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Apollo Silver is advancing two high-impact silver projects in premier North American jurisdictions—California and Chihuahua—offering investors a unique combination of scale, optionality, and leverage to silver and critical mineral demand.

Overview

Apollo Silver (TSXV:APGO,OTCQB:APGOF,FSE: 6ZF0) is a silver-focused company advancing a dual-asset strategy centered on two high-impact projects in North America: the Calico silver project in California, USA and the Cinco de Mayo project in Chihuahua, Mexico. Both are located in mining-friendly jurisdictions with strong infrastructure and significant historical work.

At Calico, Apollo Silver is advancing the Waterloo deposit toward development through geological modeling, barite resource definition, and engineering studies. Calico boasts 125 Moz of silver (measured and indicated) and 58 Moz of silver (inferred), and recent test work has produced a 94.6 percent barite concentrate, supporting the asset’s potential as a US critical minerals supplier.

In Mexico, Cinco de Mayo offers rare optionality with a historical inferred resource of 154 Moz silver equivalent (385 g/t), and a potentially game-changing discovery at the Pegaso Zone. The project is under an option agreement between Apollo Silver and Pan American (previously MAG Silver), wherein Apollo Silver will complete a 20,000-meter drill program to convert the option to an acquisition of the Cinco de Mayo. Apollo Silver’s strategy is underpinned by disciplined capital allocation, high-impact exploration, and a proven ability to acquire and unlock value from high-quality assets—following a model similar to Prime Mining. With no debt, strong institutional backing, and an experienced team, Apollo Silver is well-positioned to deliver scalable, discovery-driven growth in a rising silver and critical minerals market.

Company Highlights

  • Tier-1 US Silver Asset – Calico Project: Hosts 125 Moz silver (Measured and Indicated) and 58 Moz silver (inferred), making it the largest undeveloped primary silver deposit in the US.
  • Barite & Zinc Critical Minerals Exposure: Calico includes an Indicated resource estimate of 2.7 Mt of barite and 354M lbs of zinc and an Inferred resource estimate of 0.65Mt of barite and 258M lbs of zinc.
  • High-grade Discovery Potential – Cinco de Mayo: An option to acquire a district-scale carbonate replacement deposit with a historical inferred resource of 154 Moz silver equivalent at 385 g/t, offering further upside from the Pegaso Zone discovery target.
  • Strategic Shareholder Registry: Backed by Jupiter Asset Management, Eric Sprott, Terra Capital, Commodity Capital and Ninepoint.
  • Experienced Leadership Team: Proven M&A, discovery and capital markets expertise with over $5 billion in past transactions and most applicable to Apollo Silver, the success at Prime Mining.

Key Projects

Calico Project

The Calico silver project comprises three adjacent properties—Waterloo, Langtry and Mule—located in mining-friendly San Bernardino County, 15 km from Barstow, California. Resources at Calico sit primarily on private land with vested mining rights, simplifying the path to permitting. Infrastructure is excellent: paved roads, power lines within 5 km, and proximity to the expanding Barstow rail terminal.

Using a 47 g/t silver equivalent cut-off grade, the Waterloo Deposit includes 125 M oz of silver in in 55Mt at an average grade of 71 g/t silver in the Measured and Indicated categories, and 0.51 Moz silver in 0.6 Mt at an average of 26 g/t silver in the Inferred category. The Langtry Deposit now contains 57 Moz silver in 24 Mt at an average grade of 73 g/t in the Inferred category, using a 43 g/t silver cut-off grade. The deposits are approximately 2 km apart, shallow, laterally extensive, and exhibit excellent geologic continuity. The mining concept would be a potential open-pit operation, with a minimal environmental footprint and where Waterloo would have a low strip ratio of 0.8:1.

Apollo Silver recently added critical mineral resources for both barite & zinc at the Calico project. Barite has shown recoveries above 94.6 percent in earlier test work. Waterloo includes an Indicated resource estimate of 2.7 Mt of barite and 354M lbs of zinc at an average grade of 7.4 percent barite and 0.45 percent zinc at a cut-off grade of 47 g/t silver equivalent. It also contains Inferred resource estimate of 0.65Mt of barite and 258M lbs of zinc, at an average grade of 3.9 percent barite and 0.71 percent zinc at a cut-off grade of 47 g/t silver equivalent.

The company has recently acquired 2,215 hectares of highly prospective claims contiguous to its Waterloo property at the Calico silver project referred to as the Mule claims comprising 418 lode mining claims. The Mule claims expand the Calico Project land package by over 285 percent, from 1,194 ha to 3,409 ha of contiguous claims.

Having recently announced its mineral resource estimate, ongoing 2025-26 programs are contemplated to include exploration for additional gold mineralization, with a subsequent targeted drill program contingent on positive early results, and metallurgical and geotechnical work program on Waterloo.

Cinco de Mayo Project

Cinco de Mayo is a district-scale carbonate replacement deposit (CRD) system located in Chihuahua, Mexico along the same NW-SE structural trend that hosts some of the country’s largest silver and base metal deposits. The project was historically MAG Silver’s flagship asset, hosting a 2012 historical mineral resource estimate prepared by RPA. At an NSR cut-off of US$100/t, the Inferred resources were estimated to total 12.45 Mt at 132 g/t silver, 0.24 g/t gold, 2.86 percent lead, and 6.47 percent zinc. The total contained metals in the resource were 52.7 Moz of silver, 785 Mlbs of lead, 1,777 Mlbs of zinc, and 96,000 ounces of gold. Notably, a significant mineralized intercept—including 61 meters of massive sulphides—was drilled by MAG Silver in the Pegaso Zone beneath the known resource but never followed up due to social access issues.

The site also includes the Pozo Seco deposit, which hosts an additional historical resource consisting of 29.1 Mt grading 0.147 percent molybdenum and 0.25 g/t gold, containing 94.0 Mlbs of molybdenum and 230,000 oz of gold, in the Indicated resource category. An Inferred Mineral Resources were estimated at 23.4 Mt grading 0.103 percent molybdenum and 0.17 g/t gold, containing 53.2 Mlbs of molybdenum and 129,000 oz of gold. Cut-off grade used in the 2010 technical report was 0.022 percent molybdenum.

Apollo Silver has secured an option to acquire the Cinco de Mayo property from Pan American (previously Mag Silver) and is re-engaging with the local community to secure surface access. A new, development-friendly ejido administration, elected in December 2024, has created an opportunity to negotiate a mutually beneficial agreement for access rights. Once secured, Apollo plans to launch a 20,000-meter drill campaign, with priority targets at Pegaso and expansion zones at Jose Manto.

Under the option agreement with Pan American, Apollo must secure surface access, complete the 20,000 meters of drilling, and issue 19.99 percent of its common shares to finalize the acquisition. The company is also evaluating metallurgical studies and engineering reviews to support a future resource update.

Management Team

Andrew Bowering – Chairman of the Board

A venture capitalist with over 30 years of operational experience, Andrew Bowering has raised over $500 million in value and capital for companies within the natural resources industry. He is the founder of Millennial Lithium and American Lithium, and he is a director and executive advisor to Prime Mining.

Ross McElroy – President and CEO

Ross McElroy is a professional geologist with over 38 years of experience in the mining industry, spanning operational and corporate roles with major, mid-tier, and junior companies worldwide. He played a pivotal role in the discoveries of several world-class uranium and gold deposits, many of which have advanced through development into mining operations. Most recently he was the CEO of Fission Uranium Corp, where he oversaw the sale of Fission for more than $1.14B to Paladin Energy.

Chris Cairns – Chief Financial Officer

Chris Cairns is a CPA, CA and brings more than 13 years of experience working in the finance and mining industries. He obtained his designation while at PwC, working with numerous Canadian and US-listed mining and exploration companies operating in North America, South America and Mongolia, before leaving to serve in roles as controller and CFO of two publicly listed mining exploration companies listed in Canada and the United States.

Rona Sellers – VP Commercial and Compliance and Corporate Secretary

Rona Sellers is an experienced governance professional with more than 13 years of experience in corporate and securities law. Previously, she was VP compliance and corporate secretary at Maple Gold Mines, and previous to that she held corporate secretarial roles at publicly traded companies listed in Canada and the United States.

Isabelle Lépine – Director, Mineral Resources

With over 25 years experience leading resource focused technical programs and teams, Isabelle Lépine brings extensive knowledge in mineral resource management to Apollo. Her significant experience ranges across the advanced stages of the resource development cycle through to mining. Most recently, she was director of mineral resources at Stornoway Diamonds.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

The 2025-26 NBA season started Tuesday night in Oklahoma City as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder hosted Kevin Durant and the Houston Rockets.

Before tip-off, the Thunder celebrated their 2024-25 NBA championship season and raised their first title banner since the organization moved to Oklahoma City.

OKC players were greeted by NBA commissioner Adam Silver as they were introduced to the home crowd and received their championship rings.

Here’s how the players reacted to the championship rings and banner being raised:

Thunder receive championship rings, raise title banner

Oklahoma City Thunder championship rings

Here’s a detailed view of the Thunder’s new bling:

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Don’t say we didn’t warn you. The most devastating bye week for fantasy football managers is now at hand – with six NFL teams taking the week off and leaving bunches of open starting spots all across the fantasy landscape.

WEEK 8 BYES: Arizona, Detroit, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, L.A. Rams, Seattle

The big issue is not only finding replacements to fill the void, but also figuring out which players are most expendable to make sure you have a legal roster.

Although you’re probably going to have to dig deep, here’s who might be worth picking up this week:

Fantasy football players to add for Week 8

Due to the wide variance in types of leagues and individual team needs, the players listed here include their availability rates in Yahoo leagues, which may or may not match rates on other platforms. If you have bye week issues, feel free to go the extra dollar. (Suggested bid values based on $100 free agent acquisition budget for the season.)

RB Kyle Monangai, Chicago Bears (7% rostered)

Who’s fantasy stock is rising quickly? This (Monan)gai right here!

Splitting time almost evenly with starter D’Andre Swift (35 snaps to 31), the rookie racked up 81 rushing yards and a touchdown on 13 carries in his most extensive work of the season vs. the Saints. Granted, the Bears had the game well in hand and Swift missed some practice time during the week with a groin injury, but Monangai is showing he’s capable of handling more work the rest of the way. (Suggested FAAB bid: $11)

TE Oronde Gadsden, Los Angeles Chargers (6%)

Gadsden has emerged as yet another excellent receiving option for Chargers QB Justin Herbert. His presence does make wideouts Quentin Johnston, Ladd McConkey and Keenan Allen a bit more risky to start, but if you need a fill-in at tight end this week, you have to be encouraged by Gadsden’s seven catches for 164 yards and a TD against the Colts. He has the potential to be a consistent top-10 option at the position going forward. (FAAB bid: $10)

WR Tez Johnson, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (17%)

Mike Evans’ season-ending broken collarbone makes Johnson even more valuable than he was in last week’s roundup. After snagging a 45-yard TD in Week 6, Johnson added an electrifying catch-and-run score against the Lions on Monday night. He finished with four receptions on nine targets for 58 yards, but expect those numbers to rise significantly with Evans out. Sterling Shepard is a decent fallback option. (FAAB bid: $9)

WR Xavier Legette, Carolina Panthers (7%)

After a dreadful start, Legette has now scored in two of his last three games. Sunday’s outing at the Jets may finally signal a breakout for last year’s No. 32 overall pick. Hauling in nine of his 11 targets, Legette racked up a career-high 92 receiving yards. Even with Jalen Coker activated off the PUP list, Legette is the clear No. 2 receiver behind 2025 first-rounder Tetairoa McMillan. (FAAB bid: $5)

WR Alec Pierce, Indianapolis Colts (10%)

Stepping up with Josh Downs sidelined by a concussion, Pierce saw a season-high 10 targets in the shootout against the Chargers, with five catches for 98 yards. Keep an eye on Downs’ progress during the week as the Colts have an enticing matchup at home against the Titans. If he’s questionable, Pierce could have another good outing. (FAAB bid: $5)

WR Chimere Dike, Tennessee Titans (2%)

Sensing a theme here … With Calvin Ridley out, Dike – the Titans’ primary return man – got an extended look on offense. He wasn’t on the field as much as Elic Ayomanor or Van Jefferson, but he did make the most of his opportunities with four receptions for 70 yards and a touchdown. But let’s not call him Dike Metcalf or anything just yet. (FAAB bid: $3)

RB Brashard Smith, Kansas City Chiefs (6%)

Perhaps it was only due to the Chiefs blowing out the Raiders, but the rookie seventh-rounder had by far his busiest day as a pro in Week 7. He was on the field for 28 snaps (15 more than Kareem Hunt) and he turned those into 14 carries and five receptions for 81 total yards. He’s had at least three catches in each of the past four games, too. (FAAB bid: $3)

TE Pat Freiermuth, Pittsburgh Steelers (7%)

Don’t forget about the Thursday shootout against the Bengals in which Freiermuth caught five passes for 83 yards and two touchdowns. QB Aaron Rodgers does love his tight ends, even though he has at last three to choose from there in Pittsburgh. (FAAB bid: $3)

TE Noah Fant, Cincinnati Bengals (1%)

In that same TNF game, Fant had four catches for 44 yards and a score. With Mike Gesicki on injured reserve, Fant becomes the Bengals’ primary tight end. And we also know how much Joe Flacco likes throwing to his tight end. (FAAB bid: $2)

WR Christian Watson, Green Bay Packers (11%)

If your league allows pickups of injured players, Watson is a great speculative add this week if you have the roster space. He’s been cleared to practice after sitting out all season with a knee injury, and his first game could come this week at Pittsburgh. If you’re looking for potential upside, Watson does have 14 TD receptions in his first three NFL seasons. (FAAB bid: $1)

Fantasy football quarterbacks to stream for Week 8

QB Jaxson Dart, New York Giants (42%)

With three touchdowns through the air and one on the gound in a shootout vs. Denver, Dart finished as the QB2 for the week (behind the Broncos’ Bo Nix). He’ll have a fairly high floor every week because of his running ability. But still, he connected on just 15-of-33 passes (45.5%) so the rough edges haven’t been completely smoothed out. The Giants are at Philadelphia this week. (FAAB bid: $5)

QB Joe Flacco, Cincinnati Bengals (11%)

Flacco has been great at getting the ball out quickly to his talented crop of receivers. Throwing for 342 yards and three scores against the Steelers on a short week, he should have more than enough time to prepare (and succeed) this week against the Jets. Feel free to hang onto him another week even with a home date against the Bears in Week 9. (FAAB bid: $4)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The week fantasy football managers have been dreading has arrived. ‘Byemageddon’ is officially hitting the NFL in Week 8.

For the first, and only, time of the 2025 NFL season, a whopping six of the league’s 32 teams will be out of action. That will leave Week 8 with just 13 total games of action while thinning the ranks of available options for fantasy football managers.

That will create some difficult start ’em, sit ’em decisions for fantasy football managers looking to replace talent like Jahmyr Gibbs, Puka Nacua, Trey McBride and much more.

Add in the injuries that are still impacting the availability of some top fantasy stars, and managers may have to scour the waiver wire for potential bye-week fill-ins with upside. That could lead to some strange-looking lineups, especially for those that have multiple players on bye in Week 8.

Who can you start and sit in fantasy football for Week 8 of the NFL season? USA TODAY Sports breaks down the outlook for 16 players.

Fantasy football players to start in Week 8

Quarterbacks

  • Bo Nix, Denver Broncos (vs. Dallas Cowboys)

The Cowboys have given up the most fantasy points per game (FPPG) to quarterbacks this season. That includes a league-high 16 passing touchdowns and 222 rushing yards to the position. Nix just scored four touchdowns in the fourth quarter of the Broncos’ 33-32 comeback win over the Giants, so expect the second-year quarterback to remain hot in a good matchup.

  • Aaron Rodgers, Pittsburgh Steelers (vs. Green Bay Packers)

Are the Packers as easy a matchup for Rodgers as the Bengals? Not quite. Still, Green Bay has surrendered multiple passing touchdowns in four of its last five games while Rodgers has racked up 14 touchdowns across his six starts with the Steelers. He should be plenty motivated to post good numbers against his former team, making this a potential boom spot for the 41-year-old.

Running backs

  • Rico Dowdle, Carolina Panthers (vs. Buffalo Bills)

Dowdle maintained a solid workload despite the return of Chuba Hubbard from a calf injury. Both players should be able to earn fantasy relevance against a Bills defense that has surrendered the fifth-most FPPG to running backs this season and is tied for second in total rushing touchdowns allowed to the position with eight.

  • Tyler Allgeier, Atlanta Falcons (vs. Miami Dolphins)

Wide receivers

  • Rome Odunze, Chicago Bears (at Baltimore Ravens)

Don’t be scared off by Odunze’s back-to-back two-catch outings. He’s still averaging 7.7 targets per game and has emerged as Caleb Williams’ favorite target. That should give him a chance to find success often against a Ravens defense that has allowed the second-most FPPG to receivers this season.

  • Troy Franklin, Denver Broncos (vs. Dallas Cowboys)

The Cowboys have a weak pass defense that has allowed a league-high 12 receiving touchdowns to wide-outs this season. That could position Franklin, who is averaging a solid 6.6 targets per game, for a strong outing.

Tight end

  • Mason Taylor, New York Jets (at Cincinnati Bengals)

The Bengals allowed four receiving touchdowns to tight ends in Week 7 alone. They have allowed nine total throughout the season, which is three more than the second-ranked team, the Jets. That could position Taylor, who has seen at least five targets in four of his last five games, for a big week.

Defense/special teams:

  • Indianapolis Colts (vs. Tennessee Titans)

The Colts are averaging 2.7 sacks per game and are going up against a Titans defense that averages a league-low 13.7 points per game. That will make for a high-floor matchup and should allow Indianapolis to emerge from Week 8 as a top-five fantasy defense.

Fantasy football players to sit in Week 8

Quarterbacks

  • Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys (at Denver Broncos)

Sitting Prescott may not be easy after the veteran quarterback has posted at least three touchdowns in four consecutive games. That said, the Broncos have allowed no more than one passing touchdown in five of their seven contests this season. Prescott will maintain a high ceiling given the level at which he is playing, but his floor makes him a riskier start than usual.

  • Justin Fields, New York Jets (at Cincinnati Bengals)

Some may be tempted by Fields’ rushing upside against a woeful run defense, but the 26-year-old might not even start this game for the Jets. He was benched mid-game last week in favor of Tyrod Taylor and has racked up nearly as many sack yards (76) as passing yards (91) over his last six quarters of action. So, even if Fields does start, his limitations as a passer should prevent him from becoming a quality fantasy starter this week.

Running backs

  • Rhamondre Stevenson, New England Patriots (vs. Cleveland Browns)

Stevenson may not be threatened for touches by second-round rookie TreVeyon Henderson, but the veteran has a tough matchup against the Browns. Cleveland has allowed the third-fewest FPPG to running backs and just three touchdowns. Stevenson had 90 scrimmage yards and a touchdown against a weak Titans run defense but had averaged just 35.5 scrimmage yards across his previous four games.

  • Quinshon Judkins, Cleveland Browns (at New England Patriots)

Funny enough, Stevenson and Judkins were our ‘start’ recommendations last week. Now, they are both ‘sits.’ Judkins is facing a Patriots defense that has allowed the fourth-fewest FPPG to running backs this season and two rushing touchdowns. It will be hard for Judkins to enjoy the type of consistent success he did against a bottom-tier Dolphins run defense in Week 7.

Wide receivers

  • Zay Flowers, Baltimore Ravens (vs. Chicago Bears)

Quietly, Chicago’s pass defense has improved during its four-game winning streak. The Bears have allowed just 201.5 passing yards per game during that span, so Flowers’ opportunities to make downfield plays may be more limited, especially if Lamar Jackson (hamstring) can’t return following the bye week.

Flowers hasn’t scored since Week 1 and is averaging a solid but unspectacular 59 receiving yards per game with Jackson out of the lineup.

  • Darnell Mooney, Atlanta Falcons (vs. Miami Dolphins)

Mooney had a solid return to action against the 49ers, catching three passes for 68 yards playing across from Drake London. The Dolphins have allowed just 780 receiving yards to wide-outs this year though and are extremely weak against the run. Atlanta prefers to be a ground-dominant offense, so that may prevent Mooney from getting the volume needed to produce a quality fantasy outing.

Tight end

  • Zach Ertz, Washington Commanders (at Kansas City Chiefs)

Many variables could impact Ertz’s performance on ‘Monday Night Football’ in Week 8. Starting quarterback Jayden Daniels is dealing with a hamstring injury that could impact his availability for this game while the statuses of Terry McLaurin and Deebo Samuel could also impact the type of receiving volume Ertz gets. Add in that the Chiefs have allowed the fourth-fewest FPPG to tight ends this season, and this seems like an unappealing spot for the veteran.

Defense/special teams:

  • Pittsburgh Steelers (vs. Green Bay Packers)

The Steelers are averaging a strong 3.7 sacks per game but were just shredded by Joe Flacco and Chase Brown on ‘Thursday Night Football.’ Jordan Love and Josh Jacobs could be similarly effective, so it’s best not to trust Pittsburgh’s stop unit this week.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Lane Kiffin is the most obvious fit for Florida Gators.
  • James Franklin is a proven choice, but he’s no slam dunk choice, especially not considering how his Penn State tenure ended.
  • Would Florida consider another Group of Five hire? If so, put Alex Golesh on list.

Florida’s coaching search must start in Mississippi. Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin suits Florida like flip flops and fish bait.

Points. Quarterback play. Quips. Needling the competition. Visor. He’s a dream fit for Florida.

Kiffin is a slam dunk choice for Florida, but it’s not a slam dunk he’d say yes. He’s found success and stability at Ole Miss, where his Rebels are a playoff contender.

What if Kiffin says no?

On this edition of ‘SEC Football Unfiltered,’ a podcast from the USA TODAY Network, hosts Blake Toppmeyer and John Adams consider nine candidates for the Florida job with a round of love it, like it or no thanks.

Should Florida football consider hiring these coaching candidates?

Lane Kiffin, Mississippi

Adams: Love it. A slam dunk choice, if he’d take the job.

Toppmeyer: Love it. He’d be the closest coach to Steve Spurrier Florida could hope to find.

Eli Drinkwitz, Missouri

Adams: Like it. He’s fared well at Missouri, albeit short on signature wins

Toppmeyer: Like it. He’s Kiffin Light. Would prefer the fully leaded version.

James Franklin, fired Penn State coach

Adams: Love it. Proven winner.

Toppmeyer: No thanks. He’s good for somebody, but not Florida. His personality, lack of quarterback development and inconsistent offensive production would rankle Gators fans.

Jedd Fisch, Washington coach

Adams: No thanks. What’s he done?

Toppmeyer: No thanks. He graduated from Florida. Big deal. So did Layla Kiffin.

Jon Sumrall, Tulane

Adams: No thanks. A good coach, but can’t risk another Group of Five hire.

Toppmeyer: No thanks. But, of my ‘no thanks’ candidates, I like this one best.

Rhett Lashlee, SMU

Adams: No thanks. Good coach, but Florida needs to aim higher.

Toppmeyer: Like it. Not a home run, but a solid double.

Alex Golesh, South Florida

Adams: No thanks. Can’t risk Group of Five hire again.

Toppmeyer: Like it. His high-scoring offense would fit Florida, and he’s already won in The Swamp.

Urban Meyer, FOX analyst

Adams: Absolutely love it. No elaboration necessary.

Toppmeyer: Like it. It would be either awesome or awful. Or, likely, a bit of both.

Jon Gruden, Barstool Sports personality

Adams: I like this – if I could collect a share of the proceeds of the Chucky dolls sold in the university bookstore. Otherwise, maybe not.

Toppmeyer: No thanks. Gruden’s better suited to the job he has as an internet content creator.

Later in the episode

∎ The hosts take a hot seat temperature reading of Auburn’s Hugh Freeze and LSU’s Brian Kelly.

Week 9 picks against the spread!

Toppmeyer’s five-pack of picks (picks in bold):

∎ Alabama (-13.5) at South Carolina

∎ Auburn (-1.5) at Arkansas

∎ Tennessee (-9.5) at Kentucky

∎ Texas (-6.5) at Mississippi State

∎ South Florida (-3.5) at Memphis

Season record: 20-20 (3-2 last week)

Adams’ five-pack of picks (picks in bold):

∎ Tennessee (-9.5) at Kentucky

∎ Alabama (-13.5) at South Carolina

∎ Ole Miss at Oklahoma (-4.5)

∎ Texas A&M (-2.5) at LSU

∎ Minnesota at Iowa (-8.5)

Season record: 18-22 (1-4 last week)

Where to listen to SEC Football Unfiltered

  • Apple
  • Spotify
  • iHeart
  • Google

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. John Adams is the senior sports columnist for the Knoxville News Sentinel. Subscribe to the SEC Football Unfiltered podcast, and check out the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The WNBA collective bargaining agreement expires in 10 days.

Minnesota Lynx All-Star forward Napheesa Collier, who serves as the WNBPA vice president, says the players have prioritized ‘two main points’  increased revenue sharing and salary structures  during negotiations.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver was asked about progress toward a deal by “Today” host Craig Melvin on Tuesday, Oct. 21. Melvin asked if WNBA players should get a larger piece of the revenue pie. “They get nine percent of total revenue compared to roughly 50 percent of the revenue of NBA players. Should they be getting a larger share of revenue in the WNBA?”

“Yes,’ Silver said ‘I think ‘share’ isn’t the right way to look at it because there’s so much more revenue in the NBA. You should look at it in absolute numbers in terms of what they’re making. They are going to get a big increase in this cycle of collective bargaining. And they deserve it.”

Under the current agreement, WNBA players receive 9.3% of the league’s revenue, according to Market Watch, which includes income generated through ticket sales, TV deals, licensing and merchandise. The WNBA’s revenue share agreement is much lower than other professional leagues. NBA players receive 49-51% of all basketball-related income and NFL players get 48% of all revenue and NHL players receive 50% of revenue.

The current CBA, which was signed in January 2020, shortly after Cathy Engelbert took over as commissioner in 2019, was set to expire in 2027. The WNBPA, however, exercised its right to opt out of the agreement last October amid unprecedented league growth, meaning the CBA now ends on Oct. 31, 2025.

‘While I hope we make the October 31st deadline, and that is a real deadline from that perspective, we have extended deadlines in the past,’ Engelbert said during her press conference ahead of the WNBA Finals on Oct. 3. ‘Last time, when I was only a couple days on the job, we got to an extension and got a deal done that was progressive at the time. So again, I feel confident that we can get a deal done, but if not, I think we could do an extension.’

The draft lottery, expansion drafts and subsequent free agency period are all contingent on a new CBA. The league’s newest franchises, the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire, will begin play during the 2026 season, which will be the WNBA’s 30th anniversary.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Investor Insight

Spartan Metals offers a compelling investment opportunity in the US critical minerals sector through its high-grade, 100-percent-owned Eagle tungsten-silver-rubidium project in Nevada. With strong grades, multi-metal exposure, and alignment with US defense and supply chain initiatives, Spartan provides investors with exceptional leverage to the growing demand for domestically sourced strategic critical minerals.

Overview

Spartan Metals (TSXV:W) is a US-focused critical minerals explorer advancing its high-grade tungsten and rubidium asset in Nevada. Through its flagship Eagle project, the company is unlocking American critical mineral resources essential to defense, technology and energy independence. Spartan’s projects are strategically positioned to contribute directly to the United States’ onshoring objectives under the Defense Production Act and related supply-chain initiatives.

Eagle project site in Nevada

The Eagle tungsten-silver-rubidium project in eastern Nevada anchors a district-scale opportunity covering 4,936 acres across three historic mine areas – Tungstonia, Rees and Antelope. With historic production of 8,379 units of tungsten trioxide (WO₃) at grades between 0.6 to 0.9 percent, the project hosts one of the highest-grade past-producing tungsten systems in the United States, enriched by rubidium and other US defense-critical metals such as antimony, bismuth, indium and arsenic. Spartan is now executing an exploration program to validate and expand this potential through modern geochemistry, geophysics and tailings drilling.

Led by a team with deep Nevada exploration experience and direct US Department of Defense (DOD) engagement, Spartan is pursuing a partnership-driven approach to project advancement. It combines early-stage exploration and reprocessing opportunities and joint ventures to accelerate development. With a strong insider ownership base (42 percent) and exposure to multiple critical metals, Spartan Metals is an emerging US leader in strategic mineral discovery and domestic supply security.

Company Highlights

  • Flagship Eagle Project: One of the highest-grade, past-producing tungsten mines in the US.
  • Multi-metal Exposure: Targets tungsten, rubidium, antimony, bismuth, and silver – all listed as US critical minerals.
  • Tier-1 Mining Jurisdiction: Located in eastern Nevada, a world-class mining state with established infrastructure and regulatory clarity.
  • Strong Management and Technical Team: Led by a CEO and VP of exploration with proven discovery track
  • Alignment with US Critical Minerals Strategy: Positioned to benefit from Department of Defense and US government initiatives supporting domestic critical mineral supply chains.
  • Attractive Capital Structure: Tight share strucuture with management and board holding ~42 percent of shares outstanding, ensuring strong alignment with investors.

Key Asset: Eagle Project

Spartan’s 100-percent-owned Eagle project in White Pine County, Nevada, is a nationally significant critical mineral asset which includes the past-producing Tungstonia, Rees and Antelope mines. The Eagle project historically produced over 8,000 units of WO₃ between 1915 and 1956, and now presents a rare opportunity to redefine one of the highest-grade tungsten and rubidium systems in the United States.

With multiple mineralized zones, district-scale potential and strong alignment with US strategic metal initiatives, the Eagle project is the cornerstone of Spartan’s growth strategy.

Project Highlights

  • District-scale Footprint with High-grade Legacy Production: 4,936 acres (20 sq km) across 244 BLM claims in eastern Nevada; Past-producing Tungstonia and Rees mines averaged 0.6 to 0.9 percent WO₃, with channel samples up to 5.32 percent WO₃
  • Rubidium Discovery: Rock chip assays up to 2,264 parts per million (ppm) rubidium, positioning Eagle as a potentially significant US rubidium source
  • Polymetallic Opportunity: System hosting tungsten-rubidium-silver with antimony, bismuth and arsenic, all metals critical for US defense sector
  • Three Deposit Types: Features porphyry, skarn and carbonate replacement deposit (CRD) styles, a rare combination that indicates a large, long-lived hydrothermal system capable of hosting multiple mineralization centers, supporting district-scale exploration potential
  • Active 2025 Exploration Program: Fieldwork commenced in October 2025, executing Phase 1 of its NI 43-101-recommended program and part of Phase 2. Activities include drilling of historic Tungstonia tailings, detailed soil and rock sampling, geologic mapping and CSAMT/MT geophysics to define high-priority tungsten-rubidium drill targets and support future resource modeling.
  • Tailings Reprocessing Opportunity: ~9,000 tonnes of tailings averaging 0.14 percent WO₃ and 460 ppm rubidium offer near-term reclamation value-add
  • Tier-1 Mining Jurisdiction: Excellent access to infrastructure near Ely, Nevada
  • Strategic Positioning: Fully aligned with US DOD and Department of Energy initiatives to secure domestic tungsten and rubidium supply chains

Management Team

Brett R. Marsh – President, CEO and Director

Brett Marsh is a professional geologist with more than 25 years of experience in mineral exploration and project development across North America and internationally. Marsh previously led major exploration initiatives for both junior and mid-tier mining companies and has extensive experience in tungsten and critical mineral systems. He oversees Spartan’s technical and strategic direction and is the company’s “qualified person under NI 43-101..

Rebecca Ball – Vice-president, Exploration

Rebecca Ball brings over a decade of exploration and operational experience across base, precious and critical minerals. She specializes in greenfield targeting and geological modeling, most recently leading the McDermitt Lithium stratigraphy initiative that expanded its resource significantly. Her expertise is instrumental in defining the next phase of resource development at the Eagle project.

Michael Harp – Director

Currently VP Exploration at Ridgeline Minerals, Michael Harp has over 15 years of exploration experience in Nevada, including the discovery of over 5 million ounces of gold in the Carlin Trend’s Railroad-Pinion district. His extensive field and project management experience supports Spartan’s Nevada-focused exploration programs.

Terese Gieselman – Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary

Terese Gieselman is a seasoned financial executive with over 30 years of experience in public company management and corporate finance in the mining sector. She brings expertise in governance, financial reporting, and capital markets strategy that will support Spartan’s growth.

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Astron (ASX:ATR) said on Monday (October 20) that Australia has granted major project status to the Donald rare earths and mineral sands project, its joint venture with Energy Fuels (TSX:EFR,NYSEAMERICAN:UUUU).

Donald is located approximately 300 kilometers northwest of Melbourne in Minyip, Victoria, Australia, and is regarded as “one of the world’s most significant rare earths resources outside China.”

It currently holds a total mineral resource of 1.81 billion tonnes grading 4.6 percent.

“This (designation) will streamline our engagement with federal agencies and accelerate our pathway to development,” commented Astron Managing Director Tiger Brown in a press release. “The Donald project will create significant employment opportunities and deliver long-term economic benefits to the Wimmera region of Victoria as well as strengthen Australia’s sovereign capability in critical minerals and advanced technology supply chains.”

Donald has a planned mine life of 58 years, with expected annual output of 9,000 tonnes of rare earths in Phase 1.

In a separate announcement, Energy Fuels said Export Finance Australia (EFA) has expressed support for the project and will provide AU$80 million via senior debt financing. The total amount needed to develop Donald is AU$520 million.

Energy Fuels CEO Mark Chalmers said that the support is a “key additional step” in the project’s financing pathway and a “strong vote of confidence” in the project’s capacity and potential.

“(It) reflects our on-going progress toward delivering one of Australia’s most important rare earth projects, including valuable NdPr, and exceptional concentrations of Dy, Tb and other ‘heavy’ rare earth oxides, which upon project development will be processed and separated into high-purity products at our White Mesa Mill in Utah,” he added.

According to a work plan for Donald published in June, the progression towards a final investment decision for the project is expected within 2025. Commencement of production at Donald is scheduled for 2027.

Rare earths have been heavily spotlighted this month after China dramatically expanded its control over rare earth exports, a sector crucial to global tech and defense industries.

The October 10 announcement from the Ministry of Commerce adds five new elements — holmium, erbium, thulium, europium and ytterbium — along with key refining technologies to its export control list.

The new rules carry a global reach: any foreign company producing rare earth materials or magnets using Chinese-origin equipment or technology must now obtain an export license from Beijing.

Crucially, applications for defense-related or advanced semiconductor projects, including cutting-edge AI with military potential, will face intense scrutiny and are likely to be denied.

Securities Disclosure: I, Gabrielle de la Cruz, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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Chris Vermeulen, chief market strategist at TheTechnicalTraders.com, weighs in on gold’s record-setting price run and what could be next for the metal.

Vermeulen also discusses the outlook for silver, platinum and palladium.

Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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IAMGOLD (TSX:IMG,NYSE:IAG) is tightening its grip on one of Québec’s most promising gold districts with back-to-back acquisitions aimed at consolidating control over a vast stretch of the Chibougamau region.

In the span of two days, the mid-tier gold producer announced definitive agreements to acquire Northern Superior Resources (TSXV:SUP,OTCQB:NSUPF) and Mines d’Or Orbec (TSXV:BLUE).

Collectively the deals will expand its landholding to more than 100,000 hectares.

The larger of the two transactions will see IAMGOLD acquire all issued and outstanding shares of Northern Superior Resources in a cash-and-stock deal valued at approximately C$267.4 million.

The acquisition will fold Northern Superior’s Philibert, Chevrier and Croteau projects into IAMGOLD’s existing Nelligan and Monster Lake holdings, creating what the company has branded the Nelligan Mining Complex.

Together, these properties host estimated measured and indicated mineral resources of 3.75 million ounces of gold and inferred resources of 8.65 million ounces, positioning the district as Canada’s fourth largest pre-production gold camp.

“The addition of Northern Superior’s assets to IAMGOLD’s Nelligan Mining Complex in the Chibougamau region of Québec is extremely exciting for IAMGOLD, the region and our mutual shareholders,” said Renaud Adams, IAMGOLD’s president and CEO. “This acquisition aligns with our strategy to become a leading Canadian-focused mid-tier gold producer, bolstering our organic pipeline in Québec where we have maintained a longstanding presence.”

A day earlier, IAMGOLD struck a deal to acquire Mines d’Or Orbec, a junior explorer advancing the Muus project southwest of Chibougamau. IAMGOLD already holds a 6.7 percent equity interest in Orbec and expects to issue roughly 369,000 new shares to complete the purchase. The transaction will bring Muus under IAMGOLD’s control.

Located at the intersection of the Fancamp and Guercheville deformation zones, which are two major mineralized corridors that also host IAMGOLD’s Monster Lake and Nelligan deposits, the 24,979 hectare Muus project has been viewed as a geological link between the company’s existing holdings.

“Over the past several years, we have advanced the Muus project into one of Québec’s most promising gold exploration plays,” Orbec CEO John Tait said.

With the addition of both Northern Superior and Orbec, IAMGOLD is set to more than double its regional footprint.

The company has signaled its intent to pursue a “hub-and-spoke” development strategy in the region, envisioning a central processing facility fed by multiple ore sources within a 17 kilometre radius.

Pending regulatory and shareholder approvals, both acquisitions are expected to close in late 2025 or early 2026.

The price of gold has surged to unprecedented levels this month, reaching an all-time high of around US$4,370 per ounce amid heightened safe-haven demand and expectations of US interest-rate cuts.

However, on Tuesday (October 21), a correction began to set in as the yellow metal pulled back sharply. It fell as much as 5.5 percent to about US$4,115 as profit taking kicked in and the US dollar strengthened.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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