Titans RB claims Jags punter threatened to kill him

Tennessee Titans running back Julius Chestnut claims Jacksonville Jaguars punter Logan Cooke threatened to kill him during Sunday's game in Nashville.

Early in the fourth quarter of the Jaguars' 25-3 win, Chestnut delivered a block to Cooke during a punt return. Cooke was shaken up on the play and evaluated for a concussion before returning to the game.

Things became heated as the two players squared off again following another punt return with 11:49 remaining.

"He said he would kill me," Chestnut said of his interaction with Cooke. "That's what he said. He came up to me and said he'd kill me. Never heard that one before. That was strange. Especially a punter, you know. It was strange."

Cooke was not asked about his alleged remarks after the game.

Cooke, 30, is in his eighth season with the Jaguars, who drafted him in the seventh round in 2018. He made his first Pro Bowl last season.

Chestnut, 25, is in his fourth season with the Titans after going undrafted in 2022. He has rushed for 39 yards on 10 carries in 12 games (no starts) this season.

—Field Level Media

Titans RB claims Jags punter threatened to kill him

Tennessee Titans running back Julius Chestnut claims Jacksonville Jaguars punter Logan Cooke threatened to kill him durin...
Cal Foote, one of the players acquitted in Hockey Canada sexual assault case, signs in the AHL

CHICAGO (AP) — Cal Foote has signed an American Hockey League contract with the Chicago Wolves, making him the fourth of five playersacquitted of sexual assaultin thehigh-profile trialof members of Canada's 2018 world junior hockey team to continue his career.

The team announced the deal with the soon-to-be 27-year-old defenseman on Monday. GoaltenderCarter Hart signed with the NHL's Vegas Golden Knightsin mid-October just after thewindow opened for the playersto be eligible for new contracts.

Forward Michael McLeod, who was also found not guilty of an additional count of being party to the offense of sexual assault,signed a three-year dealwith Avangard Omsk of the KHL in October. McLeod played for the club last season, as well, after originally signing in the Russia-based league with Barys Astana in Kazakhstan.

Alex Formenton has played for HC Ambri-Piotta in the Swiss Hockey League since 2022 after the Ottawa Senators opted not to re-sign him.

Dillon Dube spent 2024-25 with the KHL's Dinamo Minsk in Belarus, but the 27-year-old winger has not played this season.

All of the players except Formenton were in the NHL when they were charged in early 2024 in connection to an incident in London, Ontario, in 2018. Foote and McLeod were with New Jersey, Hart with Philadelphia and Dube with Calgary.

Those teams did not extend qualifying offers to the players that summer, and they became free agents. The league announced in September they'd be eligible to sign Oct. 15 and play Dec. 1, and Hart could make his Vegas debut as soon as Tuesday.

This story has been corrected to show that McLeod was found not guilty.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Cal Foote, one of the players acquitted in Hockey Canada sexual assault case, signs in the AHL

CHICAGO (AP) — Cal Foote has signed an American Hockey League contract with the Chicago Wolves, making him the fourth of ...
Michigan center Aday Mara (15) celebrates a play against Gonzaga during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in the Players Era tournament in Las Vegas, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Feast Week is over, and one team came out of Vegas easily ahead of the rest.

Here's everything you missed in the fourth week of the regular season, and the latest Associated Press poll.

It's time to talk about Michigan

Michigan was the big winner in Las Vegas this past week.

The Wolverines, who entered the Players Era Festival undefeated with several solid wins, absolutely dominated. They rolled to a 40-point win over San Diego State in their first game, and then turned around and blew out then-No. 21 Auburn by 30 points the next night.

While theformat of the event has been (perhaps rightfully) called into questionby fans, the Wolverines made the championship game, and absolutely nothing changed. They cruised to a 40-point win over Gonzaga toclaim the expanded event's title and the $1 million NIL prizethat came with it. That two-game stretch made Michigan just the second school in history to mount back-to-back 30-point wins over ranked opponents in the Associated Press' poll,according to ESPN. Kentucky is the only other team in history that's pulled that off, first in 1951 and again in 1996.

While the Players Era Festival field was easily the best among the Thanksgiving week tournaments, nobody else stood a chance.

As a result, Michigan jumped four spots in this week's poll to No. 3. Auburn, which bounced back with a win over St. John's after losing to Michigan, moved up to No. 20. Gonzaga, which had looked very solid up until this point, also moved up a single spot to No. 11.

Purdue is still a perfect 7-0, and held onto its top spot in the rankings. Arizona is undefeated still, too, and remained at No. 2.

Duke, which beat Arkansas behind a 35-point night from Cameron Boozer on Thanksgiving, remained at No. 4 and UConn rounded out the top five. Houston dropped its first game of the season in Las Vegas in a battle with Tennessee, which launched it up to No. 13 in this week's poll. The Cougars now sit at No. 8.

Michigan, clearly, is making itself known as a very real threat to Purdue in the Big Ten. The Wolverines' non-conference schedule is basically over, with just a marquee matchup remaining against Villanova among a few other easier games. Duke awaits in late February, but that's a topic for a few months from now.

While it's early, the matchup between the Wolverines and the Boilermakers on Feb. 17 is looking better and better.

Games to watch this week

All times ET | * denotes neutral site

Tuesday, Dec. 2

No. 15 Florida at No. 4 Duke | 7:30 p.m. | ESPNNo. 5 UConn at No. 21 Kansas | 9 p.m. | ESPN 2No. 16 North Carolina at No. 18 Kentucky | 9:30 p.m. | ESPN

Wednesday, Dec. 3

No. 6 Louisville at No. 25 Arkansas | 7:15 p.m. | ESPN

Friday, Dec. 5

No. 11 Gonzaga at No. 18 Kentucky | 7 p.m. | ESPN2

Saturday, Dec. 6

No. 20 Iowa State at No. 1 Purdue | 12 p.m. | CBSNo. 4 Duke at No. 7 Michigan State | 12 p.m. | FoxNo. 6 Louisville at No. 22 Indiana | 2 p.m. | CBSNo. 14 Illinois at No. 13 Tennessee | 8 p.m. | ESPN *

AP Top 25

The full Associated Press men's basketball poll from December 1, 2025.

1. Purdue (7-0)2. Arizona (7-0)3. Michigan (7-0)4. Duke (8-0)5. UConn (6-1)6. Louisville (7-0)7. Michigan State (7-0)8. Houston (7-1)9. BYU (6-1)10. Iowa State (7-0)11. Gonzaga (7-1)12. Alabama (5-2)13. Tennessee (7-1)14. Illinois (6-2)15. Florida (5-2)16. North Carolina (6-1)17. Vanderbilt (8-0)18. Kentucky (5-2)19. Texas Tech (6-2)20. Auburn (6-2)21. Kansas (6-2)22. Indiana (7-0)23. St. John's (4-3)24. USC (7-0)25. Arkansas (5-2)

Others receiving votes: Iowa 100, UCLA 59, Nebraska 53, TCU 36, Missouri 28, Utah State 16, Saint Mary's 15, Baylor 13, Oklahoma State 12, SMU 12, Clemson 11, LSU 7, Seton Hall 6, Wisconsin 6, NC State 5, Wake Forest 3, California 2, Colorado 1, George Mason 1, Buffalo 1

Men's basketball AP poll: Michigan jumps to No. 3 following dominant week in Las Vegas as Purdue holds No. 1

Feast Week is over, and one team came out of Vegas easily ahead of the rest. Here's everything you missed in the fourth week of the re...
In this undated photo provided by her attorney, Todd Pomerleau, Any Lucia Lopez Belloza celebrates her high school graduation in Texas. - AP

Any Lucia Lopez Belloza arrived at the airport in Boston excited to embark on a surprise trip home to spend Thanksgiving with her family in Texas. The 19‑year‑old freshman at Babson College was nearing the end of her first semester studying business – a major she hoped would help her father open his own tailor shop one day.

But instead of getting to hug her parents and two little sisters and tell them how college was going, Lopez Belloza was arrested by federal immigration officials moments before getting on her flight on November 20. She was told there was a problem with her boarding pass, and on her way to customer service she was "surrounded, (placed) in handcuffs, and dragged out of the airport," her attorney, Todd Pomerleau, told CNN.

In the roughly 48 hours after, Lopez Belloza was sent to Texas and then Honduras, the country where she was born but had not seen since she was 7 years old, when her parents brought her to the United States to seek asylum.

Lopez Belloza was deported despite a federal judge's order prohibiting the government from removing her from the US while a lawsuit over her arrest played out in court, according to her attorney.

In an email to CNN, the Department of Homeland Security said Lopez Belloza entered the country in 2014, an immigration judge ordered her removal in 2015, but she "illegally stayed in the country since."

Pomerleau told CNN Lopez Belloza was never shown a warrant, a removal order or given any explanation for why she had been detained. "I still am not convinced that she ever had an order removal. … She wasn't shown any proof," he said.

Pomerleau said the only records he's found in government databases indicate her case was closed in 2017.

The student's father, Francis, told theAustin American-Statesmanhis family was denied asylum, but they had been assured by the judge they did not have deportation orders. The outlet identified him only by his first name due to his immigration status, it said.

After her arrest, Lopez Belloza was taken to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement's regional headquarters in Burlington, Massachusetts, according to Pomerleau.

From the field office, she was transferred to a military base in Massachusetts and then flown to Texas, where she spent the night in a detention facility before being deported to Honduras the following afternoon.

"She had chains around her ankles. Handcuffs on her wrists," Pomerleau told CNN. "Put on a plane and deported to a country she hadn't been at in like 12 years. It's beyond the pale."

In response to CNN's questions about the attorney's allegations, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement Lopez Belloza "received full due process and was removed to Honduras."

Passengers stop to look at the arrivals and departures board at Logan Airport, on November 11. - Jessica Rinaldi/Boston Globe/Getty Images

A college dream in limbo

Lopez Belloza – who spent most of her life in Texas, where her father is raising her two younger sisters, ages 2 and 5 – decided to enroll at Babson after visiting colleges across the country.

She had worked hard throughout high school and received a scholarship to study in Massachusetts, her lawyer said.

"She wanted to study business and help her dad create his own business one day, a tailoring shop," Pomerleau said. "He hand-made suits for her so she could wear them to interviews and go to … internships, things like that."

A spokesperson for Babson College directed CNN to a couple of statements sent by theschool's leadership, in which they shared that a student was detained by immigration authorities while traveling home for the Thanksgiving holiday and indicated the school won't be commenting further.

"We understand that this news may feel unsettling, particularly for our students, faculty, and staff who may already be navigating uncertainty," the college said in one of the statements. "Our ability to share specifics is limited by law, but please know that our focus remains on supporting the student and their family, as well as the wellbeing of our community."

Speaking toThe Boston Globe,which first reported the story, Lopez Belloza said she had been eager to return home to Austin and share her college experiences with her family. "I have worked so hard to be able to be at Babson my first semester, that was my dream," she told the Globe from her grandparents' home in San Pedro Sula.

Pomerleau said the focus now is on returning Lopez Belloza to the US.

"We're going to ask that the federal judge require the United States to bring her back to the United States because it is an egregious violation of her due process rights."

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A college freshman deported while flying home for Thanksgiving is fighting to return. Here’s what we know about her case

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England's resident doctors plan pre-Christmas strikes over pay

LONDON, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Resident doctors in England will stage a five-day strike starting on December 17,​ timed just before Christmas, citing the government's failure to ‌make a credible offer on jobs and pay, a union representing them said on Monday. ‌

The British Medical Association, which has been locked in a months-long dispute with the government on behalf of resident doctors, says the government's 5.4% pay offer does not address years of salary erosion when adjusting for inflation, ⁠while the government says the ‌deal is fair and affordable.

In response to the latest strike notice, Health minister Wes Streeting criticised the BMA for choosing ‍to walk out "when it will cause maximum disruption" and "untold anxiety".

"These strikes are in no one's interest and there is no moral justification for them,​" he said in a statement released by his department, adding ‌that the government was open to talks.

Resident doctors, previously known as junior doctors, carried out five days of strike actions last month and another five-day walkout in July after the government said it could not meet their demands for an improved pay deal this year.

Last year the then ⁠newly elected Labour government quickly reached a settlement ​with the doctors for a 22% pay rise ​as part of its pledge to fix the National Health Service and in hopes of drawing a line under a long-running dispute.

The ‍BMA has been seeking ⁠a 29% rise this year to restore pay to what it said was 2008 levels in real terms. Streeting wrote to the union ⁠last month stressing the "enormous financial pressures facing the country mean I am not able to ‌go further on pay".

(Reporting by Muvija M; ‌Writing by Catarina DemonyEditing by Frances Kerry)

England's resident doctors plan pre-Christmas strikes over pay

LONDON, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Resident doctors in England will stage a five-day strike starting on December 17,​ timed just b...
Hong Kong fire survivor recalls agonizing last call with his wife

Hong Kong —Yip Ka-kui told CBS News he was about to take a nap when his wife called him from the other room to say a fire was climbing up the building next door, where their son lived.

"I was so nervous. I immediately got my clothes, phone and went downstairs," he said.

He never imagined that the blaze at the Wang Fuk Court apartment complex in Hong Kong wouldspread so quickly. It tore through bamboo scaffolding, mesh netting covering it, and then foam window coverings that had adorned the sprawling complex's eight buildings for ongoing renovation work.

"I got outside and saw a big fire," he told CBS News on Monday, as the official death toll from the blazeclimbed to over 150. "Fire was spreading everywhere, and I could hear the bamboo exploding. The fire spread to the other block. The mesh caught alight."

That other block was his own building, where he knew his wife was still upstairs. He watched as the blaze spread up the sides, quickly blocking the main lobby.

"I called my wife immediately and said there's a big fire and we have to go now," the 67-year-old recalled through tears. "I told my wife, don't come down."

He had hoped that firefighters would be able to get the blaze under control before it was too late.

On the other end of the phone, his distraught wife, Bai Shui Lin, told him she couldn't move through the thick smoke.

Bai Shui Lin, 66, warned her neighbors and helped make sure at least three other families made it out of the burning building safely. / Credit: Family photo

"Then there was so much noise," he said. "I can't hear her anymore … only noise. And then I can't contact her anymore. That's the last call I had with her."

"I kept waiting, hoping the fire would be put out. I thought maybe only the outside would be affected. But the fire just kept getting bigger," he said.

As the blaze spread to seven of the buildings on the complex, Yip watched from behind a police cordon for any sign of his wife being carried out, but he never saw her.

He said he pored over lists of photos and names of victims for days as the death toll mounted, giving her description to nearby hospitals in the hope that she had been rescued.

"I couldn't find my wife," he said through tears. "I tried everything."

Yip Ka-Kui broke down in tears as he recounted to CBS News the story of his last conversation with his wife. / Credit: CBS News

Five days later, police confirmed his worst fears in a phone call on Monday. Bai, his wife of 40 years, never made it out of their building.

The couple's two sons had to confirm her identification, but her remains were burned so badly that authorities used an ID card found in her purse to verify it was her.

Yip said she had gone door to door, warning neighbors of the fire that had spread to their building. He said she helped at least three other families make it out before it was too late.

Both of their sons survived the catastrophic fire, but Yip said he was struggling with guilt over the loss of his wife.

"If I'd asked her to leave a minute earlier, I think she would have survived," he said. "But we know her. She wouldn't have left without warning others."

People lay flowers in front of the Wang Fuk Court apartment buildings in the aftermath of the deadly fire in Hong Kong, Nov. 30, 2025. / Credit: Anthony Kwan / Getty Images

Hong Kong authorities said at least 30 people were still missing on Monday, and recovery teams were still sweeping the seven charred buildings to find victims who failed to escape.

At least 14 people have been arrested for suspected manslaughter, as details of apparent safety regulation violations involving the materials on the outside of the building continue to come to light. Authorities have not ruled out further arrests.

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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...

 

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