RJ Barrett scores 21 points in the Raptors' 107-100 victory over the Jazz

TORONTO (AP) — RJ Barrett scored 21 points, Sandro Mamukelashvili added 20 and the Toronto Raptors beat the Utah Jazz 107-100 on Sunday night to open a five-game homestand.

Brandon Ingram added 19 points to help Toronto end a two-game losing streak. Immanuel Quickley had 17 points.

Scottie Barnes celebrated being added to his second NBA All-Star Game with 14 points and nine rebounds. Barnes hurt his left foot with 4:48 remaining after a steal. He departed 22 seconds later, only to return for the final 3:05.

Lauri Markkanen had 27 points and 11 rebounds for Utah. The Jazz have lost a season-worst six straight games.

Isaiah Collier added 19 points, and Jusuf Nurkic had 11 points and 13 rebounds.

The Raptors matched their 30 wins of a season ago with 31 games remaining.

Jazz: At Indiana on Tuesday night.

Raptors: Host Minnesota on Wednesday night.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

RJ Barrett scores 21 points in the Raptors' 107-100 victory over the Jazz

TORONTO (AP) — RJ Barrett scored 21 points, Sandro Mamukelashvili added 20 and the Toronto Raptors beat the Utah Jazz 107...
NASCAR's Clash postponed to Wednesday due to historic snowfall in North Carolina

WINSTON, SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Abomb cycloneover North Carolina forced NASCAR to push its preseason exhibition to Wednesday night because the snow-covered roads are too dangerous for teams and fans to get to historic Bowman-Gray Stadium.

Associated Press

The Clash had been scheduled to run Sunday night and has now been postponed twice, with a schedule adjustment, because of the intense snowfall that blanketed the area. NASCAR first condensed the race into a one-day, Sunday-only show, then pushed the race to Monday.

NASCAR said Sunday it was moving it to Wednesday evening "due to the impacts ofhistoric winter weatheracross the North Carolina region."

The race is now scheduled to run one week before qualifying for the Daytona 500, at Daytona International Speedway, where The Clash was held from 1979 through 2022.

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The Clash went to a temporary track inside the Los Angeles Memorial Stadium for three seasons, then moved to its grassroots anchor at Bowman Gray last year.

Its first year was a success but the second running has been interrupted by the bomb cyclone, known to meteorologists as an intense, rapidly strengthening weather system. It contributed to nearly a foot (30 centimeters) ofsnow in and around Charlotte, North Carolina's largest city and home base for the majority of the NASCAR teams.

The snowfall represented a top-five snow event all time in Charlotte, said Peter Mullinax, a meteorologist with weather prediction center in College Park, Maryland.

AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

NASCAR's Clash postponed to Wednesday due to historic snowfall in North Carolina

WINSTON, SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Abomb cycloneover North Carolina forced NASCAR to push its preseason exhibition to Wednesday ...
IOC president Kirsty Coventry says ICE and Epstein files are 'sad' distractions from Winter Olympics

MILAN (AP) — Two years before the Los Angeles Olympics, the United States is already dominating the narrative in the run-up to the opening ceremony of theMilan Cortina Winter Games.

Associated Press Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry meets the media in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via AP) Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry meets the media in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via AP) People take part in an Anti-ICE demonstration, ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) People take part in an Anti-ICE demonstration, ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) IOC President Kirsty Coventry, top center, sits at the head of the table at the start of the IOC Executive Board meeting at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni, Pool)

Milan Cortina Olympics

International Olympic Committee officials, including PresidentKirsty Coventry, couldn't avoid questions relatingto ICEand theJeffrey Epstein filesat a news conference in Milan on Sunday.

Coventry tried to fend them off by saying it was not the IOC's place to comment on the issues but when pressed admitted it was "sad" that such stories were deflecting attention away from the upcoming Olympics.

"I think anything that is distracting from these Games is sad, right? But we've learned over the many years … there's always been something that has taken the lead, leading up to the Games," Coventry said. "Whether it has been Zika, COVID, there has always been something.

"But what is keeping my faith alive is that when that opening ceremony happens and those athletes start competing, suddenly the world remembers the magic and the spirit that the games have and they get to suddenly remember what's actually important and they get to be inspired and so we're really looking forward to that."

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered Saturdayin Milan to protest the deployment of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents during the upcoming Winter Olympics, unbothered by the fact that agents would be stationed in a control room and not operating on the streets.

Meanwhile, the latest collection of government files released on Epstein include emails from 2003between Casey Wasserman, the head of the Los Angeles Olympics organizing committee, and Epstein's one-time girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell.

"From all the information that we have and I believe that the US authorities, as the other authorities, have made all the clarifications needed, so from our side that's not for us to further comment on that part of the security. But we're really looking forward to the games," Coventry said when asked about the presence of ICE agents in Milan.

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She was even less responsive when asked about Wasserman.

"We didn't discuss it yesterday and I believe Mr. Wasserman has put out his statement and we now have nothing further to add," Coventry said.

Two IOC members were mentioned in the documents, although there is no suggestion they did anything wrong.

They are: Richard Carrion, a Puerto Rican banker who finished runner-up to former IOC president Thomas Bach in the 2013 election; and Johan Eliasch, the International Ski and Snowboard Federation president who was one of Coventry's opponents last March.

"I've not been in contact with Casey, the focus has fully been on Milano Cortina, there's been a number of things that we've been focusing on here," said Coventry, who was elected just over 10 months ago and is the first female IOC president.

"In terms of IOC members, we're obviously watching and monitoring the media and we're aware of a few things that have been reported just today and we need some time to look into that and to be given intel."

The upcoming Olympics run from Feb. 6-22.U.S. Vice President JD Vancewill lead an American delegation to the Milan Cortina Games and attend Friday'sopening ceremony.

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

IOC president Kirsty Coventry says ICE and Epstein files are 'sad' distractions from Winter Olympics

MILAN (AP) — Two years before the Los Angeles Olympics, the United States is already dominating the narrative in the run-...
Georgia officer dead, another injured after hotel shooting, police say

A Georgia police officer was killed and another was critically injured on Feb. 1 after a shooting at a hotel in suburban Atlanta, authorities said.

USA TODAY

During anews conference,Gwinnett County PoliceChief James D. McClure said two officers responded to a fraud-related call at 7:30 a.m. local time at a hotel in Stone Mountain, Georgia, located about 25 miles northeast of Atlanta. When the officers arrived, McClure said they went to the room of a person who was believed to have fraudulently used a credit card.

The officers made contact with the suspect, who invited them inside the room, McClure added.

"They began discussing the scenario or the incident with him," the police chief said. "And at some point the suspect produced a handgun and, in an unprovoked attack, fired at our Gwinnett County police officers."

'Dangerous and wrong':Gun rights groups slam feds' comments after Minneapolis shooting

Both officers were stuck, and one returned fire, injuring the suspect, according to McClure. The two officers and the suspect were transported to a local hospital after the shooting.

One of the officers, Pradeep Tamang, 25, was later pronounced dead, McClure said. The second officer, Master Police Officer David M. Reed, remains in critical but stable condition.

The police chief said the suspect, later identified as Kevin Andrews, 35, sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Andrews will be transported to jail once released from the hospital. No additional injuries were reported.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation assumed control of the shooting investigation, authorities said.

Police officers identified

In a statement to USA TODAY, the Gwinnett County Police Department said Tamang joined the department in July 2024 and graduated from the police academy in May 2025. During the news conference, McClure said Tamang was from Nepal and moved to the United States about 10 years ago.

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Reed, according to the statement, joined the Gwinnett County Police Department in September 2015.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemptook to social mediaand mourned the dead officer and prayed for the second officer's recovery.

"This is the latest reminder of the dangers law enforcement face on a daily basis," Kemp said. "We are grateful for every one that puts themselves in harm's way to protect their fellow Georgians."

DHS report:Two border officers fired guns in fatal Pretti shooting

Preliminary probe: Person reported credit card fraud

In anews release, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said it was investigating the shooting at the request of the Gwinnett County Police Department. The agency noted that once the investigation is complete, the Gwinnett County District Attorney's Office will review the case.

A preliminary investigation revealed that Gwinnett County police responded to the Holiday Inn Express after receiving a call alleging credit card theft, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Earlier in the day, a person from South Carolina had reported that their credit card was fraudulently used at the Holiday Inn Express.

After the two officers arrived at the hotel, the agency said a front desk manager told them the room was being rented to Andrews. Officers spoke to Andrews in his room about the fraudulent use of the credit card and learned that he had an active warrant for failure to appear in DeKalb County, which is also located in the Atlanta metropolitan area.

At the news conference, McClure said Andrews had a "lengthy criminal history," including multiple felony convictions for violent crimes, gun crimes, and narcotics.

When officers attempted to arrest Andrews, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said Andrews pulled out a handgun and fired at the officers. Additional officers later responded to the scene and the officers, along with the suspect, were taken to the hospital.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Georgia hotel shooting leaves officer dead and another injured

Georgia officer dead, another injured after hotel shooting, police say

A Georgia police officer was killed and another was critically injured on Feb. 1 after a shooting at a hotel in suburban ...
Lance Cpl. Cassidy Little in Peterborough, England, on Wednesday. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

PETERBOROUGH, England — Helmand province's shades of yellow, cookies wrapped in pink foil andsouthern Afghanistan'ssweaty heat have imprinted on Lance Cpl. Cassidy Little's mind.

But then his memory of that day in May 2011 fractures. One moment he was walking through an unsecured compound with his patrol, the next he was on his back, staring into swirling dust and black smoke, his body unresponsive. He had been hit by a blast froman improvised explosive devicethat had been buried underground for months.

"I felt like I had dust from my tonsils to my prostate," Little, 44, told NBC News this week in Peterborough, a cathedral city 75 milesnorth of London. As a trained medic, Little pressed a fellow Royal Marines commando to be honest about the damage to his right leg. Eventually, he received the reply: "It's gone."

The same explosion killed two of Little's friends and an interpreter as their patrol pushed into a hostile area not yet controlled by NATO — part ofthe same allied missionthat President Donald Trump denigrated last week.

"They'll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan, and they did," Trump said. "They stayed a little back, a little off the front lines."

Image: A composite showing two photos of British Marines during an anti-Taliban operation near Kajaki in the Afghan province of Helmand. (John Moore / Getty Images)

Taking long pauses as he spoke and appearing to rein in his frustration, Little responded to Trump's comments that cast doubt on whether NATO allies would be there for America "if we ever needed them."

"When I was hit, I was so far in front of the front line that I couldn't see the front line in my rearview mirror," he said.

Trump's assertions about NATO forces not coming to the United States' defense are incorrect: More than 1,000NATO troopsfrom over 25 countries, including 457 British service personnel, died in Afghanistan. Double that number were seriously wounded. Around 2,400 U.S. service members died in the conflict between 2001 and 2021.

The war, launchedafter the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attackson the U.S., remains the only time that the alliance's collective defense clause, known as Article 5, has been invoked.

After stoking outrage among Britons ranging from Prince Harry toPrime Minister Keir Starmer, Trump sought to backtrack.

Trump praised British troops as "among the greatest of all warriors" in a post on Truth Social, while stopping short of an apology.

For Little, who now works as an actor while serving as an ambassador for a veterans welfare group, Trump's comments sparked an initial surge of anger before he forced himself to calm down. But the president's appraisal of British troops, without mentioning the dozens of other nations who lost soldiers during the conflict, was "not an apology," he said.

"I stood shoulder to shoulder with the Estonians. I stood shoulder to shoulderwith the Danish," he said, sitting in a vape shop and cafe, in a corner of the room dedicated to veterans. "These are people that I've served with on the ground, including the Americans and the Canadians."

Lance Cpl. Cassidy Little in 2011, left, and now. (Courtesy of Cassidy Little; Andrew Testa for NBC News)

Trump's remarks caused fury across Europe and NATO countries, reopening old wounds and casting fresh doubt on the future of an alliance that has already cost so much for people like Little.

Alice Rufo, the minister delegate at theFrench Defense Ministry, laid a wreath at a monument in downtown Paris on Monday dedicated to those who died for France in overseas operations. Speaking to reporters, she said it was crucial to show that "we do not accept that their memory be insulted."

Denmark lost 44 soldiers in Afghanistan, a higher number of fatalities than any other ally apart from the U.S. when taken as a proportion of its population of less than 6 million.

Denmark's veterans gather for a

Denmark's leaders described Trump's comments as deeply disrespectful to allied sacrifices, and veterans joined a silent march in the capital,Copenhagen, braving subzero temperatures on Saturday to decry the president's remarks.

A minute of silence was also observed outside the U.S. Embassy, where earlier this week veterans had placed a flag for each Danish soldier killed in the conflict.

Danish flags are placed Wednesday in front of the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen, some with names of fallen service members or those who returned after serving with American troops in Afghanistan and Iraq. (Martin Sylvest Andersen; Emil Nicolai Helms / Getty Images)

Backlash

In Britain, Starmer — usually deliberate in his dealings with Trump — called the comments "insulting and frankly appalling," saying he was not surprised they had caused "such hurt to the loved ones of those who were killed or injured."

Prince Harry, who served two tours in Afghanistan, said the sacrifices of allied troops "deserve to be spoken about truthfully and with respect," adding: "I served there. I lost friends there."

Prince Harry Serves in Afghanistan (John Stillwell  / Anwar Hussein Collection via Getty Images)

Nikki Scott's husband, Cpl. Lee Scott, was killed in Afghanistan while serving in the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, leaving behind his wife and two children.

Holding a black book containing briefing notes that her husband had taken, she said in a video posted on LinkedIn: "I believe in the difference he and all our armed forces made, and no one should tell us otherwise."

The sweeping response speaks to wider concerns about what Trump's stance could mean for the future of NATO and its relationship with the U.S., already under increasing strain as Russia seeks to test the alliance's resolve.

"Equivocation from Washingtonweakens deterrence, emboldens Moscow, and risks persuading soldiers on the ground that NATO no longer carries the saliency or seriousness it once did," said H.A. Hellyer, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a defense and security think tank in London.

"While the remarks change little for soldiers fighting in Ukraine," he said, "strategically, they are deeply corrosive."

Little recalls the commitment of NATO forces firsthand after the attacks on the U.S. in 2001, and the contrast between that reality and political rhetoric gives him pause.

"For the rest of us that were upfront, getting pulled apart, losing dads and brothers and husbands, we heard the call, we came running, and we happily went out there," he said.

"The trust that NATO has America's back has not been eroded. What's been eroded here is the trust that America has ours."

Lance Cpl. Cassidy Little. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

'We heard the call, we came running': Trump's NATO remarks have shaken allied veterans

PETERBOROUGH, England — Helmand province's shades of yellow, cookies wrapped in pink foil andsouthern Afghanistan'ssweaty heat have...

 

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