WCWS weather updates: Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss softball game in OKC delayedNew Foto - WCWS weather updates: Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss softball game in OKC delayed

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. Texas Tech and Ole Miss softball's highly anticipated debut at theWomen's College World Serieshas been interrupted by Mother Nature. Due to inclement weather in the Oklahoma City area, Thursday's WCWS game between the Red Raiders and Rebelshas been delayed by weather. The game between Texas Tech and Ole Miss was originally scheduled for a 7 p.m. ET first pitch at Devon Park in Oklahoma City on Thursday. REQUIRED READING:Texas Tech vs Ole Miss softball live score: Live score, highlight of WCWS game To make the WCWS, Texas Tech took down No. 5 Florida State in the Tallahassee Super Regional, while Ole Miss, the lone unseeded team at the WCWS this year, took down No. 4 Arkansas in the Fayetteville Super Regional. Here's the latest weather updates on Texas Tech-Ole Miss at the WCWS: All times Eastern 7:50 p.m.:Texas Tech has taken the field at Devon Park in Oklahoma City for pregame warm-ups. First pitch is right around the corner! We've taken the field in OKCpic.twitter.com/mtDdTC6wN1 — Texas Tech Softball (@TexasTechSB)May 29, 2025 7:33 p.m.:The tarp appears to be off the field in Oklahoma City. The newly announced first pitch between Texas Tech and Ole Miss is roughly 35 minutes away. THE TARP IS COMING OFF THE FIELD!!#wcwspic.twitter.com/LJtkllKJcr — Ryan Compeau (@Ry_Compeau)May 29, 2025 7:27 p.m.:The NCAA announces on X that the first pitch between Texas Tech and Ole Miss is now scheduled for 8:15 p.m. ET in Oklahoma City. #WCWSSession 2 schedule update.pic.twitter.com/zMS006zBNC — NCAA Softball (@NCAASoftball)May 29, 2025 7:26 p.m.:As noted by The Oklahoman's Jeff Patterson, Thursday's Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss WCWS has been delayed due to lightning in the Oklahoma City area.Per NCAA rules, if lightning strikes within at least six miles of the venue of the event, the game must be suspended for at least 30 minutes.  For every lightning strike that follows the initial lightning strike, the 30-minute clock is reset. The WCWS is in a weather delaypic.twitter.com/dMQE6m23Dk — Jeff Patterson (@jeffpattOKC)May 29, 2025 7:09 p.m.:Texas Tech's official X account (formerly Twitter) announced the originally scheduled first pitch for the 7 p.m. ET game won't happen due to a weather delay. We won't be starting at 6pm ⛈️Updates as we have thempic.twitter.com/uxf2CwxYNT — Texas Tech Softball (@TexasTechSB)May 29, 2025 According to The Weather Channel,it looks like once the current patch of inclement weather rolls through Oklahoma City, there should not be any more rain for the rest of Thursday night. Here's an hourly forecast from The Weather Channel for Oklahoma City: 8 p.m.:Partly Cloudy (5% chance of rain) 9 p.m.:Partly Cloudy (2% chance of rain) 10 p.m.:Partly Cloudy (2% chance of rain) TV channel:ESPN2 Streaming options:ESPN app |Fubo (free trial) ESPN2 will nationally televise Thursday's WCWS game between Texas Tech and Ole Miss. Streaming options include the ESPN app (with a TV login)and Fubo,which carries the ESPN The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:WCWS weather updates: Texas Tech-Ole Miss softball game delayed

WCWS weather updates: Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss softball game in OKC delayed

WCWS weather updates: Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss softball game in OKC delayed USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this articl...
Future CFP formats: Here's where things stand after SEC coaches pushed back on model guaranteeing 4 playoff spotsNew Foto - Future CFP formats: Here's where things stand after SEC coaches pushed back on model guaranteeing 4 playoff spots

MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. — Inside one of the Sandestin Hilton's many meeting rooms, some of the most highly paid and recognizable college football coaches, sitting alongside their athletic directors, tossed a proverbial wrench into playoff format discussions this week. A majority of the SEC's coaches did not support the multiple automatic-qualifier playoff structure that had gained momentum with a large group of their administrators. A ninth league conference game? No thanks, plenty of coaches said. A season-ending, inner-conference play-in game? No way, some of them told ADs. The 16 coaches weren't completely aligned against the concepts, but the room wasn't split either: They preferred a format that is similar to the current 12-team bracket — a 5+11 model with five automatic qualifiers for conference champions and 11 at-large bids instead of the so-called "4-4-2-2-1" model that grants twice as many qualifiers to the Big Ten and SEC (four each) than to the ACC and Big 12 (two each). The stance from SEC coaches — and the pushback from the public, other conferences and even television partner ESPN on the 4-4-2-2-1 format — has, perhaps, altered the conversation around the future of football's postseason as the three-day SEC spring meetings ended Thursday. So, what now? During his final news conference from here, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey declined to reveal his league's preference in a model, only saying the conference is "interested" in certain formats and that he would discuss those in his next meeting with his fellow FBS commissioners. But it is clear, more than ever, just how seriously the SEC is considering the 5+11 model. Take Thursday's news conference, for example. While Sankey spoke, SEC officials distributed to media members a seven-page packet of data highlighting the conference's strength of schedule — part of Sankey's weeklong agenda to lay groundwork for a change to the CFP selection committee's criteria. He and his league administrators and coaches want more value placed upon the strength-of-schedule metric. In flipping through the packet, Sankey identified certain data points and described his conference as "not like any other." His regular season schedule is "unique" and "stands alone," he said. Such an intense argument from the commissioner speaks to the serious nature of the SEC's consideration for the coach's preference, the 5+11 format, instead of a model — 4-4-2-2-1 — that would significantly limit the selection committee's role. The debate now rages onward as conference commissioners will soon schedule a meeting to further discuss playoff options. They have before them one of the most significant and landscape-altering decisions in college athletics history. And the proverbial CFP ball seems as if it is firmly planted in the SEC's court. The league's decision on the two most-discussed 16-team formats is expected to tip the scales — perhaps the final vote needed for either format. Which will it be? The Big Ten-backed "4-4-2-2-1" model or the Big 12 and ACC-backed "5+11" format that may put at odds college football's two goliaths and the controllers of the format itself: the Big Ten and SEC. Such an intense argument from the commissioner speaks to the serious nature of the SEC's consideration for the coach's preference, the 5+11 format, instead of a model — 4-4-2-2-1 that would significantly limit the selection committee's role. Let's dive in. In this revenue-generating model, SEC and Big Ten officials have discussed holding season-ending play-in style games pitting their third, fourth, fifth and sixth-place finishers against one another, with the winners gaining the league's final two playoff spots. Also, in this format, the SEC would likely move to a nine-game conference schedule. Both of these concepts generate more revenue at a time when schools are at their height of financial stress. How much revenue? That remains uncertain, but ESPN is gearing up to finalize an offer with the SEC of as much $5 million per school annually in additional revenue for the SEC's ninth conference game. Two additional play-in games per year could fetch millions more. Along with the extra cash, there is the guarantee of always having four participants and, in some years, a fifth with at-large bids. The argument from coaches is quite simple against this model: too many games. Teams participating in play-in games, then playing in the first round of the CFP and advancing to the national championship game will have played 18 games. Their other issues with this format? Well, it could cause the complete implosion of the CFP as an entity. The Big 12, ACC, Notre Dame and several Group of Six conferences are strongly fighting against the format — publicly, privately and politically, too. The battle has turned feisty on the public scene and could result in legal action over a memorandum of understanding signed last year that grants authority over future format to the Big Ten and SEC. Big 12 and ACC officials don't seem to be backing down. Would the Big Ten and SEC really leave the CFP to start their own playoff with just the two of them? It's not so foreign of a concept as it sounds. Last spring, leaders of the Big Ten and SEC threatened to leave the CFP if not granted both significant revenue in a new distribution model (the leagues will now get 58% of the revenue) and authority over any future format. Some SEC administrators here have wondered aloud this week if an SEC and Big Ten-only playoff is the right path. "There would be no argument that the winner is the national champion, right?" asked one high-level SEC school official. But such a move may be viewed as political suicide for two conferences that are fighting for congressional assistance. After all, more than half U.S. states don't have an SEC or Big Ten school in their boundaries. How would their U.S. senators and congressmen react to the implosion of the industry? Perhaps that's why the SEC and Big Ten have not yet decided on a format, Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin said earlier this week. "That's why we haven't moved forward," he told reporters on Tuesday. "We're trying to navigate all that. That's where Greg Sankey is so good. He's got a great way of navigating and bringing people along together. We're trying to find solutions to legitimate questions and the solutions are not easy. Something has got to give somewhere." Data shared with SEC presidents, athletic directors and coaches this week showed that, in a 5+11 model, the league may actually have a chance at more playoff participants compared to a 4-4-2-2-1 format. "Take the top 12-14-16 teams," LSU coach Brian Kelly says. "That's my personal opinion. We'd much rather have a situation where more of our teams could get in than limiting it with AQs." It's true. Since the 2014 playoff, the Big Ten led all conferences with 59 total teams ranked inside the top 16 of the CFP's rankings heading into conference championship weekend, or about 5.3 teams a year. The SEC has had 55 teams (5.0 a year), followed by the Big 12 (2.4) and the ACC (2.1). But the data should be taken with a grain of salt. It considers conference-realignment shifts (ie: Oklahoma is counted toward the SEC figures, USC for the Big Ten, Stanford for the ACC, Utah for the Big 12, etc.). And it also doesn't consider the ACC and SEC potentially playing a ninth conference game. They currently each play eight while the Big 12 and Big Ten play nine. Perhaps most important, a move to a 5+11 format will necessitate a change to the selection committee's criteria, according to SEC administrators and coaches. Such a model relies heavily on a committee that many SEC leaders publicly attacked this week. At times, it seemed like a choreographed assault on the athletic administrators, former coaches and others on the 13-member committee that selects and seeds the teams. "A committee is not ideal to choose a postseason," Stricklin said. "I question whether it is appropriate for college football." "The selection committee's role is not to send messages, but the outcome of their decisions do," Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione said. Kelly even suggested a move toward more data-driven method to choosing and seeding teams such as the BCS. "We got away from the old model with the computer and now we've got it totally subjective," he told Yahoo Sports. "Can we find a way to bring it more to the middle with a little more information on strength of schedule, quality of opponents, things of that nature?" Much of the discussion on CFP format this week here centered on the committee's insistence on relying too much on the loss column, SEC coaches and administrators say. "Does strength of schedule matter or not?" asked South Carolina coach Shane Beamer. "If strength of schedule doesn't matter, the only number they're going to be really looking at is on the right side of the column — how many loses do you have?" The College Football Playoff is in the midst of examining its selection committee criteria with a goal of revamping the process in a move, very likely, to appease the SEC's wishes. But the Big Ten is another matter. The SEC's consideration for 5+11 has elicited surprise from the Big Ten group. In fact, Big Ten athletic directors, in a call Wednesday, discussed the 5+11 format, andmany of them do not support such a format if the SEC remains at eight conference games. The Big Ten plays nine conference games, something viewed as a disadvantage as half of the league will be saddled with an extra loss while attempting to jockey for 11 at-large spots. Would it be possible for the SEC to move to nine conference games in a 5+11 format? That seems doubtful without an overhaul of the committee's criteria. "If we're not confident that the decision-making about who gets in and why, and the metrics around it, it's going to be hard for my colleagues to get to nine games," Texas A&M athletic director Trev Albert says. Timing is a problem, even Sankey acknowledges that. The SEC must determine its 2026 conference schedule — eight games or nine — by the end of the summer, at the latest. Sankey said Wednesday that he doesn't anticipate that a future CFP format will be determined by that time, suggesting that both (1) playoff negotiations will extend into the fall and (2) the SEC may play eight league games in 2026. "The pressure point for us is we're going to have to make a decision for our 2026 schedule in a timeframe shorter than the deadline for CFP decisions," said Sankey, referencing the CFP deadline of Dec. 1 to determine a 2026 playoff format. "I'm not sure we can work through obligations in (that timeframe)." But why exactly? Every other league has voiced its preference for a particular format. The SEC's decision tips the scales. What's the holdup? Questioned about that, Sankey cited the memorandum of understanding granting authority to the Big Ten and SEC over future format as long as they hold "meaningful consultation" with the other conferences. "We have certain responsibilities in that memo," he said. And, so, the CFP format discussions march onward with another twist in tow: a tune-change in the SEC that could very well put it at odds with the Big Ten.

Future CFP formats: Here's where things stand after SEC coaches pushed back on model guaranteeing 4 playoff spots

Future CFP formats: Here's where things stand after SEC coaches pushed back on model guaranteeing 4 playoff spots MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. — ...
Nebraska Republicans sought to weaken voter-backed paid sick leave. A Democrat helped them do it.New Foto - Nebraska Republicans sought to weaken voter-backed paid sick leave. A Democrat helped them do it.

Republicans in the Nebraska Legislature managed to pass a bill that significantly weakens a voter-backed measure requiring employers to offer paid sick leave. And they did it with the help of a Democrat. Backers of the bill overcame a filibuster on Wednesday with the exact number of votes needed — 33 — thanks to the support of a Democrat in the officially nonpartisan Legislature, Sen. Jane Raybould of Lincoln. Raybould, whose family owns several grocery store chains in the state, was also the main sponsor of another bill that sought to restrict a voter-backed minimum wage law. That bill suffered an unexpected defeat earlier this session when a freshman lawmaker failed to show up for a vote on it. Raybould's attempt to attach it to the paid sick leave measure on Wednesday also failed. By a nearly 3-to-1 ratio, Nebraska voters in November approved a ballot measure that requires all Nebraska employers to provide at least somepaid sick leaveto their employees. The ballot language, which had been set to take effect Oct. 1, required businesses to provide workers with one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked, up to seven days at businesses with more than 20 employees. Employees at smaller businesses could accrue up to five days' worth of paid sick leave a year. The leave could be used for the employees themselves or to tend to a family member. But the bill passed Wednesday and expected to be signed into law by Gov. Jim Pillen carves out exceptions. It allows businesses to withhold paid sick leave from 14- and 15-year-olds, as well as from temporary and seasonal agricultural workers. Businesses with 10 or fewer employees would not need to provide paid sick leave at all. More concerning, opponents say, is a provision that strips from the new law the ability of workers to sue employers who retaliate against them for using paid sick leave. The removal of that enforcement language would "essentially gut" the paid leave measure, said Sen. John Cavanaugh, who opposed the bill. Cavanaugh reiterated that paid sick leave received nearly 75% approval — more support than most lawmakers got at the polls. "The voters wanted this more than they wanted you here," he said, addressing fellow lawmakers. "This is about respect for the will of the voters." Nebraska joins other states leading efforts to counter voter-approved policies on everything frompaid sick leavetoabortion. Some states are seeking to limit thevoter initiative processitself, leading to pushback from voters. Supporters of the Nebraska paid sick leave rollback say they're seeking to protect both workers and businesses. Raybould has said throughout debate this session that teens under 16 will find themselves unable to get an after-school or summer job without changes to both minimum wage and paid sick leave measures. She says no one will hire teens with limited experience and federal child labor restrictions at $15 per hour — the minimum wage set to take effect Jan. 1. "We have to find that balance between business and labor," Raybould said during debate Wednesday. "We have to be competitive, and we have to be flexible." Others went further, with Republican Sen. Mike Jacobson saying that government telling businesses what wages and benefits they must offer employees "threatens democracy." If employees don't like the terms of their employment, he said, it's incumbent on them to find a different job. Sen. Robert Hallstrom is another Republican who supported restrictions on both the minimum wage and paid sick leave. He said the Legislature has the right to make changes to voter-backed measures, asking if young or seasonal workers who would be affected by those changes would "rather have a $10-an-hour job or no job?" The Paid Sick Leave for Nebraskans coalition, which was behind the effort to get paid sick leave on the Nebraska ballot last year, said the bill passed Wednesday would remove paid sick leave protections for 140,000 workers in the state. "Despite thousands of Nebraskans demanding that our Legislature honor the clear will of voters, 33 senators ignored those calls yet again today," the coalition said in a statement. "It will prevent thousands of Nebraskans from being able to access the good life."

Nebraska Republicans sought to weaken voter-backed paid sick leave. A Democrat helped them do it.

Nebraska Republicans sought to weaken voter-backed paid sick leave. A Democrat helped them do it. Republicans in the Nebraska Legislature ma...
Deaf Americans sue Trump over lack of sign language interpreters for White House eventsNew Foto - Deaf Americans sue Trump over lack of sign language interpreters for White House events

WASHINGTON - A group of Deaf Americans who previously forced the White House to provide American Sign Language interpreters during press briefings is asking a federal judge to again intervene after PresidentDonald Trumphalted their use in January. In alawsuit filed May 28, the National Association of the Deaf argued that the Trump White House's removal of ASL interpreters at press conferences and briefings violates federal law. The same group previously forced the White House to provide interpreters for COVID-19 briefings during Trump's first presidency, and formerPresident Joe Biden expandedtheir use when he took office. The lawsuit says Trump stopped using sign language interpreters upon taking office a second time, violating the 2020 ruling by Judge James Boasberg, who at the time said providing closed captioning or written transcripts is insufficient. Boasberg is the chief judge for the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and has been repeatedly criticized by Trump over unrelated immigration rulings. "Federal law unequivocally prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities and requires them to have meaningful access to the federal government's programs and services," the lawsuit alleges. "Failing to provide ASL interpreters deprives deaf people of meaningful access to the White House's press briefings." The lawsuit includes two Deaf people − Derrick Ford and Matthew Bonn − as plaintiffs, and notes that hundreds of thousands of deaf Americans speak only ASL, and may not communicate at all in English. Trump in March declared English to be the official language of the United States, and rescinded a2000 executive orderthat encouraged the executive branch to make services available to people of limited English proficiency, including ASL speakers. The NAD asked the White House to reinstate ASL translation but received no response, the group said in its lawsuit. Members of the Deaf community have long worried about lack of access to ASL interpreters, especially during times of crisis. The 2020 lawsuit from the NAD specifically cited the ongoing pandemic as a reason for having real-time translations instead of providing closed captioning or transcripts. ASL translators have also become anincreasingly common sight at concerts, with Taylor Swift, among others, using them to bring lyrics to life for deaf people. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Deaf Americans sue Trump over loss of ASL translators at briefings

Deaf Americans sue Trump over lack of sign language interpreters for White House events

Deaf Americans sue Trump over lack of sign language interpreters for White House events WASHINGTON - A group of Deaf Americans who previousl...
Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistakeNew Foto - Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake

In an email sent to season ticket holders, the Washington Capitals appeared to reveal that all-time NHL goals leader Alex Ovechkin will play his final NHL campaign in 2025-26. "OCTOBER -- the start of Capitals hockey and Alex Ovechkin's FINAL NHL SEASON," read the email sent on Thursday, according to The Hockey Writers. Not so fast, said the team. The Capitals released a statement Thursday afternoon saying that "no decision has been made" on Ovechkin's future beyond next season, blaming one of its employees for the misunderstanding. "An email was sent from an individual with the corporate sales department that mistakenly alluded to next year being Alex Ovechkin's final year," the team posted on X. Ovechkin, who turns 40 in September, said after the Capitals were eliminated from the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs earlier this month that he would be back for his 21st NHL season. The Russian winger has one season remaining on a five-year, $47.5 million contract. "I'm going to use those couple months (in the offseason) to rest, enjoy my life, then back to work," Ovechkin said on May 17. In 65 regular-season games this past season, Ovechkin scored 44 goals, with the most significant of those coming on April 6 against the New York Islanders. The 895th goal of his career passed the great Wayne Gretzky for most in NHL history. "I'm looking forward for next year," Ovechkin said. "I'm going to try to do my best to play, and my team is going to help me too. ... I just want to come back next year and see the team who's capable of winning the Stanley Cup." A 13-time All-Star and three-time Hart Trophy winner, Ovechkin enters the 2025-26 season ranked 11th all-time in points (1,623). He needs 19 points to pass Joe Sakic, who is 10th on the points list. --Field Level Media

Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake

Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake In an email sent to season ticket holders, the Washington Capital...

 

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