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...
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...
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...

 

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