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Eagles speak out on Philadelphia plane crash just days before playing in Super Bowl LIX

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Eagles speak out on Philadelphia plane crash just days before playing in Super Bowl LIX

The Philadelphia Eagles will have plenty more to play for when they take the field in Super Bowl LIX next Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs. 

After an air ambulance carrying six people crashed in Northern Philadelphia Friday night, causing a massive explosion that has killed an unconfirmed number of people, the Eagles released a statement expressing condolences for its impacted Philadelphia residents and the victims on board the flight.

“The Eagles organization was heartbroken to learn of the tragic loss of life earlier this evening as a result of the plane crash in Northeast Philadelphia,” the team said. “We extend our condolences to the victims and loved ones they leave behind. We are grateful to the first responders for their heroic actions at the scene.”

Jet Rescue Air Ambulance, the global ambulance flight company operating the plane, said its Learjet 55 crashed while departing from Northeast Philadelphia Airport at about 6:30 p.m.

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A detailed view of the Philadelphia Eagles logo at midfield prior to the game against the Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field on November 1, 2020 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

The plane was scheduled to fly from Philadelphia to Tijuana International Airport, with one technical stop in Springfield, Missouri for fuel, Air Ambulance spokesperson Shai Gold told Fox News Digital.

A senior Philadelphia fire official told Fox News the fires that were sparked by the crash are “now under control.”

President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to react to the tragedy.

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“So sad to see the plane go down in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More innocent souls lost. Our people are totally engaged,” Trump wrote. “First Responders are already being given credit for doing a great job. More to follow. God Bless you all.”

Vice President JD Vance later took to X, calling the situation “very sad.”

“May God bless the victims and their families,” Vance wrote.

Site of a plane crash in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., January 31, 2025.

Site of a plane crash in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., January 31, 2025.  (X / @JaredGSolomon)

The crash comes just days after an American Airlines passenger plane collided midair with an Army Black Hawk Helicopter near Reagan National Airport, killing 67 people.

Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch, Lorraine Taylor and Alexis McAdams contributed to this story.

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Patrick Mouratoglou’s tennis partnership with Naomi Osaka and coaching superstars

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Patrick Mouratoglou’s tennis partnership with Naomi Osaka and coaching superstars

The way phenomenal and accomplished athletes’ minds work can often catch regular folks off-guard. How is it that a tennis player like Naomi Osaka, a four-time Grand Slam champion and former world No. 1, would ever get to a place where she might question her ability?

It happens all the time, even with the all-time greats — a subset of the tennis species that Patrick Mouratoglou, the longtime coach and tennis media impresario, has spent most of his career studying. He coached the best of the best, Serena Williams, at the scene of so many of her greatest triumphs.

In September 2024, three-quarters of the way through her comeback season after giving birth to her daughter, Shai, Osaka hired Mouratogou to replace Wim Fissette. Osaka had reunited with Fissette (who coached her between 2019 and 2022) the previous summer, to prepare for her return to competitive tennis last January. At first, she was magnanimous about the relationship between improvement and outcome. When she came within a point of beating Iga Swiatek at last year’s French Open, Osaka wasn’t down: “Obviously the results aren’t resulting right now, but I think I’m growing every tournament,” she said in her news conference.

When the results still didn’t result, Osaka found herself again struggling with her confidence and decided to move away from the coach with whom she won two of those four Grand Slam titles.

Osaka, 27, hasn’t won a title of any kind with Mouratoglou yet, but she has come awfully close. She had to retire with an abdominal injury when she was up a set against Clara Tauson in the final of the Auckland Classic in New Zealand in January and she has played her best tennis since becoming a mother in the past five months, when her body has allowed her to do so.

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“I just had to believe in myself a lot more,” Osaka said at the Australian Open after her second-round win over Karolina Muchova, one of the world’s most gifted players, who had eased past Osaka at the same stage of the U.S. Open four months prior. There in Melbourne, Osaka was talking about coming back to win the last two sets after losing the first 6-1, but she could have been talking about how, when healthy, she has rediscovered her swagger and her ability to take the racket out of her opponents’ hands.

That is not an accident.

In an interview in February from Los Angeles, where he and Osaka prepared for her comeback from that abdominal injury, Mouratoglou said they have been working on confronting those moments when she feels her belief slipping and on figuring out ways to overcome them.


Patrick Mouratoglou with Naomi Osaka at January’s Australian Open. (David Gray / AFP via Getty Images)

“You earn confidence with what you do every day in practice,” Mouratoglou said.

After two weeks of hard training, Osaka will try to bring that swagger to the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells, Calif., this week.

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In the interview, Mouratoglou, 54, said he expects nothing less from Osaka, a player he says comes to the court every day with an open mind and a hunger to try anything to get better.

All the great ones do.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Naomi Osaka and the gravity of a superstar at the U.S. Open


How is her injury feeling?

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She has no pain anymore. We have been serving, but slowly and progressively. She’s done the work to try to make sure she does not get hurt again.

What is it like to work with players at her level? How does she compare with Serena Williams?

I don’t compare anyone to Serena. It is very exciting, because of her potential. She has the potential to win very many more Slams. Her motivation is very high. Tennis is a big priority and she is prepared to come back all the way.

How do you know if you are a good fit with her? 

I don’t know if it’s a good fit — all the players are different, and as a coach you need to adapt.

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Is it any different when you are coaching a superstar rather than some of the players you have worked with who are not at that level?

It’s very important when you work with a superstar that you do the same as if the player is not a superstar. You need to talk to a person in a normal way, like she is a normal player. When they achieve so much they have certainties about what they do, but they have to be open enough to learn and continue to grow. That’s where Naomi is. She really wants to improve. She’s really taking the advice, and giving 100 percent. She is not scared. That’s the champion’s mindset.

It’s interesting you say that. I would have thought people who have won so much in the past think they know how to do it again. 

They are champions because they are doing what it takes to improve; their ability to trust the person working with them to tell them what to do and what it takes. That makes them champions.

Rafa (Nadal) and Novak (Djokovic), they went through so many technical changes. They see the sport as a race. Everybody is improving. That is how Serena was seeing the world. If you’re happy with what you have and don’t try new things, you will be overtaken by others. The progress comes from seeing which areas you can get better with.

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Why is Osaka better now than she was last year?

Her confidence is much higher. This comes from what she has done at practice. She’s practising extremely well. She pushes herself. Her game has gained in consistency. A player has to be aware of how she is feeling, even if she feels she is losing confidence. Before, she didn’t express it to herself. Most of the matches, she lost because she stopped believing and this is not allowed.

We do practice matches. She is aware of what she is feeling. We talk about it. We work on it in the moment. It’s fine to have that feeling, it’s natural — there is no shame in being nervous. We just have to be aware of it. It can affect you but it can’t affect you too much — Novak gets super-nervous or angry, but the most important thing is the ability to come back very fast. Otherwise, you are losing points and points and points. You have the right to become nervous and lose confidence, but not too much and not for too long.

You don’t talk much during matches other than small messages of encouragement. Why?

There is not so much to say, unless I see she is not following the plan one way or another. The match, we prepare it before. The only thing I can do is to support her.

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In the Muchova match in Melbourne, Muchova was playing great and Naomi was struggling to get to her level. I’ve seen that in the past year. I found out that when she was in trouble, her confidence level would drop a lot and the game was affected.

Her first tournament in China, she had lost 20 matches in a row when she had lost the first set. This time, she didn’t let what was happening on the court play with her mind.  It’s impossible not to be affected by the score. They need to be affected by the score. How much it affects you and does it affect you in a way that can harm you is the question. You want to be affected but stay under control. Keep believing in what you are doing.

Is that what she did against Muchova? 

She stayed mentally there. You don’t go away. Nobody plays perfectly from the first point to the last.

When you coached Serena, you went up against Osaka. Did you share your old game plans with her?

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No. You don’t want to reinforce the spots that are weaker. I also don’t think you win by improving your mistakes so much. You prepare solutions, and you make your strong points better. If someone has a good game plan to beat Jannik Sinner, I would like to see it. Players at that level, you have to catch them on a certain day when there are weak spots.

I want my players to know how to turn their strengths into weapons: ‘What is my player’s game style and how do they win points?’.

So what are Osaka’s strengths at this point that should be her weapons?

When she is at the top of the game, she plays faster than anyone. She makes it very difficult to organize a point against her. She comes back to you with the ball in such a short time. When the ball touches the racket, it goes so fast to the other side of the net, and she can be very accurate with hitting her spots.

She also has big room for improvement. She can return better, be more aggressive on the second serve, take time away from the opponent better. The good thing is that she is extremely open to new ideas. I told her what I thought when I arrived and she told me she was very excited to get to work because she believed she was going to learn new things.

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Naomi Osaka holds the Australian Open trophy after the 2019 final. (Getty Images)

Is that what the best ones tell you?

Absolutely. They forget what they have achieved one minute after they achieve it. Serena finishes 2012 winning Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and the Olympics and the WTA Tour Finals. She’s walking off the court and tells me to come up with a plan for her to win the French Open. She says, “I’ve been chasing it for 10 years. I want to win Roland Garros, make a plan for me to win it.” (Williams won the 2013 French Open.)

The past is the past. It’s important not to look at the past. ‘Let’s move on. Always focus on the journey, where we want to go’. That’s Naomi right now. She’s very ambitious. She believes her story is still to be written. That’s important, because when you hold a trophy it only lasts a few minutes. You have to be excited about what’s next.

What has changed about tennis in recent years?

In general, the fitness level has improved a lot. It’s easy to explain. All of the top players travel with a fitness coach and physiotherapist. It was not true before. The movement of the players is so much better. On the women’s side, (Aryna) Sabalenka, for her height, is moving so well. And then Iga (Swiatek) and Coco (Gauff).

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(Carlos) Alcaraz, Sinner, it’s crazy how they move on the court. Even someone like Tomas Machac. So it’s harder to hit winners, to get the ball through the court. If Naomi keeps evolving as she is, she will be able to hit as many winners again.

Naomi said she didn’t know if you would actually be a good coach, because you had coached Serena and she wondered whether Serena even needed coaching. Others sometimes question how much impact you have when you are coaching these all-time greats? How does that affect you? 

People who say that don’t know what they are talking about. If I coach Naomi and she doesn’t do something well, I’m going to hear about it. I take no special pride in coaching champions. For me, if I don’t bring her to her top level, I didn’t do a good job.

(Top photo: David Gray / AFP via Getty Images)

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Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter: Former volleyball player Payton McNabb takes main stage at Trump's address

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Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter: Former volleyball player Payton McNabb takes main stage at Trump's address

Welcome to the Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter.

‘FAILED WOMEN’ – Former high school volleyball player Payton McNabb spoke out against Democrats who wore pink during President Donald Trump’s address to Congress after Senators prevented an executive order on transgender athletes’ participation from being codified. Continue reading …

FAIRNESS IN WOMEN’S SPORTS – Indiana Gov. Mike Braun signed an executive order to prohibit transgender athletes from competing in women’s college sports. Braun also highlighted volleyball player Elle Patterson, who is listed as a plaintiff in the female athlete lawsuit against the Mountain West Conference. Continue reading … 

PARTISANSHIP – No Senate Democrat voted in favor of the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act, which addresses biological males’ participation in women’s and girls’ sports. The act required a minimum of 60 votes to break the filibuster. Continue reading …

Democrats who voted down a bill to ban trans athletes in women's sports.

Democrats who voted down a bill to ban trans athletes in women’s sports. (Fox News)

‘CAME TOGETHER TO STOP THIS’ – Chris Kluwe, a former NFL punter who was thrust into the national spotlight after he was arrested at a California city council meeting, voiced his support for lawmakers who blocked the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act from moving forward. Continue reading …

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STAR POWER – Former NCAA swimmer and host of OutKick’s ‘Gaines For Girls’ podcast, Riley Gaines, called on prominent star athletes to assist in her push for fairness in women’s and girls’ sportsContinue reading …

‘CLEAR MESSAGE’ – Rep. Laurel Libby, who was censured in the state’s House of Representatives over a social media post that pointed out a transgender athlete had won a girls’ competition, praised President Donald Trump’s remarks during his address to Congress on biological males competing in women’s sports. Continue reading …

Maine State Rep. Laurel Libby is sounding the alarm over the state's defiance of President Donald Trump's Executive Order demanding an end to biological males competing in women's sports.

Maine State Rep. Laurel Libby is sounding the alarm over the state’s defiance of President Donald Trump’s Executive Order demanding an end to biological males competing in women’s sports. (Getty/Maine House of Representatives)

RUNNING IT BACK – Travis Kelce pubically addressed his decision to forgo retirement and return to the Kansas City Chiefs for the 2025 NFL season. Continue reading …

FROM FOX SPORTS – The 2025 NFL Scouting Combine is in the books. FOX Sports’ lead college football analyst Joel Klatt highlights some of last week’s biggest takeaways. Continue reading …

FROM OUTKICK – The Vikings declined to place the franchise tag on Sam Darnold by Tuesday’s deadline. OutKick’s Armando Salguero predicts Darnold’s and other high-profile veteran quarterbacks’ landing spots. Continue reading …

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WATCH NOW – Keyshawn Johnson weighs in after a quarterbacks coach raised concerns about NFL Draft prospect Shedeur Sanders’ disposition during interviews at the league’s annual scouting combine. Watch here …

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Jack Dreyer is Dodgers' Rubik's Cube master, and potential big league option in bullpen

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Jack Dreyer is Dodgers' Rubik's Cube master, and potential big league option in bullpen

It took some four hours of work, roughly 1,200 Rubik’s Cubes, and years’ worth of knowledge with the six-side, 54-panel puzzle.

Ever since high school, minor-league Dodgers reliever Jack Dreyer has been able to master the Rubik’s cube; getting so good he not only solves them in as little as 20 seconds, but has learned to arrange them on canvasses by the hundreds to create multi-colored murals.

So, when the Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani to his record-breaking $700 million contract in late 2023, Dreyer decided to commemorate the moment with a unique piece of art, creating a Rubik’s Cube portrait of the two-way star that was displayed at the team’s Camelback Ranch facility last spring.

“I was like, ‘Hey, he’s the face of baseball right now,’” Dreyer recalled Wednesday. “I think it would be kind of cool to have the fans get to see something like that.”

Dreyer is unsure if Ohtani ever saw the piece. And now, he said with a laugh (and hint of sorrow), it no longer exists, having been knocked over and shattered last year.

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Will the 26-year-old left-hander build Ohtani a new one?

“I definitely could,” he said, “if that’s something that he would want to see.”

The good news for Dreyer: He wouldn’t have to walk far to find Ohtani and ask.

Unlike last year, when the undrafted University of Iowa product started the season as just another talented but raw prospect in the organization, Dreyer is in big-league camp this spring, sitting just 14 stalls away from Ohtani in the Dodgers’ spring clubhouse.

Dreyer hasn’t discussed his hobby with Ohtani yet, but it has become one of the spring’s more light-hearted subplots, with everyone from Tony Gonsolin to Jackson Ferris to Yoshinobu Yamamoto toying around with the cubes Dreyer has brought into the room.

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“He carries a Rubik’s Cube everywhere he goes,” manager Dave Roberts joked. “Some guys carry a golf club. He carries a Rubik’s Cube.”

According to Roberts, Dreyer (and his Rubik’s Cube) almost reached the majors last year, with the Dodgers coming close on several occasions to calling him up for his MLB debut.

“There were a couple times where Jack was going to be the guy,” Roberts said. “It’s a very slow brain, as far as managing situations. A good heartbeat. The fastball really plays. And the slider has really come on.”

Prior to last year, the big leagues were more of a distant dream for Dreyer — whose father, Steve, spent two years pitching for the Texas Rangers in the early ‘90s.

During his first two minor-league seasons in the Dodgers organization, Dreyer flashed his potential by striking out 92 batters in 66 ⅔ innings between rookie ball and high-A, posting a 2.16 ERA along the way. But he also issued 41 walks, struggling to keep his fastball/slider mix in the zone.

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Dodgers relief pitcher Jack Dreyer has given up only one run in four appearances this spring, striking out seven and walking one.

(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

“The Dodgers are super transparent in terms of what they would like to see out of you, and what areas they want you to improve on each offseason,” Dreyer said. “So I had some really good conversations with the front office and the coaching staff, just saying like, ‘Hey, your stuff is good. But if you want to move to the next level, you need to reduce the walks.”

Reduce the walks, Dreyer did.

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Entering last season, Dreyer said he focused on making a full “mentality shift.” His delivery didn’t change. He didn’t tweak his arsenal. But he did begin throwing “with conviction on every pitch,” he said, learning to have “the belief in yourself” to more consistently pound the strike zone and attack opposing hitters.

The results were sterling.

In 46 outings between double-A and triple-A, Dreyer again posted a 2.20 ERA, but this time while issuing just 12 walks on the entire season.

“I didn’t make any mechanical changes or anything like that,” he said. “It was purely just a mentality shift.”

While it didn’t yield a big-league call-up, Dreyer’s improvements were enough for the Dodgers to put him on the 40-man roster last November to protect him from going into the Rule 5 draft.

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Dreyer said he got the news while playing catch at Camelback Ranch, when Dodgers director of player development Matt McGrath came out to the field to inform him of the decision.

“I tried my best to keep it out of my mind,” Dreyer said. “But it was cool to be able to be here in person and get congratulated by him and some teammates that were here.”

Dreyer has parlayed the opportunity — which also meant a first spring training spent in big-league camp this year — into a strong performance thus far in the Cactus League. In four appearances, he has given up just one run, struck out seven batters and walked only one.

“The biggest thing for me is just to try to be a sponge every day,” Dreyer said. “Obviously, surrounded by All-Stars and future Hall of Famers, I’m incredibly grateful for the opportunity to learn everything I can and ask questions whenever I can. I’m just learning more about the process and pitch selection and all kinds of things. It’s been very useful.”

Dreyer has been giving lessons of his own with the Rubik’s Cube, too.

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He said Gonsolin already knew how to solve the three-dimensional puzzle, but has sought new methods to complete it more quickly. Roberts noted that Dreyer also outdueled Tommy Edman in a challenge earlier this spring.

Has Roberts taken a shot at making every side the same color?

“No,” the manager laughed. “Part of my strength is I know my weaknesses … I don’t have the bandwidth to approach that yet.”

Given Dreyer’s current trajectory, Roberts might get future opportunities. After coming close to the majors last year, the pitcher appears to be near the top of the organization’s relief pitching depth chart, primed to reach the majors with his improved command and renewed mental approach.

“The organization has raved about his make-up, his talent, for a while,” Roberts said. “And now for me to get to know him a little bit more, see him against major league hitters, he’s really impressive.”

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