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Super Bowl champion reveals what part of the college-to-NFL transition doesn't get talked about enough
Super Bowl champion Steve Beuerlein revealed what part of the transition from college football to the NFL doesn’t get talked about enough.
Beuerlein, 61, said that players anticipate the physical side of the game when they enter the NFL, but not all of what comes mentally.
"I think a lot of players anticipate the physical side of it. Understanding that things just happen a lot faster. The guys are a lot stronger. The mistakes are a lot fewer. The margin for error is much less," Beuerlein told Fox News Digital in a recent interview.
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"Every mistake is magnified. I think players understand that. But I don't think they have any way to possibly understand the complexity of the game at this level and the time that goes into preparing yourself week after week."
Beuerlein said that for players to withstand the grind, they need to make strong decisions off the field to build strong habits.
"It's a long season, and I know the season's much longer now for college football players than it ever was. But the intensity and the magnitude of each game and the pressure that's on you to perform and produce at a high level each and every week is much greater at the NFL level," Beuerlein said.
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"And obviously, as you get a little bit older, the toll it takes on your body is much different too. So you've got to get yourself into good habits in terms of decisions, your life decisions off the football field, how you take care of yourself, your diet, your nutrition, your exercise routine."
Rookies would be wise to heed Beuerlein’s advice as he played 14 seasons in the NFL.
He played for the then-Los Angeles Raiders, Dallas Cowboys, Arizona Cardinals, Jacksonville Jaguars, Carolina Panthers and Denver Broncos. He was a backup quarterback when the Cowboys won the Super Bowl in 1992.
He made the Pro Bowl with the Panthers in 1999. In 147 games (102 starts), he completed 56.9% of passes for 24,046 yards, with 147 touchdowns and 112 interceptions.
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Maryland moves to ban surveillance pricing in grocery stores
You grab a box of cereal off the shelf. Your neighbor grabs the exact same box at the exact same store on the exact same day. She pays less. You pay more. Why? Because the store's algorithm decided you would.
That scenario sounds like a conspiracy theory. It isn't. Retailers have been quietly using this kind of pricing for years, and now one state has finally had enough.
Maryland is set to become the first U.S. state to ban surveillance pricing in retail grocery stores and certain grocery delivery platforms. Governor Wes Moore has said he will sign the Protection from Predatory Pricing Act into law after the state legislature passed it, and the rule will take effect on October 1, 2026.
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Surveillance pricing goes by a few names: dynamic pricing and personalized pricing are the common ones, but the concept is the same regardless of what you call it.
A store collects data on you as an individual shopper. It looks at how often you browse certain products, what neighborhood you live in and whether a competitor is nearby, what your income and family size appear to be, and your dietary habits. Then it uses all of that to decide how much you specifically are willing to pay and charges you accordingly.
One Kroger shopper in Oregon decided to find out exactly what her grocery store knew about her. She submitted a data request under a state privacy law and received a 62-page profile in return. Most of the inferences in that profile were wrong. That's the part that should make your stomach drop. Retailers are charging people based on guesses, and those guesses are frequently inaccurate.
The timing here matters. Maryland didn't pass this bill in a vacuum. Major retailers, including Walmart, have been rolling out digital price tags on store shelves. Unlike paper tags, these electronic displays can update instantly. Pair that capability with predictive pricing software, and a store can change what you're charged in real-time based on whatever the algorithm decides at that moment.
Governor Moore pointed to the financial pressure already squeezing working families and argued that new technology should not become another tool for squeezing them harder. Consumer Reports actively lobbied for the bill, which speaks to how significant the consumer protection concern really is. Still, the organization was honest about the result: the final version of the law falls short of what advocates originally wanted.
The Protection from Predatory Pricing Act sets some clear ground rules for large grocery retailers. Stores must keep their prices fixed for at least one full business day. That eliminates the possibility of prices spiking by the hour based on demand signals or individual shopper data.
Retailers are also prohibited from using surveillance data, shopping history, ethnicity or income to set different prices for different customers at the same time.
Loyalty programs and promotional offers are still allowed. That exemption was a concession to the retail industry, and it's one of the places where critics say the law starts to lose its teeth.
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Brick-and-mortar surveillance pricing gets most of the attention, but the same issue shows up in online grocery shopping.
Consumer Reports ran an investigation into Instacart's pricing practices last December. Nearly 400 shoppers purchased the same basket of groceries from the same stores at the same time. The price differences were striking. Depending on the product, shoppers were paying up to 23% more than other shoppers for identical items. Across a full year of shopping, those gaps could add up to more than $1,200 per household.
After the investigation went public, Instacart announced it was ending the program responsible for those discrepancies. That outcome matters. It shows that consumer pressure and public scrutiny can drive real changes, even before a law requires them.
Maryland may have moved first, but it won't be alone for long. California, Colorado, Illinois, New Jersey and other states are exploring similar legislation, while New York has already enacted a related pricing transparency law.
What happens next in those states will be telling. Advocates are hoping they avoid the exemptions that weakened Maryland's version. Each new bill is an opportunity to close the loopholes the retail industry has worked hard to create.
Consumers have been subject to dynamic pricing in airlines, rideshares and e-commerce platforms for years. Grocery stores represent something different, a daily necessity where price manipulation hits people with the least financial flexibility the hardest.
No matter where you live, this law matters to your wallet. If you shop in Maryland, the change is immediate. Starting October 1, 2026, you have a legal right to the same shelf price as every other shopper who walks in that day, regardless of what data the store has collected on you. If you shop anywhere else in the country, pay attention because your state may not be far behind. California, Colorado, Illinois, New Jersey and other states are exploring similar legislation, while New York has already taken steps toward pricing transparency. The momentum is real, and Maryland just handed those states a working template to build from.
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That said, wherever you shop right now, the exemptions in Maryland's law are worth understanding. The Maryland Retail Alliance pushed hard against this bill and successfully carved out several exceptions during the legislative process. Consumer Reports flagged one irony in particular: loyalty program prices are exempt, which means stores could shift pricing in ways that favor members and potentially disadvantage non-members, effectively punishing non-members rather than rewarding members.
The enforcement side is also limited in ways that should concern any consumer. If a retailer violates the law, you cannot sue them yourself under these specific provisions of the law. Only the Maryland Attorney General has that authority. And before the AG can take action, the retailer gets a written notice and a 45-day window to correct the violation with no legal consequences. First-time violators face fines of up to $10,000. Repeat offenders face up to $25,000 in fines.
For a major grocery chain generating hundreds of millions in revenue, those fines barely register.
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Maryland's law is imperfect, and advocates said so publicly. But an imperfect first law still moves the needle. It establishes that surveillance pricing in grocery stores is a problem worth legislating, gives other states a legal framework to improve on, and puts retailers on notice that the political appetite for regulation is growing. The bill's weaknesses are actually useful in that way. They show exactly where the next round of advocacy needs to focus: stronger enforcement, consumer standing to sue, and tighter language around loyalty pricing exemptions. And if you live outside Maryland? Watch what your own state legislators do next. The grocery industry will lobby hard to add the same loopholes everywhere. Knowing what those loopholes look like is half the battle. Change tends to start in one place before it spreads. Maryland went first. Your state could be next.
If a retailer already holds a 62-page profile on you and most of what's in it is wrong, do you trust that the same technology is setting your prices fairly, and would you even know if it wasn't? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.
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Death toll from Colombia bus bombing rises to 20 during wave of violence
The number of people killed in a bombing in a volatile region in southwest Colombia rose to 20, officials said Sunday.
The attack happened Saturday when an explosive device was detonated on a bus traveling along the Pan-American Highway in the municipality of Cajibio. So far, 15 women and five men are among the victims, according to Octavio Guzmán, governor of the region of Cauca.
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He wrote on X that the attack injured 36 others, three of whom are in intensive care. Guzmán noted that five of the injured are minors who are expected to recover.
Colombia’s Institute of Legal Medicine said that specialists including dentists, anthropologists and forensic doctors are identifying the victims.
AT LEAST 80 PEOPLE KILLED IN NORTHEAST COLOMBIA AS PEACE TALKS FAIL, OFFICIAL SAYS
The bombing is the latest attack in the region, with more than two dozen incidents reported in the past three days in southwestern Colombia. The region is home to illegal armed groups who vie for control of coca leaf cultivation areas and for sea and river access routes to run drug trafficking operations to Central America and Europe.
Gen. Hugo López, commander of Colombia’s armed forces, has described the incident as a "terrorist act." He blamed it on the network of a man known as "Iván Mordisco" — one of Colombia’s most wanted figures — and the Jaime Martínez faction. Both are dissidents of the now-defunct Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia that operate in the region.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights condemned the attacks against the civilian population and called on authorities to investigate the incidents and "guarantee justice for the victims."
Guzmán declared three days of mourning on Sunday in memory of the victims.
Bacteria in your mouth may travel to the gut and trigger stomach cancer, research finds
New research is suggesting a strong association between mouth bacteria and gastric cancer.
The study, published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, examined the gut microbiome in stool and the oral microbiome from saliva and the tongue.
The China-based researchers with BGI Genomics analyzed 404 samples from Chinese patients with gastric cancer in one group and chronic gastritis in another.
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Gut microbes were different in gastric cancer, the researchers found, unveiling 28 varying gut species.
Most were oral bacteria, including Streptococcus — bacteria that can sometimes cause strep throat — lactobacillus and other lactic acid bacteria.
Twenty oral-gut species were found in both saliva and stool and were more common in the gut of gastric cancer patients.
The findings suggest the transmission of these bacteria from mouth to gut, after finding that the oral bacteria matched closely to the gut bacteria in the same person, according to genetic comparisons.
The researchers suggest that saliva and stool samples could help indicate patterns that are linked to stomach cancer, although more research is required before testing is ready for clinical use.
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"Collectively, these findings underscore the critical role of the oral-gut microbiome axis in [gastric cancer]," the researchers concluded in the study publication.
Since this is a cross-sectional analysis, the results cannot prove that these bacteria cause cancer, but they do suggest a strong association.
Dr. Brian Slomovitz, director of gynecologic oncology and co-chair of the Cancer Research Committee at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida, talked about the "initiator-promoter" model of this study in an interview with Fox News Digital.
"[The study] demonstrates how the microbiome of one area of the body can migrate and affect the ability of cancers to develop in another part of the body," said Slomovitz, who was not involved in the new study.
"The initiator in gastric cancers is usually inflammatory, such as H.pylori infection," he continued.
"This inflammation leads to damaged mucosal cells where the lactic acid-producing bacteria can colonize. This helps to explain why cancers still develop even after treating H. pylori infection."
The new findings could be applied to using the saliva for early cancer detection, Slomovitz suggested, which may help identify the disease even in pre-cancer states.
"Perhaps we will learn that by altering the microbiome, we can help better treat cancers (in combination with immunotherapy or chemotherapy) or even prevent cancer," he said.
"These results will build a foundation for future research. However, we are not ready to incorporate this into clinical practice."
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Fox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel also weighed in separately on the study, noting that awareness around the importance of the gut microbiome on overall health has been growing.
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"There is a correlation between the bacteria found in the gut and neurogenerative disease and increased cancer risk," he told Fox News Digital.
"It is very important that we work toward a healthy microbiome in the gut to decrease the risk of inflammation and cancer."
GOP gubernatorial hopeful's pro-Trump pitch to voters clashes with paper trail inside his own company
FIRST ON FOX: A billionaire gubernatorial candidate in Georgia, who has said there is "no bigger supporter of Trump right now than I am," is facing questions after a healthcare company within his business empire criticized President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA).
Rick Jackson has spent months trying to cast himself as the race’s most pro-Trump candidate who will be Trump's "favorite governor" despite Trump’s endorsement of Lt. Gov. Burt Jones. However, one of his companies has repeatedly criticized the OBBBA, a landmark GOP legislative package that Trump endorsed and signed into law last year.
Jackson Physician Search, a subsidiary of Jackson Healthcare, said on its website in September 2025 that the bill's "sweeping cuts to Medicaid and ACA programs raise serious concerns about access, equity, and sustainability," and warned that some hospitals may need to "adapt or close their doors."
In a February 2026 recruitment report, the company also said the law was projected to cause "between 10 and 15 million people" to lose health coverage, while Medicare and Medicaid cuts were creating "significant financial pressure" across healthcare organizations and considerable "fear and uncertainty" about what lies ahead.
"Rick supports the Big Beautiful Bill. Period," Mike Schrimpf, a spokesperson for Jackson's campaign, told Fox News Digital. "Growing up in the projects, Rick believes in the dignity of work and is a strong proponent of work requirements for that reason. He has long opposed Obamacare and regularly touts President Trump’s healthcare policies, like TrumpRx, on the campaign trail. That’s why Rick Jackson will be Donald Trump’s favorite governor."
Schrimpf added that "for months" Democrats have been attacking Jackson for his support of the OBBBA, noting "this attack makes about as much sense as accusing a pilot of hating to fly."
At a campaign event last month in Thomasville, Georgia, Jackson told constituents that he thought there were "many parts" of the OBBBA that were "great," and said he would be paying "40 percent more in taxes" if it had not passed, and defended work requirements in the bill by saying they motivate people to be productive and get off Medicaid.
"The worst thing that we can do is tell people — is get people relying on government where they have no incentive to work," Jackson told constituents.
"It’s the most dehumanizing thing that you can do," he continued. "God made us to be productive."
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Jackson has also drawn himself closer to Trump by praising his tariff policies. "I believe in fairness," Jackson said in March. "Don't want somebody to take advantage of us in a business transaction. That's what he's trying to do. So I support."
Meanwhile, Jackson, who reportedly modeled his campaign launch after Trump with a celebratory elevator descent, said he can't name a single White House policy he disagreed with, according to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution.
But, despite these assertions from Jackson on the campaign trail, his remarks stand at stark odds with his physician search firm warning in a February white paper about "considerable fear and uncertainty" for what is to come as the result of the OBBBA.
"The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) is projected to cause between 10 and 15 million people to lose health coverage," the white paper notes, citing new public healthcare work requirements implemented by the OBBBA. "Medicare and Medicaid cuts are creating significant financial pressure across healthcare organizations," it continues.
The same report, which includes comments from the firm's senior leadership and other content on the search firm's website, also slammed H-1B visa provisions in the OBBBA aimed at restoring integrity to the immigration program that has reportedly been rife with fraud, arguing it would be a net negative for the healthcare industry.
The materials and resources also said OBBBA would promote physician burnout, would likely force rural hospitals to shut down, would discourage hopeful physicians from going to school, thus exacerbating the existing doctor shortage, and briefly emphasized the negative impact of Trump's tariffs on physician recruitment.
"My team works with clients throughout the Midwest who are facing department closures if they can’t hire a physician or advanced practice provider. For proof, just look at the number of labor and delivery departments forced to close in the past few years," said Senior Vice President of Recruiting at Jackson Physician Search, Tara Osseck. "Now, recent policy changes — including provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) and increased fees affecting international visas — are adding new layers of complexity to an already challenging physician recruitment environment."
"The implications are significant," Osseck adds. "Coverage losses can lead to increases in uncompensated care, placing additional strain on already thin operating margins. When financial pressure mounts, healthcare organizations may delay service expansions, reduce hiring plans, or freeze recruitment altogether."
The OBBBA, a wide-ranging bill, included reforms to the federal student loan program aimed at making education more affordable. However, Regional Vice President of Recruiting at Jackson Physician Search, Tonya Hamlin, warned the reforms will actually make it harder for hopeful physicians to get to college.
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"These reforms could force students to absorb the difference through private loans or personal resources," Hamlin wrote in a blog post on the search firm's website. "They could also cause lower-income students to reconsider attendance altogether."
Hamlin went on to warn that with fewer people able to go to medical school, the shortage of physicians will only get worse for hospitals and clinics.
"Despite these additional hurdles, clinicians and trainees must not be deterred," Hamlin encouraged. "Stay focused on the higher purpose of your calling while staying informed, planning ahead financially, and engaging in ongoing advocacy."
The Republican primary race for Georgia governor has been a messy one between Jackson and other frontrunner candidates, including Jones, Attorney General Chris Carr, and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. In particular, Jones and Jackson have been sparring over who is more aligned with Trump.
"This Primary Election is very simple," Jones says on his campaign website. "There is one authentic conservative who has fought for President Trump."
Jackson, meanwhile, donated $1 million to the president's political action committee, MAGA Inc. less than two months before he jumped into the race in February and has faced backlash for cutting 6-figure checks to the presidential campaigns of Trump's former GOP rivals during the 2024 Republican primary.
Jackson also reportedly ran an ad against Raffenspeger portraying him as the Biblical character Judas in an attempt to portray him as a traitor for defying Trump's efforts to challenge Georgia's 2020 election results.
The Republican primary to see who will move on to the general election in Georgia's gubernatorial fight will take place on May 19. The first and only debate between the candidates is scheduled for Monday.
Fox News Digital reached out to Jackson Physician Search.
Spurs' Victor Wembanyama calls out NBA's concussion protocol as he returns in win
San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama returned to the floor for Game 4 against the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday night after he was placed in concussion protocol after Game 2.
Wembanyama said he was disappointed with the way concussion protocol was handled, but didn’t elaborate further.
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"The way the situation was handled was very disappointing," he told reporters. "I’m not saying that not playing was a good or bad decision. It was a decision, I’m not saying it was good or bad. But the way the situation was handled, very disappointing."
He sustained the injury in the first half of the Spurs’ 106-103 loss to the Trail Blazers on Tuesday. He didn’t return to the game and traveled to Portland while continuing the steps in order to be cleared for Game 4.
"I won’t get into details. I don’t want it to become a distraction. Ask me again after the end of the season," Wembanyama said.
He scored 27 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and served up seven blocks in the Spurs’ 114-93 win on Sunday. The team announced that Wembanyama would be able to play about an hour before tip-off.
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The 7-foot-4 unanimous NBA Defensive Player of the Year averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 3.1 blocks per game during the regular season.
Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson said the team was prepared to play without Wembanyama if he wasn’t cleared.
"Fortunately, we have a little experience preparing for a variety of lineups and rotations," Johnson said before the game. "I think the guys have really empowered us as a staff, I’d say, throughout the season, of being able to have a brand and identity regardless of availability."
Players like Wembanyama who are diagnosed with a concussion need to clear a series of benchmarks before they are allowed to play. The results are compared to baseline neurological evaluations players take at the start of the season.
Game 5 is set for Tuesday night back in San Antonio.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Ex-Biden official's campaign faces heat as missing children scandal resurfaces: 'Voters deserve better'
As Xavier Becerra looks to move up the polls in the California Democratic primary for governor, one of the biggest controversies shadowing his record is the scandal involving missing migrant children during his tenure as Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The scandal reportedly stemmed from the massive surge of immigrants, specifically unaccompanied minor children. Shelters became so full that these children were forced to stay in jail-like facilities run by federal immigration officials and eventually in massive tent cities set up in major metropolitan areas.
The images of these children put pressure on the Biden administration to do something, so they reportedly began imposing demands on staffers to begin moving kids quickly out of the shelters and to their sponsors meant to protect the kids from human trafficking or other forms of exploitation, according to a scathing investigation by the New York Times published in Feb. 2023.
"If Henry Ford had seen this in his plants, he would have never become famous and rich. This is not the way you do an assembly line," Becerra told HHS staff, according to the Times, even as HHS was beginning to peel back longstanding protections that had been in place for years, such as certain background checks and reviews of children's files.
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The comment from Becerra to ramp up the efficiency also came after nearly a dozen officials within the HHS division responsible for unaccompanied migrant children expressed concern that child labor trafficking was increasing, adding the system is "one that rewards individuals for making quick releases, and not one that rewards individuals for preventing unsafe releases," according to the Times.
Data the Times obtained showed, over a period of two years, more than 85,000 children became unable to be tracked by federal officials.
However, Becerra contested that unaccompanied minors had been "lost," arguing they were in the custody of vetted sponsors, but just did not pick up the phone when officials made their follow-up calls. Becerra and his supporters also pointed out, amid push back over the matter, that HHS's legal authority over a child ends once they are placed with a sponsor.
A campaign staffer with Becerra's team added that the HHS Secretary worked diligently to fix a broken immigration system inherited by Trump, suggesting the blame did not fall at Becerra's feet.
Meanwhile, in February 2024, HHS's Office of Inspector General indicated it had indeed found gaps in sponsor screening and follow-up, including missing documentation for required safety checks in 16% of sampled case files and untimely or undocumented follow-up calls in many cases.
At the time those findings were released, the HHS OIG already found in 2022 that guidance issued to speed releases had removed safeguards and may have increased the risk of releases to unsafe sponsors.
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"Xavier Becerra failed those kids, failed the country, and failed to do his job," a longtime Democratic Party campaign strategist told Fox News Digital.
"Becerra was horrible at HHS, and thinking he can become Governor of California after that record is delusional," the strategist continued. "Voters deserve better than a recycled cabinet secretary who couldn’t manage his own department."
A few months after the Times' reporting, Republicans in the House subpoenaed Becerra and HHS for records and documents related to the "vetting, screening and monitoring" of sponsors for migrant children. Republicans received hundreds of pages of documents, but argued none were responsive to their concerns before eventually hauling him to Capitol Hill for a hearing.
After House Republicans ordered HHS to produce records by Oct. 3, 2024, the dispute never culminated in a clean public resolution — committees kept complaining the production was incomplete, Becerra was called back to testify, and later watchdog reports — rather than Congress’ subpoena — became the clearest answer on whether the government was reliably tracking unaccompanied minors entering the United States.
Super Bowl champion Monte Coleman dead at 68
Monte Coleman, a three-time Super Bowl champion who played 16 years in the NFL, has died, the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and the Washington Commanders announced. He was 68.
Coleman was a standout at Central Arkansas before the Washington Redskins selected him in the 11th round of the 1979 NFL Draft.
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"Monte Coleman was one of the greatest players in Washington history," Commanders owner Josh Harris said in a statement. "He was one of the pillars of our championship defenses having played for all three Super Bowl-winning teams. His durability and leadership set the standard for what it meant to suit up for the Burgundy & Gold."
He later joined Arkansas Pine-Bluff as a linebackers and took over as head coach in 2008. He was at the school for 10 years and helped the team to a Southwestern Athletic Conference championship in 2012.
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"Coach Coleman represented everything we strive for at UAPB," athletic director Chris Robinson said. "Excellence, integrity, and a relentless commitment to developing our student-athletes. His legacy is not only written in championships and honors, but in the lives he changed every single day."
Coleman played his entire 16-year career with Washington. He led the NFL in tackles once – in 1980 when he had 118 during the season.
In 215 games, he had 49.5 sacks, 1,002 total tackles, 17 interceptions and four defensive touchdowns.
He was on the Redskins’ Super Bowl teams in 1982, 1987 and 1991.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Soccer goalie delivers brutal haymaker to opponent in wild brawl in Spanish league
A brutal brawl broke out during a La Liga 2 match in Spain on Sunday.
Zaragoza and Huesca were in the final minutes of their match when Zaragoza goalkeeper Esteban Andrada shoved Huesca defender Jorge Pulido to the ground. Andrada was addressing the official in the middle of the pitch when Pulido came over to talk to him.
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Andrada was given his second yellow card of the match at the time. After the shove, he was shown a red card as members from both teams tried to get rising temperatures under control.
Andrada then made a break for Pulido and hit him with a brutal right hand. Pulido went down and players from both teams swarmed the 6-foot-4 goalie.
Huesca goalkeeper Dani Jimenéz and Zaragoza’s Dani Tasende were also sent off after the fight.
Huesca eventually won the match, 1-0.
Andrada released a statement through the club’s social media, apologizing for his actions.
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"I really regret what happened," he said, via The Athletic. "It’s not a good image for the club, for the people or for a professional like me. I really regret it. Throughout my career, I’ve only been sent off once (before) when I handled the ball outside the area and you can see from my career path that it was an extreme situation where I crossed the line and I reacted like that.
"But I really regret it and I wouldn’t do it again because I know I’m a public figure, a professional with a career of many years. I also said sorry to Jorge Pulido because we’re colleagues and it was an action from me where I disconnected in that moment. I’m here for the consequences from the league or, if they want me to go and give explanations, I’m available for that."
Huesca accepted Andrada’s apology and condemned the fight.
La Liga 2 is the second-tier division of La Liga. Huesca is 19th in the table and Zaragoza is 21st.
Ex-Steelers coach Mike Tomlin makes bold prediction about Aaron Rodgers' NFL future
Former Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin got his feet wet in the NFL media realm and made a bold prediction about Aaron Rodgers' future in the league.
Rodgers remains a free agent as he weighs whether to walk away from a 21-year career. The Steelers may be the most attractive destination for the four-time NFL MVP as the team hired Mike McCarthy to replace Tomlin, following the latter’s abrupt decision to step down.
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Tomlin joined NBC Sports as an analyst for the 2026 season and said in his debut that he believed Rodgers would end up back in Pittsburgh.
"I just think being around him for the 12 months that I’m around him, he got a love affair with the game of football," he said, via Pro Football Talk. "And not only the game, but the process. The informal moments, the development of younger guys, the interaction with teammates.
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"I think he has an addiction to that. And there’s only one way to feed it, and certainly, he is still capable and in really good shape, and so I think at the end of the day, he’ll play football."
Rodgers, presumably, would walk back onto the roster as the Week 1 starter barring an injury. The team only has Mason Rudolph and Will Howard on the depth chart and selected Drew Allar in the draft.
He played in 16 games for the Steelers in 2025, helping the team to an AFC North win and a playoff berth. He had 3,322 passing yards and 24 touchdown passes. However, they are some of his lowest totals when he plays at least 15 games in a season.
Rodgers will turn 43 by the end of the year. He hasn’t said one way or the other whether he will return.