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  • Nearly 6 in 10 Women Will Develop Heart Disease, Stroke by 2050. What to Know

    Nearly 6 in 10 Women Will Develop Heart Disease, Stroke by 2050. What to Know

    Younger female checking blood pressure at homeShare on Pinterest
    Narly 60% of U.S. women could have at least one type of cardiovascular disease by 2050. Ana Luz Crespi/Stocksy
    • Researchers say the heart health of American women will decline over the next 25 years if current trends continue.
    • A new AHA scientific statement projects that 60% of U.S. women will have at least one type of cardiovascular disease, 25% will have diabetes, and 60% will have obesity by 2050.
    • The authors say these trends are driven by rising rates of conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes.

    The American Heart Association (AHA) projects that the cardiovascular health of females in the United States will decline significantly over the next 25 years.

    In a scientific statement published on February 25 in Circulation, the association reports that nearly 60% of U.S. women will have at least one type of cardiovascular disease by 2050.

    The authors of the statement say the downward trend in women’s heart health will cut across all age groups, all ethnicities, and all types of cardiovascular disease.

    The authors also projected that rates of high cholesterol will decrease during the next quarter-century.

    The scientific statements come on the heels of a recent study suggesting that women typically have less artery-clogging plaque than men, but still face higher rates of cardiovascular events like heart attacks.

    The reports are part of the AHA’s campaign to educate women about cardiovascular disease during American Heart Month.

    “Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death for women and remains their number one health risk overall,” Stacey Rosen, MD, volunteer president of the AHA, executive director of the Katz Institute for Women’s Health, and senior vice president of women’s health at Northwell Health in New York City, said in a statement.

    Cardiovascular disease can affect women of all ages, with risk factors like high blood pressure driving the onset in younger females.

    “We know the factors that contribute to heart disease and stroke begin early in life, even among young women and girls,” Rosen said in a statement.

    “The impact is even greater among those experiencing adverse social determinants of health such as poverty, low literacy, rural residence, and other psychosocial stressors. Identifying the types of trends outlined in this report is critical to making meaningful changes that can reverse this course,” Rosen said.

    The AHA’s report noted that the expected increase in cardiovascular disease underscores the need for greater awareness and prevention strategies for U.S. women and medical professionals alike.

    “We have done a great job decreasing deaths from big cardiovascular events like heart attacks and strokes, but these data suggest that we need to really refocus our efforts on health, wellness, and prevention,” said first study author Karen Joynt Maddox, MD, a professor of medicine and public health and the co-director of the Center for Advancing Health Services, Policy & Economics Research at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, in a statement.

    Jennifer Wong, MD, a cardiologist and medical director of Non-Invasive Cardiology at MemorialCare Heart and Vascular Institute at Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, CA, wasn’t involved in the scientific statement, but said it raises serious concerns.

    “The overall rise in cardiovascular disease, despite reductions in hyperlipidemia and improvements in diet, physical activity, and smoking rates, is unexpected and concerning,” Wong told Healthline.

    “The rising prevalence of risk factors such as diabetes and hypertension, along with the marked increase in obesity among girls, is alarming,” she said.

    The authors of the AHA scientific statement said they expect several health issues to emerge by 2050 if current trends continue. Among their predictions:

    • Nearly 60% of U.S. women will have high blood pressure. That compares with fewer than 50% today.
    • More than 25% of U.S. women will have diabetes, compared to about 15% currently.
    • More than 60% of U.S. women will have obesity, compared to about 44% today.

    The authors noted that older women will continue to have higher rates of cardiovascular disease. However, they said the rates among younger women will climb substantially. Among their projections:

    • Nearly a third of U.S. women ages 22 to 44 will have some type of cardiovascular disease by 2050, compared to 1 in 4 now.
    • More than a third of women ages 22 to 44 will have high blood pressure, an increase of 11%.
    • More than 1 in 6 women ages 22 to 44 will have obesity, a rise of 18%.
    • Diabetes rates for women in this age group will more than double, from 6% to nearly 16%.

    The authors added that the trends will be similar among girls ages 2 to 19. Among those predictions:

    • Nearly 32% of girls in this age group will have obesity by 2050, an increase of 12%.
    • More than 60% of these girls will have inadequate physical activity, and more than half will have unhealthy diets.

    “This trend in increased health risks among girls and young women is particularly disturbing, as it indicates they will be facing chronic health issues for most of their lives,” said Rosen.

    Concerns were also raised among certain ethnic groups. The authors’ predictions for 2050 include:

    • High blood pressure will increase the most among Hispanic women, rising by more than 15%.
    • Obesity will increase the most among Asian women, jumping by nearly 26%.
    • Health factors that increase heart disease risk will remain high among Black women, with 70% having high blood pressure, 71% having obesity, and 28% having diabetes.
    • About 40% of Black girls between the ages of 2 and 19 will have obesity.

    Nissi Suppogu, MD, a cardiologist and medical director of the Women’s Heart Center at MemorialCare Heart & Vascular Institute at Long Beach Medical Center in California, said all these predictions are disconcerting. Suppogu wasn’t involved in the scientific statement.

    “I am a little surprised by these projections because decades of ongoing hard work have gone into diagnosing heart disease and creating awareness about risk factors and improvements in cholesterol control, which is great, but the trend of worsening obesity, diabetes, and hypertension is disturbing,” Suppogu told Healthline.

    The report authors outlined a number of steps they said can be taken to reverse the rising trend of female cardiovascular disease. Among the recommendations:

    • Promote healthy choices in schools, community centers, pediatric clinics, and gynecology offices.
    • Health providers should prioritize long-term support for managing chronic conditions such as high blood pressure in females.
    • New research should be conducted, looking into how new obesity medications work specifically in females.
    • Treatment plans for long-term conditions such as atrial fibrillation (AFib) and heart failure should include factors unique to females.
    • Heart health programs tailored to Black women should be developed.

    They recommended a goal of reducing chronic health factors, such as high blood pressure, by 10%, and improving blood sugar and cholesterol management by 20%.

    “Society has come so far in medical advancements, but the same can’t be said for innovation and progress around cardiovascular health, wellness, and prevention,” said Joynt Maddox.

    “Every woman of every age should understand her risk of heart disease and stroke and be empowered to take action to reduce that risk,” added Rosen.

    Wong said it’s important for women to know their heart disease risks are different than men’s risks.

    “Traditional risk factors such as diabetes and smoking appear to confer a disproportionately greater increase in cardiovascular risk for women compared with men,” said Wong. “In addition, women are uniquely affected by sex-specific risk factors, including pregnancy-related complications such as preeclampsia and gestational diabetes.”

    “This is a harsh reminder that there is so much work to do in creating awareness about heart disease and risk factors,” said Suppogu. “Focus is on prevention starting very early on in a girl’s life and across various stages of life, focusing especially on pregnancy-related risk factors and changes with menopause as well.”

    There are several ways females can improve their heart health in their daily lives. Among them:

    “Women should address risk factors such as diabetes and obesity early and adopt preventive strategies — including a heart-healthy diet, regular physical activity, and adequate sleep — to reduce the likelihood of developing these conditions whenever possible,” said Wong.

    Suppogu recommended that females adhere closely to the AHA’s Life Essential 8 guidelines.

    “It is so important for every female to understand that coronary artery disease is preventable and treatable,” she said. “So, it is important that they are aware of the risk factors that cause it, so that they can focus on preventing these risk factors.”

  • Sondra Lee, Star of ‘Peter Pan’ and ‘Hello, Dolly!’ on Broadway, Dies at 97

    Sondra Lee, the Broadway standout who created the iconic roles of Tiger Lily opposite Mary Martin in Peter Pan and Minnie Fay alongside Carol Channing, Ginger Rogers and others in Hello, Dolly!, has died. She was 97.

    Lee died Monday of natural causes in her New York apartment, friend and colleague Joshua Ellis, a former Broadway press agent turned minister, announced.

    The 4-foot-10½ Lee made her Broadway debut for choreographer Jerome Robbins in the 1947 musical High Bottom Shoes, starring Phil Silvers and Nanette Fabray, and the two would reunite in 1954 for Peter Pan.

    In her nine-decade career, she was a dancer, actor, teacher, author, stage director, playwright, film consultant and painter.

    Lee coached the likes of Jane Fonda, Sally Field, Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman, Natalia Makarova, John Malkovich, Amy Adams, Matt Dillon, Cyndi Lauper, Joan Jett and John Lloyd Young and served as a consultant on more than a dozen films, among them Places in the Heart (1984), The Morning After (1986) and The Last of the Mohicans (1992).

    With Lee as the Native American lass Tiger Lily and Martin as the mischievous little boy who can fly, Peter Pan opened on Broadway at the Winter Garden Theatre on Oct. 20, 1954. Five months later, NBC aired it as the first full-length Broadway production filmed for color TV, and it attracted a then-record 65 million viewers.

    Lee then played the young hat-shop assistant Minnie in the original 1964-70 production of Hello, Dolly! opposite Channing, Rogers, Betty Grable and her personal favorite, Martha Raye, as Mrs. Dolly Levis. (Lee and Raye then took the musical on tour with the USO during the Vietnam War.)

    From left: Sondra Lee, Carol Channing and Eileen Brennan in ‘Hello, Dolly!’ in 1964.

    Courtesy Everett Collectio

    The older of two kids, Sondra Lee Gash was born on Sept. 30, 1928, in Newark, New Jersey (most internet biographies say she was born in 1930).

    “Sondra wanted to correct the error but never got around to it,” Ellis said. “However, she specifically asked that her this obituary press release set the record straight.”

    A tiny, sickly child, she received growth hormones and eventually studied ballet, with the endorsement of prima ballerina Alexandra Danilova, at Studio 61 in Carnegie Hall with Vera Nemtchinova and Edward Caton.

    As a teenager, Lee “waltzed right into the YMHA Players” in Newark and joined the revue Hi, Neighbor in the Catskills, where she was befriended by comics including Buddy Hackett, Red Buttons, Jack Carter and Joey Adams.

    Back in New York, she moved into a boarding house on West 58th Street, where she fellow tenants included Wally Cox, Maureen Stapleton and Brando.

    In 1947, Lee heard about an audition for High Bottom Shoes. As she told it:

    “I entered the stage door [of the Shubert Theater] and asked, ‘Who’s Robbins? Out of nowhere this guy comes forward, ‘I’m Robbins. Who are you?’

    ‘I’m Sondra Lee, and I’d like to audition for this.’

    ‘The audition is over.’

    ‘Oh [a bit humorously], I just auditioned for Agnes de Mille for Allegro and they found I was too short, so they let me go. So, I’m going home to commit suicide.’

    ‘Don’t go home and commit suicide. Come over here and dance for me.’”

    Lee moved to Paris in 1957 when she joined Roland Petit’s La Revue des Ballets de Paris with Zizi Jeanmarie. At the invitation of Robbins, she was part of his Ballets: U.S.A. troupe performing in Italy in Spoleto, Florence and Trieste; at the 1958 World’s Fair in Brussels; and on Broadway.

    Federico Fellini saw her in Spoleto and cast her as an American ballerina for the final party scene in La Dolce Vita (1960).

    She returned to Broadway in 1957 for the Feydeau farce Hotel Paradiso, starring Bert Lahr and Angela Lansbury, and in 1961 for Sunday in New York, starring Robert Redford.

    The original production of Hello, Dolly!, directed and choreographed by Gower Champion and produced by David Merrick, opened at the St. James Theatre on Jan. 16, 1964. Lee was part of Champion’s vision of a central trope of scene-stealing actors who somehow manage a balancing act, playing brilliantly off one another.

    In development, Champion insisted that Dolly Levi and Minnie Fay never touch, with their relationship largely conveyed in dance. Costume designer Freddy Wittop gave Lee a special hat for Minnie, one that symbolized the character’s endless curiosity and naiveté: a feather in the shape of a giant question mark.

    Her success led to an unusual assignment: teaching actors how to die. For a month in 1965, she worked with choreographer John Butler on the new touring division of the Metropolitan Opera, ensuring death scenes evoked an appropriate audience response.

    Lee went on to direct cabaret shows based on the music of Stephen Sondheim, including I Know Things Now: My Life in Sondheim’s Words, performed by Jeff Harnar; #Sondheim Montage, performed by Harnar and KT Sullivan; and Another Hundred People, performed by Harnar and Sullivan.

    Her last public appearance came at Carnegie Hall on June 23 for the Transport Group’s concert performance of Hello, Dolly! As the musical’s last surviving original principal artiste, she received a prolonged standing ovation.

    I’ve Slept With Everybody: A Memoir, her 2009 book, carried readers through 50 years of  show business, her lifelong friendship with Brando and her romantic flings. At the time of her death, she was writing her second book, Snapshots Redux.

    A celebration of her life and career is being planned.

  • NBA trade deadline hot topics & unhappy teams with Jason Timpf + NFL Playoffs talk with Justin Boone

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    Kevin O’Connor is joined by Jason Timpf to check in with unhappy fan bases across the NBA. They discuss whether the criticism of Karl Anthony-Towns is fair and offer solutions to the problems in New York. Then, they break down the root of Atlanta’s issues since the Trae Young trade. Plus, what’s going on in Los Angeles and can it even be fixed?

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    Next, KOC shares why Collin Murray-Boyles could be the next Draymond Green and why the Celtics-Pistons matchup is the game of the week. Who should the Pistons target before the trade deadline? KOC gives his picks! Plus, is Ja Morant’s stock rising? Do the Timberwolves need to make a trade to find success this season?

    Later, Justin Boone joins to discuss why the Buffalo Bills parted ways with Sean McDermott, recap the wild NFL divisional games and preview the upcoming championship weekend.

    (0:15) Jason Timpf joins

    (1:23) Unhappy fan bases: New York Knicks

    (9:18) Unhappy fan bases: Atlanta Hawks

    (15:49) Unhappy fan bases: Los Angeles Lakers

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    (25:16)  Collin Murray-Boyles = Draymond Green

    (29:13) Celtics vs. Pistons preview

    (41:56) Is Ja Morant’s stock rising back up?

    (49:19) Do Timberwolves need to make a trade?

    (1:06:23) All-Star starters announced

    (1:10:26) NFL 6 Points! with Justin Boone

    Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts during the game against the Phoenix Suns at Madison Square Garden on January 17, 2026 in New York City.  (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts during the game against the Phoenix Suns at Madison Square Garden on January 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on the Yahoo Sports NBA YouTube channel

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  • 4 KEY offseason moves for Bills, Bears, 49ers, Texans + Saleh to Titans & latest coaching hire reactions

    Nate Tice & Matt Harmon react to the latest NFL coaching hire news before determining what went wrong for playoff losers and what each team can do to get further next season. The duo start with their thoughts on the latest coaching hires, including the Miami Dolphins hiring Jeff Hafley, the Tennessee Titans getting Robert Saleh, the Detroit Lions hiring OC Drew Petzing and the Kansas City Chiefs hiring OC Eric Bieniemy.

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    Next, Nate & Matt deep dive on the four Divisional Round losers, determining what direction each team needs to take to retool and get even closer to a Super Bowl next season. The duo cover the post-Sean McDermott Buffalo Bills and their need to nail the next coaching hire, the Chicago Bears and how they can fix their defense, the Houston Texans and next steps to fix C.J. Stroud and the San Francisco 49ers, who are entering a sketchier offseason than you may realize.

    (5:00) – Titans hire Robert Saleh

    (14:10) – Dolphins hire Jeff Hafley

    (20:30) – Key OC hires: Petzing to Lions & Bieniemy to Chiefs

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    (41:00) – Bills deep dive

    (1:00:45) – Bears deep dive

    (1:06:45) – Texans deep dive

    (1:20:15) – 49ers deep dive

    DENVER, CO - JANUARY 17: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills reacts after a play against the Denver Broncos during the second half of an AFC Divisional Playoff game at Empower Field At Mile High on January 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    DENVER, CO – JANUARY 17: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills reacts after a play against the Denver Broncos during the second half of an AFC Divisional Playoff game at Empower Field At Mile High on January 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

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  • CMA Fest Announces 2026 Stadium Lineup, Including Ella Langley, Zach Top, Cody Johnson, Tim McGraw, Shaboozey and Red Clay Strays

    CMA Fest Announces 2026 Stadium Lineup, Including Ella Langley, Zach Top, Cody Johnson, Tim McGraw, Shaboozey and Red Clay Strays

    The lineup for the nightly Nissan Stadium shows at CMA Fest 2026 has been revealed, including a slew of the young stars that are currently helping drive the genre’s popularity, such as Ella Langley, Zach Top, Cody Johnson, Tucker Wetmore, Shaboozey, Stephen Wilson Jr. and Red Clay Strays.

    Some longer-established stars will also be on the agenda during the June 4-7 festival in Nashville, of course, including Tim McGraw, Keith Urban, Blake Shelton, Luke Bryan and Jason Aldean.

    Hitmakers of the past few years represented on the lineup include Riley Green, Jordan Davis, Hardy, Carly Pearce, Bailey Zimmerman and Russell Zimmerman.

    The festival has some returning favorites from past years making a return, too, in the form of Deana Carter, Gretchen Wilson and the recently reconfigured Band Perry.

    Other performers will be announced later on, including some opening acts and the nightly performers of the national anthem. This rollout of names includes only the artists who will be appearing at Nissan Stadium (which is set to be demolished for a newer stadium), and not the many dozens more who will perform on daytime stages during CMA Fest.

    Four-night stadium passes are now on sale at CMAfest.com/tickets.

    As always, the four nightly concerts will be filmed to be edited into a prime-time special set to air on ABC and on Hulu. As always, the special will be executive produced by Robert Deaton and directed by Alan Carter. No air date has yet been announced for the special, which used to air after Labor Day but more recently has been moved up into the summer.

  • Meet the New Mets Roster, Beltrán & Jones Elected to the Hall of Fame and the Phillies Bring Back a Familiar Face

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    The New York Mets struck big last year when they reeled in Juan Soto from the Bronx to headline an eventful winter. However, after a disappointing 2025 campaign, the Amazin’s have been on a mission to retool this offseason, and thanks to David Stearns, they’ll go into 2026 with plenty of new faces and hope for success.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman talk about the retooled lineup that the Mets have assembled, which includes signing Bo Bichette and trading for Luis Robert Jr. from the Chicago White Sox. In addition to the signings of Devin Williams and Jorge Polanco, the new-look Mets are looking forward to a redemption season in 2026.

    Later, Jordan and Jake talk about Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones being elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, why the Houston Astros cheating scandal caused Beltrán to have to wait and the improbable climb for Jones to make it into the Hall. Then the guys discuss the Philadelphia Phillies bringing J.T. Realmuto back to the City of Brotherly Love, Elly De La Cruz rejecting a big contract extension from the Cincinnati Reds and take a look at the LIDOM Championship Series.

    1:12 – The Opener: New-look Mets

    22:09 – Luis Robert Jr. trade

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    33:24 – Hall of Fame results

    54:26 – Around the League: Phillies re-sign Realmuto

    1:03:02 – Three-team trade

    1:06:47 – Elly turns down extension

    1:09:33 – LIDOM Championship Series

    Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images
Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

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  • 2026 Winter Olympics: Lindsey Vonn, Mikaela Shiffrin, Chloe Kim among those named to U.S. Ski & Snowboard team

    Team USA revealed its ski and snowboard roster for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympic Winter Games on Thursday.

    Leading figures include Olympic veterans Lindsey Vonn, Mikaela Shiffrin and Chloe Kim. Vonn, who won gold in the downhill at the 2010 Winter Olympics, returned to the sport in 2024 after retirement and a partial knee replacement. Three-time Olympian and two-time gold medalist in snowboard slopestyle Jamie Anderson was not on the 97-person list.

    Shiffrin, the most decorated Alpine skier, will compete in her fourth Olympics. Kim, a three-time Olympian, aims to be the first snowboarder to win a third straight gold in halfpipe.

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    “In many ways, making this team is even harder than the Olympics themselves,” snowboard program director Rick Bower explained in a statement. “The depth of our field is incredible, and selection truly came down to the wire.”

    On the men’s side, the U.S. team will be led by three-time Olympian and 2018 slopestyle gold medalist Red Gerard, snowboard cross racer Nick Baumgartner, and 17-year-old Alessandro Barbieri, who’s seen as a medal contender in halfpipe.

    Four-time Olympian Nick Goepper will head the freeski halfpipe squad, which also includes two-time Olympic medalist Alex Ferreira, Birk Irving and first-time Olympian Hunter Hess. Irving’s sister, Svea Irving, qualified for the women’s freeski halfpipe. Defending Olympic freeski slopestyle champ Alex Hall is also set to compete in his third Olympics.

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    Olympic champion and three-time cross-country skiing medalist Jesse Diggins will participate in her fourth and final Olympics. Chris Lillis is returning for the aerials team. He took gold at the 2022 Games.

    At the 2022 Beijing Games, skiers and snowboarders earned 15 of the 25 medals for Team USA. For the 2026 Winter Olympics, they’ll make up nearly half of all the athletes representing the U.S.

  • Mets Trade for Ace Freddy Peralta, Brewers Eye Future With New Prospects & Yankees Reunite With Cody Bellinger

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    When the New York Mets signed Bo Bichette and traded for Luis Robert Jr., many wondered if President of Baseball Ops David Stearns was finished making major moves this offseason. On Wednesday night though, Stearns had one more big surprise up his sleeve when he acquired someone from his past days in Milwaukee.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman discuss the big trade that saw the Mets deal for Milwaukee Brewers ace Freddy Peralta and Tobias Myers in exchange for a package of top prospects Brandon Sproat and Jett Williams. With Peralta now headlining the Mets’ starting rotation, does this addition make them a World Series contender again? Also, how will the new additions to the Brew Crew’s prospect pipeline help them in the immediate future?

    Later, Jordan and Jake talk about the New York Yankees and Cody Bellinger reuniting after his impressive 2025 season in pinstripes on a five-year, $162.5 million contract. The move further solidifies the Yankees’ belief in their offense, essentially running it back from last season—but could Brian Cashman and company have one more front-page deal before Spring Training kicks off? The guys then close the show by making their picks for this week’s edition of The Good, The Bad & The Uggla.

    2:03 – The Opener: Freddy Peralta to the Mets

    29:43 – Jordan’s Prospect Hut: The Brewers’ return

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    38:28 – Yankees re-sign Cody Bellinger

    52:00 – Scott Boras Scoreboard update

    54:37 – The Good

    1:01:13 – The Bad

    1:06:44 – The Uggla

    Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images
Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

    Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

    (Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

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  • AFCON Final Fallout, Shawn Francis on MLS & World Cup 2026, and Can Pep Save Man City?

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    Christian Polanco and Alexis Guerreros react to a chaotic AFCON final and ask the uncomfortable question: was the spectacle a nightmare for the sport? The guys break down what went wrong, what it says about tournament organization, and why moments like this matter for global soccer’s credibility. Christian and Alexis dive into viral territory as iShowSpeed encounters his first ultra fans in Algeria — and quickly learns that not every football culture rolls out the red carpet.

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    Next, Copa90 creative director Shawn Francis joins the show to talk World Cup 2026 coming to America, why he’s completely flipped his stance on MLS’s new schedule, and what the league needs to do to actually become “cool.”

    The episode wraps with a look at Manchester City’s recent slump and whether Pep Guardiola has the answers to pull City out of their funk.

    Timestamps:

    (8:00) – Was the AFCON final an embarrassing moment for the sport?

    (26:30) – IShowSpeed encounters Algerian ultras

    (34:15) – Shawn Francis joins The Cooligans

    (1:11:15) – Can Pep save Man City again or has he lost control?

    AFCON FINAL

    AFCON FINAL

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  • How the SEC & Big Ten are shaping the CFP + Charles Bediako’s impact on college sports

    It is officially the offseason, unfortunately, but just because the confetti has been cleaned up does not mean the conversations about the CFP have stopped. In fact it is quite the opposite. The difference is these conversations are not about what is happening on the field. The debate continues to rage on as commissioners discuss potential expansion of the CFP. Andy Staples and Ross Dellenger discuss what happened in the meetings that were held in the week leading up to the National Championship. The Big Ten and the SEC seem to be at an impasse of how much they want the College Football Playoff to expand. With the deadline fast approaching, no decision appears in sight. Ross explains why these two commissioners hold all the power for this decision.

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    Then, the guys shift from one hot button topic to the next. The transfer portal. Specifically one athlete. Darian Mensah. The Duke quarterback has officially entered the transfer portal even though he has a signed NIL contract with Duke. The Blue Devils are suing Mensah to prevent him from leaving. It is expected he will head to Miami to be their new quarterback. Andy and Ross discuss the differences between this situation and the one with Demond Williams and Washington. They share why it seems like Mensah has a good chance to win this case and how schools can prevent these situations in the future. Plus, they dive into Adidas’ potential impact in this situation and their overall aggressive handling of NIL. Also, Duke wide receiver Cooper Barkate has entered the portal as well, with Miami being a favorite to land him too.

    Later, the big news in college athletics is no longer about football. It is over in the college basketball world as Charles Bediako has temporarily been granted the ability to return to Alabama basketball. There is a hearing next week that will determine whether or not he can return full-time. Bediako previously played at Alabama and entered the 2023 NBA Draft. Although he has never played in an NBA regular season game, he has played on multiple Summer League and G League teams. Andy and Ross discuss Bediako being allowed to play college basketball again and the impact this could have on college athletics.

    The season is over but the news never stops with College Football Enquirer.

    Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti & SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey  Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images, Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

    Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti & SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images, Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

    (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    0:00:00 – Will the CFP expand further?

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    15:40 – Why the Big Ten & SEC hold all the power

    27:44 – Duke sues Darian Mensah

    37:48 – Adidas’ impact in the NIL space

    44:08 – Duke WR Cooper Barkate to transfer

    49:23 – Charles Bediako returns to Alabama

    53:43 – How Bediako could impact college sports

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