NC State v Miami (Megan Briggs / Getty Images)

When the penultimate College Football Playoff rankings are released Tuesday night, only one thing is for certain: People are going to be angry.

Since its inception in 2014, the CFP was meant to bring order and stability after the nebulous Bowl Championship System relied on a stew of polls and computer rankings to determine a national championship game. The playoff was supposed to bring a more traditional championship structure to college football, beginning with the four-team bracket in 2014 before it switched to the current 12-team format last season.

Except ... even with the expanded field, the decisions of the rotating 13-member committee have created a new set of problems — most notably, schools every year complaining vociferously about their exclusion.

This season is shaping up to be no different. With only the conference championship games left, Tuesday's rankings should reveal where the playoff is headed before the 12-team field is set on Sunday. Here are the biggest issues headed into the second-to-last rankings.

Miami vs. Notre Dame

The rivalry affectionately (and, uh, problematically) referred to as "Catholics vs. Convicts" has been as hot off the field as on it this season. In Week 1, the Hurricanes beat the Fighting Irish 27-24 on a late field goal. Miami had built a 21-7 lead before a furious comeback by Notre Dame.

The problem for the Hurricanes? Since the first ranking was released on Nov. 4, Miami has been rankedbehindNotre Dame every week. And it hasn't been close. The Hurricanes went from unranked to 15th to 12th to 11th before Tuesday. Meanwhile, after having started 10th, the Fighting Irish have been cruising at ninth the last three weeks.

That has happened even though the teams sport the same record (10-2) and Miami owns a head-to-head win. What has hurt the Hurricanes are their losses to SMU and Louisville, two schools the committee seems not to hold in high regard. To many, it seems as though Notre Dame is getting more credit for losing to Miami than the Hurricanes are getting for beating the Fighting Irish. (Notre Dame's other loss was a one-point defeat to then-No. 3 Texas A&M in Week 2. The Fighting Irish have won 10 in a row.)

After a win over Pittsburgh to end the regular season, Miami coach Mario Cristobal made it clear what he believes should separate his team from Notre Dame.

"You know what's the best part about football?" Cristobal said. "You get to settle it on the field, where head-to-head is always the No. 1 criteria for anything regarding athletics and football."

We'll see whether the committee feels the same way!

Don't forget those pesky auto-bids

The 12-team bracket was designed to fix hurt feelings by creating an automatic bid system for the five highest-ranked conference champions. That was clearly created to protect the Power Five schools, especially teams in the Big 12, the Pac-12 and the ACC, who were constantly concerned about SEC and Big Ten bias.

Of course, the automatic bids have set off a new round of chaos.

The first problem was when the Power Five became the Power Four after the Pac-12 almost entirely disbanded at the end of the 2024 season. The result is four unwieldy conferences with unbalanced schedules that make teams incredibly difficult to compare with one another.

Meanwhile, the ACC's byzantine conference tiebreaker system is playing a massive role this season. Duke is 7-5 but will play in the conference championship game over Miami, the highest-ranked ACC team in the CFP field. If the Blue Devils defeat Virginia in the ACC title game, there's a good chance the ACC is left out of the CFP fieldentirely. The committee is required to take the five highest-ranked conference champs ... which means the Sun Belt Conference's James Madison (11-1) could ultimately squeak in over the Hurricanes.

Ole Miss is definitely in, though, right?

It would be shocking if the committee added insult to injury and kept the Rebels out of the playoff after the departure of head coach Lane Kiffin, wholeft the school high and dryto take the same job at LSU.

Ole Miss is 11-1 and enters Tuesday seventh in the CFP rankings. But the committee has set a precedent that a team like the Rebels could be dropped from the field.

In 2023, Florida State was excluded from the four-team playoff even though it completed a 13-0 season and won the ACC. The main reason given was a season-ending injury to quarterback Jordan Travis, which he suffered during the ACC title game, with the committee saying that made the Seminoles "a different team."

The committee opted to put Alabama in over Florida State, a decision that drew widespread criticism. It would be shocking to see the same thing happen to Ole Miss, but if several coaches leave with Kiffin, is that all that different from why Florida State was left out a couple of years ago?

Ole Miss v Mississippi State (Justin Ford / Getty Images)

At least the conference championship games still matter?

In another world, this Saturday's Big Ten championship game between No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Indiana would be incredibly dramatic. In the BCS era, it would be a pseudo-semifinal. In the four-team era, it could knock one of the schools out of the playoff field.

The stakes are much lower this year, though, as both schools are all but assured of playoff spots regardless of the outcome.

The Big 12 (No. 11 BYU vs. No. 5 Texas Tech) and the SEC (No. 4 Georgia vs. No. 10 Alabama) could certainly prove to be consequential. But they carry different weights in the expanded field.

The field, by the way, is expected to expand even more beginning next season. Expect the complaints to grow along with it.

The 12-team College Football Playoff was supposed to eliminate chaos. Whoops.

When the penultimate College Football Playoff rankings are released Tuesday night, only one thing is for certain: People are going to be an...
Russian skiers and snowboarders win CAS ruling to try to qualify for Winter Olympics in Italy

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — Russian skiers and snowboarderswon a court rulingon Tuesday to apply as neutral athletes for qualification events to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics after nearly four years of being excluded during the war on Ukraine.

Russian sports minister Mikhail Degtyaryov posted on social media that an appeal from Russia to the Court of Arbitration for Sport overturned a blanket ban imposed by the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) within days of the full military invasion in February 2022. FIS renewed the ban in October.

CAS later published its ruling in another legal win for Russian and Belarusian winter sports athletes.

In October, asimilar appeal to CASby the Russian luge federation and athletes ruled against a long-standing blanket ban based on their passports.

Sports bodies have excluded Russians mainly for security reasons to protect athletes and prevent protests that also could disrupt the field of play.

Still, there is little time for FIS to process applications from athletes to be approved with neutral status ahead of a Jan. 18 qualification deadline. The Milan Cortina Winter Olympics begin on Feb. 6.

Neutral status can be approved in most sports, following International Olympic Committee guidance, for athletes who have not publicly supported the military invasion of Ukraine and do not have ties to military or state security agencies.

Russian athletes and team officials also face challenges getting visas to enter some countries that host qualifying events such as on the World Cup circuit in Alpine, cross-country and freestyle skiing, and snowboarding.

FIS runs almost half of the entire Winter Games program — 57 of 116 gold medal events.

CAS said its judges gave an urgent ruling combining separate appeals that Russian and Belarusian athletes who meet eligibility standards set by FIS should be allowed to enter international events.

"Both panels (of judges) found that the FIS statutes protect individuals from discrimination and require the FIS to be politically neutral," the Lausanne-based court said in a statement.

Some Russian and Belarusian athletes competed at the Paris Summer Games last year without their national identity of flag, anthem and team colors. Both countries were banned from team sports.

The IOC must also assess the neutral status of Russian and Belarusian athletes before inviting them to compete at the Milan Cortina Winter Games.

Two Russian figure skaters and one from Belarus wereinvited to the Olympics by the IOClast week.

Degtyaryov has said he expects as few as 15 Russian athletes to compete at the Winter Games.

AP Winter Olympics athttps://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Russian skiers and snowboarders win CAS ruling to try to qualify for Winter Olympics in Italy

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — Russian skiers and snowboarderswon a court rulingon Tuesday to apply as neutral athletes for...
NBA Cup bracket, schedule: What to know ahead of the knockout rounds

The NBA Cup has run through its group stage. Now, only eight teams remain, and we're bursting into the quarterfinals to determine the third annual in-season tournament winner.

With over half a million dollars on the line for each player on the winning team, you know that most squads still in the running will be putting their best foot forward in an effort to earn that payday. So, will it be one of the surprise teams paving their way to an NBA Cup title, or will one of the league's juggernauts like theOklahoma City Thunder,Los Angeles LakersorNew York Knicksemerge victorious?

Here's everything to know heading into the knockout rounds:

Oct. 26: The Dallas Mavericks' Cooper Flagg dunks the ball past the Toronto Raptors' Sandro Mamukelashvili at the American Airlines Center. Oct. 26: The Washington Wizards' Cam Whitmore dunks the ball against the Charlotte Hornets at Capital One Arena. <p style=Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Oct. 25: The Denver Nuggets' Christian Braun dunks the ball against the Phoenix Suns' Grayson Allen at Ball Arena. Oct. 24: The Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. dunks against the Miami Heat at FedExForum. Oct. 24: The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo dunks over the Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. at FedExForum. Oct. 22: The New York Knicks' OG Anunoby goes up for a reverse dunk against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden. Oct. 22: The Utah Jazz's Lauri Markkanen dunks against the Los Angeles Clippers at Delta Center.

Dribble into this collection of dunk photos as NBA stars posterize opponents

Final NBA Cup group play standings

*- indicates a team that advanced to the quarterfinals

East Group A

  1. Toronto Raptors (4-0)*

  2. Atlanta Hawks (2-2)

  3. Cleveland Cavaliers (2-2)

  4. Indiana Pacers (1-3)

  5. Washington Wizards (1-3)

East Group B

  1. Orlando Magic (4-0)*

  2. Boston Celtics (2-2)

  3. Detroit Pistons (2-2)

  4. Philadelphia 76ers (1-3)

  5. Brooklyn Nets (1-3)

East Group C

  1. New York Knicks (3-1)*

  2. Miami Heat (3-1)*

  3. Milwaukee Bucks (2-2)

  4. Charlotte Hornets (1-3)

  5. Chicago Bulls (1-3)

West Group A

  1. Oklahoma City Thunder (4-0)*

  2. Phoenix Suns (3-1)*

  3. Minnesota Timberwolves (2-2)

  4. Utah Jazz (1-3)

  5. Sacramento Kings (0-4)

West Group B

  1. Los Angeles Lakers (4-0)*

  2. Memphis Grizzlies (3-1)

  3. Los Angeles Clippers (2-2)

  4. Dallas Mavericks (1-3)

  5. New Orleans Pelicans (0-4)

West Group C

  1. San Antonio Spurs (3-1)*

  2. Denver Nuggets (2-2)

  3. Houston Rockets (2-2)

  4. Portland Trail Blazers (2-2)

  5. Golden State Warriors (1-3)

NBA Cup knockout stage schedule

*All knockout stage games will stream on Amazon Prime

Quarterfinals

Tuesday, Dec. 9

  • Miami Heat at Orlando Magic, 6 p.m. ET

  • New York Knicks at Toronto Raptors, 8:30 p.m. ET

Wednesday, Dec. 10

  • Phoenix Suns at Oklahoma City Thunder, 7:30 p.m. ET

  • San Antonio Spurs at Los Angeles Lakers, 10 p.m. ET

Semifinals

  • Saturday, Dec. 13 at 5:30 p.m. ET

  • Saturday, Dec. 13 at 9 p.m. ET

Finals

  • Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 8:30 p.m. ET at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA Cup updated bracket, schedule for knockout rounds

NBA Cup bracket, schedule: What to know ahead of the knockout rounds

The NBA Cup has run through its group stage. Now, only eight teams remain, and we're bursting into the quarterfina...
Will Stein grew up 'die-hard' Kentucky fan. Now, Oregon OC will coach Wildcats, report

Fewer than 24 hours after firing 13-year head coachMark Stoops, Kentuckyreportedly named his replacement Dec. 1.

Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein, a Louisville alum, will be taking the reins in Lexington as a first-time head coach,per a report from ESPN.He will take over a 5-7 Wildcats team that just lost 41-0 to Stein's alma mater, as he attempts to right the ship.

Stoops was the all-time winningest coach at Kentucky, racking up 82 wins. He barely finished his career there above .500, going 82-80 in that span. Kentucky missed bowl games in consecutive years for the first time in 10 seasons, exacerbating the urgency to show Stoops the door.

Why was Mark Stoops fired at Kentucky?Buyout, record for former Wildcats coach

Virginia Tech hired James Franklin as its next head coach. Franklin was fired earlier this season at Penn State. He replaces Brent Pry, who was fired midseason by the Hokies. Oklahoma State hired Eric Morris from North Texas to be the Cowboys next head coach. Morris replaces longtime OSU coach Mike Gundy, who was fired earlier this season. Colorado State hired Jim Mora Jr. as its new head coach. Mora led UConn to back-to-back nine-win seasons and replaces Jay Norvell, who was fired midseason. Oregon State hired Alabama co-offensive coordinator JaMarcus Shephard as its head coach, replacing Trent Bray who was fired after an 0-7 start this season.

These college football coaches are on the move. See who found new home

The timing of firing Stoops was puzzling, with Jon Sumrall accepting the Florida job earlier on Nov. 30. Sumrall, who played at Kentucky, was a popular name being tied to the job as an alum. But the subsequent timing of Stein's hiring indicates he was a priority target for Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart and the Kentucky brass.

Oregon is preparing to likely host a first round game at Autzen Stadium in the College Football Playoff. However, in another interesting wrinkle, Stein will get to do what Lane Kiffin could not for Mississippi: coach his 2025 team with a new destination in 2026 set,per Thamel.

The seeds for Stein to Kentucky have been cultivated for over a year.

"I grew up a die-hard Cats fan, actually. My dad played there, so I went to every game at Commonwealth Stadium. I grew up in really SEC football,"Stein said ahead of the 2024 season, per On3.

Now, Stein will have an opportunity to prove he can thrive in SEC football as well, as he looks to do what Clark Lea has done at Vanderbilt and help one of the more difficult jobs in the conference turn things around.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kentucky to hire Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein as new head coach

Will Stein grew up 'die-hard' Kentucky fan. Now, Oregon OC will coach Wildcats, report

Fewer than 24 hours after firing 13-year head coachMark Stoops, Kentuckyreportedly named his replacement Dec. 1. ...
Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

BATON ROUGE, LA – Verge Ausberry had secured the greatest booty ofcollege football's coaching carousel, but LSU's athletic director still had to travel behind enemy lines to retrieve it.

No trouble, right? Fly into Mississippi. Pick up the package. Fly out.

Ha. Nothing abouthiring Lane Kiffincould ever be so easy.

The initial plan had been that LSU's plane would pick up Kiffin from the Tupelo airport, 50 miles from the University of Mississippi. At least that would provide some distance between the LSU envoy and theOle Miss fans furious by Kiffin's heel turn.

Once aboard the plane, Ausberry learned plans had changed. They'd be flying into Oxford, ground zero itself, to secure LSU's prize.

"I said, 'We're goingwhere? Oxford?They'll be shooting missiles at us,'" Ausberry said.

News media arrive before a press conference by LSU's new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. A sign is seen before a press conference by LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin is introduced at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025.

See Lane Kiffin's LSU introductory press conference in Baton Rouge

No missiles fired, butOle Missstudents and fans who gathered at the airport gave the LSU plane and anyone who boarded it a middle-finger salute.

As Ausberry waited for Kiffin to arrive, the pilots asked him if he wanted to deplane and use the restroom.

"I said, 'That's OK. I'll hold it,'" Ausberry said.

Smart thinking.

Kiffin had concerns of his own, and why shouldn't he? He'd made his choice to leave Ole Miss on the playoff's doorstep, but he still had to get out of Dodge.

Ole Miss had hired Kiffin when powerhouse schools like LSU didn't want him. The Rebels had given Kiffin the opportunity to relaunch his career inside the SEC and rebuild his image.

The relationship became gloriously beneficial for both parties for six seasons, but Kiffin couldn't resist the itch to coach another blue-blood. He left Ole Miss at the worst possible moment — with the Rebels on the verge of their first playoff appearance.

As Kiffin made for his exit route, Ole Miss fans wanted to give him the sendoff he'd earned.

Kiffin claims people tried "to run us off the road" on his drive to the airport. Kiffin had his son, Knox, in the vehicle with him. Kiffin, concerned for their safety, says he called a cop friend for help.

At the Oxford airport, fans were lined up at the fence line, waiting to jeer Kiffin and flip him the bird. Not your ordinary job change, though perhaps a bit familiar for Kiffin.

Even after Kiffin boarded the plane, he wondered to himself: Had he made the right choice to leave?

And then he landed in Baton Rouge.

A king's welcome awaited. Fans cheered and hollered his name. The savior had arrived. Kiffin noted the time. He'd been in town for six minutes.

"There's the (LSU) fans, just all of them out there at the airport, and their excitement and their passion … as we're going to the office, and you go by Tiger Stadium, and it's lit up, and you are like, I absolutely made the right decision," Kiffin said, "and (those bad feelings) all went away."

This is how it goes in the South's college football hotbeds. They'll worship you when you arrive. If you win big, they'll worship you more. You'll become more than a king. You'll be agod. What a power trip. Just ask Nick Saban.

If you fail, they'll holler for your firing.

And, buddy, if you leave for a hated rival, well, good luck getting out of town. Because, that's not just a job change. That's betrayal.

One town's traitor becomes another's hero.

"That's the SEC," Kiffin said. "I've been around it long enough to know that, and it's just the passion of the SEC."

Kiffin admitted that hearing what Ole Miss fans said as he left and seeing their reaction hurt him. It got to him. He also took it as a compliment: If they were that incensed at him leaving, that must have meant he'd done the job well while he was there.

When Kiffin returns to Ole Miss next season on the LSU sideline, it'll be the hottest game on that weekend's calendar. Don't forget to bring the mustard, Rebels.

Much has been said and written lately about what Kiffin's exit means for his legacy. At Ole Miss, his name is forever tarnished, but I'm not sure Kiffin's legacy is all that changed, on the whole.

Thisis his legacy. He's arguably the most polarizing figure in college football history.

Years ago, he left a great SEC job in the middle of the night but not undetected. Tennessee fans gathered in protest and literally burned objects in the street.

He's the lightning rod with enough charisma and talent to make everyone in one state love him, even as everyone in another hates him after he twisted the knife on them.

Of course Kiffin would become the first college football coach to ever leave his team and not coach it in the playoff. And for anyone who thought a coach would never do that, and skip out on a chance to win a national championship, well, you've never met Kiffin. He's the rebel who doesn't bend to norms.

He likes to say he doesn't just think outside the box. He builds a new box.

Stay and pursue a national championship at Ole Miss? That would sound nice to some, but, sorry, that's Baton Rouge calling. Kiffin would have liked to accept the LSU job and have still coached Ole Miss in the playoff. When Ole Miss brass made him choose, he cast his lot with LSU.

And when more coaches repeat this move in the future, Kiffin will take pride in knowing he was the pioneer. He steamrolled the path for all the renegades who'll inevitably follow.

You'll hear plenty about how this moment — a coach leaving one team on the playoff's doorstep to move up the perceived food chain — is awful for the sport.

Is it? Or is it the epitome of this sport.

These past 48 hours and the scenes emanating from Oxford and Baton Rouge could be a dang infomercial for college football, especially within the SEC, or at least a YouTube tutorial for those who don't understand this zany enterprise.

College football's never been about the postseason, and certainly not about the College Football Playoff. Heck, the playoff is younger than Kiffin's youngest son.

College football peaks in the fall, when the rivalries burn hottest, when fans storm the field seconds after an upset ends, not worrying about who they might trample along the way, when games radiate from college towns, inside ancient 100,000-seat cathedrals instead of the glitzy NFL stadiums that hijack the games in the playoff.

No matter how big the bureaucrats make the playoff, college football isn't about the playoff.

It's about loving your team, hating your rivals, worshipping your heroes while you revile the heels.

At the heart of college football are the rivalries that burn as hot as the sun.

And at the center of those rivalries, are the coaches.

Even as college athletes celebrate more power and recognition than they've ever had before, the coaches are college football's stars in ways they are not in the pro leagues.

And there's never quite been a coach like Kiffin. Everyone feels some type of way about him, and they'll feel those feelings deeper after these past three days.

In Oxford, their former king disgusts them now. That's fine. He'll be feted at LSU.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

BATON ROUGE, LA – Verge Ausberry had secured the greatest booty ofcollege football's coaching carousel, but LSU's...
The Rotunda at the University of Virginia is illuminated at sunset. Photo: Tim Thorn / Unsplash

(The Center Square) - State officials met with representatives from the University of Virginia on Monday following the school's agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice on five civil rights investigations.

UVA Interim President Paul Mahoney was scheduled to update the Virginia Senate Finance & Appropriations Committee on institutional leadership and finances, as well as explain why the university opted to sign the controversial federal agreement.

At the meeting, Mahoney defended the university's decision, describing it as the best possible option.

"For all of those reasons, I believe that signing the agreement was the best option available to us. In fact, we are in a clearly better position than if we hadn't signed," Mahoneysaid.

Prior to the meeting, some lawmakers expressed disappointment over the agreement and urged the university to reconsider its decision.

"I want transparency for both the public and the legislature," Virginia House Delegate Katrina Callsen, D-Albemarle, said in a statement to theVirginia Mercury. "I trust that my Senate colleagues will pursue information that will help everyone better understand the interactions that occurred between UVA and the federal government and the full nature of the settlement agreement UVA formed with the DOJ. Virginians deserve to know what is happening in Virginia universities."

Other UVA leaders have supported the agreement, unlike other higher education institutions that have gone to court, losing federal funds.

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkincalledthe UVA agreement "common sense."

The University of Virginia reached a formalagreementwith the U.S. Department of Justice in October to end investigations that the institution violated federal civil rights laws in its admissions, hiring, diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and that its campus culture was hostile toward Jewish students.

UVA denied the allegations, but later signed an agreement with the DOJ to comply.

Theagreementstates that UVA must submit quarterly reports to the Justice Department confirming it remains in compliance with federal law.

"This notable agreement with the University of Virginia will protect students and faculty from unlawful discrimination, ensuring that equal opportunity and fairness are restored," Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon of the Civil Rights Division said in astatement.

Former UVA President Jim Ryanresignedin June amid the federal government's investigations into UVA and other institutions to end alleged illegal discrimination and race-based preferences across education.

In a 12-pageletterto the UVA Faculty Senate on Nov. 14, Ryan said he was "stunned and angry" at the board's lack of honesty as it faced federal pressure to remove him over an alleged failure to dismantle DEI initiatives.

The agreement will stay in effect through Dec. 31, 2028.

Virginia officials meet with university following DOJ pact

(The Center Square) - State officials met with representatives from the University of Virginia on Monday following the school's agreeme...
Sen. Kelly slams Trump, calls for investigation into Caribbean strikes

Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly on Monday repeatedly said he would not be silenced by President Donald Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth even after the Department of Defense announced last week that it would belaunching a "thorough review"of Kelly citing "serious allegations of misconduct."

"I will not be intimidated by this president. I am not going to be silenced by this president or the people around because I've given too much in service to this country to back down to this guy," Kelly said at a news conference Monday afternoon.

It comes after Kelly and several other Democrats last monthposted a video on social mediawhere they said that U.S. service members could refuse illegal orders.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters - PHOTO: Sen. Mark Kelly holds a press conference at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., Dec. 1, 2025.

Kelly slammed Hegseth, calling him "unqualified for this position" and saying Hegseth should testify concerning the boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea where two survivors were allegedly killed after a second strike was authorized on a boat suspected of ferrying drugs in September.

The White House confirmed there was more than one strike on the boat. One person familiar with details of the incident confirmed to ABC News that there were survivors from the initial strike on the boat and that those survivors were killed in subsequent strikes.

Trump calls Dems' video to service members 'seditious behavior, punishable by death'

Kelly, a member of the Senate Armed Services committee, said there "needs to be an investigation" into the strikes following reporting from the Washington Post that Hegseth issued a verbal order to kill survivors with a second strike. Kelly added that "if there is anyone who needs to answer questions in public and under oath, it is Pete Hegseth."

"I hope what we are hearing is not ... accurate. I will say, though you know as somebody who has sunk two ships myself, that folks in the military need to understand, you know, the Law of the Sea, the Geneva Conventions, what the law says. And I'm concerned that if there were, in fact, as reported, you know, survivors clinging to a damaged vessel, that that could be, you know, over a line. I hope it's not the case," Kelly said.

Felix Leon/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth holds a press conference at the Dominican National Palace in Santo Domingo, Nov. 26, 2025.

When asked about a Washington Post report that Hegseth ordered the military to kill all passengers aboard the boat suspected of carrying drugs, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Adm. Mitch Bradley, the head of the United States Special Operations Command, made the order for the second strike.

"Adm. Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was completely eliminated," Leavitt said Monday.

Asked by ABC News whether the video he posted on social media telling military members that they can disobey illegal orders was about strikes in the Caribbean, Kelly said it was "not about this specific thing."

But Kelly did say that he hopes the American people are given an opportunity to see the legal argument behind the strikes that lawmakers were presented during closed-door briefings.

In response to the Democrats' video, Trump -- in social media posts -- called them "traitors" who should face the death penalty.

Kelly said that the president's is meant to silence individuals who may want to stand up to him.

"This isn't about me and it's not about the others in that video, they're trying to send a message to retired service members, to government employees, the members of the military, to elected officials and to all Americans who are thinking about speaking up, 'You better keep your mouth shut, or else,'" Kelly said.

FBI attempting to schedule interviews with 6 members of Congress who made video about troops disobeying illegal orders

Kelly was asked whether he would participate in interviews with the FBI or Defense Department if one was requested as part of an investigation.

"I will follow the law," he said.

Kelly noted the wave of political violence in America, highlighting the attack against his wife, former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, and targeted attacks against the Trump himself. Trump, he said, should be doing more to cool tensions rather than inflame them.

"The president's words carry tremendous weight. People listen to him, and he knows that, and that's exactly why he does what he does," Kelly claimed.

Editor's note:An earlier version of this story said that the White House confirmed there were survivors from a first strike on the alleged drug boat and they were killed in a second strike. It has been updated to say that press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed there was more than one strike on the boat.

Sen. Kelly slams Trump, calls for investigation into Caribbean strikes

Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly on Monday repeatedly said he would not be silenced by President Donald Trump and Secretary of ...

 

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