Sports
WWE ring collapses during last monster standing match
The “Monday Night Raw” audience was treated to a special moment during a last monster standing match between Bran Strowman and Bronson Reed.
The two gigantic men had been tormenting each other for weeks, and it came to a head during Monday’s show. Strowman started the match off by chokeslamming Reed through the announcer’s table, but Reed needed to stay down for a 10 count for Strowman to win.
Braun Strowman and Bronson Reed collapse the ring during Monday night RAW at Ford Center on Sept. 30, 2024, in Evansville, Indiana. (WWE/Getty Images)
As the match moved on, Reed speared Strowman through the barrier and into the first row of the audience. He hit multiple Tsunami finishing moves on Strowman and ultimately threw the referee back into the ring for him to start counting to 10. But Raw general manager Adam Pearce didn’t’ appear to appreciate what Reed was doing and the two confronted each other.
As Reed held Pearce by the shirt, Strowman jumped from the top rope and onto Reed and the group of officials and security guards.
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The wild scene would be topped moments later.
Reed got Strowman back into the ring and perched him up onto the top rope. He hit a suplex from there and as the two men crashed onto the ring – it burst. All four corners fell down, as did the ring ropes. Several bodies were strewn across the ring. The referee was tossed out of it.
The referee got up and started to count to 10. Just as it appeared Reed was going to get up, Seth Rollins made his in-ring return. Rollins hit a Curb Stomp on Reed, which knocked him out.
Strowman stood up and was declared the winner.
Braun Strowman and Seth Rollins celebrate during Monday night RAW at Ford Center on Sept. 30, 2024, in Evansville. (WWE/Getty Images)
Reed had knocked Rollins out of action for a few weeks, and it seemed as though a bigger feud was brewing between the two competitors.
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Sports
Giants part with longtime executive one day after John Harbaugh introduced as head coach
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The New York Giants parted with a longtime high-ranking executive just one day after introducing John Harbaugh as head coach.
Senior Vice President of Football Operations Kevin Abrams is leaving the organization. Abrams had been with the organization since 1999, and in a front office executive position since 2002 when he was assistant general manager.
Abrams had been a constant at the top of the organization throughout its bevy of general manager and coach firings over the last decade. Abrams’ tenure in the front office spanned four general managers, including his own short stint as interim GM in 2017, and seven head coaches before Harbaugh.
New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh speaks to the media after being introduced during a news conference at the team’s NFL football training facility. The event took place in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. (Adam Hunger/AP Photo)
Harbaugh’s arrival as head coach came with a different set of terms related to the organizational structure and his own power to shape it compared to previous Giants coaches.
Harbaugh is the first Giants coach who will report directly to ownership, bypassing a long-running team tradition of the coach reporting to the general manager.
Giants’ Senior Vice President of Player Personnel Chris Mara told reporters Tuesday that Harbaugh will be the “most important cog in the wheel” for the organization now and suggested Harbaugh was a unique candidate with the leverage to negotiate such power.
“He’s going to be the most important cog in the wheel. Let’s put it that way. But in terms of final say, this is going to be a collaborative effort between ownership, general manager and coach,” Mara said.
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“We’re just comfortable doing this with him. I think with anybody else, maybe it might not have happened that way. Everyone was in agreement, so we’re good.”
Harbaugh was endorsed for the Giants head coaching job by President Donald Trump several days before the hiring in a Truth Social post. Trump also said Harbaugh should “take the job,” in the endorsement. Harbaugh acknowledged Trump’s endorsement in his introductory press conference Tuesday.
“It feels really great!” Harbaugh said, when asked by Fox News Digital how it felt to have the president’s endorsement. “I also noticed in that post that he said, ‘John take the job!’ So I thought [owner] John Mara might’ve had something to do with that.”
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Trump praised Harbaugh and the Giants for the hire while speaking to Fox News Digital late on Monday night, and hinted at a personal connection with the Harbaugh family.
“I like the coach. I like his brother,” Trump said. “They came up to see me about three months ago. They came up to see me in the White House with their mother and father because the mother likes me, and the father likes me and I think they like me. And he’s a great coach and he’s gonna do well with the Giants, just like his brother does so well. They got something very special in their blood. And I’m happy for the Giants. They got a great coach.”
Fox News Digital’s Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report.
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Sports
Alijah Arenas’ debut spoiled by USC’s loss to Northwestern
As he laid in a hospital bed last April, grateful just to be alive, Alijah Arenas dreamed of this moment. He thought of it in the weeks and months after his Tesla Cybertruck hit a tree and burst into flames in Reseda, leaving him hospitalized for six days. And he thought of it over a long summer and fall spent rehabbing the injured knee that failed him in his first week back to practice at USC.
Nine difficult months spent waiting for the day to finally arrive had culminated Wednesday night with Arenas roaring into the lane, with just one defender standing between him and the hoop. The five-star freshman had committed to USC with every intention of bolting for the NBA after one season, only for the setbacks of the past year to put his likely lottery status in doubt.
But here, as he lifted towards the hoop early in his college debut, Arenas spun around that lone defender in mid-air and softly laid in a finger roll, reminding everyone in attendance of the talent they’d waited so eagerly to see.
But what unfolded from that moment on Wednesday night probably wasn’t how Arenas had envisioned it, as Northwestern spoiled his debut, dealing USC a 74-68 defeat.
It was Arenas’ backup in the backcourt who would drag the Trojans back from the brink against Northwestern after the Wildcats had led nearly the entire game. Just a week earlier, Jordan Marsh had dropped 17 in the second half of USC’s win over Maryland. On Wednesday, he was even better, piling up 19 after halftime.
But there was little he or USC’s five-star freshman could do in the final minutes as Northwestern fended off every push from the desperate Trojans, thanks largely to the efforts of senior forward Nick Martinelli, who had 22 points.
Arenas had eight points in his debut, shooting three of 15 from the perimeter in a performance that left him obviously gassed throughout. He played 29 minutes, nonetheless, at one point leaving to have his knee evaluated by trainers on the bench.
With losses in three of their last five coming into Wednesday, USC (14-5 overall, 3-5 in Big Ten) had hoped that Arenas’ arrival would act as a salve at the start of its Big Ten slate, injecting five-star talent into a lineup ravaged by injuries. But there were only so many problems that talent could paper over for the Trojans, even if Northwestern had come into Wednesday night on the heels of a five-game losing streak.
Arenas’ debut didn’t suddenly correct the Trojans’ free-throw woes. After hitting just five of 14 from the stripe in a loss to Purdue on Saturday, USC responded by shooting 26 of 43 on Wednesday night, with Northwestern content to foul them pretty much whenever the Trojans drove inside.
Once again, no one, Arenas included, could get going from three-point range for USC either, as the Trojans followed up a three of 20 showing from deep against Purdue loss by hitting their first two three-pointers … only to miss their next 11.
They spent most of the second half without their leading scorer, too, after Chad Baker-Mazara fouled out with more than nine minutes remaining.
Still, USC hung on tight through the second half, never letting Northwestern’s lead grow to more than eight. Marsh drove the lane with a chance to cut Northwestern’s lead to a single possession in the final 15 seconds. But his lay-in flew wildly out of his hands.
The loss spoiled a debut that had been perhaps the most anticipated at USC in at least half a decade, since Evan Mobley graced the Galen Center court in 2021. But while Mobley led the Trojans on an Elite Eight run, his lone season at USC was played front of empty arenas because of COVID-19 restrictions.
Arenas, meanwhile, was just the sort of blue-chip prospect that Eric Musselman and his staff had hoped to build around.
The path to that point would prove far more harrowing than anyone expected. But what felt like a light at the end of the tunnel Wednesday night didn’t feel nearly as hopeful by the final buzzer.
Sports
Bills quarterback’s wife pens heartfelt social media post to fired coach Sean McDermott’s family
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Hillary Trubisky, the wife of Buffalo Bills backup quarterback Mitch Trubisky, posted a heartfelt message on social media following the firing of head coach Sean McDermott.
Trubisky credited McDermott and his wife, Jamie, for making Buffalo feel like home.
“Jamie and Sean are a huge reason why Buffalo has always felt like home to us,” Trubisky captioned on her Instagram story. “So thankful for you both and everything you have done for our family on and off the field. Wherever you go next is very lucky.”
Buffalo Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky (11) throws a pass before a game against the New York Jets at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, New York, on Jan. 4, 2026. (Timothy T Ludwig/Getty Images)
“Love you (Jamie). Our nighttime dog walks, carpooling, and slime sales with the kids will always have a special place in my heart. You are truly a one-of-a-kind human being, and I am so lucky our paths crossed.”
Mitch Trubisky signed a two-year, $5.25 million contract in 2024 to rejoin the Bills for his second stint with the team. His first season with the Bills was in 2021 after four seasons with the Chicago Bears.
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Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott looks on before the game against the New York Jets at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, New York, on Jan. 4, 2026. (Mark Konezny/Imagn Images)
The 31-year-old has seen limited action over his three seasons with the Bills with Josh Allen at the helm but has played well when called upon. In Week 18 against the New York Jets, while he didn’t technically start because Allen took the first snap to preserve his starting streak, Trubisky played the rest of the game and performed well.
In the Bills’ 35-8 win over the Jets, Trubisky completed 22 of his 29 passes for 259 yards and four touchdowns. He is a free agent this offseason.
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Head coach Sean McDermott and owner Terry Pegula of the Buffalo Bills look on before a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, on Dec. 12, 2021. (Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)
Bills owner Terry Pegula told reporters on Wednesday that his decision to fire McDermott was based on the results of the team’s 33-30 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos on Sunday.
McDermott spent nine seasons with the Bills and went 98-50 with a 16-8 record in the playoffs but was unable to lead the team to a Super Bowl.
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