Sports
Trump receives raucous welcome at NCAA wrestling championships: Champ is here

President Donald Trump has arrived for the final rounds of the 2024-25 NCAA wrestling championships in Philadelphia on Saturday.
Trump walked into the Wells Fargo Center and was greeted by a raucous crowd from the wrestling fans, who cheered “USA! USA!” amid the president’s presence. A few fans booed when Trump walked in.
U.S. President Donald Trump attends the NCAA men’s wrestling championships in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., March 22, 2025. (REUTERS/Nathan Howard)
Elon Musk, OutKick founder Clay Travis, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, Education Secretary and former WWE executive Linda McMahon, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, Sen. Dave McCormick, R-Pa., and several other Trump allies were in the front row stands to greet the president as well.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, U.S. Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH), U.S. Senator Dave McCormick (R-PA) and his wife Dina Powell attend the NCAA men’s wrestling championships in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., March 22, 2025. (REUTERS/Nathan Howard)
For the president, it marks another stop on his tour of major sporting events in what has been a sports-focused presidency.
Trump is there to potentially witness sports history. Penn State is looking to extend its streak to four straight national titles. It would be the third time Penn State has won four straight championships since 2011. Only Iowa and Ohio State have interrupted the Nittany Lions’ run of dominance.

The Penn State Nittany Lions pose with the trophy after winning the NCAA Wrestling Title at the T-Mobile Center. (Reese Strickland-USA TODAY Sports)
And Penn State is firmly in the driver’s seat to do it, leading with 169 points, 60 points ahead of second-place Nebraska.

Attendees cheer as US President Donald Trump arrives to watch the men’s NCAA wrestling competition at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on March 22, 2025. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
“We’re going to the big fight. … They have the NCAA, world, wrestling for college. And I’ve always supported the wrestlers,” Trump told reporters outside the White House Friday. “So, I want to support them. These are the great college wrestlers from the various schools. I think Penn State is leading, and Nebraska is in second place right now. And a lot of good things.”
Travis broke the news Tuesday that Trump would attend the event when he said in an X post that he would be traveling with the president on Air Force One to the championships.
The White House confirmed Friday that Trump would attend the event.
LA TIMES WRITERS SUGGEST WORLD SERIES CHAMPION DODGERS SHOULD SKIP WHITE HOUSE VISIT: ‘THANKS, BUT NO’
Jordan was a wrestling champion in high school and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he won an NCAA Division I men’s wrestling title twice. He was later an assistant coach with Ohio State University’s wrestling program from 1987 to 1995.
McCormick previously confirmed that Trump would be in attendance at the event in the senator’s home state of Pennsylvania.
“I’m thrilled to be in Philadelphia this weekend with [Trump] for the [NCAA Wrestling] Championship,” McCormick wrote on X. “I grew up wrestling in small towns across PA and at West Point. It taught me grit, resilience, and hard work.”

US President Donald Trump speaks with Senator Dave McCormick sitting next to Tesla and SPaceX CEO Elon Musk and US Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) as they watch the men’s NCAA wrestling competition at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on March 22, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
This will be the second time in three years President Donald Trump has attended the NCAA wrestling championships. He also attended in 2023 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Trump has been seen at a few different sporting events since winning the election in November.
Trump attended the Daytona 500 in February and became the first sitting president to attend two Daytona 500 races at Daytona International Speedway. He first attended the race in February 2020.
Trump participated in prerace festivities, riding in “The Beast” for a lap before the race, and he had a special message for drivers that was broadcast on their radios.
Earlier in February, Trump became the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl. When Trump was shown at the stadium, a raucous cheer was heard on the FOX broadcast from the crowd.

US President Donald Trump next to Senator Dave McCormick, Tesla and SPaceX CEO Elon Musk, US Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles watch a player celebrate his victory during the men’s NCAA wrestling competition at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on March 22, 2025. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
In December, Trump attended the 125th edition of the Army-Navy game with Vice President JD Vance, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.
Trump attended the annual rivalry game throughout his first presidency, first attending in 2016, shortly after winning that year’s election. He was also at the game during each year of his presidency, including in 2020 at West Point.
A couple of weeks after Trump won the election over Vice President Kamala Harris in November, he attended UFC 309.
Trump sat cage-side alongside Elon Musk, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Donald Trump Jr. and others.
Jon Jones defeated Stipe Miocic via knockout and did Trump’s signature dance move, pointing to Trump and giving his UFC heavyweight championship belt to Trump to hold.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Sports
In Exeter, a match to show how Reynolds and McElhenney have supercharged Wrexham’s rise

At the end of a week when the true impact of Hollywood coming to Wrexham was laid bare by a balance sheet containing almost as many new records as music store HMV, it felt appropriate that the Welsh club should make the long trip to Exeter City.
The Devon club are in their 21st season of fan ownership, the same model that kept Wrexham afloat for more than a decade before Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney rode into town.
Like Saturday’s 2-0 victors, Exeter had a stint in the National League — five years in their case, between 2003 and 2008 — after being taken to the brink of financial ruin by previous owners.
Today, though, the Devon club is rightly considered one of the best-run in the EFL, making the most of limited resources to establish themselves as a League One outfit. Wrexham manager Phil Parkinson is certainly a fan.
“This is a good club and it’s total respect over the job they’ve done,” he says. “I love their story with the fan-owned situation and how, like ourselves, this club has had tough times but kept themselves going.”
Exeter’s mid-table standing these past three years is no mean feat in a division that has seen them go up against some relative behemoths, with Birmingham City the latest member of the Premier League alumni to visit St James Park after Sheffield Wednesday, Derby County, Ipswich Town and Portsmouth had all made the trip to the south west.
Wrexham may never have played higher than the second tier in their history, but this week’s revelation about the huge £26.7million turnover generated by last season’s League Two promotion at the STōK Cae Ras means they can be added to any list of League One clubs with exceptional financial muscle.
To put that figure — which is likely to have risen slightly for the current campaign — into context, Portsmouth, champions of this division in 2023-24, raked in £13.6m over the same financial period and runners-up Derby £19.4m.
Exeter’s accounts for the last full financial year are not yet available, but in 2022-23, annual turnover at St James Park stood at £5.8m, including £1.39m in transfer revenue. A profit of £312,000 was made in a season when the club finished 14th in League One.
Such prudency, and in particular the nurturing of young talent to sell on for profit, has characterised this era of fan ownership at St James Park. In the absence of a major benefactor, it has had to.
Sell-on clauses are particularly important, providing Exeter with timely windfalls on top of the initial fees paid for the likes of Ollie Watkins and Ethan Ampadu, sold to Brentford and Chelsea respectively in 2017.
Just two summers ago, Ampadu’s switch from Stamford Bridge to Leeds United earned his boyhood club more than £1m. Jay Stansfield’s move from Fulham to Birmingham City also proved lucrative, with the sell-on clause in his 2019 transfer to Craven Cottage expected to bring in a further £2m.
Not so long ago, a similar level of husbandry seemed to be Wrexham’s only hope of a brighter future after years of mismanagement and poor decision-making had culminated in the fans riding to the rescue in 2011.
For the next decade, the supporters’ trust ran the show with the backing of around 4,000 members paying their annual subs.
On-field success proved just out of reach, Wrexham bagging 98 points in 2011-12, only to be pipped to the Conference title by Fleetwood Town and then losing to Newport County 12 months later in the play-off final. The irony of Fleetwood and, to a lesser extent, Newport both benefiting from a rich backer was lost on no one.
Off the field, however, the trust transformed a club initially losing £750,000 per year to one that was debt-free and had cash in the bank when bought by Reynolds and McElhenney in February 2021.
Once Hollywood had arrived in north Wales, spending restraints went out of the window as the new owners attempted to turbo-charge an escape from non-League via a series of loans.
This ambition remained once back in the EFL, albeit — as the latest set of accounts reveal — with Wrexham now being run along more sustainable lines.
An £11m wage bill in 2023-24 may be beyond the comprehension of not only last year’s League Two clubs, but also most of Wrexham’s divisional peers this time around.
Sealing the win from the spot 👏
🔴⚪️ #WxmAFC pic.twitter.com/QpMqN85reC
— Wrexham AFC (@Wrexham_AFC) March 29, 2025
But it was made possible by that record-breaking turnover of £26.7m, raised in part by a seven-fold increase in sponsorship income to £13.1m, plus other substantial boosts to matchday and retail receipts.
This new-found sustainability on the back of such huge income levels also brings one very big benefit. Namely, how Wrexham — unlike others in League One, whose business model relies largely on selling players — can hang on to their best talent with a view to pushing even further up the leagues.
The performances of Max Cleworth and Arthur Okonkwo at this level have not gone unnoticed. The duo being calmness personified in the comfortable win over Gary Caldwell’s side will only have sharpened that interest.
Likewise how Sam Smith, Ollie Rathbone (who scored the game’s opener on Saturday), Ryan Longman, Lewis Brunt and George Dobson — all signed in the past 12 months amid a notable shift in recruitment policy that has started to bring the average age down and give the side more mobility — once again underlined their contribution to the promotion push.
The vast financial resources that have allowed Parkinson to recruit such talent mean there’s no real ceiling to how far the Welsh club can go. Unlike, perhaps, Exeter, due to the limitations of a fan-run setup that inevitably go with the commendable aspects, which on Saturday included a team of volunteers clearing rubbish from the stands within 15 minutes of the final whistle.
Wrexham are not fully there on the sustainability front. They did lose £2.7m in 2023-24 and a similar deficit is forecast for this season.
But, after all those years in north Wales of trying to make every pound do the work of a fiver as the supporters’ trust commendably kept the lights on, the time really has arrived for Wrexham to dream big.
(Top photo: Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images)
Sports
Paige Spiranac talks 'sexual favors' rumors at start of golf career

Paige Spiranac is one of the biggest influencers in sports on social media, building a following of more than 4 million followers on Instagram and another 1.6 million on TikTok.
As Spiranac grew in popularity from playing collegiate golf to taking a different route in the sports industry, she faced some vile rumors about how she was able to get ahead.
Paige Spiranac attends the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue Release and 60th Anniversary Celebration on May 16, 2024, in New York City. (Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit)
She revealed on an episode of the “Quiet Please!” podcast earlier this month that she just “wanted to be liked” when she made an appearance at a 2015 golf tournament in Dubai.
“There were constant comments like ‘I did sexual favors to get this invite,’ and I was listening to it – and they would say [it] within earshots of me,” Spiranac revealed. “It was tough.”
Spiranac added that her popularity was a result of “going viral” but she wasn’t prepared for everything that came with it.
GOLF LEGEND JOHN DALY MAKES LIGHT OF RECENT HEALTH SCARES: ‘I’VE ONLY BEEN DEAD 11 TIMES’

Paige Spiranac watches her teammates putt during the Kaulig Companies Championship Pro-Am at Firestone Country Club, July 12, 2023, in Akron, Ohio. (Jeff Lange/USA Today Network)
“I ended up going viral and this was back when people weren’t going viral all the time and I didn’t know how to handle it and my whole life got flipped upside down. I went from having 500 followers to 100,000 followers,” Spiranac said, via People magazine. “I show up and was doing hours of press, which I wasn’t prepared for.
“I had no training to do this. And I would say there were a couple of girls who were really supportive and who were nice, but the majority [of them], it was brutal. I would go on the range and girls would just scatter. No one wanted to hit next to me.”

Paige Spiranac attends the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Celebration on May 18, 2024, in Hollywood, Florida. (Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit)
Spiranac has been open about how she deals with struggles on and off the golf course, as well as trying to get on the LPGA Tour in the past.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Sports
Sondheimer: Venice's Lawrence Kensinger practices patience in shotput

Nick Garcia is like a horse whisperer, but for shotputters. He’s trained 18 Southern Section champions at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame High in the shotput and discus. When he speaks, athletes listen.
Lawrence Kensinger, a junior at Venice, started working out with Garcia once a week. He trusts him so much that he adopted his weight-training regimen and shotputting techniques. More challenging was accepting Garcia’s edict that he’d have to wait until the final two weeks of the track season to reach peak form.
That means when others might be throwing top marks, he will have to bite his tongue, be patient and wait for the City Section championships and state championships to do his best.
“It’s for sure something you think about,” Kensinger said of having to wait to see the validation of his workouts. “I’ve focused on enjoying the process and being patient. When the time comes, I will throw far.”
Garcia believes Kensinger has a 60-foot throw coming this season. His best had been 55 feet 5.5 inches going into this weekend. All the training revolves around reaching peak form when it counts.
“That’s the plan,” Garcia said. “And he will. He’s going to have a big throw soon. You can’t throw far every week. If you don’t plan for the end of the season, someone else will. You want to make sure you’re locked in for the end of the season.”
Kensinger comes from a family of achievers. His brother, Thomas, was a star football player at Venice, went to the Air Force Academy, gave up the sport, became a boxer and recently won the academy’s heavyweight title. Sister Daniella is a beach volleyball player at Arizona State after being the City Section player of the year at Venice.
Twins Daniella and Thomas Kensinger were star athletes at Venice High.
(Cliff Kensinger)
Lawrence, 5 feet 11 and 210 pounds, played football his first two years at Venice before dropping the sport last season to focus on the shotput. “I started to love it,” he said.
What’s to love about heaving a 12-pound ball of iron?
It’s the journey to win meets.
“It’s a mix of everything — technique, explosiveness, patience,” Kensinger said. “If you try to do brute force, it’s going going to throw you off.”
Now that his big brother is boxing, will Lawrence test himself?
“I’ve been provoking him a little bit,” he said. “I’ve been telling him to teach me how to box.”
Lawrence still lifts weights with the football team, then heads to the track to train by himself. He’s an A student preparing to be the City Section shotput champion, then maybe surprise people at the state meet in Fresno.
He’s got his shotput Yoda instructing him, so who knows.
Venice has one of its strongest City Section track teams, with distance standout Paul Tranquilla and 400-meter runner Nathaniel Santa Cruz ready to score points in multiple events.
Remember, Kensinger is only a junior and sticking with Plan A.
“It’s all about those two weeks, the City championships and the state meet,” he said.
He’s a 17-year-old committed to the process of preparation and execution while waiting for the big day to happen.
-
News1 week ago
Musk Offers $100 to Wisconsin Voters, Bringing Back a Controversial Tactic
-
News1 week ago
How a Major Democratic Law Firm Ended Up Bowing to Trump
-
Education1 week ago
ICE Tells a Cornell Student Activist to Turn Himself In
-
World1 week ago
Donald Trump signs executive order to ‘eliminate’ Department of Education
-
News1 week ago
Were the Kennedy Files a Bust? Not So Fast, Historians Say.
-
News1 week ago
Dismantling the Department of Education will strip resources from disabled children, parents and advocates say | CNN
-
News6 days ago
Washington Bends to RFK Jr.’s ‘MAHA’ Agenda on Measles, Baby Formula and French Fries
-
Politics1 week ago
Student loans, Pell grants will continue despite Education Department downsizing, expert says