When do CFP rankings come out? Schedule, release date after Week 14

Thecollege footballregular season has come to an end, which means only one more set ofCollege Football Playoffrankings will be released before the official 12-team bracket is set on Sunday, Dec. 7.

Only a handful of teams will be on action duringconference championship week, with No. 1 Ohio State vs. No. 2 Indiana in the Big Ten championship headlining the Week 15 schedule. The game not only has the Big Ten title on the line, but also the top overall seed in the final CFP ranking.

CFP PROJECTIONS:Updated bracket predictions for 12-team field

The ACC championship game winner will be also interesting for the CFP race: Ifunranked, five-loss Dukebeats No. 16 Virginia (No. 18 in CFP rankings), there's a strong chance the ACC will be left out entirely, opening the door for two teams from outside the Power Four to reach the playoff. The most likely teams would be the American Conference winner between North Texas and Tulane and a potential Sun Belt Conference champion James Madison.

No. 6 Texas Tech (No. 5 in CFP) faces No. 11 BYU (No. 11 in CFP) in the Big 12 championship. It will be a rematch of a regular-season matchup that saw the Red Raiders win 29-7.If the Cougars win, it would almost certainly make the Big 12 a two-bid league and knock out the lowest-ranked at-large team from the top 12.

Heading into the penultimate set of CFP rankings, that team is No. 10 Alabama (No. 10 in CFP), which must rematch with No. 3 Georgia (No. 4 in CFP) for the SEC title in Atlanta on Dec. 6.

Here's a look at when the penultimate CFP rankings release ahead of conference championship week:

When do CFP rankings come out after Week 14?

  • Time: 7 p.m. ET

  • Date: Tuesday, Dec. 2

The penultimate CFP rankings will release at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Dec. 2, five days before the final 12-team bracket is set on Dec. 7.

CFP rankings release schedule

Here's the remaining CFP rankings release times in 2025:

  • Tuesday, Dec. 2: 7 p.m. ET

  • Sunday, Dec. 7: Noon ET

CFP schedule

  • First round: Friday, Dec. 19 and Saturday, Dec. 20

  • Quarterfinals: Wednesday, Dec. 31 and Thursday, Jan. 1

  • Semifinals: Thursday, Jan. 8 and Friday, Jan. 9

  • National championship: Monday, Jan. 19

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:When do CFP rankings come out? Schedule, release date after Week 14

When do CFP rankings come out? Schedule, release date after Week 14

Thecollege footballregular season has come to an end, which means only one more set ofCollege Football Playoffrankings wi...
Lane Kiffin's disastrous exit from Ole Miss is a stain on college football

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🚨 Headlines

🏈Coaching carousel:Lane Kiffinleft Ole Miss for LSU(more below), Kentuckyfired Mark Stoopsafter 13 seasons, Floridahired Jon Sumrall(Tulane), Arkansashired Ryan Silverfield(Memphis), Auburnhired Alex Golesh(USF), Michigan Statehired Pat Fitzgerald(ex-Northwestern), andmore.

🏎️Down to the wire:Red Bull's Max Verstappenwon Sunday's Qatar Grand Prixto set up a season-ending three-way race for the title. McLaren's Lando Norris leads Verstappen by 12 points and teammate Oscar Piastri by 16 points entering the finale in Abu Dhabi.

🏀NBA Cup knockouts:Group play is complete and theknockout stage is setfor the in-season tournament, with the Magic, Raptors, Knicks and Heat advancing in the East and the Thunder, Lakers, Spurs and Suns advancing in the West.

⚽️Iran boycotts draw:Iran isboycotting this week's World Cup drawin Washington, D.C., after members of its delegation were denied visas to enter the United States. Barring further action, Iran still plans to compete in next summer's World Cup.

🏀Deadline extended again:The WNBA and players associationhave agreed to extend their CBA for a second timeas negotiations continue, this time through January 9. The first extension was set to run out on Sunday night.

🏈 Kiffin's disastrous exit from Ole Miss

(Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports)

After weeks of public scrutiny and private consternation, Lane Kiffinfinally made his decisionon Sunday, ditching Ole Miss on the eve of the College Football Playoff to take the job at LSU.

Behind the scenes:In his statement announcing his departure, Kiffin said he wanted to coach the Rebels in the postseason but the school wouldn't allow it. Hard to disagree with them on that one.

From Yahoo Sports' Dan Wolken:

Kiffin leaving the No. 7 team in the country to take a job with another SEC program before the sport's marquee event is bad for the product, and no other well-run sports league would tolerate it.

While it's easy to blame "the system" or "the calendar," as you might have heard on ESPN over the weekend, this is a story of individual choices and responsibilities.

It's Kiffin's choice to leave a trail of sleaze on his way out of town. And it's the choice of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and other college sports leaders to do nothing about it, to shrug their shoulders and to rail against professionalization of college sports when making it a priority would be the best path for their business.

Instead, lack of action is a strategic choice, and it's one that needs to be called for what it is: A dereliction of duty in protecting the best interests of college football.

Don't you think, during all those years of the Patriots winning championships, that other NFL franchises would have liked to break up the dynasty by putting a huge pile of cash in front of Bill Belichick right before a Super Bowl run?

Loyalty wasn't the reason it never happened. It's not possible because the NFL understands how bad it would be for its product and has made rules that govern when and under what circumstances coaches can change jobs when they're under contract.

Without collective bargaining, college sports has often run into legal trouble when trying to regulate anything regarding compensation or movement of personnel.

And yet, every time people like Sankey end up on Capitol Hill begging for some type of NCAA protection legislation, it's amazing how the focus is always on the chaos of NIL and the transfer portal while the coaching carousel never gets mentioned as a source of harm for the product and schools that pour hundreds of millions of dollars into their programs.

Kiffin celebrates with Ole Miss players after winning Friday's Egg Bowl. (Justin Ford/Getty Images)

A coach leaving is, by definition, traumatic and overwhelming. Players start thinking about their own futures and options. Routines get broken up. It would truly defy the odds if Ole Miss was as good of a team under these circumstances as it has been for the past three months.

That's Kiffin's fault, and his reputation will pay a price across generations. The circus of the last few weeks will go down in SEC infamy, a forever stain on his already pock-marked record.

But this is also the product of an ecosystem where players changing jobs on a whim or for a paycheck is a crisis that needs to be dealt with immediately and regulated through a literal act of Congress, while coaches getting paid $10 million a year wrecking their own teams gets met with a shoulder shrug.

This might be the first time it's happened in college football. But in the 12-team playoff era, you can bet it won't be the last.

If the leaders of college sports aren't willing to make this as much of a priority as opt-outs and portal windows while it turns their national playoff into a punch line, they've lost all sense of perspective on what's good or bad for the game.

Read the full story.

🏀 OKC is unstoppable

(William Purnell/Getty Images)

The 2024-25 Thunder put together a historic campaign en route to a championship. So far this season, the defending champs look even better.

Historic start:OKC beat Portland on Sunday to win their 12th straight game and become just the fourth team in NBA history to start a season 20-1 or better.

  • The 1969-70 Knicks started 20-1 and went on to win the championship.

  • The 1993-94 Rockets started 20-1 and went on to win the championship.

  • The 2015-16 Warriors started 21-0 and went on to lose in the NBA Finals.

  • The 2025-26 Thunder started 20-1 and [TBD].

The straw that stirs the drink:Reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is putting up 33-5-7 on 67.3% true shooting, which is pretty incredible for a guy who rarely even plays in the fourth quarter and has been without his wingman, Jalen Williams, for all but two games.

  • If not for Nikola Jokić, who is casually averaging a near 30-point triple-double, SGA would be the runaway favorite to win back-to-back MVPs.

  • He scored 20+ points for the 93rd consecutive game on Sunday, which is the longest streak by any player not named Wilt Chamberlain (126 straight).

Just how good are these guys?Well, let's see: Last year's Thunder team outscored opponents by 12.9 points per game, which broke the previous NBA record that had stood for more than half a century (12.3 by the 1971-72 Lakers). This year's Thunder squad? They're outscoring opponents by15.5 points per game.More nights than not, they're cruising to victory.

Looking ahead:What if I told you the NBA's best team could soon be adding the NBA's best prospect? The Thunder own the Clippers' 2026 first-round pick, and L.A.'s putrid 5-15 start means OKC currently has a 10% chance of landing the No. 1 pick (and a 40% chance of landing a top-four pick) in next year's draft. Something to keep an eye on as L.A.'s season spirals dangerously out of control.

🏈 Does anybody want to win the Super Bowl?

The Panthers took down the heavily-favored Rams on Sunday in Charlotte. (Grant Halverson/Getty Images)

The Rams, Eagles, Chiefs, Seahawks and Colts entered Week 13 as the five betting favorites to win the Super Bowl. Four of those teams (all but Seattle) promptly lost and got exposed in various ways.

The big picture:The final month of the regular season is upon us, and it'shard to find any reliable contenders.

  • In the NFC, the defending champion Eagles (8-4) are flailing and the rock solid-seeming Rams (9-3) just showed they, too, are prone to a bad loss. The Bears (9-3) are the No. 1 seed, but can they really be trusted?

  • The Seahawks (9-3), 49ers (9-4), Packers (8-3-1) and Buccaneers (7-5) are the other teams in playoff position, while the Lions (7-5), Cowboys (6-5-1) and Panthers (7-6) are all in the hunt.

  • Meanwhile, in the AFC: The Colts (8-4) have gone from "best team in the league" to ceding control of their own division to the Jaguars (8-4). They now find themselves in the messy middle alongside the Bills (8-4), Chargers (8-4), Texans (7-5), Chiefs (6-6), Ravens (6-6) and Steelers (6-6).

  • The Broncos (10-2) have won nine straight games to leapfrog the Patriots (10-2) for first place, but they continue to fly under the radar. Perhaps that's because they barely eked out most of those wins, with seven of the nine being decided by four or fewer points.

Week 13 Scoreboard:

  • Cowboys 31, Chiefs 28 (Thanksgiving)

  • Packers 31, Lions 24 (Thanksgiving)

  • Bengals 32, Ravens 14 (Thanksgiving)

  • Bears 24, Eagles 15 (Black Friday)

  • Texans 20, Colts 16

  • Panthers 31, Rams 28

  • Seahawks 26, Vikings 0

  • Broncos 27, Commanders 26 (OT)

  • Bills 26, Steelers 7

  • Buccaneers 20, Cardinals 17

  • Jets 27, Falcons 24

  • Jaguars 25, Titans 3

  • 49ers 26, Browns 8

  • Chargers 31, Raiders 14

  • Dolphins 21, Saints 17

Fantasy Focus:Underdog in your league? Week 13 showed there is always hope for an upset

🇺🇸 Photos across America

(Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Fort Lauderdale, Florida —Inter Miami crushed NYC FC,5-1, on Saturday to reach the MLS Cup Final for the first time in franchise history. Breakout star Tadeo Allende netted a hat trick, giving him eight goals across Miami's five playoff games.

Meanwhile, out West: Vancouver ended top-seeded San Diego's dream debut seasonwith a 3-1 victory, sending the Whitecaps to their first MLS Cup Final.

(Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Seattle —The Seattle Torrent drew 16,014 fans to Climate Pledge Arena on Friday for their inaugural home game,breaking the attendance recordfor a professional women's hockey game in the U.S.

On the ice: Seattle lost, 3-0, to two-time defending champion Minnesota, leaving the expansion Torrent as theonly PWHL team without a winthrough two weeks of action.

Michigan head coach Dusty May celebrates with the Wolverines. (Zach Del Bello/Players Era/Getty Images)

Las Vegas —No. 7 Michigandominated the Players Era Festivalwith blowout victories over No. 21 Auburn (102-72) and No. 12 Gonzaga (101-61), making the Wolverines the first team in AP poll history (since 1948) to post consecutive 30-point wins against ranked opponents.

On the women's side: No. 4 Texaswon the Players Era Festivalafter beating No. 3 UCLA and No. 2 South Carolina on consecutive days.

(Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Copper Mountain, Colorado —Death, taxes, and Mikaela Shiffrin winning the slalom. Sunday's victory, which came in front ofan adoring crowd on her home snow, marked the Olympian's fourth straight win in her best discipline and her record-extending 104th career World Cup win.

A league of her own: How dominant was Shiffrin? The 1.57-second gap between her and the runner-up was the same as the gap between the runner-up and 11th place.

📺 Watchlist: Monday, Dec. 1

The Giants and Pats haven't played in New England since 2019. Yes, that is Tom Brady. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

🏈 Giants at Patriots

New England hosts New York(8:15pm ET, ABC/ESPN)in just theirfourth meetingsince Super Bowl XLVI nearly 14 years ago. Can the last-place Giants (2-10, six straight losses) pull off another stunner against the first-place Pats (10-2, nine straight wins)?

⚽️ USWNT vs. Italy

The Americans close out the year in Fort Lauderdale with another friendly against the Italians(7pm, TBS/HBO Max)just three days after beating them,3-0, in Orlando.

More to watch:

  • 🏀 NBA: Bulls at Magic (7:30pm, Peacock); Suns at Lakers (10pm, Peacock) … The Lakers (15-4) have won seven straight games to take over second place in the West.

  • 🏒 NHL: Penguins at Flyers (7pm, NHL) … Philly hosts the season's second Battle of Pennsylvania. The Flyers took round one in a shootout.

Today's full slate.

🏈 NFL trivia

(Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

Josh Allen recorded his 76th career rushing touchdown on Sunday, passing Cam Newton for themost by a QB in NFL history.

Question:Who ranks third on that list with 63 rushing TDs?

Hint:Unlike Allen and Newton, he was not a first-round pick.

Answer at the bottom.

🍿 Top plays of the weekend

Treylon Burks! (Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

This weekend featured some of the best catches you'll ever see on the football field. Four of them top our list, and five made the cut overall.

  1. 🏈 Treylon Burks!!!

  2. 🏈 KJ Duff!!!

  3. 🏈 Puka Nacua!!!

  4. 🏈 Brock Bowers!!!

  5. 🏀 Pitt at the buzzer

  6. 🏀 Stanford at the buzzer

  7. ⚽️ Tyler Adams from way out

  8. 🏈 CJ Daniels!!!

  9. 🏒 Assist while injured

  10. 🏒 Ridiculous finish

  11. 🥍 No-look goal

  12. 🏈 Hardy to the house

  13. 🏀 Block → Dunk

Watch all 13.

Trivia answer:Jalen Hurts

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Lane Kiffin's disastrous exit from Ole Miss is a stain on college football

Yahoo Sports AMis our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports.Sign up hereto get it every weekday...
'Fire Tomlin': Steelers fans losing patience with Pittsburgh's long run of mid football

The year that Mike Tomlin took over the head coaching duties of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Tom Brady and the Patriots went undefeated in the regular season and lost the Super Bowl to Eli Manning and David Tyree's Helmet Catch. Adrian Peterson was the NFL's Offensive Rookie of the Year, and Randy Moss, Brett Favre and Peyton Manning were in the primes of their careers. George W. Bush was still president, and there was no such thing as a Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Mike Tomlin took charge of the Steelers a long time ago, is what we're saying. But now, judging from the "Fire Tomlin" chants that resounded throughout Pittsburgh on Sunday afternoon, that union might just be reaching its end.

[Get more Steelers news: Pittsburgh team feed]

By any measure, Tomlin has had a spectacular head-coaching career. A Super Bowl champion, his next win will move him into a tie with Dan Reeves for 10th place on the NFL's career coaching wins list at 190. His famous, and justly celebrated, streak of never finishing a season below .500 remains intact; the Steelers are 6-6 even after Sunday's miserable loss to Buffalo.

That woeful 26-7 defeat brought fans' long-simmering frustrations to a full boil.Chants of "Fire Tomlin" resonated throughout Acrisure Stadium. And these weren't just a few isolated cranks hopped up on cheap beer. No, these chants wereloud:

Fire Tomlin chants loud and clear at Steelers game. The city has finally had enoughpic.twitter.com/GNkLkUDLJt

— Simon Ince (@SirSimon43)December 1, 2025

"I share their frustration tonight," Tomlin said, when asked about the chants. "We didn't do enough."

That's a fair assessment of Sunday, where the Steelers gained just 166 yards of total offense — 108 in the air, 58 on the ground — and managed to convert only three of nine third-down opportunities. Meanwhile, the Bills set a stadium rushing record of 249 yards over, around and through the Pittsburgh defense.

But "we didn't do enough" applies to the season as a whole, too … maybe to the entire decade of the 2020s for Pittsburgh. Although Aaron Rodgers' name isn't exactly synonymous with Pittsburgh, it was impossible to look at photographs of him aftersuffering a cut to his nose on Sunday— weary, bleeding, bandaged, gray in his beard and a resigned look in his eyes — and not think of the larger picture, that the best on-field days of both Rodgers and the Steelers are, for now, behind them.

"I totally understand the frustration," Rodgerssaid after the game. "That was a boo-worthy performance."

The Steelers of the 2020s lurk in the NFL's murky middle — enough name recognition to earn a few nationally televised games, but not enough talent to seize control of the division or the conference. Enough wins to make the playoffs on a regular basis, but too many to get anywhere near a position to draft a reliable quarterback.

Since the retirement of Ben Roethlisberger — whose arrival in Pittsburgh predated even Tomlin's — the Steelers have cycled through a procession of rent-a-QBs whose performances have ranged from decent to disastrous, with a whole lot more lows and mids than highs. Kenny Pickett, Mitch Trubisky, Russell Wilson, Mason Rudolph, Justin Fields and now Rodgers — all quarterbacks whose best days, whether college or pro, came long before they arrived in Pittsburgh.

One column on one spreadsheet tells the Steelers' tale. In the "Notes" section of Tomlin'sPro Football Reference career chartare his full-season accolades — a Super Bowl championship in his second season, an AFC title game in his fourth, and then … nothing since then. A long stretch of emptiness. The Steelers have reached the playoffs four of the past five years, but haven't won a playoff game since the 2016 season and have only three playoff wins since their Super Bowl run in 2010 when they lost to a 27-year-old QB named Aaron Rodgers.

A coaching change in Pittsburgh would be a seismic civic event akin to tearing down one of the city's signature bridges. The Steelers have only had three head coaches — Chuck Noll, Bill Cowher and Tomlin — since1969. Between them, they've won six Super Bowl titles, so that's the baseline for any new hire. Tomlin was just 35 years old when he took over from Cowher, and managed to nab his Lombardi quickly. Could any replacement do the same with this roster?

Tomlin, still just 53, remains under contract through 2027. Should he and/or Pittsburgh decide a fresh start is in order, he'd have a line of suitors waiting at his front door before he got home from his farewell press conference. A whole lot of teams in the NFL would love to have the "problem" of never finishing below .500.

But that's a hypothetical. The reality is that Pittsburgh has five games remaining — Baltimore twice, Miami, and at Detroit and Cleveland. Pittsburgh remains tied with the Ravens for first place in the AFC North, although on the outside of the playoff bracket due to tiebreakers. (The AFC North's overall stench means that merely mediocre is enough to lead the division.)

Even if Pittsburgh makes the playoffs, though — by any definition a good season — how long would the Steelers last against, say, the Colts, Chargers or these same Bills? Steelers fans have decided that "good" isn't good enough. And if the front office feels the same way, some fascinating days are ahead in Pittsburgh.

'Fire Tomlin': Steelers fans losing patience with Pittsburgh’s long run of mid football

The year that Mike Tomlin took over the head coaching duties of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Tom Brady and the Patriots went ...
In Trump country, suburban grandmas push back against ICE

HAMILTON, OH ‒ A group that's grown almost 70-strong shows up weekly to commissioner meetings in this conservative Ohio county toprotest officials' agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

They're mostly grandmas.

"I'm here because I'm outraged. I'm here because I'm angry," Cassie Stevens, who lives in Hamilton, said at a Butler County Commissioners meeting on Nov. 18. "I'm here because I need to be able to look my grandkids in the eye and say I did not remain silent."

For 17 weeks, this group of Butler County residents has spoken at the commissioners' meetings in Hamilton. They want commissioners to cancel Sheriff Richard Jones' March agreement with ICE, which allows theButler County Jail to detain people facing deportation.

Commissioners authorized the agreement, which bringsmillions of federal dollars to the county.

At the latest commissioners' meeting, more than 70 people sat, stood and spilled through the doors. Most were White women who sported silver and white cropped hair. After the meeting, they took their protest outside, braving the November rain with fleece jackets and handmade signs.

Commission meetings prompt residents to band together

Sharon Meyer, who lives in Hamilton, criticized the county's agreement with ICE and said it sends one message: "If you don't look like us, bring a passport to Butler County."

Some people cried as speakers shared their neighbors', friends' and grandchildren's classmates' fears about ICE arrests and detentions. Toward the end of the meeting's public comment portion, and after one commissioner told them not to, critics of the contract broke into song: "America the Beautiful."

Anne Jantzen, 82, is the organizer behind the Butler County for Immigrant Justice group, which has been protesting for weeks against the conservative county's partnership with ICE.

Anne Jantzen, 82, who lives in Seven Mile, first began attending commissioners meetings over the summer to protest the county's agreement with ICE. There, she met others with the same beliefs and started an email chain.

"They said, 'I heard about you and I want to be part of this,'" she told The Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, after the meeting.

Their group, Butler County for Immigrant Justice, ranges in age from 60 to 85, she said. Retirees are more likely than younger people to be able to attend commissioners meetings, which are held at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesdays.

"I can do it; therefore I need to," Jantzen said.

The meetings are also streamed online, but speakers must be present to make a public comment.

Benjamin McCall, a Liberty Township resident who ran as a Democrat for an Ohio House seat in 2024, said he's begun carrying his passport daily for fear of being arrested by ICE.

A 'dirty money contract'

President Donald Trump won Butler County in 2024 with 62% of the vote. The federal government'sextra funding for the Butler County Sheriff's Officebegan to arrive this month.

Stevens, a member of Butler County for Immigrant Justice, called the agreement a "dirty money contract" and said it has "emboldened racists."

"They use the dehumanizing term 'illegals' just like they use the n-word," she said.

Melanie Stearns, who lives in Hamilton, said the county's cooperation with ICE has given the region a bad reputation. The sheriff's office is the only one in Ohio with a Jail Enforcement Model agreement, according tocurrent ICE contracts, which allows the Butler County Jail to hold ICE detainees for extended periods of time.

"We look like idiots, just like we did withthe cats and JD Vance," she said, referring to the vice president's comments last year that immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, about an hour north of Butler County, were eating pets. Vance was raised in Butler County's Middletown.

Resident, Jay Stevison, who joined the group after the meeting, got teary-eyed as he spoke about his three grandchildren, who, he said, have a Latino parent.

"I would have to defend them with my life if ICE tried to take them," he said.

Commissioner T.C. Rogers argued that the county's cooperation with ICE agents is necessary because of a surge in migration.

Commissioners give reasons for not canceling ICE contract

Twenty residents spoke out against the contract for about an hour. None spoke in favor of it.

The three commissioners, all Republicans, responded.

Commissioner Cindy Carpenter, who has served on the board since 2011, said the sheriff "alone" sets policies, determines operations and makes decisions about cooperating with federal agencies, including ICE.

But the sheriff is not an independent contractor, said Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser. Jones' office needs commissioner authorization to sign most contracts and agreements, as was done for the ICE agreement.

In a phone call with The Enquirer the day after the meeting, Carpenter said commissioners aim to facilitate county operations without inserting their own political opinions.

"We would lose a lot of credibility with our officeholders if we started undermining their judgment," she said.

The resolution passed by commissioners in February amended the sheriff's agreement with the U.S. Marshals Service to allow the jail to hold ICE detainees. Commissioners could take action to cancel the agreement. The ICEdocumentsays either party can terminate or suspend the agreement.

Commissioner T.C. Rogers,citing CNN coverage, said there is a need for ICE arrests because of a 2023 surge of migration at the U.S.-Mexico border. That surge wasdeclining under President Joe Biden and has slowed even furtherunder Trump.

Demonstrators from a new grassroots group called Butler County for Immigrant Justice gathered outside of the chamber after a meeting of the Butler County Commissioners on Nov. 18.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer:Suburban grandmas protest ICE contract in Trump-voting Ohio county

In Trump country, suburban grandmas push back against ICE

HAMILTON, OH ‒ A group that's grown almost 70-strong shows up weekly to commissioner meetings in this conservative Oh...
19-Year-Old Man Mauled to Death by Lioness at Zoo in Front of Other Visitors After Scaling 20-Foot Wall into Enclosure

Gerson de Melo Machado was mauled to death by a lioness after sneaking into the big cat's pen at a zoo in Brazil on Sunday, Nov. 30

NEED TO KNOW

  • Machado, 19, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, had previously attempted to sneak onto a flight to Africa to pursue his dream of training lions

  • "My feeling is one of total powerlessness, and this feeling causes enormous pain in my soul," child welfare counselor Verônica Oliveira said of Machado's death

A teenager was mauled to death by a lioness after sneaking into the animal's pen in front of fellow visitors at a zoo in Brazil.

On Sunday, Nov. 30, Gerson de Melo Machado climbed a wall about 20 feet high to break into the big cat's enclosure at Parque Zoobotânico Arruda Câmara in João Pessoa, Paraíba, local news outletsO Correio Brazilense,O GloboandFolha de São Pauloreported.

The botanical zoo, which is home to hundreds of animal species, confirmed Machado, 19, was mauled to death in a news release shared onInstagram.

Thao Pham / 500px / Getty

Thao Pham / 500px / Getty

"Once the incident was confirmed, the park was immediately closed, following all safety protocols," the zoo wrote. "The teams mobilized the competent authorities and provided the necessary support for the service and work of the experts."

ary mattos/Getty Lion (stock image)

ary mattos/Getty

The zoo announced that it would remain closed amid the ongoing investigation into the incident, while reassuring visitors that it has "strict" safety standards.

"The Arruda Câmara Park is in solidarity with the family of the boy who passed away, deeply regrets the loss and wishes strength at this difficult time," the news release concluded.

The zoo's security team allegedly attempted to stop Machado as he climbed into the lioness' enclosure, but he moved too quickly,O Correio Brazilensereported, citing a statement from the City Hall of João Pessoa. The state's Civil Police forensics team has not yet ruled out that his actions may have been suicidal.

Machado had previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia and had been in several institutions, perO Correio Brazilense. He came from a family with a history of mental health issues and grew up in "extreme poverty."

Child welfare counselor Verônica Oliveira told the outlet that all four of his siblings were adopted except for him when they were removed from their mother's custody and placed for adoption while he was still very young.

He went on to have several run-ins with the police throughout the years, having begun to steal in his childhood. Just last week, Machado allegedly came to Oliveria for help with seeking employment after being released from prison.

"He was 19 years old, but when he spoke, I believe his cognitive ability was no more than that of a 5-year-old,"  Oliveria toldO Correio Brazilense.

She recalled that Machado previously snuck into the landing gear of a plane heading towards Africa in pursuit of his dream to tame lions, but was detected and referred to the Child Protective Services at the airport.

"Gerson is the result of a system that always excluded him; he's been caged for years. Today was the culmination of a 'Chronicle of a Death Foretold,' " Olivieria told the outlet of his death. "I hope the lesson remains and that the countless Gersons we care for every day have a happier ending. My feeling is one of total powerlessness, and this feeling causes enormous pain in my soul."

jamesphillips/Getty Lioness (stock image)

jamesphillips/Getty

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Following Machado's death, Parque Zoobotânico Arruda Câmara shared an update on the lioness in a news release shared onInstagram.

"Leona, the lioness at Arruda Câmara Park, is doing well and will continue to receive all necessary care," the zoo wrote. "After the incident, she was immediately evaluated by the technical team and remains under continuous observation and monitoring, as she experienced a high level of stress.

"It is important to emphasize that euthanasia was never considered," the zoo continued. "Leona is healthy, does not exhibit aggressive behavior outside the context of the incident, and will not be euthanized. The protocol in situations like this provides exactly what is being done: monitoring, behavioral assessment, and specialized care.

"The Bica team, veterinarians, handlers, and technicians are fully dedicated to Leona's well-being, ensuring that she recovers, stabilizes emotionally, and resumes her routine safely," the zoo concluded.

Read the original article onPeople

19-Year-Old Man Mauled to Death by Lioness at Zoo in Front of Other Visitors After Scaling 20-Foot Wall into Enclosure

Gerson de Melo Machado was mauled to death by a lioness after sneaking into the big cat's pen at a zoo in Brazil on S...
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, White House Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner attend a meeting with Ukrainian officials in Florida on Sunday. - Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images

Inside the Witkoff Group's exclusive Shell Bay private members club in South Florida, the delegations from Washington and Kyiv faced each other for "tough but very constructive" negotiations over lashings of Ukrainian Borsch, a beetroot and cabbage soup which one attendee told me was "very rich with meat."

But its serving, along with Holubtsi, traditional meat and cabbage rolls, was seen as a welcome nod to Ukrainian culture – a deft diplomatic gesture as the US tries to coax Ukraine towards compromising on a peace deal with Russia.

A source with direct knowledge of the Florida talks – involving US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and President Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner – tells CNN the intensive negotiations were a "step forward" and "built on progress in Geneva," where a first round of discussions on US proposals to end the Russian war in Ukraine were held last week.

"It would be very premature to say we finalized everything here as a lot of things have still to be done," the source told CNN.

"But the meeting was very focused and the most problematic aspects of the peace proposals were discussed in detail," the source added, hinting that tentative progress in some areas could be made.

One of the most "problematic aspects" of the original 28-point US peace proposal was the stipulation for Ukraine to formally renounce its aspiration, enshrined in its constitution, to join NATO – a key Russian demand to end the war and something Ukrainian officials continue to reject.

However, the CNN source now says negotiators have discussed a possible scenario in which Ukraine would effectively be barred from joining the US-led Western military alliance via arrangements that would have to be negotiated directly between NATO member states and Moscow.

"Ukraine will not be pushed to officially, in the legal sense, reject this aspiration," the source told CNN.

"But if the United States has something to agree upon with Russia bilaterally, or if Russia wants to receive some assurances from NATO multilaterally, then this is not engaging Ukraine in the decision-making process," the source added.

A final decision on what would be a highly sensitive compromise – likely to be unpopular among NATO states – has not yet been taken and would ultimately be made by the Ukrainian president, the source stressed to CNN.

But it suggests that, as US-Ukraine negotiations proceed, and as Witkoff travels to Moscow for talks at the Kremlin, creative solutions to tiptoe around Kyiv's red lines are being explored.

Another one of those problematic areas is the Kremlin demand, which also found its way into the 28-point US peace proposal, for Ukraine to surrender territory in the Donbas region of Eastern Ukraine that has been annexed, but not yet conquered, by Russia.

The US plan suggested the region, which includes a "fortress belt" of heavily defended towns and cities seen as crucial to Ukrainian security, become a Russian demilitarized zone, which Moscow would administer but not deploy military forces into.

The source, who has direct knowledge of the negotiations, tells CNN that discussions are also progressing on this issue – one of the most controversial in the negotiations.

"The idea to give up the control to Russians, where it would significantly weaken Ukraine's defense and make further potential aggression more likely to happen and significantly decrease Ukraine's capability, this is out of the scope," the source told CNN.

"But that doesn't mean that there are no potential ways of preserving the constitutional provisions and keeping Ukraine's security," the source added.

However, the source refused to discuss what specific options are under discussion, saying the issue is "too sensitive."

"I really believe that if it becomes public, we may ruin the potential solution," the source told CNN.

There may be another spoiler unmasked in the days ahead too: a Kremlin that has so far refused to curb any of its maximalist demands to subjugate Ukraine before ending the war.

Amid hints of Ukrainian compromises being forged by US negotiators, the next and bigger challenge in America's shuttle diplomacy may be getting Russia to accept them.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Monday that he had spoken with the leaders of the UK and France along with Witkoff - ahead of the US envoy's meetings in Moscow.

"Together with French President @EmmanuelMacron and with the participation of UK Prime Minister @Keir_Starmer, we just spoke with the head of Ukrainian delegation Rustem Umerov and US President's Special Envoy Steve Witkoff following the Ukraine-U.S. delegations' meeting in Florida," Zelensky said on X Monday.

"It was an important briefing, and we agreed to discuss more details in person," he added.

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After ‘progress’ in talks to end Ukraine war, US diplomacy faces Kremlin test

Inside the Witkoff Group's exclusive Shell Bay private members club in South Florida, the delegations from Washington and Kyiv faced ea...
Michigan's big statement leads winners, losers from college hoops holiday week

It took Dusty May five seasons before he turnedFlorida Atlanticinto a Final Four team.

At Michigan, it may just take two.

Over three days in Las Vegas, theWolverinesproved they are a national championship contender after a dominant showing in the Player's Era Festival.

The showing came after Michigan had struggled in the first few weeks of the season with close wins against Wake Forest and TCU. There were questions about how the Wolverines would fare in the 18-team tournament loaded with ranked teams. Those doubts went away as fast as chips at a blackjack table.

Michigan blew out San Diego State and No. 25Auburnby a combined 70 points to earn the spot in the championship game against No. 10 Gonzaga. The Bulldogs had also been impressive over two games in Sin City, making the matchup billed as a meeting of a possible Final Four opponents.

Instead, it looked like a No. 1 seed playing against No. 16. Michigan jumped out to a 20-5 lead in the first five minutes and never looked back in a 40-point over the Bulldogs, the biggest loss in the Mark Few tenure.

Michigan guard Trey McKenney gestures after hitting a 3-pointer against Gonzaga during the championship game of the 2025 Players Era Championship basketball tournament at MGM Grand Garden Arena on Nov. 26, 2025 in Las Vegas.

It's hard to grasp how exceptional Michigan looked with its closest game the 30-point defeat of Auburn.

Yaxel Lendeborg showed why he was the top transfer in the country with 52 points and 22 rebounds in the three games, and the 6-foot-9-inch forward just one piece of what is a long lineup that features 7-foot-3-inch Aday Mara and 6-foot-9-inch Morez Johnson Jr.

Is it early to declare a national championship favorite? Probably, with Selection Sunday more than three months away. But it's hard to not laud Michigan after one of the most impressive three-day stretches you can have in November.

The Wolverines have sent a message to the rest of the country, and that's why they lead the winners and losers of Feast Week.

Winners

Kansas

Kansas had a favorable road in the Player's Era Festival and were set up to fail in the third-place game. Instead, Kansas proved it still is a contender with a perfect finish in Las Vegas.

After handling unranked Notre Dame and Syracuse, it felt like the the Jayhawks would have a rough outing against No. 16 Tennessee, which just knocked off No. 2 Houston. The result seemed locked when the Volunteers had a 12-point lead in the second half. That's when Kansas turned it on. Elmarko Jackson and Melvin Council Jr. combined for 27 second half points and shut down Tennessee for a massive 81-76 win.

It can't be overstated how much Kansas needed that win since it looked flat against North Carolina and Duke earlier in November. It felt like it was trending to another down year, but this game certainly gives Bill Self his mojo back, especially with standout freshman Darryn Peterson still sidelined. The Jayhawks can ride the momentum into big contests against Connecticut and North Carolina State in December.

Iowa State

The Cyclones were denied the Player's Era championship due to its unusual tiebreakers, but you can't take away what was an exceptional week in Las Vegas for T.J. Otzelberger's squad.

No. 13 Iowa State got a major test in the first game against No. 15 St. John's, and proved to be tougher in the final minutes for a major one-point victory over the Red Storm. The win did come at a cost with star guard and leading scorer Tamin Lipsey being injured late and missing the rest of the tournament.

It wasn't much of a problem. The Cyclones returned with a rout of Creighton, and took their frustrations out on missing out on the big prize in the Player's Era Festival by putting a beat down on Syracuse in the second half of a 31-point victory. Iowa State remains undefeated and gets two early Quad 1 wins to make its case for being among the Big 12 favorites.

There's a noticeable trend that the Big 12 had a great week, capped off by TCU's performance at the Rady Children's Invitational in San Diego.

The Horned Frogs have recovered from the season-opening loss against New Orleans. They nearly beat Michigan on Nov. 14, but got the job done last week with a key win over defending champion Florida on Thanksgiving Day. Against Wisconsin in the championship, the Horned Frogs kept a safe distance from the Badgers, never trailing despite 30 points from Badgers guard John Blackwell.

Credit Jamie Dixon's team for not letting the season get away, and the Horned Frogs become another team that makes the Big 12 a gauntlet of a conference.

Southern California

All aboard the Muss Bus? It wasn't a loaded Maui Invitational, but it's still impressive to win in Lahaina, and the Trojans are feeling the aloha spirit after winning the prestigious tournament.

USC powered pastBoise Stateand Seton Hall in its first two games, and in the championship, the offense shined in a comfortable win overArizona State. What's even more impressive is the win over the Sun Devils came without leading scorer Rodney Rice. That's when a guy that knows about winning the tournament in Chad Baker-Mazara stepped up. The Auburn transfer has transitioned well for USC and looked like the best player on the court with 23 points in the title game, earning tournament MVP.

Eric Musselman has been trying to bring some hype back to Los Angeles, and starting 7-0 will certainly help. The Trojans have the makings of an NCAA Tournament team, something it's trying to get back to after two straight seasons missing out.

Michigan State

Michigan wasn't the only team in the state to have a great week with No. 12 Michigan State picking up another ranked win to prove the Spartans still are a contender.

In the Fort Myers Tip-Off, the Spartans had a comfortable win over East Carolina, but the main attraction was the Thanksgiving matchup against No. 17 North Carolina. Both teams have impressed so far, and the winner would get another big boost. It was a back-and-forth first half, but Michigan State grabbed control before halftime and never let it go en route to a 16-point win over the Tar Heels.

That's now three ranked wins in the first seven games for Tom Izzo, and it's notable that two of those ranked victories were by double-digits. Michigan State is an experienced team and it shows, and it's the first undefeated November for the Spartans since 2015-16, and this team is capable of winning 30 games again this season.

<p style=Magic Johnson
college dominance: Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.
NBA: 5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Carmelo Anthony college dominance: In his lone season (2003), led Syracuse to a national championship and earned Final Four Most Outstanding Player honors. Averaged 22.2 points and 10 rebounds per game as a freshman.
NBA: 10× NBA All-Star. 2012–13 NBA scoring champion, averaging 28.7 points per game.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Before NBA glory: How Jordan, Bird, Magic and Curry ruled in college

Magic Johnsoncollege dominance:Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.NBA:5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

LOSERS

Florida

A 1-1 showing in the Rady's Children Invitational is not what Florida had in mind. Instead of winning the four-team tournament, the Gators head back from the West Coast with more questions.

Things seemed to be going well against TCU until Florida's offense fell apart in the second half, leading to a head-scratching loss. The Gators were able to regroup for a win against Providence to avoid a disastrous time in San Diego.

It's obviously hard to defend a national championship, but Florida came into this season looking like it would be well positioned to do so with a mix of key transfers joining some veteran pieces. But it hasn't looked quite right since the season-opening loss to Arizona, and the Gators don't look anywhere near as dominant as last season's national championship-winning squad.

St. John's

Rick Pitino's magic in New York looks like its fading, with the hype surrounding St. John's coming to a screeching halt after a losing week in the Player's Era Festival.

The Red Storm fell in a thriller to Iowa State in the opening contest. There wasn't anything wrong with the loss, and they came back to beat Baylor in the second game, but the consolation round performance was troubling. After leading Auburn by nine points at halftime, the Tigers outscored St. John's by 20 points in the second half to win. A team that could've contended for a Player's Era crown instead went 1-2 in Las Vegas.

St. John's is now 4-3 in the young season looks suspect on defense. It's allow 76.4 points per game and gave up an astonishing 88 points against the SEC and Big 12 teams it has played this season. If it can't defend against top-tier teams, there won't be another big season for Pitino.

Oregon

The inaugural Player's Era Festival champion didn't get anywhere near an encore with a winless showing in the expanded field.

Oregon returned to Las Vegas and had double-digit losses to Auburn, San Diego State and Creighton. The Ducks returned two key pieces from last season's tournament team, but they haven't been able to put together solid performances. Jackson Shelstad struggled as he recovers from a broken hand, and big man Nate Bittle got hurt against San Diego State. The result led to sloppy performances throughout the week.

North Carolina State

There was a great opportunity for Will Wade to prove in Maui the Wolfpack were ready to get off to a fast start in his first season. Instead, NC State showed it still has some ways to go.

According to the rankings, NC State was the best team in the Maui Invitational, but ended up finishing in sixth place. The Wolfpack fell to Seton Hall before responding beat Boise State. In their final game, they allowed 102 points to Texas to head back to the mainland with a 1-2 record.

Defense is a glaring problem, but what is a real concern is Texas Tech transfer Darrion Williams hasn't been the dominant player he can very easily be. It will go a long way if Williams can assert himself as one of the best players in the ACC, but at this point, the Wolfpack don't look like they can be a heavy contender yet.

Boise State

It's far too early in the season to be declared out of the at-large tournament discussion, but Boise State has a lot of ground to make up if it doesn't the Mountain West's automatic bid.

After the stunning season-opening loss to Division II Hawaii Pacific, the Maui Invitational provided for the Broncos to earn some quality wins, but they couldn't capitalize in their first two games. They played Southern California close in the opener before not being able to keep up with NC State the following day. That left Boise State in the last=place game against Chaminade, another game against a Division II school that won't count in the NET rankings.

What was a big moment for Boise State ended in a dud with no signature victory, and things are going to have to drastically change in Boise if the Broncos don't want to miss the tournament again.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College basketball winners, losers: Michigan makes major statement

Michigan's big statement leads winners, losers from college hoops holiday week

It took Dusty May five seasons before he turnedFlorida Atlanticinto a Final Four team. At Michigan, it may just ...

 

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