FIFA president Gianni Infantino defends awarding Peace Prize to Trump

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has defended his organization's controversial decision toaward Donald Trump its inaugural Peace Prize.

The U.S. president was presented the award at the 2026 World Cup draw in December, just one month after FIFA announced the creation of the prize.

Though he conceded there had been a "strong reaction" to Trump winning the award, Infantino insisted the prize was deserved.

"Whatever we can do to help peace in the world, we should be doing it, and for this reason, for some time we were thinking about (whether) we should do something to reward people who do something," he said in aninterview with Sky News.

The FIFA president, who has a close relationship with Trump, said that "objectively, he deserves it."

US Draw assistant Shaquille O'Neal poses on the red carpet upon arrival to attend the draw for the 2026 FIFA Football World Cup taking place in the US, Canada and Mexico, at the Kennedy Center, in Washington, DC, on December 5, 2025. Chief Football Officer of FIFA Jill Ellis poses on the red carpet upon arrival to attend the draw for the 2026 FIFA Football World Cup taking place in the US, Canada and Mexico, at the Kennedy Center, in Washington, DC, on December 5, 2025. Pierluigi Collina, Chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee, attends the FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Draw at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on December 5, 2025 in Washington, DC. Red Carpet Host Eli Manning and Draw Assistant Shaquille O'Neal arrive on the red carpet ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw. Former footballer Blaise Matuidi arrives on the red carpet ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw. Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella arrives on the red carpet ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw. Javier Pastore poses on the red carpet prior to the FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Draw at John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on December 5, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Photos show Trump and celebs gather for 2026 World Cup draw

Many speculated the FIFA Peace Prize was invented to placate Trump, who has been publicly fuming over not winning the Nobel Peace Prize since it was awarded in October.

According to The Athletic, FIFA's Council and vice presidents were not "consulted or involved" in the award's creation, as they normally would have been with such an initiative.

The prize has looked even stranger in hindsight afterU.S. troops invaded Venezuela and removed its president Nicolás Maduroand his wife, followed by the fatal shootings of two American citizens last month amid an immigration crackdown in Minneapolis.

Infantino, however, pointed to the actual winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, to say Trump was deserving.

"It's not just Gianni Infantino who said it ... (there's) a Nobel Peace Prize winner who said this," Infantino said.

"He was instrumental in resolving conflicts and saving lives and saving thousands of lives."

Machadopresented her Nobel Prize to Trumpduring a meeting last month as she continues to seek his endorsement to be Maduro's long-term replacement.

Trump said that Machado giving him the award was "a wonderful gesture of mutual respect," but the Nobel committeereleased a statementthat said it didn't hold any official weight.

"Once a Nobel Prize is announced, it cannot be revoked, shared, or transferred to others," the statement said. "The decision is final and stands for all time."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:FIFA's Gianni Infantino defends awarding Peace Prize to Donald Trump

FIFA president Gianni Infantino defends awarding Peace Prize to Trump

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has defended his organization's controversial decision toaward Donald Trump its inaug...
Sean McVay 'absolutely' wants Matthew Stafford back with Rams, but will give QB time to make retirement decision

If Matthew Stafford wants to return to the Los Angeles Rams in 2026, he'll have a job waiting for him. Rams coach Sean McVay confirmed Monday that he "absolutely" wants Stafford back next season, but will give the quarterback some time to decide if he still wants to play football.

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McVay expressed as much Monday, saying he wants Stafford back as long as "that's something that he wants to do."

McVay's comments shouldn't come as a major surprise considering Stafford's numbers in 2025. The 37-year-old led the NFL with 4,707 passing yards and 46 touchdowns. He's considered the favorite to take home the MVP award once its announced.

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[Get more Rams news: Los Angeles team feed]

But there's at least some uncertainty over whether Stafford — who is signed with the Rams through the 2026 NFL season — will return for next season. WhileMcVay angrily dismissed the ideaimmediately following the Ram's loss to the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC championship, the quarterback said he wouldtake some time to think things over.

McVay said Monday the team would "respect [Stafford's] timetable." McVay added there was no specific date set for Stafford to make that decision.

The Stafford-McVay pairing has been incredibly successful since the Rams traded for the former Detroit Lions quarterback. Since joining the Rams, Stafford has led the team to the playoffs in four out of five seasons. He won the Super Bowl in his first year with the team back in 2021. Stafford has made two Pro Bowls and was selected to the first-team All-Pro team once with the Rams. He'll likely add an MVP award to his list of accomplishments with the team before long.

Given his success in the NFL, there's not much else Stafford needs to accomplish before he calls it a career. He already ranks sixth all time in passing yards and seventh all time in passing touchdowns. Combine that with his Super Bowl win — and probable MVP award — and Stafford has a pretty strong case for the Hall of Fame if he never plays another down in the NFL.

But walking away from the game right now could prove difficult. Stafford just had the best season of his career and was able to take the Rams on a deep playoff run. The temptation to try and win one more ring might prove too strong, especially with Stafford showing little to no signs of decline in 2025.

Sean McVay 'absolutely' wants Matthew Stafford back with Rams, but will give QB time to make retirement decision

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Winter Olympics 2026: How does curling work?

Curling, which first became an organized sport in Scotland, traces its roots to the 1500s. Historians say paintings from the time depict people sliding rocks across frozen ponds. It took a few centuries for the world to appreciate all that feverish sweeping, though: Curling made its Olympic debut in 1924 — but didn't return as an official competitive event until the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan.

Chances are if you didn't grow up in Canada (where curling is most popular), you may think of the sport as people in funny pants — we're lookin' at you, Norwegians — pushing an oversized puck across a skating rink.Au contraire.Curling requires finesse, strategy and serious athleticism — the sweeping can burn up to 500 calories per hour. And because players use their brains as much as their bodies, people call it "chess on ice."

A general view of the action during the Mixed Doubles Round Robin Curling Session on day two of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the National Aquatics Centre, Beijing, China. Picture date: Sunday February 6, 2022. (Photo by Andrew Milligan/PA Images via Getty Images)

Rules

For starters, players aim to guide heavy, granitestonesacross a sheet of textured ice toward a target area called thehousethat is split into four rings. (Consider curling a distant cousin of shuffleboard.) Two teams, each with four players, take turns sliding the stones — also called "rocks" — toward the target. Each team has eight stones perend, which is curling's version of, say, a baseball inning. There are 10 ends in a tournament-style game.

This video shows the skill involved, from the movement the thrower uses to deliver the stone, to the sweepers trying to guide it where it needs to go in the target, aka the house.

Who remembers this epic spinner attempt from Bruce Mouat?Remember, curling's as much about the shots you try as the shots you make.pic.twitter.com/1fqTv6L6JY

— Grand Slam of Curling (@grandslamcurl)January 22, 2026

The stone weighs 38 to 44 pounds. Players use brooms to smooth the ice and ease the stone's path toward the house. If a player breaks a rule — like nudging the stone with their shoe — they should be "the first to divulge the breach," according to the WCF. This sportsmanship expectation is part of what players call "the spirit of curling."

Scoring

The objective is simple: The team that lands the most stones closest to the bulls-eye wins.Players win a point for every stone that 1) lands in the house and 2) is closer to the "button" — or center of the house — than the closest opponent stone. (For example, if Team A has the closest stone and Team B has the second closest stone, Team A can only earn one point, even if the rest of Team B's stones somehow ended up outside of the curling arena.) Teams can knock an opponent's stone away from the house — and, through some vigorous sweeping, strategically place some stones as makeshift shields (guards) to protect others.

It is impossible, however, for both teams to score in an end, which last the amount of time it takes to throw all of the stones. Points are awarded only to the team that did better in each end. (Should a team tie, there are tie-breaker rounds.) The best possible score in an end is 8-0, which happens when one team gets all eight stones closer to the button than its opponent. This is called a "snowman" — curling slang for a perfect game.

Japan's Satsuki Fujisawa curls the stone during the women's gold medal game of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games curling competition between Japan and Great Britain at the National Aquatics Centre in Beijing on February 20, 2022. (Photo by Lillian SUWANRUMPHA / AFP via Getty Images)

Fun fact: Curling may be the nicest sport of all

Objectively. After each game, the winners traditionally buy the other team a round of drinks. From the WCF website: "Curlers play to win, but never to humble their opponents. A true curler never attempts to distract opponents, nor to prevent them from playing their best, and would prefer to lose rather than to win unfairly."

Quick terminology

Bonspiel:A curling tournament.Circles:The round scoring area, 12 feet in diameter, with concentric circles 1, 4 and 8 feet in diameter.Curl:The rotating movement of a stone caused by turning the handle.Delivery:The act of throwing a rock.End:Similar to an inning in baseball; in an end, each team throws eight rocks, two per player in alternating fashion. Tournament-style games run for 10 ends.Front End:The lead and second player on a curling team.Heavy:A stone that is delivered with more than the desired amount of weight or force.House:The round scoring area, 12 feet in diameter, with concentric circles 1, 4, and 8 feet in diameter.Light:A stone that is delivered with less than the desired weight or force.Rink:A curling team that consists of four players: the skip, third (vice-skip), second, and lead. Also refers to the place where curling is played.Rock:Stone.Sheet:The 146-foot-long area of the ice on which the game is played.Skip:The player who calls the ice and determines the strategy. Almost always plays the last two rocks for his team (but may throw in a different order in some games.)Sweeping:Using a brush to polish the ice in an effort to alter the action of the rock.

Winter Olympics 2026: How does curling work?

Curling, which first became an organized sport in Scotland, traces its roots to the 1500s. Historians say paintings from ...
Two more arrested in Minnesota church protest, Pam Bondi says

Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Monday the arrest of two more people who werenamed in a federal indictment in connection to a protestat a Minnesota church.

NBC Universal Pam Bondi (Aaron Schwartz / CNP / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In a Monday social media post, Bondi said Ian Davis Austin and Jerome Deangelo Richardson had been arrested. Both were among the nine people, including journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort,named in an indictmentthat a federal grand jury returned last week.

Lemon, a former CNN anchor, was arrested Friday in connection with his coverage of the Jan. 18 protest at The Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. The protest was aimed at the church's pastor, who according to demonstrators works for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Department of Homeland Security called the protest a coordinated attack on the church.

Last week's indictment charges all defendants with conspiracy against the rights of religious freedom at a place of worship and injuring, intimidating and interfering with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of worship.

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"If you riot in a place of worship, we WILL find you," Bondi said inher social media post.

Last week, a federal magistrate released Lemon and other defendants who'd been arrested, rejecting a criminal complaint against them. The judge found the administrationlacked probable cause for the arrestsunder a federal statute that a top Justice Department official conceded had never been used previously in the context of a protest at a church.

Upon his release, Lemon vowed to continue covering the news, as he said he was doing at the church protest.

His attorney Abbe Lowell said upon Lemon's arrest that it was an "unprecedented attack on the First Amendment and transparent attempt to distract attention from the many crises facing this administration."

The arrest of Lemon, a well-known journalist, has added to outrage over the Trump administration's immigration crackdown in Minnesota and the recent killings of two U.S. citizens by federal officers.

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Victims complain of death threats as government says it's fixing redactions in Epstein-related files

NEW YORK (AP) — The Justice Department said Monday that it had withdrawn several thousand documents and "media" related todisgraced financier Jeffrey Epsteinafter lawyers complained to a New York judge that the lives of nearly 100 victims had been "turned upside down" by sloppy redactions in the government's latest release of records.

The exposed materials include nude photos showing the faces of potential victims as well as names, email addresses and other identifying information that was either unredacted or not fully obscured.

The department blamed it on "technical or human error."

In a letter to the New York judges overseeing the sex trafficking cases brought against Epstein andconfidant Ghislaine Maxwell, U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton wrote that the department had taken down nearly all materials identified by victims or their lawyers, along with a "substantial number" of documents identified independently by the government.

Clayton said the department has "revised its protocols for addressing flagging documents" after victims and their lawyers requested changes. Documents are promptly pulled down when flagged by victims, then evaluated before a redacted version of the document can be reposted, "ideally within 24 to 36 hours."

Two lawyers for Epstein victims wrote the court Sunday seeking "immediate judicial intervention" because of what they described as thousands of instances when the government had failed to redact names and other personally identifying information.

Eight women who identify as Epstein victims added comments to the letter to Judge Richard M. Berman. One wrote that the records' release was "life threatening." Another said she'd gotten death threats after 51 entries included her private banking information, forcing her to try to shut down her credit cards and accounts.

"There is no conceivable degree of institutional incompetence sufficient to explain the scale, consistency, and persistence of the failures that occurred — particularly where the sole task ordered by the Court and repeatedly emphasized by DOJ was simple: redact known victim names before publication," the lawyers, Brittany Henderson and Brad Edwards, wrote.

Berman, who presided over Epstein's sex trafficking case, scheduled a conference for Wednesday.

Also Monday, a section of the Justice Department'sEpstein files websitethat had contained public court records from Epstein and Maxwell's criminal cases and civil lawsuits was no longer functioning.

A message seeking comment on the website issue was left for the Justice Department.

Uncensored photos

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in an interviewSunday on ABC's "This Week" that there have been sporadic errors in redacting, or blacking out, sensitive information but that the Justice Department has tried to work quickly to address them.

"Every time we hear from a victim or their lawyer that they believe that their name was not properly redacted, we immediately rectified that. And the numbers we're talking about, just so the American people understand, we're talking about .001 percent of all the materials," Blanche said.

Dozens of Associated Press reporters analyzing the files have so far found multiple occasions where a name was redacted in one document, only to be left exposed in another version of the same file.

In other places, names and email addresses are crossed out but not fully blackened out, so they're still visible. Other text redactions can be easily overridden by simply double clicking on them to reveal the hidden text underneath.

The Justice Department has said all nude or pornographic images were redacted from the 2,000-some videos and 180,000 images in the release, even if they were commercially produced, as the agency considered all women depicted in the images as potential victims.

But reporters with The New York Times still founddozens of uncensored photosof naked young people with their faces unredacted.

The newspaper said the images have since been largely removed or redacted after it notified the Justice Department. It said some of the images appeared to have been taken on the beach at Epstein's private Caribbean island while others are in a bedroom setting.

In another instance, the AP found a set of more than 100 images of a young, unidentified female lounging on a bed, standing on a beach and at other summertime locations while wearing a short top.

The images are almost fully blacked out so only the person's arms and legs are clearly visible, save for the very last image, a profile photo that is completely unredacted and reveals her face.

Elsewhere in the files, the face of one of Epstein's alleged underage victims was clearly shown on an organizational chart created by federal investigators.

Practical consequences in an unrelated court case

At an unrelated sex trafficking trial in New York on Monday, lawyers for twohigh-end real estate brokersand their brother asked for a mistrial because their names had appeared in some of the Epstein documents.

Deanna Paul, a defense lawyer at the trial of Tal, Oren and Alon Alexander, said prosecutors had "destroyed the possibility of a fair trial" by letting documents get out that falsely suggested an association with Epstein. The brothers have pleaded not guilty to drugging and raping multiple girls and women from 2008 to 2021. They aren't accused of having anything to do with Epstein's abuse of underage girls.

Judge Valerie E. Caproni rejected the mistrial request after she individually questioned jurors, all of whom said they hadn't seen any news about the brothers. Still, she confronted a prosecutor about the matter, asking, "Government, really?"

"Yes, I understand where the court's coming from," replied Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Espinosa.

She said the documents had been withdrawn from public circulation.

__ The AP is reviewing the documents released by the Justice Department in collaboration with journalists from CBS, NBC, MS NOW and CNBC. Journalists from each newsroom are working together to examine the files and share information about what is in them. Each outlet is responsible for its own independent news coverage of the documents.

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