say this: (Shedeur) has shown how resilient he is, considering some of the things I’ve heard him speak on,” Stewart continued. “Shedeur has proven himself to be a top-notch quarterback. If not the best, one of the best two or three quarterbacks in all of college football. And, of course, it’s about winning, right? ... When you win, it makes all of what he’s doing right now to be more worthy. (It helps him) to be recognized, respected, appreciated and most importantly, identified as one of the top quarterbacks in this (draft) that’s coming up.” The Giants (2-13) need Shedeur. The Raiders (3-12) covet him. He’ll be long gone by the seventh pick in the 2025 NFL draft, another CU first. Since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970, only five Buffs players have been drafted to play QB at the next level. Koy Detmer was the last, in 1997, and he waited until the seventh round. Stewart, a second-round pick tapped by Pittsburgh with pick No. 60 in 1995, was the highest. “He’s just so cool and calm in that pocket,” Montez gushed. “And when he steps up, it’s trouble for the defense because somebody’s running open downfield. You get Travis (Hunter) or Jimmy Horn Jr. the ball, no matter where you’re at on the field, they’ve got a chance to go all the way. It looks really easy for him.” The impossible looked routine. You’ll miss that, too. Legends, like diamonds, are forever. ©2024 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit at denverpost.com . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.Central Reg. wins team race at Rumble in the Pines - Girls wrestling
Sir Keir Starmer has led a host of tributes to former US president Jimmy Carter, saying he “redefined the post-presidency with a remarkable commitment to social justice and human rights at home and abroad”. The Prime Minister said Mr Carter, who died aged 100, will be remembered for the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, as well as his “decades of selfless public service”. He added that it was the Democrat’s “lifelong dedication to peace” that led to him receiving the Nobel Peace prize in 2002. Very sorry to hear of President Carter’s passing. I pay tribute to his decades of selfless public service. My thoughts are with his family and friends at this time. pic.twitter.com/IaKmZcteb1 — Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) December 29, 2024 Sir Keir was joined in paying tribute to the 39th president by other leaders including the King, current President Joe Biden, Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey and former PM Tony Blair. The King remembered former US president Jimmy Carter’s 1977 visit to the UK with “great fondness” and praised his “dedication and humility”. In a message to Mr Biden and the American people, Charles said: “It was with great sadness that I learned of the death of President Carter. “He was a committed public servant, and devoted his life to promoting peace and human rights. “His dedication and humility served as an inspiration to many, and I remember with great fondness his visit to the United Kingdom in 1977. “My thoughts and prayers are with President Carter’s family and the American people at this time.” Mr Biden said that Mr Carter was an “extraordinary leader, statesman and humanitarian”. He said his fellow Democrat was a “dear friend”, as he announced that he will order a state funeral to be held for him in Washington DC. “Today, America and the world lost an extraordinary leader, statesman and humanitarian,” he said. “Over six decades, we had the honour of calling Jimmy Carter a dear friend. But, what’s extraordinary about Jimmy Carter though is that millions of people throughout America and the world who never met him thought of him as a dear friend as well. “With his compassion and moral clarity, he worked to eradicate disease, forge peace, advance civil rights and human rights, promote free and fair elections, house the homeless, and always advocate for the least among us. He saved, lifted and changed the lives of people all across the globe. “He was a man of great character and courage, hope and optimism.” Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey said Mr Carter “will be remembered for generations”. “Jimmy Carter was an inspiration,” Mr Davey wrote on X. “He led a truly remarkable life dedicated to public service with a genuine care for people. “My thoughts are with his family, friends and all those who loved him. He will be remembered for generations.” Mr Blair said: “Jimmy Carter’s life was a testament to public service; from his time in office, and the Camp David Accords, to his remarkable commitment to the cause of people and peace round the world over the past 40 years,” he said. “I always had the greatest respect for him, his spirit and his dedication. He fundamentally cared and consistently toiled to help those in need.”None
Kitchens will lead Tar Heels in Fenway Bowl against UConn. Another ex-Browns coach is standing byJPMorgan Chase & Co. Has $431.41 Million Stock Holdings in Laboratory Co. of America Holdings (NYSE:LH)