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Kendal Grey captures WWE NXT Women's Championship at The Great American Bash

Kendal Grey came into her match against Lola Vice as the up-and-coming rookie ready to make a major splash and put the rest of the WWE NXT roster on notice at The Great American Bash.

She stepped into the ring against the NXT women’s champion and hoped that, by the end of Sunday night, she would leave the WWE Performance Center as the new title holder. Grey, donning Kurt Angle-inspired gear, got it done.

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Grey and Vice were sprawled out on the mat, attempting to pin one another. Both competitors got their shoulders up at the last second. The two traded forearm shots. Grey ran toward Vice, avoiding the spinning backfist. She used the middle turnbuckle to hit the Shades of Grey on Vice. She then pinned Vice for the victory.

The celebration with WWE women’s speed champion Wren Sinclair and her family began. Grey picked up the NXT Women’s Championship on her third try, dispatching Vice, whose reign as champ came to an end after 85 days.

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Grey has only been on the NXT roster since April. She was the WWE Evolve women’s champion for 146 days before she was promoted to NXT. She got her first shot at the NXT Women’s Championship at New Year’s Evil but lost to Jacy Jayne. At Stand & Deliver, she lost in a triple threat to Jayne and Vice, who won the title.

Now, after attempt No. 3, Grey can finally call herself the NXT women’s champion.

Vice is still the AAA mixed tag team champion with Mr. Iguana. She’s appeared on AAA a bunch recently, signaling a possible program in the Mexican promotion coming soon.

For now, Grey will have to see who comes after the NXT Women’s Championship.

US military touts work to assist in Venezuela following deadly earthquakes

The U.S. military has been working to assist in Venezuela after the South American nation was rocked by deadly earthquakes last week.

"At the direction of U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), U.S. military capabilities continue arriving in Venezuela today to support ongoing U.S. earthquake relief efforts requested by the Venezuelan government and led by the U.S. State Department," SOUTHCOM said in a Sunday press release regarding the relief efforts.

"SOUTHCOM operations are completely self-sustaining, with personnel on the ground requiring zero local resources as they work tirelessly to deliver critical relief to the people of Venezuela," SOUTHCOM noted.

Venezuelan National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez indicated Sunday that the death toll from the earthquakes had reached 1,450.

AMERICAN RESCUE TEAMS PULL INFANT ALIVE FROM RUBBLE IN VENEZUELA DAYS AFTER DEVASTATING TWIN EARTHQUAKES

"Marines on the ground, saving lives," SOUTHCOM declared in a Sunday post on X.

"U.S. Marines in Venezuela are supporting U.S. and international first responders during search and rescue efforts in areas hardest-hit by the earthquakes," the post, which included several photos, continued.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION PLEDGES $150M IN AID, DEPLOYS NAVY WARSHIPS AFTER DEADLY VENEZUELA EARTHQUAKES

"The @DeptofWar continues to work closely with the @StateDept to support earthquake relief efforts and deliver assistance to the Venezuelan communities of greatest need. At the direction of #SOUTHCOM, U.S. military forces are supporting U.S. disaster assistance to the people of Venezuela in the aftermath of the June 24, 2026, earthquakes," the post noted.

ARGENTINE SOCCER PLAYER LUCAS TREJO LOSES WIFE, TWO CHILDREN IN VENEZUELA EARTHQUAKE BUILDING COLLAPSE: REPORT

"Racing against the clock to save lives in Venezuela: First responders assist a U.S. Marine climbing through rubble during a search for survivors in earthquake-damaged structures," SOUTHCOM wrote in a different post on X. "Operating day and night, these crews continue to support international search and rescue operations across the hardest-hit communities."

Mamdani-backed socialists look to take New York playbook nationwide and more top headlines

1. Mamdani-backed socialists look to take NYC playbook nationwide

2. Seven arrested after National Mall vandalism 

3. US, Iran agree to stand down, continue negotiations

DISASTER ZONE — Survivors blast officials for eating arepas and posing while bodies lay buried. Continue reading …

BACK IN PLAY — Alex Murdaugh returns to court as defense argues for retrial move after clerk scandal poisoned jury pool. Continue reading …

DEADLY ATTACK — Trio accused of fatally stabbing Texas mother of 5 in broad daylight. Continue reading …

FATAL FLIGHT — Aircraft 'fell almost vertically,' killing 11 and barely missing a neighborhood. Continue reading …

LOSING BET — Dave Ramsey’s daughter warns of money habit ‘taking down a generation’. Continue reading …

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DC CLASH — Trump floats seizing federal control if socialist wins the capital's mayoral race. Continue reading …

CLOSE CALL — Senator taken to hospital after driver's medical emergency triggers car crash. Continue reading …

EXIT STAGE LEFT — Biden's latest awkward stage moment goes viral after Democratic gala speech. Continue reading …

SILICON SQUEEZE — AOC targets tech giants for breakup over surging processor costs and AI strain. Continue reading …

Click here for more cartoons…
 

CONTESTED GROUND — DHS chief clashes with Tapper over Haiti deportations after Supreme Court ruling. Continue reading …

DIGITAL FOOTPRINT — Deleted posts trashing Harris, interracial couples and Old Glory haunt Dem candidate. Continue reading …

PARTY POLITICS — Mamdani claims democratic socialists can win ‘anywhere’ as Democrats feud over party’s future. Continue reading …

PRAYER PENALTY — Orthodox Jew penalized thousands of dollars for hosting religious meetings in home. Continue reading …

CHAD WOLF — America cannot ignore China’s economic attack on US industry. Continue reading … 

JOE ABRAHAM — Famed economists warned us about big government power. Katie paid the ultimate price. Continue reading …

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OPEN SEASON — Caitlin Clark controversy explodes as WNBA faces brutal timeline of mistreatment of star. Continue reading …

STILL FRESH — Archaeologists uncover freeze-dried potatoes older than the US in 'excellent' condition. Continue reading …

PAPER TRAIL — Singer baffled after album artwork shredded as packing for Taylor Swift merch. Continue reading …

AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ — Test yourself on cruise controversies and wedding whispers. Take the quiz here …

Tune in to hear how one songwriter turned chart-topping country hits into an off-Broadway musical celebrating the pursuit of the American dream. Check it out ...

What's it looking like in your neighborhood? Continue reading…






 

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America's lifespan has doubled since 1776 — experts reveal what changed

Americans today live roughly twice as long, on average, as they did when the Declaration of Independence was signed.

When the nation was founded in 1776, life expectancy was around 35 to 40 years old, historians estimate. However, someone who survived childhood in colonial America often lived into their 60s or even 70s.

Today, the average lifespan is about 79 years old, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

FILTERED WATER AT SPECIFIC AGES COULD ADD MONTHS TO YOUR LIFESPAN DECADES LATER, NEW STUDY FINDS

The improvement in lifespan over the centuries has been largely attributed to reduced deaths in infancy and from infectious diseases, multiple researchers have stated. Advances in sanitation, clean water, nutrition, vaccination and medical care have also contributed to lower mortality rates.

"Much of this vast discrepancy is related to the extremely high rates of infant, childhood and maternal mortality," Dr. Omer Awan, physician and professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, told Fox News Digital.

"Childbirth was dangerous, and without antibiotics and vaccines, many infectious diseases, such as measles, smallpox and pneumonia, were deadly," he went on. "Now we have cleaner water and sanitation, vaccines and antibiotics that have significantly prolonged life."

Advances in treatments of chronic diseases such as high blood pressure, cancer and diabetes have also significantly prolonged life, the Harvard-trained doctor noted.

WANT TO AGE BETTER? RESEARCHERS SAY 4-MINUTE ROUTINE MAY HELP PREVENT DANGEROUS FALLS

According to the CDC, improved prevention and treatment of high blood pressure has helped reduce deaths from heart disease and stroke, two of the nation's leading causes of death.

Mia Kazanjian, MD, a Stanford-trained body and breast radiologist with an interest in longevity who is based in Greenwich, Connecticut, attributes the shorter life expectancy in the 1700s to suboptimal sanitation, poor hygiene and limited medical treatments.

"Many babies and children died from infections like dysentery, diphtheria, scarlet fever and pneumonia," she told Fox News Digital. Children who survived into adulthood often succumbed to infections like tuberculosis, cholera and typhoid fever.

Maternal mortality has also fallen dramatically over the past century due to advances in antibiotics, blood transfusions and safer obstetric care, according to the CDC.

Kazanjian pointed to several key advancements over the centuries that contributed to longevity improvements, including the development of early municipal water systems that provided cleaner drinking sources.

"Sewer system networks were built, the first in Brooklyn in 1857," she said. "These allowed people to drink clean water and dispose of waste. Indoor plumbing with toilets and bathrooms became more widespread."

At this time, people’s understanding of disease started to improve, and public health measures were developed to minimize risk.

During the late 1800s, germ theory became widely accepted in medicine and public health, helping shape the Sanitary Era, the expert said.

COULD 'HUMANMAXXING' ACTUALLY HELP YOU LIVE LONGER? HERE'S WHAT EXPERTS SAY

"The Federal Quarantine Act of 1878 allowed the government to prevent spread of infection from out of the country, from epidemics like yellow fever," she said. "Food safety regulations went into effect in 1906, when the Pure Food and Drug Act and Federal Meat Inspection Act were passed."

By 1900, the average life expectancy was about 49 years old, according to the National Vitals Statistics Report.

Another major landmark in increasing lifespan came with the development of vaccines and antibiotics to prevent and treat disease, Kazanjian noted.

"Jenner developed the smallpox vaccine in 1796, Pasteur created vaccines for rabies and anthrax in the 1880s, and several scientists created vaccines for polio, measles, influenza, mumps and rubella in the mid 1900s," she said.

"Antibiotics proliferated in the 1940s, specifically penicillin and tetracycline. By 1950, the US life expectancy was about 68 years old."

FINDING THE SLEEP 'SWEET SPOT' COULD HELP YOU LIVE LONGER, STUDY SUGGESTS

From the mid-20th century to 2014, life expectancy continued to rise, Kazanjian said, largely due to "major gains" in medical knowledge of ways to prevent heart disease and stroke.

Public health campaigns promoting smoking cessation also played a role, as declining smoking rates helped reduce deaths from lung cancer, heart disease and stroke, according to the CDC.

"Motor vehicles became safer and carseats became staples," Kazanjian noted.

According to the National Institutes of Health, advances in emergency medical services and trauma care have substantially reduced deaths after serious injuries.

Development of pharmaceuticals for cardiovascular disease and cancer also contributed to longer lives, according to Kazanjian.

Modern longevity is more focused on preventing chronic disease and less about surviving childhood infections, noted Nneoma Oparaji, MD, a triple board-certified media physician specializing in obesity, lifestyle and internal medicine.

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"The next frontier will be less about living longer, but more about living healthier longer," Houston-based Oparaji told Fox News Digital.

Kazanjian pointed out that between 2014 and 2026, there has been a fall and a rise in lifespan.

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"The fall was due to young adult deaths from drug overdoses, particularly the opioid epidemic, suicides and alcohol-related deaths," she told Fox News Digital.

The COVID-19 pandemic reduced U.S. life expectancy by more than two years between 2019 and 2021 before it began recovering, CDC data shows.

Although U.S. life expectancy has rebounded since the pandemic, it remains below that of other high-income countries, largely because of higher death rates from chronic diseases, substance use and other preventable causes, according to KFF.

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Obesity rates also continue to climb, contributing to higher numbers of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer, Kazanjian said.

"Most concerning is the rise in obesity in children," she added.

Changing cancer trends are also affecting lifespan among younger adults, data shows.

"My generation, the millennials, has seen an unprecedented rise in young adult cancers, particularly colon and breast," Kazanjian said, citing factors that include sedentary lifestyles, poor diet, alcohol, obesity and smoking, among others.

The doctor said she aims to raise public health awareness of ways to improve lifespan.

"We need to get off our screens, move around more, eat a whole food, plant-based diet, sleep seven hours a night, do our screening exams, and avoid toxins like alcohol and cigarettes."

Socialism is only a symptom. Republicans can’t risk ignoring the real problem

The left isn’t embracing socialism. It’s rejecting the status quo.

The political world woke up after Tuesday’s election asking the same question: Is the Democratic Party lurching toward socialism?

Maybe.

DEMOCRATS' NEW-WAVE SOCIALISTS ARE WINNING PRIMARIES BUT FACE A HARSH REALITY IN GENERAL ELECTIONS

But that’s not the question that matters.

The question that matters is this: Why are more voters willing to give socialism a look in the first place?

Because if Republicans answer that question incorrectly, they risk making precisely the same mistake Democrats made in 2016.

KHANNA TORCHES DEMOCRATS FOR RUNNING 'STATUS QUO' CANDIDATES, ADMITS WORKING-CLASS VOTERS WERE ‘SHAFTED’

The rise of President Donald Trump bewildered much of the political establishment. Too many observers looked at his supporters and saw only the man. They missed the message.

What many Trump voters were saying was simple: The system isn’t working for me anymore.

They felt ignored by political leaders, looked down upon by cultural elites and abandoned by institutions they no longer trusted. They believed that the people in charge either couldn’t or wouldn’t fix what was broken.

FOX NEWS POLL: 'RESILIENT DISCONTENT' DEFINES THE US MOOD AT 250TH ANNIVERSARY

Trump didn’t create that frustration. He harnessed it.

Today, a remarkably similar frustration is coursing through younger and more progressive voters, even if it is leading them to very different political conclusions.

Listen to the language of the left’s ascendant voices.

New York Democrat Mayor Zohran Mamdani has made affordability the centerpiece of his politics. "My focus is on the cost-of-living crisis," he said during his campaign. Elsewhere, he has argued that he is running to "lower the cost of living for working-class New Yorkers."

Notice what is absent from those appeals. There is little talk of Marx. Little discussion of economic theory. Instead, there is a relentless focus on everyday struggle: rent, groceries, childcare, transportation, and the increasingly widespread feeling that a middle-class life is slipping out of reach.

Claire Valdez, one of the Democratic Socialists backed by Mamdani who prevailed Tuesday, framed her campaign in similarly populist terms. "We are more powerful than the billionaires and bosses," she told supporters in the closing days of the race.

Darializa Avila Chevalier spoke in much the same language, arguing that too many working people feel trapped in an economy that benefits those at the top while everyone else falls further behind. Across these campaigns, the message was remarkably consistent: ordinary people believe the system is no longer delivering for them.

For many younger voters, this isn’t ideology. It’s biography.

They look at homeownership and see fantasy. They look at college debt and see decades of payments. They look at healthcare costs, rent and everyday expenses and wonder whether they will ever enjoy the economic security their parents took for granted.

And increasingly, they have lost faith that the institutions that shaped previous generations can solve these problems.

That loss of faith matters.

Because when people conclude that the existing system no longer works, they go searching for alternatives.

Sometimes those alternatives emerge on the right. Sometimes they emerge on the left. But the emotional fuel is often strikingly similar: anger, frustration, disillusionment and a deep sense that the promise of America is slipping away.

This is where Republicans should proceed carefully.

If socialism worries you, condemning the people drawn to it is unlikely to change their minds.

Democrats spent years dismissing Trump supporters as misguided, irrational or morally suspect. In doing so, they often ignored the underlying frustrations that made Trump’s message resonate in the first place.

Conservatives should avoid repeating that mistake.

People rarely embrace political movements because they have spent countless hours studying ideology. More often, they embrace movements because those movements speak to their fears, validate their frustrations, and offer hope that change is possible.

Socialism is not the disease. It is a symptom.

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The deeper problem is the growing belief, shared by Americans on both the left and the right, that the current system no longer delivers a fair shot, a secure future, or a reason to trust the institutions that govern our lives.

Americans are angry.

Some are expressing that anger through populism on the right. Others are expressing it through democratic socialism on the left.

The labels are different.

The dissatisfaction is not.

And any political movement that ignores that reality does so at its own peril.

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Tony D'Angelo retains WWE NXT Championship at The Great American Bash

Tony D’Angelo came into his NXT Championship title defense against Naraku at The Great American Bash on Sunday with a bandage over his eye.

D’Angelo and Naraku’s contract signing led to a fireball into the champion’s face. D’Angelo was feeling the effects of the madness created by Naraku but he wasn’t going to let it stop him from trying to achieve his goal – defend the NXT Championship.

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The champion started off hot. He speared Naraku through a retaining wall, getting the edge early. Naraku wasn’t going to just sit back and take it.

He took control of the match and tried to take advantage of D’Angelo’s eyesight issue. When the referee was going to call for the bell, D’Angelo made clear he wasn’t about to throw in the towel because of his eye.

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D’Angelo got back into the match and hit Naraku with a Dead to Rights. He pinned him for the win.

D’Angelo only won the NXT Championship for the first time back at Stand & Deliver. His reign has lasted at least 85 days and it will increase going into the brand’s Tuesday episode later in the week.

Who challenges him next is anyone’s guess.

He might get Mason Rook next as the newcomer looks to step up and make a name for himself. So far, D’Angelo has dispatched every opponent who has made an effort to fight for the NXT Championship.

AI may spot deadly heart risk in a routine ECG

A routine heart test may be hiding a warning sign that doctors have missed for years. That is the big takeaway from new UC Berkeley research published in Nature. Researchers trained an artificial intelligence model to study ECGs, also called EKGs, and look for patterns tied to sudden cardiac death.

This is the scary part. Sudden cardiac arrest can strike people with known heart problems. However, it can also hit younger athletes and people who never knew they were at risk.

Each year, hundreds of thousands of Americans die after cardiac arrest. Once it happens outside a hospital, survival can drop fast. CPR and a defibrillator can save lives, but timing is everything.

Now, AI may help doctors spot some patients earlier, while their hearts still look normal by today's common tests.

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DIABETES DRUG COULD SLASH RISK OF FATAL HEART CONDITION IN ONE GROUP, SCIENTISTS REVEAL

An ECG records the electrical activity of your heart. It creates the familiar spikes and waves doctors review to check rhythm and other heart clues.

For this study, researchers used more than 440,000 ECGs from Sweden. They paired those scans with death certificates and health records. Then they trained the AI model to look for waveform patterns linked to sudden cardiac death.

After that, they tested the model on separate patient data from the U.S. and Taiwan. That step is important because medical AI often looks good in one dataset, then fails in the real world. Here, the model held up across very different health systems.

Doctors often use a measurement called left ventricular ejection fraction, or LVEF, to judge risk. In plain terms, it shows how much blood the heart pushes out with each beat.

If that number falls below a certain threshold, a patient may qualify for an implantable defibrillator. That device can shock the heart back into rhythm during a dangerous event.

However, this method leaves big gaps. Many people who die suddenly never had that deeper heart evaluation. Others may have a heart that pumps normally but still be at risk for a dangerous rhythm problem.

The UC Berkeley model found a high-risk group with a 7% annual rate of sudden cardiac death. The standard reduced LVEF group had a 4.6% annual rate.

Even more striking, most patients flagged by the AI were missed by the LVEF method. In other words, a routine ECG may hold warning signs that current screening overlooks.

The researchers did more than ask AI for a risk score. They also tried to understand what the model saw. That is important because medical AI can become a black box if doctors get an answer with no clear reason behind it.

To dig deeper, the team used another AI system to compare low-risk and high-risk ECG patterns. Think of it as a way to see how a normal-looking heartbeat pattern could shift into a higher-risk one.

That comparison pointed to a visible feature in one part of the ECG called aVL. This is one of the standard views doctors use to read the heart's electrical activity. The feature showed up in the QRS complex, the part of the ECG that reflects the heart's main electrical signal during each beat.

Researchers say this signal strongly predicted sudden cardiac death. They also say it had not been previously described in medical literature. That raises a fascinating possibility. AI may help doctors make better predictions and spot warning signs humans have missed.

LATEST COVID VACCINE MAY HAVE UNEXPECTED HEALTH BENEFIT, STUDY SUGGESTS

An implantable defibrillator can save a life. Still, putting one in the wrong patient has risks. The procedure can be invasive and costly. Also, many devices placed under current rules never need to fire.

So doctors face a brutal challenge. Miss the patient who needs the device and the result can be deadly. Implant too many and patients face procedures they may never need.

This new AI tool could help narrow that gap. It may flag patients who need closer monitoring before doctors consider bigger steps.

The next phase is already underway. Researchers are working with health systems in Sweden, Taiwan and the U.S. to test the algorithm on hospital ECG databases.

If the tool flags a scan as high risk, doctors could contact the patient. The patient may then wear a heart-monitoring patch. That could reveal more about the dangerous rhythm before it turns fatal.

There is another side to this story. Medical AI needs huge datasets to work well. Researchers said it took about a decade to compile the data used in this study. That tells you how hard serious clinical AI can be.

But it also raises a fair question. Who controls the data when your scan helps train a medical model? Hospitals, researchers and AI companies need clear guardrails. Patients should know how their health records get protected, shared and used.

Before sharing more health data, review health app permissions, logins and privacy settings. Health apps can hold sensitive information, so small privacy choices can have big consequences. Better prediction can save lives. However, trust will decide how quickly people accept these tools.

This AI tool is promising, but you cannot use it at home today. You cannot upload an ECG and get a personal risk score. Doctors are still testing it before it becomes part of routine care. Still, the idea is powerful. A routine heart test you may have already had could one day reveal a hidden risk that today's screening might miss.

For now, do not ignore warning signs. Fainting, unexplained dizziness, a racing heartbeat or a family history of sudden cardiac death should be discussed with a doctor. A normal checkup does not always mean every heart risk has been ruled out. If your doctor wants you to track blood pressure, compatible cuffs can sync readings with Apple Health. Wearables can also flag some heart-health clues, including possible hypertension alerts, but they do not replace a doctor.

Also, know what to do in an emergency. Learn CPR if you can. Look for AEDs at work, school, gyms and public places. When cardiac arrest happens, fast action can help save a life.

Your phone holds your email, passwords, photos, banking apps and personal data. In this free CyberGuy Live replay, Kurt the CyberGuy walks you step by step through simple phone security fixes you can do at your own pace. You’ll learn how to improve your privacy settings, spot the latest phone scams, use trusted security tools and walk away with a simple checklist to stay protected. Watch the replay and get our checklist here:CyberGuyLive.com

8 COMMON FOOD PRESERVATIVES LINKED TO HIGHER RISK OF HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART DISEASE

This is the kind of AI breakthrough that grabs me because it starts with something so ordinary: a routine ECG. Many of us have had one. You lie back, a few stickers go on your chest and a machine prints out a wave pattern most people never think about again. Now, researchers say AI may be able to find a hidden warning sign in that pattern. That is powerful because sudden cardiac death often gives families no time to prepare and doctors no second chance. However, this tool still needs more testing before it becomes part of everyday care. Doctors need to know it works across more patients. Hospitals need a plan for what happens after an AI alert. Patients also deserve clear privacy protections when their medical scans help train these systems. Still, the idea is hard to ignore. A common heart test could someday help spot danger before a person collapses. That to me is hopeful, unsettling and exactly why this kind of medical AI deserves very close attention.

Would you want an AI system scanning your old medical tests for hidden health risks? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com

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Serena Williams criticizes 'grueling' anti-doping process ahead of Wimbledon return

Serena Williams will participate in women’s singles at Wimbledon for the first time since 2022, entering the tournament as a wild card entrant. She’s also in the doubles event with her sister, Venus, for the first time since 2016.

The road to get back to professional tennis was a long one. Williams had to go back into the anti-doping pool. When asked about the process on Sunday, the 44-year-old tennis legend called the system "unprofessional" and "unreasonable."

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"It’s grueling. They changed the rules now. I didn’t know some of the rules. So apparently if you miss a test outside of your window, it still counts as missed. I’m like, I guess I can’t go pick up my kids," she said. "It’s unprofessional. I hate it. I think it’s necessary, but I think a lot of the stuff, if I want to go places outside of my window, I should be able to go without having it count as a missed test."

The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) requires players to provide their daily "whereabouts" for no-notice testing. It’s a feature that has come under much scrutiny over the last few weeks.

Marketa Vondrousova, the 2023 Wimbledon champion, was suspended for four years for refusing an anti-doping test.

Williams called the process "unreasonable."

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

"That was a big reason why I didn’t want to come back either because it’s just so hard. I mean, my life is busy, I run a company, I run a VC company, I travel the world. I have children. It’s like I could be in so many different cities so many different times," she said.

The ITIA responded to Williams’ comments.

"If a tester is unable to reach a player during their allocated hour, then it may well be a ‘strike,’ and three failures could lead to a charge. If a tester is unable to reach a player outside of their allocated hour, it is not considered a strike," the agency said.

"There have been no changes to the whereabouts rules in the last few years," the ITIA added. "We understand the system can seem challenging, but it is there to protect players, not to trip them up. If players are unsure or have questions, we would welcome a conversation with them directly or through their agents."

Regardless, Williams has said she’s always been willing to comply with the rules.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Tom Brady gives Raiders harsh 'reality' check after the team won only three games in 2025

The Las Vegas Raiders have had a disappointing few years.

The Raiders have not had a winning season, nor have they made the playoffs since 2021. The team hasn’t won more than eight games in that stretch, which concluded with a 3-14 season in 2025. Last year’s futility landed them with the No. 1 overall pick of the 2026 draft.

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Tom Brady, a minority owner of the Raiders and FOX’s lead color commentator, put the organization on notice in a recent interview on the "Stick to Football" podcast.

"I would expect a lot of improvement from where it’s been. Last year, we just underperformed in every area," he said. "And it’s everybody’s fault. That’s the reality.

"There’s nobody who did a good job. There’s not one player in the organization, there’s not anybody involved that did the job to the level that it needs to be done at. And everybody needs to improve. And it starts with me, and it filters down to the rest of the players on the field, and they’ve got to go out there, and ultimately they’ve got to perform at a high level."

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Brady said he expected a "massive improvement" all around as the team revamped its personnel from the sidelines down to those playing on the field.

He added that with more reps on the field, a good team should be better from the beginning of the year to the end.

The team hired Klint Kubiak as its new head coach in the offseason after he helped guide the Seattle Seahawks to a Super Bowl title.

The Raiders selected quarterback Fernando Mendoza with the top pick and signed Kirk Cousins to ramp up the competition at the position. The team also signed Tyler Linderbaum, Quay Walker, Kwity Payne, Connor Heyward and Jalen Nailor among others.

Las Vegas will open up the season against the Miami Dolphins in Week 1 on Sept. 13.

DHS chief Mullin clashes with Tapper over Haiti deportations after Supreme Court TPS ruling

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin clashed with CNN's Jake Tapper on Sunday over deportations to Haiti after the Supreme Court allowed President Donald Trump's administration to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian immigrants.

"I understand that. But based on everything I have read, including the U.N. and Human Rights Watch, it doesn’t sound safe for Haitians. More than 8,100 killings documented last year, those weren’t Americans," Tapper said. "Haiti is among the top five countries with the highest rates of rape and sexual abuse, with more than 1,200 cases of sexual violence last year. That’s not Americans; 1.4 million people have been displaced. Those aren’t Americans."

"Is there a question in that?" Mullin replied to Tapper's monologue.

Tapper began by asking whether all affected migrants would be deported and when removals would start.

SUPREME COURT'S LATEST IMMIGRATION RULING WILL CAUSE AMERICANS TO 'DIE AND SUFFER' ATTORNEY WARNS

"Will you be deporting all of them?" Tapper asked. "Will they be all deported back to their home countries, Haiti and Syria? And when will these deportations start? Will it be immediately?"

Mullin said TPS was not intended to become a permanent immigration status and said beneficiaries had time to pursue other options.

"Temporary Protected Status was never intended to be permanent," Mullin said. "The whole time these individuals have been here underneath the Temporary Protected Status, they could have applied for a visa. They could have applied for LPR. They could have applied for different directions."

HOUSE REPUBLICANS DEFY TRUMP TO SHIELD HAITIANS FROM DEPORTATION

Tapper pressed Mullin on whether Haiti was safe enough for returns, pointing to the State Department's April Level 4 "Do Not Travel" advisory and warnings about crime, terrorism, kidnapping, unrest and limited health care.

"That do not travel is not for Haitians," Mullin said. "That’s do not travel for the United States, because they are kidnapping or trying to kidnap individuals from the United States because they feel like their family has the money to pay the ransom."

Tapper countered that U.N. and Human Rights Watch reports showed Haitian victims, citing killings, sexual violence and displacement.

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"I understand that," Tapper said. "But based on everything I have read, including the U.N. and Human Rights Watch, it doesn’t sound safe for Haitians."

Tapper then asked how deportations could happen while commercial flights to Port-au-Prince are restricted because of gunfire and gang violence.

Mullin said DHS has deportation-flight options where commercial travel is limited.

"We have several options for deporting individuals, because we have deportation flights, where we can get into areas where maybe commercial travel can’t go to," Mullin said. "We expect to have pretty full flights going back to Haiti and going back to some of these countries where TPS has been eliminated."

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Mullin said the administration would provide travel assistance to migrants who choose to leave.

"We will provide the travel for them," Mullin said. "And, like I said, we will give them $2,100 roughly to go back home."

The Supreme Court on Thursday reversed lower court orders that delayed TPS terminations for Haiti and Syria. The court said the TPS statute bars judicial review of nonconstitutional claims and that Haitian challengers were unlikely to succeed on an equal protection claim.

TPS was created by Congress in 1990 for nationals who cannot safely return home because of armed conflict, disaster or extraordinary temporary conditions. The Supreme Court said Haiti’s TPS designation followed the 2010 earthquake and Syria’s followed the civil war that began in 2011.