Florida
Is it too late for Florida State to turn its season around?
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State coach Mike Norvell has dealt with 0-2 starts. Bad home losses. Negativity. Quarterbacks getting booed.
Never, however, as a defending conference champion.
And never as a top-10 team.
Coming off a season when Florida State was left out of the College Football Playoff as an undefeated conference champion, Norvell had plenty on his plate: rebuilding a roster, developing leadership and getting his team past a snub that continued to sting months later.
He felt good about his plan, telling ESPN in July, “This has been arguably the best offseason I’ve ever been a part of. The way that they approached our winter drills, spring practice, summer, the work has been there. It’s a fast, explosive, powerful football team.”
But Florida State’s first two games exposed flaws not only in what should have been team strengths, but also a general lack of cohesion and leadership that has led to mistrust on the field. What’s more, all of this played out with a national television audience watching, and its lawsuit against the ACC challenging the grant of rights as a backdrop.
The Seminoles have not looked fast, explosive or powerful. Rather, they allowed Georgia Tech and Boston College to be the aggressors, dictating exactly how the first two games of the season would go. Meanwhile, offensive coordinator/offensive line coach Alex Atkins will miss his third game Saturday as he serves an NCAA-mandated three-game suspension for recruiting violations.
Norvell has vowed to be better as his team attempts to hit the reset button on its season against Memphis.
The question, of course, is this: Is it too late?
AS THE GAME clock wound down against Boston College, the Florida State sideline was as quiet as the rest of the stadium. Athletic director Michael Alford stood with his arms crossed, looking up at the scoreboard, disbelief settling in over a 28-13 loss that would drop the Seminoles from preseason No. 10 to outside the AP Top 25.
Another Florida State official used the word “bewilderment” to describe the scene. Norvell glared straight ahead as he ran off the field. Nobody — from Alford to Norvell to the coaching staff and players — expected to start 0-2.
Florida State was supposed to be past all this after Norvell elevated the program from irrelevance to an ACC title in four years. Perhaps the lowest point came in 2021 when the team got off to an 0-4 start and quarterback Jordan Travis was booed so badly he considered quitting football. From that point to the 2023 ACC championship game, Florida State went 28-6.
If the Seminoles engendered any sympathy after getting left out of the playoffs, it quickly dissipated after the school opted to sue the ACC to get out of the league. The team’s 0-2 start has drawn widespread ridicule on social media and whispers in ACC circles about karma being delivered to the two schools that have filed lawsuits (Clemson having lost 34-3 to Georgia in Week 1).
The lawsuits, however, have nothing to do with the on-field performance. The snub did send the program reeling, at least in the short term. For four years, Norvell had told his players if they put in the work, the reward would follow. Except in the case of the playoff, it had not, leading to anger and a crisis in confidence.
Nearly a quarter of the roster either opted out of last season’s Orange Bowl or entered the transfer portal; Florida State lost that game to Georgia 63-3. Ten players off its 2023 roster were drafted, including Travis, receiver Keon Coleman, defensive end Jared Verse and defensive tackle Braden Fiske.
Players throughout the offseason, and at ACC Kickoff, lamented the snub and vowed not to fall short of the playoff again. Asked whether the playoff snub has lingered this year, receiver Kentron Poitier delivered an emphatic no.
“It ain’t about last year, it’s about this year,” Poitier said. “Yeah, we talk a little bit about [the snub], but this is a whole new team.”
Norvell, meanwhile, had conversations with Alabama in January about replacing Nick Saban. But he stayed at Florida State and earned a contract extension that will pay him $10 million a year until 2031. At the time, he said, “There’s a lot of excitement around our program. I’m just excited to continue to build upon the foundation that’s been laid.”
Florida State dipped into the transfer portal again to rebuild. Since his arrival, Norvell has been strategic about the type of players he has brought into the program. Early on, he brought in players with multiple years of eligibility to help lay a foundation, including Verse, Trey Benson and Jammie Robinson. Florida State rose back to an elite level thanks in large part to the portal evaluations the program made — from Verse, Fiske and Coleman, to Johnny Wilson, Benson, Jermaine Johnson, Keir Thomas and Robinson.
This year, though, Norvell wanted to add complementary players to a roster that returned 82 players — many that Norvell recruited. In his mind, the foundation had been set, and the Seminoles wanted to rely on their role players taking on bigger starting roles, while using portal players to complement what they already had.
The Seminoles signed 17 transfers this time around, bringing in a top-10 portal class. The Seminoles knew they had to bring in a veteran quarterback with Travis gone and Brock Glenn still in need of development. They targeted the two biggest names: Cam Ward and DJ Uiagalelei. The quarterbacks visited on the same weekend in December.
Ward had also visited Miami and told ESPN in a previous interview that he made it clear to both coaching staffs that he planned to declare for the NFL draft but would keep his options open to return to college. “A lot of schools wanted to rush my decision, but I was going to do it on my time no matter what,” Ward said. Ultimately, Uiagalelei committed to the Seminoles on Jan. 1; Ward declared for the draft the same day, but did not sign with an agent. He changed his mind and decided to play at Miami, committing Jan. 13.
Uiagalelei had previously played in the ACC, starting his career at Clemson before going to Oregon State for 2023. From the beginning, there were questions about whether he would be able to play at an elite level at his third school. One opposing coach observed, “I just never felt like that guy was a championship quarterback. He’s just never been able to be accurate.”
Two games in, Uiagalelei has been erratic at best, and he was booed against Boston College where the crowd also chanted for the backup, Glenn. In two games, Uiagalelei has thrown for 465 yards with a touchdown and an interception, and is averaging just 6.7 yards per completion.
The other portal additions have been quiet, too. Defensive end Marvin Jones Jr., whom the staff raved about all spring and summer, has been neutralized as a threat (two total tackles). Alabama transfer receiver Malik Benson ranks third on the team in receiving yards. Roydell Williams leads the team in rushing, but is only averaging 3.2 yards per carry.
Asked after the Boston College game whether he had missed on his portal evaluations, Norvell responded tersely, “Obviously I’ve not done a good job putting our guys in a position to showcase what I believe that they are. So I’ll be better.”
But the issues go beyond the portal players. Between 2020-23, Florida State signed 25 ESPN 300 players; 13 remain on the team. Three are starters. Players Florida State wants to rely on — including DJ Lundy and defensive end Pat Payton — had to be convinced to return to the Seminoles in the first place. In December, Payton threatened to enter the portal before changing his mind; Lundy entered the portal and committed to Colorado, before opting to stay with the Seminoles.
What also has been glaring is the lack of leadership. Perhaps the staff thought replacing 10 NFL draft picks would not be as difficult as it has been, both from a production and leadership standpoint. “Travis, Verse and Fiske were all next-level guys who had been through the battles, and they don’t have it this year,” another opposing coach said.
Florida State worked the entire offseason on this needed intangible. Norvell held a retreat for the veterans that made up his leadership council in January, six months earlier than usual, understanding he had a new group that had big shoes to fill. Players in March discussed the need to get to know each other better, identifying three key words to building a successful team: relationships, accountability and mindset.
At a team meeting the day before spring practice began, center Maurice Smith told his teammates to get out of their comfort zones and start building relationships with guys outside their position groups: “We’re not here for NIL,” Smith told them. “We’re here to create a team and make a run. We only go as far as our relationship goes.”
Asked about the opportunity for players to step up in the face of adversity to emerge as leaders, Norvell admitted, “There’s an open door for that. I don’t want a team that waits for the adversity for the people to arise, but it’s also necessity that in these moments, when it does happen, who are you? What is the true core identity?”
After the Boston College game, both linebackers Lundy and Cam Riley and Poitier said multiple times that players had to start trusting each other.
“I would probably say really believing in each other, trusting our brothers, knowing if a safety is in the fit, just trusting he’s going to be there and not being hesitant and second-guessing yourself,” Riley said.
A third opposing coach noted that it usually takes a few games before a team identity emerges, something that has become more challenging in the portal era with a revolving roster door. “Internally how you hold it together is even more challenging,” the coach said.
PERHAPS MOST DISCONCERTING to those close to the program is the performance against Boston College. Florida State lost to Georgia Tech on a last-second field goal on a different continent. Against the Eagles at home, Florida State got dominated across the board and, by the end of the game, looked like a team that had given up.
In both games, Florida State failed to both run the ball and stop the run, a head-scratcher to those around the program because the coaching staff believed its offensive and defensive lines would give Florida State an opportunity to contend again.
Florida State returned the most experienced offensive line in the ACC with 190 starts and two preseason All-ACC players in Smith and tackle Darius Washington. With added depth in their running back room, the Seminoles felt they could be a dominant run team and rely on Uiagalelei to be a complementary player, allowing him to thrive without putting the pressure of an entire offense on his shoulders.
The first drive of the season against Georgia Tech showcased exactly that — five rushes for 58 yards; two passes for 17. But since that drive, Florida State has not been able to run with any consistency. The Seminoles have routinely lost their one-on-one matchups, making it far more difficult to run. In two games, they have 119 total yards and are averaging 0.92 yards before contact — the worst under Norvell.
Not only that, the running backs were simply not involved against Boston College. Florida State had four designed runs for running backs in the first half, the fewest in the first half of a game by an ACC team since Duke had four against Boston College in 2011.
Though Florida State did not call many designed runs for Travis last season, he always brought the threat to run; that simply does not exist with Uiagalelei, a dynamic that has affected the way defenses have decided to play Florida State. The fact that Georgia Tech and Boston College — two teams that ranked last in the ACC in rushing defense a year ago — have shut down the Seminoles is particularly galling to those close to the program.
One factor at play is Atkins’ suspension. The NCAA handed down a three-game suspension and two-year show-cause penalty stemming from recruiting violations in 2022. Though Norvell calls the plays, Atkins is hands-on with the offensive line over the course of the game and has the best feel for when to make rotations, substitutions and specific line calls. He is not allowed to be with the team on game day, including pregame walk-throughs and planning.
The Florida State defensive front has not been much better. The Seminoles have allowed 453 yards rushing in two games, the most they have allowed in their first two games of a season since at least 2000.
One coach who watched the opener against Georgia Tech used the word “tender” to describe the defense. Norvell said he noticed players pressing to make plays against Boston College and “trying to do almost too much.”
“That’s on the linebackers and the D-line,” Lundy said. “We’ve got to play better. Teams can’t be able to run the ball on us. We’ve got to figure out how to stop the run, and we’re going to do that, I promise you.”
There seems to be a clear disconnect between what is happening in practice, and what is happening on the field. Asked why what is happening in practice is not happening in games, Lundy said, “We just got to be better at executing our game plan. We’ve got to be more disciplined, more fundamental. We’ve got to do what we do in practice. But it’s all going to come down to execution.”
Athletic director Michael Alford has never wavered in his belief in Norvell, even when Florida State started 0-4 in 2021 and people wondered whether the coach was on the hot seat. Alford told ESPN in a phone interview last week, “I’ve got full faith in Mike and the team. We live in such a competitive arena every day, and we know what it takes to endure tough times. We have that unconquered spirit here. They’re going to be fine. They’ll get it fixed.”
BACK IN JULY, when Norvell spoke with ESPN during ACC Kickoff, he spoke about the challenges in pushing Florida State even further — to a place where the Seminoles compete not just for ACC championships, but for national championships.
Two months later, his words sound more prescient than ever.
“The closer you get to the tip of the mountain, the steeper it gets. You miss a step there, and it can be a tumble, and we’ve seen that happen within our own program years back…Now it’s time to go take another step,” Norvell said. “It’s time to be better than what we’ve been and the challenges, the adversity, all those things, they’re going to show up. We haven’t arrived. But there’s also a lot of excitement.”
Now is the time to see what type of response and leadership Florida State has on its 2024 team before it’s too late.
“Our program is built off responding,” Lundy said. “There’s a lot of season left, and we’ve got to decide what we’re going to make the season to be. We’ve got to come together. It’s all on us. Coach likes to take the blame, but it’s on us.”
Florida
Florida woman dies when SUV rolls backward in Port. St. Lucie driveway
A 78-year-old Port St. Lucie woman died June 28 after being knocked down in a residential driveway by a parked SUV.
The incident happened 10:47 a.m. June 28 in the 100 block of SE El Sito Court in Port St. Lucie.
The woman was standing outside a 2016 Lincoln MKX SUV, between the open driver’s door and the left side of the vehicle, according to a Florida Highway Patrol report. When the woman’s son, 59, started the vehicle from where he was sitting in the right front seat, the vehicle rolled backward. The woman was knocked to the ground by the open driver’s door.
The woman was taken to HCA Florida Lawnwood Hospital in Fort Pierce, where she was pronounced dead at 11:19 a.m.
The son started the engine by reaching over the center consol with his left hand to depress the brake pedal and press the start button with his right hand. It is unknown why the car rolled backwards.
The traffic homicide investigation is continuing.
Colleen Wixon is the Indian River County government watchdog reporter for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.
Florida
Winner and Loser of the Week in Florida politics — Week of 6.21.26
Gov. Ron DeSantis praised the World Cup for giving visiting fans from other countries a chance to see America directly.
“We do have a really great country. I know there’s a lot of problems. I know we see a lot of things that we wish we could change immediately. And I know there’s a lot of work to do, but I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else,” DeSantis said.
The visitors, he added, have gotten to see “firsthand both the generosity of the American people, but also that this is a good country.”
He is right.
But we’re pointing out these comments not just to show he is right, but also to show how he, like many of our leaders, are directly responsible for painting such a grim picture that leads to people’s negative views of this country to begin with.
DeSantis’ own political brand — the one that got him elected twice, launched a presidential campaign, and made him one of the most influential Governors in the country — is built substantially on the premise that a vast, organized internal enemy is destroying this country.
Teachers and school administrators who discussed gender identity in classrooms weren’t misguided or mistaken, they were “groomers.” Corporate executives who supported diversity programs were carriers of “the woke mind virus.” California is “a civilization in decay” leading “an attack on the American family.”
We could go on. This is not the rhetoric of someone who thinks America is a good country being pulled in the wrong direction. It is the rhetoric of someone who believes powerful forces within it are fundamentally opposed to everything good about it.
Trump has made the same argument in far more extreme terms. On Veterans Day 2023, at a campaign rally in New Hampshire, he declared: “We pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country.” Not misguided opponents. Not people with different values. Vermin — a word chosen with precision by Trump’s team and consistent with his repeated use of dehumanizing language toward political adversaries.
A month later, he described immigrants arriving in the United States as “poisoning the blood of our country,” a phrase with frightening historic parallels. These were not offhand remarks; they were delivered at rallies, posted to Truth Social, and repeated at subsequent campaign stops. Again, we could go on.
Democrats have found their own ways to corrode the thing they claim to be defending. The “threat to democracy” framing — once reserved for specific and serious institutional attacks — has been applied so broadly and so constantly that it now means approximately nothing. Every Republican appointment is an existential threat. Every policy disagreement heralds the end of constitutional order.
The World Cup has produced, almost accidentally, what American political culture cannot seem to produce on purpose: a setting in which people from wildly different countries interact with actual Americans and discover that the caricature is wrong. Fans from Scotland, Iran, Brazil, Morocco, and Australia arrived with whatever impressions their politics and media had given them, and found something different. They’re acknowledging that this is a good country, DeSantis said.
They are. The more interesting question is when the people who govern it are going to start acting like they believe the same thing.
In the meantime, sit back, have a drink with a stranger, and go Team USA.
Now, it’s onto our weekly game of winners and losers.
Winners
Honorable mention: Largo. Largo Mayor Woody Brown opened the June 2 Commission meeting by reading a Pride Month proclamation — a gesture the city had planned to drop from the agenda entirely before word got out and dozens of residents showed up to object.
Many of them arrived directly from the ribbon-cutting for Horizon West Bay, the $85 million mixed-use development anchored by the city’s new City Hall, and used their public comment time to make clear they hadn’t come just for the building.
That same Commission, it should be noted, recently passed an ordinance creating a new open-container entertainment district in the blocks surrounding that building — a program called “Sip and Stroll” that lets patrons walk freely through designated downtown zones with drinks purchased from approved local businesses.
Abner Morales, who owns Wepaa Puerto Rican Restaurant nearby, is already designing custom branded cups. “That’s awesome because we have like 16 employees. We want to keep running this business,” he said. One Cozy Smoke Shop employee told Fox 13 she sees the district becoming “almost like Bourbon Street in New Orleans.”
So the city is clearly looking to support its citizens. But on the Pride proclamation, the pressure the city was operating under was real.
In a June 1 online chat with residents, Brown explained that new legislation barring local governments from spending on diversity, equity and inclusion-related events and initiatives doesn’t technically take effect until Jan. 1. But with the budget still unsigned, Brown said the Governor could still cut off funding streams Largo depends on, including dollars for stormwater infrastructure.
“We’re trying to keep a relatively good relationship with our state folks,” Brown said, “and they’ve made some rules around that.”
Planning Board Chair Matthew Faustini, who is running for a Commission seat in November, pushed back, arguing a law that isn’t even in effect shouldn’t be tying the hands of local officials.
“You’re not willing to stand up for the residents of this city,” he said directly to Brown.
The most significant moment belonged to Commissioner Michael Smith, who is gay. Smith described spending 28 years of his life in the closet. He said the near-removal of the proclamation felt like “a real slap in the face.”
He acknowledged having considered ending his life when he was younger because of how different he felt. He said he cannot hold his partner’s hand in a restaurant without risking being called names or worse. He spoke of the proclamation as an act of faith toward residents who haven’t yet felt safe enough to be visible.
“There are many that are still afraid to come out and speak,” he said, “and many that are being shamed back into the closet. And that’s just wrong.”
Look, Florida has inserted itself into the center of the vulture war battle under DeSantis. Sometimes, they’ve pushed back against ridiculous things on the Left, but often, Tallahassee has overstepped. This proclamation isn’t hurting anyone and is a small thing in practice. But as Smith explained, it means a lot nevertheless to a significant portion of the community. They shouldn’t be feeling any heat from the state on this.
Largo didn’t do this perfectly — in fact, the city very nearly didn’t do it at all. But pushed by residents and remarks from some in charge, Largo ultimately chose its people over its political relationships.
Almost (but not quite) the biggest winner: Jared Moskowitz. Moskowitz joined forces with U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Pinellas Republican, to file a discharge petition that would force a floor vote on legislation capping federal student loan interest rates at 2%.
The bill does not attempt to cancel existing debt, a choice both Florida lawmakers described as deliberate. Rather, it’s aiming to put limits on future loans.
“There is broad bipartisan agreement that student loan debt is holding Americans back, yet Congress has failed to act,” Moskowitz said in a joint CNN appearance with Luna.
A discharge petition requires 218 signatures — a majority of the House — to force a vote bypassing leadership, and Luna has experience running them. She filed the first discharge petition of the current Congress in January over a remote voting accommodation for members on maternity leave, and it reached the required signatures before being withdrawn when Speaker Mike Johnson addressed the issue through other means.
Luna is a Republican representing a Trump-leaning Pinellas district. Moskowitz is a Democrat whose district includes Parkland. Neither one let partisan nitpicking stop them from addressing this week.
Also this week, Moskowitz hosted the fourth annual Sneaker Day on the Hill. Moskowitz has run the also bipartisan Congressional Sneaker Caucus since his first year in office. And his own connection to sneakers is personal: His late father used to take him to the mall on Air Jordan release days, and he wears them in the Capitol partly to carry that memory through the work.
Whether it’s a fun way yo bring more humanity to Washington, or reaching across the aisle to deal with a difficult policy problem, Moskowitz is making sure to build bridges in Congress in the hopes that it can break through the toxic and often absurd fake fights his colleagues, and the rest of us, spend way too much time on amplifying.
The biggest winner: FDACS. Florida’s agricultural community is already on its knees. Back-to-back freezes from late December through early February delivered an estimated $1.1 billion in damage to the state’s sugarcane crop alone. Ranchers have spent months contending with rising input costs, drought, and the lingering fallout from one of the most destructive winters in modern Florida farming history.
The last thing producers needed was a new invasive pest.
Enter the pasture mealybug, a small sap-feeding insect that specializes on grasses. It arrived in Florida in late May 2026, first detected on limpograss in South Florida. Since then, infestations have spread to multiple counties, with surveys still underway to determine the full extent of the damage.
Heavy infestations can degrade pasture quality quickly, open the land to weed invasion, and leave cattle without reliable forage. For the sugarcane industry, the pest is one more blow in a year that has already produced more blows than the industry can easily absorb.
“The rapid expansion of the infestation coupled with the quick deterioration of crop quality has taken farmers by surprise,” said Jarad Plair, a sugarcane farmer and past president of the Hendry/Glades Farm Bureau.
The situation was complicated further by the fact that as of this week, no insecticides were specifically labeled for mealybug control in pasture systems. Many common pasture treatments barely affect the pest because it spends much of its life cycle buried in thatch and soil, out of reach of conventional applications.
But the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) wasted no time in acting, urging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to grant a crisis exemption for the use of the insecticide Sivanto Prime.
The Florida Cattlemen’s Association issued a statement crediting Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson directly. “Thanks to the dedication of Commissioner Wilton Simpson, FDACS is recognizing the importance of protecting herds and lands from invasive pests,” the group wrote. “While a long road lies ahead, we are grateful for the support and decisive action of FDACS.”
Simpson was able to move fast enough even as the ground continues to shift under Florida’s farmers.
Losers
Dishonorable mention: María Elvira Salazar. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act is one of the most significant federal housing bills in decades — an expansive bipartisan package that touches more than 50 provisions aimed at expanding the housing supply, cutting red tape and limiting Wall Street investors from bulk-purchasing single-family homes.
Salazar recently took to Facebook to celebrate.
“In South Florida, housing costs are one of the biggest concerns I hear about,” she posted. “That’s why I supported this bipartisan legislation. We need to build more housing, cut through unnecessary red tape, and make it easier for families to achieve homeownership.”
The problem is, she did not vote for it, as she was absent due to the death of her mother.
To be clear, that is an entirely justifiable reason to be absent. In fact, it’s hard to come up with a more justifiable reason.
The problem is the Facebook post, which claimed credit for “supporting” legislation on which her name does not appear in the vote record.
Her Office’s statement tried pointing to her prior support — she voted for the bill in the House Financial Services Committee, twice on the floor to advance it to the Senate, and her own RESIDE Act, the Revitalizing Empty Structures Into Desirable Environments legislation she introduced in September, was incorporated into the final package.
That is a legitimate record. It’s also a different thing from the final passage vote, and using the word “supported” in a public statement about a bill you did not vote on in its final form opened her up to attack, justified or not.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) did not wait long.
“If María Elvira Salazar is misleading her constituents and taking credit for votes she couldn’t be bothered to show up for, then Miamians will replace her with a real leader who will fight for their ability to afford housing for their families,” DCCC spokesperson Madison Andrus said.
The DCCC has designated Florida’s 27th Congressional District as a “District in Play” for 2026 and has been building a file on Salazar for months. Salazar has won her district comfortably in recent cycles, taking more than 60% support in 2024. She is not in immediate danger.
But she has missed 212 of 2,820 roll call votes across her career, a 7.5% absence rate that is well above the median for currently serving House members. That number, combined with a pattern the DCCC has spent multiple cycles highlighting — instances of Salazar touting legislation she either skipped or voted against — could give the attack some credibility in the eyes of voters.
Almost (but not quite) the biggest loser: Brightline. More than 200 people have now been killed in collisions involving Brightline trains since the company began Florida operations in 2017, a milestone the railroad passed this year.
With 17 deaths recorded through late June, the overall unofficial count now sits at 214.
Brightline emphasizes, with some justification, that its safety picture is improving. The company says incidents — defined broadly as any contact a train makes with another object — have declined 30% in 2026 compared to the same period last year.
It is also midway through deploying $55 million in safety infrastructure: $45 million from a federal grant, another $10 million of its own money. The installations include fencing, warning signs and suicide prevention signage. An Orlando Sentinel analysis from late last year found that 27 months after opening, the route from Cocoa north to Orlando through more rural terrain with 6-foot fencing near the tracks had recorded zero fatal accidents.
That’s all encouraging. And perhaps over the long run it will be enough to rehabilitate Brightline’s reputation.
But that reputation remains relevant. Brightline carries the highest death rate per mile traveled of any railroad in the United States. The deadliest stretch is between Miami and West Palm Beach, where trains run through some of the most densely populated corridors in the state. Many crossings fall within “quiet zones” where trains do not sound their horns. Victims include people in vehicles who miscalculate the speed, cyclists, pedestrians walking on or near tracks, and suicide cases.
And Brightline may not have a “long run” to shed its long-standing image. Brightline lost more than $233 million in 2025. The company carries more than $5 billion in debt and interest.
Revenue reached $214 million in 2025, up from roughly $188 million the year before, but average fares in the first quarter of 2026 actually declined compared to Q1 2025. Ridership hit a quarterly record of more than 900,000 passengers, which is encouraging, though credit-rating agencies have concluded the company needs significantly higher fares or ridership volume — likely both — to reach solvency. A proposed Tampa extension remains on the distant horizon.
Will the train company get back on track before it’s too late?
The biggest loser: Tampa Sports Authority. Ye performed for the first time at Raymond James Stadium on Friday night despite weeks of escalating public pressure from politicians, community leaders and Jewish organizations calling on the Tampa Sports Authority (TSA) to cancel both the Friday and Sunday night shows.
As we spotlighted last week, the opposition was bipartisan, with both U.S. Sen. Rick Scott and former Gov. Charlie Crist leading the charge against the shows.
The TSA wasn’t moved, arguing that no taxpayer money is being used to stage the concerts.
That last claim is technically defensible in a narrow sense — Ye’s promoter is bearing the production costs — but it papers over the reality that the stadium itself is a publicly subsidized facility.
Whether the TSA legally could have canceled is a different question than whether it found itself in a bad situation, and the answer to the former is: probably not. The contract governing the shows includes an anti-cancellation clause that legal experts described as unusual and apparently inserted at the artist’s request, requiring either a federal terrorism threat elevated to Level 5 or a major public health emergency before the shows could be called off without triggering significant legal liability.
Clay Calvert, a First Amendment expert at the American Enterprise Institute, said Raymond James Stadium’s status as a public forum means a performer cannot be excluded based on what they have said or might say.
But the TSA signed a contract that locked in the performances under conditions almost impossible to break. A few miles away, the Florida Holocaust Museum announced free admission for three days in response to the concerts.
Ye published a full-page apology for his antisemitic statements in The Wall Street Journal in January. Whether that is sufficient is a question each attendee has to answer for themselves.
What is not a question is that the TSA is already under scrutiny for its governance of the Rays stadium process, and that it will likely spend the coming weeks answering for this decision.
Florida
From pizza to Panthers: How Simas Ignatavicius landed with Florida | Florida Panthers
In Switzerland ever since, Ignatavicius has steadily improved with each passing season.
Spending most of the 2025-26 campaign playing against professionals in the National League, he notched 13 points (7G, 6A) in 52 games with Genève-Servette HC. He also suited up in 11 games in the postseason, scoring two goals and dishing out an assist.
During a brief stint in Switzerland’s second-tier league, he was better than a point-per-game player, racking up 11 points (7G, 4A) in eight contests.
“That was a big there,” the 18-year-old forward said of his breakout season. “There we go, and here I am now.”
Catching the attention of scouts across the NHL, Ignatavicius was projected as a possible late-first-round pick by several outlets heading into this weekend.
Making history when the Panthers called his name, he became the fourth Lithuanian to be drafted, joining Darius Kasparaitis, Dainius Zubrus and Andrey Pedan.
“It means a lot to my family and to my country,” Ignatavicius. “It shows little kids that whatever you dream it’s possible. You’ve just got to work for it. When you get your chance, you take it. Don’t give up. Work hard.”
A veteran of 1,293 games in the NHL, Zubrus has been a longtime mentor to his young countryman.
“I’m pretty close with him,” Ignatavicius said. “We text a lot. I’m happy with that and think I can learn a lot from him.”
When it comes to future lessons, he’ll have no shortage of new teachers to work with in South Florida.
Priding himself on playing a physical, relentless style, Ignatavicius models his game after one Panther in particular.
“Matthew Tkachuk,” he said. “I try playing like him, his style. I think he’s a great player and I can learn a lot from him.”
Yet to commit to returning to Switzerland next season, Ignatavicius is still waiting to see where he’ll lace up his skates in 2025-26.
“I’ve just got to focus on my summer and getting better,” he said.
In the immediate future, Ignatavicius will soon board a flight to Fort Lauderdale to participate in his first development camp with the Panthers.
“Florida? Can’t complain much,” he said when asked about his impending trip. “Very happy.”
In between on-ice sessions, maybe Ignatavicius will even find some time to grab a pizza.
If he needs a recommendation, I’m sure Panthers fans will have a few suggestions.
“This is just the beginning,” he said.
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