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Saturday, February 7, 2026

Icy weather highlights open questions about climate change effects

February 07, 2026
Icy weather highlights open questions about climate change effects

WhenPunxsutawney Phil popped upand saw his shadow on Feb. 2, a collective groan rippled across the Eastern United States, where freezing temperatures, ice and snow have cast a big chill for days.

Stillanother Arctic blast with snow and a deep freezejust arrived, along with another round of quips directed at meteorologists and scientists, challenging them to explain againhow climate change works.

"We all hear it every winter when we get a cold outbreak, or when a snowstorm hits hard," said Brian LaMarre, ameteorologist who founded Inspire Weatherafter retiring from the National Weather Service in 2025.

Winter 2025-2026:Winter in the West has been alarmingly mild. Here's why that's bad.

This winter, these Arctic blasts seem relentless for much of the nation east of the Rockies.A winter storm and blast of polar airbetween Jan. 23 and 26 affected more than 30 states and claimed more than 120 lives. Then in quick succession,a storm dumped a blanket of snow over the Southeastthat lingered for days as temperatures plunged again.

<p style=Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. These photos captured the winter storm's aftermath from the sky.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A person shovels snow off their driveway covers in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. A section of West 42nd Street remains snow covered Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, in Indianapolis. Snow blankets the city Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, as motorists travel along Interstate 65 and West 38th Street in Indianapolis. An aerial photo shows the University of Missouri sitting under several inches of fresh snow on Jan. 25, 2026 in Columbia, MO. An aerial photo shows several inches of fresh snow covering a residential neighborhood on Jan. 25, 2026 in Columbia, MO. Snow covers downtown after a winter storm in Oklahoma City, on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. People play in snow after a winter storm in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. Downtown Louisville and snowy interstate conditions are seen on Jan. 25, 2026 in Louisville, Kentucky. Downtown Louisville and snowy interstate conditions are seen on Jan. 25, 2026. Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026.

Mesmerizing drone photos taken after winter storm show power of nature

Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. These photos captured thewinter storm's aftermathfrom the sky.

The Truth Social account of PresidentDonald Trumpgoaded scientists about the theory he has repeatedly called into question since his second inauguration,asking "whatever happened to global warming."

It's a confounding dilemma for many folks trying to make sense of winter weather in the context of climate change, and for professionals trying to explain how we can still see record cold and snow, even in the face of a steadily warming climate.

The confusion is partly rooted in the science itself. Researchers studying the polar jet stream and the Polar Vortex that lives above it in the stratospheredon't yet fully understand all the complexatmospheric interactions that drive frigid weather outbreaks. And they haven't reached consensus about how warming in the Arctic – happening faster than most of the globe – influences the movement of these and other complex patterns.

So whenparts of Florida see snowtwice within days and Buffalo, New York comes close to breaking its record for days at 20 degrees or below, questions aren't surprising and misunderstandings are common about the differences between daily weather and long-term climate.

How historic have the 2026 winter storms been?

Many daily low temperature records were broken between Jan. 23 and Feb. 2, according to the National Weather Service, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Dozens of monthly records were broken, including 38 low minimums along a swath from Texas to New York, and 45 low maximum temperatures.

Only 15 new all-time record low temperature records were set, for either daily maximums or minimums, according to available preliminary NOAA data. However, the number of consecutive days with freezing temperatures also challenged previous records.

  • At Ronald Reagan National Airport in Virginia, nine consecutive days below freezing was the second longest such span on record.

  • In Jacksonville, Florida, the record was tied for the most consecutive days – eight – with minimum temperatures at or below 32 degrees.

  • The nine days at or below freezing in Central Park was the eighth longest such span on record.

  • Lake Erie had more ice coverage at the beginning of February than it has had in 23 years.

Frozen Lake Erie is viewed Jan. 29, 2026, from the top of the tower at Presque Isle State Park's Tom Ridge Environmental Center, 301 Peninsula Drive. In the lower left is Waldameer Park's Ravine Flyer II roller coaster.

Warming climate will change winters

Even though records show our winters are growing warmer on average, cold winter events like the ones that caused the recent mayhem aren't going away anytime soon,an international studythatincluded U.S. scientistsconcluded in 2025.

"It seems really counterintuitive, but there will beplenty of ice, snow, and frigid air in the Arctic winterfor decades to come, and that cold can be displaced southward into heavily populated regions by Arctic heat waves," said Jennifer Francis, a senior research scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center and co-author on that study.

Meanwhile, winter weather impacts could be even more significant as people become accustomed to warmer climates and grow "increasingly less used to" the cold, according to another co-author, Muyin Wang a meteorologist at the University of Washington and NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory.

A polar blanket

The situation in the Arctic can be thought of like a blanket of low pressure and cold air, said Frederick Bertley, president and CEO of COSI, the Center of Science and Industry in Columbus, Ohio.

Like an old blanket, it can develop holes from things happening around it and become a leaky barrier that allows low pressure and cold air to escape into the United States.

Scientists are actively researching how weather systems and climate patterns play a role in these freezing outbreaks.

"If you went back 30 years, 100% of scientists would have said climate change is going to lead to milder winters and less snow," said Judah Cohen, a research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

During a winter weather webinar by the Woodwell Climate Research Center, Cohen said that's an oversimplification of the influence of climate change and other patterns.

The scientists say it's important to understand the meanderings of the polar jet stream and the stretching and speed of the Polar Vortex that lives above the jet. They want to know how the systems interact within the multi-layered atmosphere, hoping to improve winter forecasts for frigid weather outbreaks.

The jet stream, a band of winds that circle the globe, is created by temperature differences between the higher latitudes and the Arctic. Existing in the troposphere some five to nine miles above the Earth, its naturally occurring undulations have always allowed Arctic air to plunge down into the U.S. Since the winter of 2013-2014, the dips of the jet stream over North America have been increasingly commonly referred to as "a polar vortex."

The Stratospheric Polar Vortex, a winter phenomenon, is positioned some 10 to 30 miles above the surface. In addition to its intermittent interactions with the jet stream, the vortex sometimes experiences sudden warming events that weaken or stop its flow and also send outbreaks of Arctic air southward.

Meanwhile, warming oceans not only contribute to moisture that piles on the ice and snow, but may also help drive some of the polar outbreaks, studies suggest. Scientists are working to understand the contributions from the rapidly warming Arctic, warmer oceans and sea ice loss.

Also not yet fully understood are the interactions with naturally occurring planetary waves and atmospheric cycles such as the Arctic Oscillation and the El Niño Southern Oscillation.

"More analysis is needed to understand how these different factors have been working together or against each other," said Laura Ciasto, an atmospheric scientist at NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.

It's likely most of the cold events this winter have been in response to the tropospheric jet stream, "which sometimes is erroneously referred to as the polar vortex," Ciasto said. "The jet stream has been disrupted a fair bit this winter."

Just how often the stratospheric polar vortex is disrupted and takes on a role in weird weather extremes remains a subject of debate.

Cohen compares the interactions between the Polar Vortex and the jet stream as a dog and its tail, and said he sees more interaction between the two than many meteorologists acknowledge. And those disruptions, he said, favor colder weather.

A 2024 study by a group of scientists from Canada and the United Kingdomfound the frequency or intensity of midlatitude cold extremeshasn't increased, saying both have decreased since 1990 and are consistent with the trend predicted by climate models.

Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist at Berkeley Earth, published a recent blog post disputing "claims" he sees about unusually cold events being made worse by human activity, "as a result of increased variability or a disruption of the 'polar vortex' in a fast-warming world."

There is significant debate in the scientific community about whether rapid Arctic warming and sea ice loss could disrupt atmospheric circulation patterns and lead to cold-air outbreaks in the northern hemisphere mid-latitude regions," Hausfather wrote.

Winters still warming

Despite the misery wielded by the recent winter storms, bitter cold storms aren't occurring often enough to outweigh the long-term influence of human-caused global warming on temperatures, according toa January story by Rebecca Lindsey, a project director for Climate.us. The non-profit was created when the Trump administration stopped further publications on its climate.gov website andhalted the Fifth National Climate Assessment in 2025.

Average winter temperatures in the United States between 1896 and 2025, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data.

Hausfather agreed, saying the bouts of cold air aren't preventing winter from warming overall.

Climate models "overwhelmingly project" that cold extremes will continue to diminish as greenhouse gas concentrations rise, Hausfatherexplained in the Feb. 2 blog post. Even if certain patterns do occasionally transport freezing polar air southward, he said, winters on the whole are likely to be milder than in the past.

Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, covers climate change, wildlife and the environment. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Polar vortex cold highlights climate change questions

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Super Bowl fans warned to leave drones at home amid flight ban

February 07, 2026
Super Bowl fans warned to leave drones at home amid flight ban

As fans from around the countrydescend on Californiato watch the New England Patriots take on the Seattle Seahawks in Sunday'sSuper Bowl, officials are telling them to leave their drones at home.

CBS News

The police chief in Santa Clara, where this year's big game will be played, said authorities are prepared to shoot down a drone, if necessary.

Unmanned aerial vehicles, commonly known as drones, can be easily purchased online and are increasingly popular with hobbyist drone pilots, including sports fans who want to film their favorite events.

But the risks posed by drones are real, whether a hobbyist drone malfunctions and falls into the stands or a bad actor uses a drone to drop something into the stadium.

Retired Army Col. Bill Edwards, who runs counter-drone training at Washington, D.C.-based tech company ENSCO, expects people will try to fly drones at the big game.

"We have to expect it at every major event that's happening in the country," Edwards said in an interview.

The view from the 50-yard line is seen inside Levi's Stadium ahead of Super Bowl LX on Feb. 4, 2026, in Santa Clara, California. / Credit: Don Juan Moore/Getty Images

To get ahead of the issue, the Federal Aviation Administration has issued a ban on all drone flights over the Super Bowl, which has been classified by the federal government as a top special event that merits extensive interagency support.

The FAA says it is collaborating with the FBI to detect, track and assess unauthorized drone activity, and drone operators who fly them in restricted airspace without authorization face fines of up to $75,000, confiscation of their drone and federal criminal charges.

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Law enforcement agencies working on Super Bowl security use layers of responses and mitigation efforts for drones.

"Everything from ground intercept teams to contact the pilot on the ground to redirecting it, landing it or even shooting it down depending on the circumstances," Santa Clara Police Chief Cory Morgan said.

Technological advancements to drones made overseas during the Russia-Ukraine war and conflicts in the Middle East pose new challenges to law enforcement.

Edwards, who trains such police departments as the New York Police Department on drone threat mitigation, points to fiber-optic drones that can evade radio frequency detection systems as a particular concern.

"It's promulgating the technology's capability 20 years into the future — now," he said. He also said, "The threat level has increased a hundredfold."

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Confusion at reopening of Rafah crossing leaves Palestinians stranded

February 07, 2026
Confusion at reopening of Rafah crossing leaves Palestinians stranded

The first week of the partial reopening of the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt was marked by confusion, and logistical hurdles, according to Palestinians attempting to cross and multiple sources who spoke to CNN on condition of anonymity.

CNN Ambulances wait on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on Wednesday. - AFP/Getty Images

The disorder resulted in far fewer Palestinians traversing the border between Egypt and Gaza than was expected, nearly two years after Israel seized and shut the crossing.

When the partial reopening was announced last week, an Israeli security official told CNN that 150 Palestinians per day would be allowed to leave Gaza, while only 50 would be permitted to enter. But even that detail was unclear, as Egyptian state media reported that only 50 would be allowed to leave and the same number to enter.

In the end, the number of people who crossed during the first week amounted to only a fraction of those figures. On Monday, when the crossing officially reopened, only 12 Palestinians crossed the Rafah border in each direction. On Tuesday, the highest day for which CNN has obtained numbers, 40 crossed each way.

In those first two days, most of the Palestinians who were medically evacuated to Egypt during the war and were due to return to Gaza were barred from re-entering the territory, despite receiving prior approval from Israeli and Egyptian authorities.

A Palestinian child waves from the window of a bus evacuating war-wounded patients through the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt on Monday. - Bashar Taleb/AFP/Getty Images

It was not immediately clear why the numbers allowed through the crossing have changed each day.

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, 20,000 people in Gaza have completed medical referrals and are awaiting permission to travel abroad for treatment. Since the war began, about 1,000 Palestinians have died while waiting to be approved for medical evacuation, according to the ministry and the World Health Organization (WHO).

CNN has reached out to Israel's Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) for comment but has yet to receive a response.

The few who did manage to pass through from Egypt described an arduous and exhausting journey.

Harsh journey home

To return to Gaza via the Rafah crossing, Palestinians must undergo three security checks – first with Egyptian forces, then with the European Union Border Assistance Mission to Rafah (EUBAM) alongside Palestinian forces, and finally the Israeli military once inside Gaza.

Those who returned on Monday told CNN they reached the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing at 3 a.m. but did not make it into Gaza until 11:30 p.m. Some described difficulties, mistreatment, and increased scrutiny at both EUBAM and particularly Israeli checkpoints.

Um Omar, frustrated and in tears, said Israeli forces had handcuffed those crossing and questioned them at length.

"The Israelis made everything difficult today. They searched us and they interrogated us about everything – about migration (from Gaza), about Hamas, about the 7th of October, and every topic you can imagine," she said.

The Egyptians treated them well and tended to their needs, she said, while the Israelis prevented them from having anything on them, including food and drink.

"They made us get rid of all our belongings. They only allowed one bag of clothes per person. Even a little girl was not allowed to take her toy with her. They told her the toy is forbidden and took it from her," Um Omar said, shouting angrily.

Lamia Rubia, 27, said all of her belongings were searched, and many items were confiscated.

In a statement, the United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner (OHCHR) reported similar accounts from Palestinians returning to Gaza, alleging "patterns of ill treatment and coercion."

"After two years of utter devastation, being able to return to their families and what remains of their homes in safety and dignity is the bare minimum," the statement said, quoting the head of OHCHR's Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Ajith Sunghay.

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Palestinian patients and their relatives gather to board a bus in Khan Younis in southern Gaza before they head to the Rafah crossing on Wednesday. - Abdel Kareem Hana/AP

A diplomatic source told CNN that returning Palestinians could bring only one bag of belongings and face limitations on how much cash they can carry. But the exact restrictions are still unclear as different authorities try to streamline a system that has just begun working.

In response to a query from CNN, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) denied any mistreatment, saying in a statement that "no incidents of inappropriate conduct, mistreatment, apprehensions, or confiscation of property by the Israeli security establishment are known."

"Security authorities at the screening facility conduct a cross-check of the identities of incomers with lists approved by the Ministry of Defense. Additionally, they conduct a thorough screening of luggage, in accordance with the security policy that was coordinated in advance with Egypt and European Union Border Assistance Mission to Rafah (EUBAM), and in accordance with international law," the statement continued.

CNN has reached out to the EUBAM but has yet to receive a response.

A source at the European Union, however, told CNN the policy at the crossing is not decided by the EUBAM, but is rather based on the Agreed Principles for Rafah Crossing (APRC) and theAgreement on Movement and Access (AMA) – two documents signed in 2005 by Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

The list of authorized items is part of the AMA agreement, and anything not authorized gets confiscated before entering Gaza, the source added.

"The EUBAM is limited to monitoring and supporting Palestinian border officials. We don't know of any problems so far besides some minor logistics," the source said.

Tearful reunions

Palestinians coming from the Rafah crossing embrace as they arrive at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza, on Thursday. - Ramadan Abed/Reuters

In southern Gaza, family members waited for hours to welcome the return of their loved ones.

Iman Rashwan, 30, had been waiting since 8 a.m. on Monday for her sister and mother to return from Egypt. They left in March 2025 after her brother was killed.

"He was my mother's only son. She had a heart condition, and her heart became very weak from the grief, so they had to medically evacuate her to Egypt," Rashwan said.

Despite the delay, joy erupted in hugs, smiles, and tears as the UN-marked bus carrying the returnees arrived, reuniting families who had been torn apart by the war.

"Open, open, open!" Rashwan shouted in glee, as she banged on the bus windows.

Her wheelchair-bound mother was the first to appear, and Rashwan immediately collapsed in her arms.

"My longing for Gaza was huge. I love Gaza and I do not want to leave my country… I didn't know I'd be gone for this long," Rashwan's mother said, her voice cracking with emotion.

"Today's trip was so difficult. Today was a taste from hell… the Egyptians treated us well, but the journey got difficult when we reached the Israelis," she added.

The hardships awaiting these Palestinians in a devastated homeland may outweigh the trials of their journey. As they arrived, however, they were simply grateful to be back in Gaza, with no wish to relive the journey they had just endured.

"I advise every Palestinian from Gaza not to leave their country and not to even think about leaving," Um Omar said.

As another woman emerged from the bus, she shouted: "Nobody leave Gaza! You are better off staying here and maintaining your dignity."

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Lindsey Vonn completes another training run and is ready to race Olympic downhill on injured knee

February 07, 2026
Lindsey Vonn completes another training run and is ready to race Olympic downhill on injured knee

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) —Lindsey Vonnwrapped up her second straight successful downhill training run Saturday and appears ready to go for gold at theMilan Cortina Olympicsat the age of 41 on Sunday, little more than a week after rupturing the ACL of her left knee.

Associated Press United States' Lindsey Vonn in action during alpine ski women's downhill training, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty) United States' Lindsey Vonn in action during alpine ski women's downhill training, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty) United States' Lindsey Vonn arrives at the finish area of an alpine ski women's downhill training, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) United States' Lindsey Vonn concentrates ahead of an alpine ski, women's downhill official training, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati)

APTOPIX Milan Cortina Olympics Alpine Skiing

The Americancrossed in third position, 0.37 seconds behind leader and teammate Breezy Johnson, and pumped her fist after seeing the result.

"All good," Vonn told The Associated Press.

Aksel Lund Svindal, the 2018 Olympic downhill champion from Norway who now coaches Vonn, said she was "very calm" after her run "and didn't talk about the knee at all."

"And then I didn't want to ask, either, because I figured that's a good sign," Svindal said. "When she's calm means that she feels like she has it under control. She knows that she'll have to push harder tomorrow because the rest of the girls will and it's the Olympic downhill — you're not going to get away with a medal there unless you push hard. I think she's ready for that."

Still, Vonn has been favoring her right leg while landing jumps during training, which has put her off balance at times.

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"Try to have less of that tomorrow if we can," Svindal said. "It's the landings that hurt the most."

Vonn is competing with a large brace covering her injured knee. She had a partial titanium replacement inserted in her right knee in 2024 and then returned to ski racing last season after nearly six years of retirement.She crashed during the final World Cup downhill before the Olympics, raising the possibility that she would end not just her season but her career.

Instead, she has been steadfast in saying she would ski at the Olympics if at all possible and, after a training run was canceled Thursday, hit the Olympia delle Tofana downhill course on Friday and Saturday with the other racers.She placed 11th in Thursday's training,though the times mean little since the athletes do not always go their hardest.

Svindal noted that Vonn's brace negatively affects her aerodynamics, but added, "We're not focusing on that because if she starts to ask to take the brace away I think there's a couple of doctors that would have something to say about that. Please don't ask her that question."

Vonn holds the record of 12 World Cup wins in Cortina.

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

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IOC praises warm Olympic diplomacy with Vance in Milan after fans boo at opening ceremony

February 07, 2026
IOC praises warm Olympic diplomacy with Vance in Milan after fans boo at opening ceremony

MILAN (AP) — Though U.S. Vice President JD Vance wasbooed by some spectatorsat the Winter Games opening ceremony, there was warmth with Olympic leaders at a key point in diplomatic relations ahead of the2028 Los Angeles Summer Games.

Vance and International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry had "a very good chemistry" in meetings over two days in Milan, the IOC said Saturday.

Hosting Vance at a formal dinner Thursday before the Milan Cortina Olympics opening Friday was Coventry's first direct contact with the United States government. The two-time swimming gold medalist andformer sports minister of Zimbabwe was electedas the IOC's first female leader in March.

Theanxiety of some IOC members, especially from Africa, over how welcome the world will be in the United States in 2½ years' time was made clear Tuesday to leaders of the LA organizing team.

"With the next games coming up in Los Angeles we are super happy, very happy that the U.S. administration is so engaged with the games here and going forward," IOC spokesman Mark Adams said Saturday at a news conference reflecting onthe opening ceremony.

The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has a crucial role in planning for the next Summer Games with responsibility for federal security operations and processing visas for tens of thousands of athletes, officials and visitors from more than 200 national teams.

Pressed for details on discussions between Vance and Coventry, who sat together for the three-plus hour ceremony at San Siro stadium, Adams said: "I know it went incredibly well, there was a very good chemistry."

"She was very pleased about the enthusiasm of the vice president and the whole administration for the games, which obviously for us is an important thing," he said.

Vance, who attended ice hockey and figure skating events in Milan, was clearly booed and whistled at in the soccer stadium when he and his wife, Usha, were displayed on screens as U.S. athletes joined the ceremony parade. The athletes had been cheered moments earlier.

"We are largely a sports organization and seeing the U.S. team cheered as they were by the audience," Adams said, "fair play, that was fantastic."

The Italian chief executive of the Winter Games organizing committee deflected a question about how his country currently views the U.S.

"I heard incredible cheering when the U.S. team entered the stadium," Andrea Varnier said. "Honestly, I didn't hear anything else. I just read (in) the papers afterwards."

Someprotests in Milan's streets flaredsince it was confirmed 10 days before the games opened that staff from ICE, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement department,are involved in American security planningfor the Olympics.

The investigations unit within ICE involved in the Olympics is separate from the enforcement unit at theforefront of the immigration crackdownin the U.S. including deaths of protesters in Minneapolis.

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

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Paige Bueckers, Breanna Stewart top seeds in Unrivaled 1-on-1 tourney

February 07, 2026
Paige Bueckers, Breanna Stewart top seeds in Unrivaled 1-on-1 tourney

Breeze guards Paige BueckersandMist forward Breanna Stewart officiallyown top seeds in Unrivaled's 1-on-1 tournament.

On Saturday, the Miami-based 3-on-3 league announced the No. 1 seeds for its annual 1-on-1 tournament. The 32-player bracket is divided into four pods and ranked by fans, players, coaches and media members. The top seeds were then selected from each pod.

After the final vote, Bueckers, in Pod B, and Stewart, in Pod D, were voted the No. 1 seeds in their respective pods. Stewart's teammate, Mist guard Allisha Gray (Pod C) and Hive guard Kelsey Mitchell (Pod A) round out the four top seeds from each eight-player pod in the bracket.

In 2025,Unrivaled co-founder Napheesa Collierwon the league's inaugural tournament.She is out for the season after surgery on both anklesand will not participate in this year's event. Lunar Owls forward Aaliyah Edwards was the runner-up last season, and Mist guard Arike Ogunbowale was in the semifinals.

The 32 players in this year's competition will compete for a portion of the tournament's $300,000 prize pool. The winner gets $200,000, the runner-up $50,000 and $25,000 each to the other two semifinalists.

Unrivaled's 1-on-1 tournament will be held Feb. 11 and 13-14 at Sephora Arena in Medley, Florida.

Seeding for the Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament.

Unrivaled one-on-one participants, pods

  • Courtney Williams

  • Jordin Canada

  • Kelsey Mitchell

  • Natisha Hiedeman

  • Rachel Banham

  • Skylar Diggins

  • Veronica Burton

  • Arike Ogunbowale

  • Brittney Sykes

  • Chelsea Gray

  • Jackie Young

  • Kate Martin

  • Natasha Cloud

  • Paige Bueckers

  • Tiffany Hayes

  • Allisha Gray

  • Kahleah Copper

  • Marina Mabrey

  • Rae Burrell

  • Rhyne Howard

  • Rickea Jackson

  • Saniya Rivers

  • Sonia Citron

  • Aaliyah Edwards

  • Aliyah Boston

  • Alyssa Thomas

  • Breanna Stewart

  • Dearica Hamby

  • Dominique Malonga

  • Li Yueru

  • Shakira Austin

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Paige Bueckers, Breanna Stewart top seeds in Unrivaled tournament

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Zelensky says US wants Ukraine-Russia peace deal by June, despite failure to reach breakthrough so far

February 07, 2026
Zelensky says US wants Ukraine-Russia peace deal by June, despite failure to reach breakthrough so far

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that the United States wants a peace settlement between Ukraine and Russia by early summer, despite repeated rounds of talks failing to reach a breakthrough over the issues of territory and security guarantees.

CNN President Zelensky said Washington had proposed that Ukrainian and Russian delegations meet in the United States in a week's time. - Mindaugas Kulbis/AP

"They say they want to get everything done by June," Zelensky said in remarks published Saturday by the Presidency. "And they will do everything to end the war. They want a clear schedule of events."

"If the Russians are really ready to end the war, then it is really important to set a deadline," he added.

Zelensky said that Washington had proposed that Ukrainian and Russian delegations meet in the United States, probably in Miami, in a week's time. "We have confirmed our participation."

CNN has sought comment from the US government on Zelensky's remarks.

The Kremlin has insisted that Kyiv gives up all of the Donbas region, about a quarter of which is still held by Ukrainian forces. Ukraine has refused to cede the territory.

"We stand where we stand," said Zelensky, with the current frontline the basis for a ceasefire.

"The American side says they can guarantee the monitoring," Zelensky said, referring to the trilateral negotiations in Abu Dhabi this week.

"There can be no end to the war without security guarantees. This is an absolute certainty."

He added that there were signs that some bilateral discussions between the US and Russia might impinge on Ukraine. "Ukraine will not support any such even potential agreements about us that are made without us," Zelensky asserted.

Zelensky's remarks came as Russia carried out another large-scale attack on Ukraine's power infrastructure, with several regions targeted by hundreds of drones and missiles overnight.

The overnight attacks follow a recent lull in strikes on energy infrastructure by both sides, which was proposed by the US. Zelensky said Washington had proposed "that both sides once again support the US President's energy de-escalation initiative. Ukraine has agreed, but Russia has not yet responded."

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Zelensky said the latest Russian strikes involved "more than 400 drones and around 40 missiles of various types. The main targets were the energy grid, generation facilities, and distribution substations."

"Energy facilities have suffered significant damage, which has affected the energy situation across practically the entire country, resulting in major power outages," the Ukrainian president said.

Many of the targeted sites were in central and western Ukraine, including the Lviv and Rivne regions, Zelensky said, but the Kyiv and Kharkiv regions had also been hit. Much of Ukraine faces temperatures well below freezing for the next few days.

Ukrainian energy minister Denys Shmyal said the Russians had attacked the backbone of the country's energy grid, including high voltage 750 kV and 330 kV overhead lines and two thermal power plants.

Emergency blackouts had been implemented throughout Ukraine, Shmyhal said.

"Energy workers are ready to begin restoration as soon as the security situation allows."

More than 600,000 subscribers throughout the Lviv region were without electricity on Saturday morning, according to Maksym Kozytskyi, head of Lviv region military administration.

Ukrainian power provider DTEK said the strikes on the thermal plants were the 10th massive attack on the company's facilities since October. DTEK's thermal power plants "have been attacked by the enemy more than 220 times" since the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion, the company said.

The power outages led Ukraine's nuclear plants to reduce their output, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. The agency's Director General, Rafael Grossi, reiterated a call for restraint as the "worsening grid situation compromises nuclear safety," theIAEAsaid.

"Every day, Russia could choose real diplomacy, but it chooses new strikes," Zelensky said.

"Moscow must be deprived of the ability to use the cold as leverage against Ukraine. This requires missiles for Patriot, NASAMS, and other (air defense) systems. Every shipment helps us get through this winter."

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