Colts cornerback Sauce Gardner avoids Achilles tendon injury, but will miss time with sore calf

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis Colts coach Shane Steichen said Monday that starting cornerback Sauce Gardner is expected to miss "some time"after injuring his left calfduring Sunday's 20-16 loss to the Houston Texans but that Gardner avoided hurting his Achilles tendon.

Steichen didn't provide details on how much time the two-time All-Pro might miss but said he believed Gardner would return this season and that he's not expected to go on injured reserve.

Gardner did not speak with reporters Monday but said after the game he didn't think he hurt the Achilles tendon because the pain he felt was higher in his leg.

Gardner was hurt on the Texans second offensive play of the game while in coverage, but he did not appear to get hit when he went down. He stayed on the field for several minutes before he was helped off the field and taken to the locker room. Gardner later returned to the sideline and watched the rest of the game in street clothes and a walking boot.

The Colts (8-4) envisioned pairing Gardner with two other Pro Bowl cornerbacks, Charvarius Ward and Kenny Moore II, to create one of the league's top secondaries whenthey acquired him in a trade deadline dealthat included sending two first-round picks to the New York Jets.

So far, though, those plans haven't worked out.

Gardner, Moore and Ward have only played one full game together — the previous week's loss at Kansas City after Ward was activated off injured reserve and cleared the concussion protocol. Ward was injured in a bizarre pregame collision with tight end Drew Ogletree in October.

Moore has dealt with multiple injuries this season, missing three games in September and October.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/NFL

Colts cornerback Sauce Gardner avoids Achilles tendon injury, but will miss time with sore calf

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis Colts coach Shane Steichen said Monday that starting cornerback Sauce Gardner is expecte...
Vikings expect QB J.J. McCarthy to return from concussion protocol vs. Commanders after disastrous loss to Seahawks

Aftera disastrous offensive performance Sundayin a shutout loss to the Seattle Seahawks, the Minnesota Vikings anticipate that starting quarterback J.J. McCarthy will return next week to face the Washington Commanders.

Head coach Kevin O'Connellannounced the news on Monday. O'Connell told reporters that McCarthy is symptom-free after missing Week 13 in concussion protocol. He needs to go through a full practice to officially clear protocol. O'Connell anticipates that he'll do that Wednesday and then start on Sunday, barring any setbacks.

With rookie backup Max Brosmer starting against the Seahawks, the Vikings turned the ball over five times, including four interceptions in a 26-0 loss.

What will Vikings gain from McCarthy's return?

The Vikings haven't fared well with McCarthy at quarterback. They're 2-4 in his six starts this season and ranked 28th in the league in total offense and 25th in scoring offense heading into Week 13.

A first-round pick in the 2024 draft, McCarthy has failed to meet those expectations in his first season as Minnesota's starter while completing 54.1% of his passes for 154.8 yards per game with 6 touchdowns and 10 interceptions in his six starts.

The Vikings fell to 4-8 with their fourth straight loss on Sunday and remain at the bottom of the NFC North and out of playoff contention.

With five games left in the season, McCarthy's return gives Minnesota a chance to further evaluate the second-year quarterback. If he doesn't show marked improvement over the last five games, the Vikings will face offseason decisions over whether to upgrade at the position, a year removed from letting Sam Darnold walk to the Seahawks in free agency.

McCarthy's return also gets Brosmer off the field. With backup quarterback Carson Wentz out for the season with a shoulder injury, Brosmer — an undrafted rookie — started against the Seahawks despite clearly not being ready to face NFL competition. He completed 19 of 30 passes for 126 yards with 4 interceptions and no touchdowns in Sunday's loss.

Vikings expect QB J.J. McCarthy to return from concussion protocol vs. Commanders after disastrous loss to Seahawks

Aftera disastrous offensive performance Sundayin a shutout loss to the Seattle Seahawks, the Minnesota Vikings anticipate...
Biggest NBA takeaways at the one-quarter mark: 25 takes on the East, West and OKC's run at history

We've reached the NBA season's one-quarter mark, where every team will have played 20 games by week's end. What conclusions can we make about the East and West standings at this point? Who are the top title contenders? And can the Thunderreallybreak the NBA record for most wins in a season? Let's break it all down.

What's one big takeaway from the East standings?

Ben Rohrbach:The Pistons are legit. The Knicks have a middling defense, though they have been better, and the Cavaliers own a middling record, sitting in seventh place, which opens the door to Detroit. The Pistons are the class of the conference, both by record and eye test, and while we now accept them as possible NBA finalists, they also may be one piece (Lauri Markkanen?) away from more serious title contention against the West winner. The iron is hot. Time to strike.

Kelly Iko:The fifth-place Hawks survived November without Trae Young. Atlanta won 10 of its 15 games with a top-10 defense — and fifth-year forward Jalen Johnson has been flat-out awesome as a playmaker and distributor. Combine that with his elite rebounding, floor spacing (45.9% from 3 on over four attempts) and aggressive three-level scoring and you could make the argument that Johnson should be the focal point in Atlanta moving forward, even when Young returns.

Nekias Duncan:I'll put on my Propaganda Pants: the Southeast Division is the most fascinating group in the East. The Heat's new-but-not-really-new-but-certainly-different offense has madeheadlinesand they're now looking to fully implement Tyler Herro into the fold. The Magic are rounding into form defensively and scoring all of the buckets since Paolo Banchero has been out. The Hawks have ramped up their activity defensively, and their everyone-eats offensive style without Young has kept them afloat. Only a game sets them apart, and they'reallplayoff teams right now. It's been a blast.

Steve Jones:It's a land of opportunity in the East this year, so the overall competition stands out. As I write this, nine teams have records of .500 or above and seven have won 7 of their last 10 games. Detroit has earned its way to the top, but the Knicks are knocking on the door. If you look at the standings, every single one of these teams believes they can beat each other. Makes for some fun basketball every night.

Dan Devine:The East feels like it's going to be a game of rock-paper-scissors. How the teams up top navigate their respective top-line injury absences and reintegrations — Jaden Ivey in Detroit, OG Anunoby in New York, Tyler Herro in Miami, Trae Young in Atlanta, Paolo Banchero in Orlando, et al. — figures to go a long way toward determining seeding, which in turn will determine matchups, which in turn will determine which styles wind up making which kind of fights. Damn near everybody has at least some reason to believe they can win a playoff series, given health and the right opponent. But that also means everybody can get got.

What's one big takeaway from the West standings?

Iko:The Lakers, Nuggets and Rockets are staying within closing distance of the Thunder. All three are in the top 10 in net rating against the league's elite, all three possess top-five offenses and all three have the depth that necessitates a seven-game slugfest with the reigning champs. I'm not exactly betting against a team that has won 20 of its 21 games, but don't be so quick to crown Oklahoma City.

Rohrbach:The Clippers stink. The last-place Pelicans, who owe their first-round draft pick to the Hawks, are about as bad as anyone could have anticipated, but the Clips, whose first-rounder belongs to the West-leading Thunder, are almostas bad. There was a time not long ago, at the start of last year's playoffs, when we figured them for the conference's second-best team. That now feels quaint. How does their deep-pocketed owner, Steve Ballmer, respond? As a buyer?

Devine:Zach Edey: small sample size MVP?

The sophomore center is averaging 13.6 points on 67.2% shooting to go with 11.1 rebounds and 2.3 blocks in just 25.4 minutes per game since returning fromoffseason surgeryon his troublesome left ankle. Memphis has gone 5-2 in the seven games Edey has finished thus far and has walloped opponentsby103 pointsin his 203 minutes. As loudly bad as the vibes in Memphis were amid a 4-9, Ja Morant saga-inflected start, they've quietly and dramatically improved as the Grizz have climbed back into the play-in mix and within hailing distance of .500, thanks in large part to the return of one very,verylarge man.

Jones:The Thunder have not stopped rolling, but the current battle between the Lakers, Rockets and Nuggets has been fun to watch. It's not just that all three are stacking up early wins, it's that they're getting it done on the road (a combined 8-2 on the road as of this writing). The Western Conference is a gauntlet, and a tough week can send you sliding down the standings, but establishing yourself early can open up a pathway for a run.

Duncan:[Looks around]Well, I'll talk about the Thunder! With all due respect to the fun jockeying below them, and the sadness I will personally ignore as it pertains to the Clippers, it's hard to overstate how ridiculous the Thunder have been. They're a top-five offense despite an early shooting slump. They've flat-out been the best defense of the modern era. They're on pace for aneasy70-win season. It's hard to have a bigger takeaway than that.

Power rank your top-5 title contenders.

Devine:1. Thunder; 2. Rockets; 3. Nuggets; 4. Lakers; 5. Knicks

Oklahoma City, a runaway war rig that'sonlynowgetting whole, remains the rabbit everyone's chasing. Houston — the only other team besides OKC to rank in thetop five in offensiveanddefensive efficiency— has lookedsince opening nightlike the league's best rabbit hunter. What Nikola Jokić (and Jamal Murray) and Luka Dončić (and Austin Reaves, and now LeBron James) are capable of doing offensively at the controls of top-four seeds merits respect. And amid a mish-mash of imperfect options atop the East, I still think I buy New York — now 5-2 since losing Anunoby, their best defender and a viable All-Star candidate before his injury — more than Detroit, Toronto, Miami or Orlando.

Rohrbach:1. Thunder; 2. Nuggets; 3. Rockets; 4. Pistons; 5. Knicks

I don't think anyone could argue against the Thunder (20-1) as clear-cut favorites to repeat as champions. The Nuggets and Rockets, probably in that order, have been the league's next two best teams. The Pistons, firmly in first place in the East, belong in any conversation of serious title contenders, as do the Knicks, who have as good a chance as anyone to emerge from the weaker conference, as their record is now commensurate with their potential.

Jones:1. Thunder; 2. Nuggets; 3. Rockets; 4. Lakers; 5. Pistons

OKC has lostonegame since winning a championship. The Nuggets have shown a high ceiling on both ends when at full strength. The Rockets, whose defense is their identity, now have offensive punch with the two-man game of Kevin Durant and Alperen Şengün and the growth of Amen Thompson/Reed Sheppard/Jabari Smith Jr. In L.A., Luka Dončić is playing at an unreal level, Austin Reaves has grown and LeBron James has returned to elevate this team on both ends. And the Pistons have showcased a belief in who they are: a physical defense that gets after you and a two-man game between Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren that keeps pressure on you.

Duncan:1. Thunder; 2. Nuggets; 3. Rockets; 4. Knicks; 5. Wolves

The real answer here is probably the full-strength Thunder, then four different variations of the Thunder missing a role player. They've been that good. The Jokić-Murray-Gordon trio with more defensive answers is a formula that speaks to me. Houston's collective size paired with the Şengün-Durant duo has been a force to be reckoned with. The Knicks are finding the right balance between general flow, off-ball movement, and KAT-centric possessions offensively; I also trust that their defense will return to a more passable form once OG Anunoby returns. I lean Wolves here, very slightly ahead of the Pistons and Lakers. Anthony Edwards has gotten better, Julius Randle is having one heck of a year. The defense, while shakier than we're accustomed to, has worked its way back to top-10 levels. The Edwards-Randle-McDaniels-Gobert quartet isblowing teams out of the building, and this is a group that's fresh off back-to-back conference finals appearances.

Iko:1. Thunder; 2. (fully healthy) Nuggets; 3. Lakers; 4. Rockets; 5. Knicks

Denver's defense was allowing a stingy 109.4 points per 100 possessions with both Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun on the floor. The reshuffling of the Lakers' hierarchy — moving Austin Reaves ahead of LeBron — was necessary and gives them an edge no other team has (James as the third option). The Durant/Şengün two-man game has given Houston a deeper X's and O's look. Once Anunuoby returns, New York's eight-man playoff rotation looks exquisite — and I'm taking the All-NBA-esque defender shooting 40% from 3, with that depth, over Detroit's fantastic story.

Name a contender that concerns you.

Duncan:Well, I thought the [redacted non-Lakers team in Los Angeles] would be a contender, but that seems firmly out. I'll roll with the Cavs, who are firmlygoodbut haven't hit the high notes on either end of the floor that I've expected them to. Injuries have derailed the chemistry-building process; Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley are seeing multiple bodies virtually every time they try to attack, which has put a damper on some of the Beautiful Game flow we saw last year. There's still plenty of time for them to round into elite form, but I'd like to see that soon.

Rohrbach:Cavaliers. Darius Garland cannot stay healthy. Mobley has not taken the leap necessary to vault Cleveland into another stratosphere. Mitchell has to do too much. The problems that have plagued them in the playoffs are starting to impact their success in the regular season, and we have to wonder whether the awkward fits between Garland and Mitchell in the backcourt and Mobley and Jarrett Allen in the frontcourt are their Achilles heels.

Jones:Nuggets. Yes, I have them at No. 2, but they need to navigate this stretch without Aaron Gordon and keep their defense at a high level. The concern is less with the whole and more if a losing streak could bump them down the standings. The Spurs have not gone away without Wemby and the Wolves always make a run.

Devine:Cavaliers. They entered the season with thebest championship odds of any team in the East. They're now4-9 against teams over .500, and their offense has generally been a disaster whenever Mitchell's beenoff the floor. Meanwhile, their core four has played a grand total of57 minutes togetherdue to injuries. Viewed through one lens, that's cause for optimism: Get the main guys healthy, and maybe Cleveland starts looking more like last year's No. 1 seed. The longer the Cavs go without clicking into gear, though, the further away last year looks … and the further away they seem from being the contender they were purported to be.

Iko:76ers. I was alive when they were propped up by some to be the most dangerous team in the East in a year where the Celtics, Bucks and Pacers were decimated by injuries or lack of depth. Philadelphia today is 10-9, sitting in ninth place and struggling against good teams. Paul George's reincorporation has been rough. You could debate some of Nick Nurse's rotations — Jared McCain is averaging just 17 minutes per night a season — but the vibes just don't look great, Joel Embiidlooksdifferent and something is off in the city of brotherly love.

Fill in the blank: The Thunder will win _____ games.

Jones:69. The Thunder have been outstanding on both ends, and Jalen Williams' return only makes them tougher, but they are going to keep getting everyone's best shot.

Rohrbach:70. At the quarter mark, the Thunder are operating at a 78-win pace, largely without Williams, who only recently returned from wrist surgery. Another injury, especially one to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, could send them "spiraling" toward 60-something wins, as could the relentlessness of another 82-game campaign in the wake of a championship run, butat worstthey have a shot to be the third team ever to eclipse 70 wins.

Iko:72. I can't really see this team losing more than nine more times the rest of the season, barring any major injuries. SGA looks better than last season, Williams is back and they're  brilliantly coached on both sides of the ball. After winning a title and starting this year at this blistering rate, why not go for 70+?

Duncan:71. I'm already on record with that prediction so I don't think I can change it in good faith. Just know that I am very, very prepared to be wrong. It feels closer to 74 or 75 at this rate.

Devine:75. Unlikely? Of course. But if these Thunder are historically good — and considering they're thefourth team ever to win 20 of their first 21 games, that they currently boast thebest defense since the ABA-NBA merger, and that they're on pace for thelargest average margin of victoryever— then why not have a little fun and project a little bit of history?

Biggest NBA takeaways at the one-quarter mark: 25 takes on the East, West and OKC's run at history

We've reached the NBA season's one-quarter mark, where every team will have played 20 games by week's end. Wh...
Some US Republicans want answers on Venezuela strikes, despite Trump

By Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Some congressional Republicans expressed concern about U.S. military actions off Venezuela's coast and joined Democrats in pledging to look into possible multiple strikes on fishing boats, although there was no ​word on Monday of any briefings or hearings.

White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt defended the strikes on Monday, saying they were within the law ‌and authorized by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, after some members of Congress said the second strike in early September on one boat to kill survivors might have been illegal.

The boat strikes are the second ‌issue in one week to trigger objections from Republicans, who have otherwise strongly supported virtually all of President Donald Trump's policy initiatives since his second term began in January.

Last week, several Republican lawmakers harshly criticized the White House over its handling of a proposed Ukraine peace plan they said favors Russia.

The latest concerns came after the Washington Post reported on Friday that Hegseth "gave a spoken directive" to kill everyone on board one of the vessels on September 3.

HEGSETH HAD DENIED ⁠ORDERING SECOND STRIKE

Hegseth had vehemently denied that he ordered ‌a second strike. He called such reports "fabricated, inflammatory and derogatory" on social media. Trump said he would look into the matter, but he believed Hegseth "100%" when he said he had not ordered ‍one.

The two Republican-led congressional committees that oversee the Pentagon said they would look into the reports. On Friday, Republican Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Roger Wicker and Senator Jack Reed, the committee's top Democrat, said they would be conducting "vigorous oversight."

Their counterparts on the House of Representatives Armed Services panel, Republican Chairman ​Mike Rogers and ranking Democrat Adam Smith, said they took the reports seriously and were taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting.

Leavitt told a ‌White House briefing that Hegseth had spoken to some members of Congress "who might have been concerned" during the weekend.

AN ILLEGAL ACT?

Some Republicans joined Democrats in saying that, if the allegation were true, the second strike could be illegal.

"Obviously, if that occurred, that would be very serious, and I agree that that would be an illegal act," Representative Mike Turner, a former Intelligence Committee chairman, said on CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday.

Republican Senator Rand Paul noted on social media that, "It is not permitted, under the laws and customs of honorable warfare, ⁠to order that no quarter be given - to apply lethal force to those ​who surrender or who are injured, shipwrecked, or otherwise unable to fight."

Paul co-​sponsored legislation with Democrats that would have reined in Trump's campaign against Venezuela, but was blocked by members of his own party.

Democrats and a few Republicans had questioned the policy of striking what could be fishing vessels, killing all or most of ‍those on board, rather than stopping ⁠them and questioning any passengers.

U.S. troops have carried out at least 21 strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and Pacific since September, killing at least 83 people as Trump escalates a military buildup against President Nicolas Maduro's government.

In November, Senate Republicans blocked ⁠a resolutionthat would have prevented Trump from attacking Venezuelan territory without congressional authorization. Only two of Trump's Republicans joined Democrats in backing the measure, in a show of the ‌party's support for the military buildup in the southern Caribbean.

In October, Senate Republicans blocked a resolution that would have stopped the ‌boat strikes.

(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Don Durfee and Rod Nickel)

Some US Republicans want answers on Venezuela strikes, despite Trump

By Patricia Zengerle WASHINGTON, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Some congressional Republicans expressed concern about U.S. m...
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

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...

 

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