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Monday Night Fights.

The New York Giants might be eliminated from playoff contention, but they aren’t going quietly into the night. Especially as the New England Patriots take aim at Big Blue’s rookie quarterback.

Jaxson Dart cleared concussion protocol ahead of the Giants’ Week 13 trip to New England, allowing him to retake his spot at the starting quarterback.

The Patriots certainly didn’t waste any time reintroducing the rookie to the pros, however, as Christian Elliss laid the boom on Dart.

Both teams sparred following the play, but only the Giants’ Theo Johnson was flagged for a personal foul.

It was the second time in as many drives that Dart took a big hit from a Patriots’ defender and the second time it drew a reaction from the visiting team.

Reports indicated that the Giants were going to protect Dart from himself, opting to remove designed runs from the playbook to avoid any unnecessary hits, according to ESPN’s Jordan Raanan.

While the hit didn’t look good, it was a legal one from Elliss. The linebacker hit the quarterback in the shoulder while he was still in bounds.

The Giants are hoping to coach that out of Dart, encouraging him to prioritize his health more going forward.

Early returns aren’t promising, but Elliss’ hit was yet another teaching moment for the rookie quarterback.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

FOXBOROUGH, MA — For the second time in three games, New York Giants rookie defensive lineman Abdul Carter was nowhere to be found when the “Big Blue” defense took the field for the first time. 

And neither he nor interim head coach Mike Kafka wanted to discuss after the Giants’ thrashing at the hands of the New England Patriots, 33-15. Kafka repeatedly said it was ‘my decision’ during his postgame news conference, while Carter’s refrain to reporters was ‘(expletive) happens.’

In fact, Kafka repeated the phrase ‘my decision’ 11 times during his back-and-forth with reporters, who continually pressed him on his reasoning. Kafka said he did not regret the choice.

Carter wore a long blue overcoat near the Giants’ bench as the defense allowed a field goal on the opening drive of the “Monday Night Football” matchup and remained on the sideline for their touchdown drive later in the quarter. 

‘Listen, when he came back in the game you saw the kind of impact he had and the player this guy is,’ he said. ‘This is a kid that I, again, I back, I support this kid highly and for any young player that we have on the roster, whether it’s Abdul or any rookie or young player, we’re going to make sure we him under our wing and continue to develop these guys because they’re important to us. They’re important to me.

‘That was my decision, my decision only. Anything else outside of it is going to be kept in house.’

Kafka benched Carter for the first defensive series against the Green Bay Packers on Nov. 16 because he missed a walkthrough while in a recovery bed; Carter disputed reports he napped through a team activity and said the treatment was part of his training. 

‘Again, those are tough decisions to make, but that was my decision and, again, the kid, nothing with him,’ Kafka said. ‘Everything that we did was my decision and obviously I’m sure he wasn’t happy about it, which I understand, but I thought that was the best thing for the team and it was my decision to move forward with it and that’s where we’re at.’

The Giants selected Carter third overall out of Penn State in the 2025 draft. He rejoined his unit in the second quarter in search of his first full sack of the season, which came three plays later when he took down Patriots quarterback Drake Maye at the line of scrimmage.

‘Like I said, I have to be better,’ Carter told reporters. ‘I have to take pride in what I do, be where I have to be at. Simple as that.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Humanoid robotics is rapidly advancing.

Driven by the convergence of technological innovation, evolving labor market demands and growing investor interest, the humanoid robotics industry is expanding at a rapid rate. A handful of humanoid robotics companies have announced initial public offerings in 2025, such as China’s Unitree and Singapore’s Otsaw, with more predicted in 2026.

Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood said in October that humanoid robots “will be the biggest of all” artificial intelligence (AI) opportunities, highlighting their potential in transportation, healthcare and productivity enhancement.

Samimi discussed the impact AI integration has had on the robotics industry, challenges such as labor shortages and supply chain disruptions and how the firm evaluates opportunities within this nascent yet promising market.

Key trends in humanoid robotics

According to Samimi, recent trends in robotics include enhanced automation in the industrial and logistics sectors.

“We’re seeing a lot of new trends on foundation models and control stacks within the robotic sector, as well as new sorts of electronic assemblies to put all of these components together,” he explained, pointing to companies like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), BMW (ETR:BMW,OTC Pink:BMWKY) and Mercedes-Benz Group (ETR:MBG,OTC Pink:MBGAF) as current adopters of humanoid robots in factories and warehouses.

Additionally, Samimi highlighted that recent battery advances have improved energy density, enabling longer robot operation for industrial and logistics tasks. Meanwhile, lighter, more efficient actuators enhance precision and energy use, supporting dynamic interaction and human collaboration.

Finally, advances in robotics control systems are powered by cutting-edge AI algorithms. Platforms like RideScan, a Humanoid Global portfolio company, harness continuous, independent AI-driven monitoring, risk scoring and anomaly detection to optimize robot performance. The company recently filed a patent in the UK for its core AI technology

Samimi added that safety and reliability remain critical focal points amid these technological advances.

Advances in algorithms, machine learning and operational intelligence systems are enabling comprehensive, scalable safety and maintenance solutions for robots deployed across different facilities, supported by digital twin technologies and a closed-loop data cycle for continuous improvement.

Addressing labor shortages via robotics

Labor shortages and constrained supply chains are accelerating innovation by prompting industrial sectors to adopt robotics to augment limited labor resources.

The 2025 MHI Annual Industry Report, a document that covers emerging disruptive technologies, confirms robotics is thriving amid labor shortages and rising complexity in logistics and manufacturing.

During the US-Saudi Investment Forum, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk made a bold prediction about the long-term effects of robotics and AI: work will become optional, and money will be obsolete.

“I don’t know what long term is — maybe it’s 10, 20 years or something like that,” Musk said, adding that there is still a lot of work to be done before society gets to that point.

In the meantime, the workforce will likely see more human-robot collaboration. Samimi said he has observed that humanoid robots and collaborative robots (cobots) are increasingly taking over repetitive manual tasks.

“Human labor now shifts to more, higher-value tasks, rather than moving a warehouse box or a palette from A to B. So we’re seeing somewhat of a shift (that’s) helping make labor more scalable and more productive, and really less dependent on that shrinking labor pool,” he said.

Resource-heavy and industrial sectors present strong opportunities for robotics, especially amid a limited labor pool. Areas like agriculture, mining, pharmaceuticals and lumber stand to benefit from automation and upskilling via robotics.

Robotics investment thesis and portfolio evaluation

Humanoid Global views its role not only as an investor, but also as an ecosystem builder, actively fostering collaboration and knowledge sharing across its portfolio companies.

By strategically connecting early stage innovators with mature industry players, Humanoid Global seeks to accelerate the global deployment and scale of humanoid robotics technologies.

The firm emphasizes balancing risk across a portfolio that includes both disruptive technology developers and companies closer to full commercial deployment, allowing for diversified exposure while driving integrated growth.

Companies are evaluated with a strong prioritization for teams with proven execution capabilities and sustainable technological moats, such as proprietary IP or unique data networks. Scalability and clear go-to-market strategies are equally important, as is a strong safety architecture embedded in the technology.

This approach highlights the importance of strategic relationships, market education and risk-managed growth in realizing the transformative potential of humanoid robotics.

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

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

As scrutiny continues to intensify across the battery metals supply chain, the conversation around sustainability has moved far beyond carbon footprints.

At this year’s Benchmark Week, Stefan Debruyne, director of external affairs at Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile (SQM) (NYSE:SQM), made that point unmistakably clear: sustainability in lithium is as much about people, process and transparency as it is about emissions — and it must be learned, not imposed.

SQM, one of the world’s largest lithium producers, has long been at the center of debates about extraction in Chile’s Salar de Atacama. But for Debruyne, the company’s vision of leadership goes beyond scale.

“We approach leadership in a holistic way,” he said. “It’s not only about having trust to produce and being able to deliver the quality the market needs, but also doing it in a responsible way — dialogue, working closely with stakeholders and civil society. We work very hard on all components.”

Building social license

Much of Debruyne’s role over the past five years has centered on improving engagement with Indigenous communities, many of which have deep historical grievances tied to land, water and the impact of large-scale resource extraction.

“It’s really about being the best neighbor possible,” he said.

But getting there has required fundamental shifts in mindset and method. One of the clearest examples is what Debruyne called the principle of horizontality — a change born from early missteps.

A decade ago, when communities questioned the mine’s hydrological impacts, SQM responded the way many industrial operators would: it sent engineers to explain the technical data.

“You would think that’s a great thing to do,” Debruyne said. “But we learned that’s not the right way, because community members aren’t hydrologists. There’s a vertical difference.”

Instead, SQM now helps communities secure independent experts of their choosing, ensuring conversations happen “on a horizontal level.” This shift has been crucial to rebuilding trust.

Just as important, Debruyne said, is abandoning the western notion of time.

“Communities have a different concept of time. It’s about giving them the time they need — taking information back, returning, iterating. You may think you’re doing things the right way, but there’s always room for improvement.”

Why social investment reduces risk

For Oxfam policy advisor Andrew Bogrand, these types of changes are not just ethical — they’re also practical.

The expert, who also spoke on the panel, noted that since 2010, more than 800 protests or violent incidents have occurred around mine sites globally, including 300 since 2021 alone.

Each one carries real costs: slowdowns, legal expenses, rising insurance premiums — and, as Bogrand pointed out, the hidden cost of executive time diverted to crisis management.

“There is a win-win solution,” he told the Benchmark Week audience. “It’s engaging communities, making sure everyone’s on the same page. Sometimes the solutions are very simple.”

As an example, he pointed to mining projects where warning messages were sent in English to communities that do not speak the language, or where key safety information was delivered over SMS when what residents needed was a physical noticeboard in their own dialect.

Bogrand described companies that “step over a dollar to pick up a penny” — refusing modest community requests, only to face shutdowns costing tens of millions of dollars.

Transparency: A tool, not a threat

Debruyne described transparency as one of SQM’s most effective tools, even if it initially felt counterintuitive.

A few years ago, the company made all hydrological data from its government reporting publicly accessible online.

“I was bracing myself,” he said, expecting to receive dozens of questions about brine levels. But counter to his fears, transparency defused tension rather than fueling it. “I received complete silence,’ Debruyne noted.

It also created a foundation for future collaboration, including joint environmental monitoring programs with communities that had refused to speak with SQM for years.

Moving slow to move fast

The tension between rapid industry growth and slow, iterative sustainability processes often surfaces in investor discussions. For Bogrand, the answer is simple: “You have to move slow to move fast.”

Rushing early stage engagement almost always backfires, he argued, while early investment in community relationships pays dividends across the life of a mine.

Debruyne echoed this idea, noting that patience, consistency and presence — not promises — win trust. In one case, SQM organized a visit for Atacama Indigenous women leaders to electric vehicle and battery plants in Germany and Poland, allowing them to see firsthand where lithium fits in a finished product.

One participant, surprised that the metal formed only a thin coating on a cathode, admitted she had imagined an “Avatar-like” scenario where mines destroyed massive volumes of land for each battery.

“Because they don’t have visibility on the value chain, they make interpretations, which is human,” Debruyne told listeners. “Dialogue is so important.”

Both Debruyne and Bogrand agree that the lithium supply chain cannot scale without social acceptance, credible transparency and deep engagement with affected communities.

As Debruyne noted, “Ultimately, it’s about people.”

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

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Investors looking for exposure to the silver price and silver-mining companies should consider silver exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

Spurred by moves in the gold market, safe-haven buying as well as increasing demand from industrial sectors, in the fourth quarter of 2025 the price of silver broke through its all-time high of US$49.95, which it set in 1980, and set a new-all time high of US$58.83.

While silver has often been seen as a more approachable precious metal owing to its lower per ounce price, its performance has lagged gains seen in the gold price over the past few years. However, silver has stolen some of the spotlight in 2025 as it sees significant gains on the back of geopolitical tension and economic uncertainty from the US trade and tariff policy.

Like gold investing, investors can invest in silver in several ways that each offer their own pros and cons, along with differing costs and risks. For example, investors can purchase physical silver bars or coins, or trade silver futures.

Another way for investors to diversify their portfolio with silver is to invest in ETFs. These products work similarly to mutual funds in that they pool investor resources into an asset. However, as their name suggests, ETFs are traded on exchanges like stocks, making them more accessible to investors than mutual funds are.

While ETFs aren’t without risk, they can offer a more stable investment compared to individual stocks thanks to their diversification and the fact that they are often managed and rebalanced.

Silver ETFs come in several forms, such as ones that hold physical silver and ones that hold silver mining, royalty and exploration stocks. Investors looking to start trading silver ETFs should be aware of the options available to them to determine which silver ETF will best suit their precious metals investing needs and risk tolerance.

Here’s a brief look at 10 of the top silver ETFs by total assets. The first five ETFs offer exposure to the price of silver, while the last five provide exposure to silver-mining stocks.

Assets and prices for these silver ETFs were collected on December 1, 2025, using data from the funds’ web pages.

5 ETFs for exposure to the silver price

1. iShares Silver Trust (ARCA:SLV)

Total assets: US$26.33 billion
Unit price: US$51.21

The iShares Silver Trust provides investors with access to the silver price performance, using the London Bullion Market Association silver price as its benchmark.

As the iShares Silver Trust’s web page warns, it is not an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, or a commodity pool under the Commodity Exchange Act. Because of this, it is not subject to the regulatory requirements that apply to mutual funds or ETFs.

This silver trust holds 508 million ounces of silver bullion.

2. Sprott Physical Silver Trust (ARCA:PSLV,TSX:PSLV)

Total assets: US$11.61 billion
Unit price: US$18.65

The Sprott Physical Silver Trust is an option for investors looking for the security of physical silver without the need to find secure storage.

The ETF is backed by 191.12 million ounces of silver held in trust in fully allocated London Good Delivery silver bars.

Additionally, the ETF is fully convertible into physical silver, should investors decide they want the precious metal on hand. However, the fund states that holders ‘must have enough units to equate to ten 1000 oz silver bars.’

3. Aberdeen Standard Physical Silver Shares ETF (ARCA:SIVR)

Total assets: US$3.71 billion
Unit price: US$53.71

The Aberdeen Standard Physical Silver Shares ETF’s investment objective is for its shares to reflect the performance of the silver price less the expenses of the trust’s operations. It has an expense ratio of 0.3 percent.

This ETF comes with the same warnings as the iShares Silver Trust.

The fund is backed with 45.51 million ounces of silver held with JPMorgan Chase Bank in London in a secured vault.

4. ProShares Ultra Silver ETF (ARCA:AGQ)

Total assets: US$1.33 billion
Unit price: US$107.32

The ProShares Ultra Silver ETF, established in 2008, was designed to offer daily investment results that correspond with twice the daily performance of the Bloomberg Silver Subindex. Because of this, the ETF is aimed at investors who are bullish on silver and able to monitor their investments on a daily basis.

The fund uses derivatives such as futures contracts to invest in silver and has an expense ratio of 0.95 percent.

5. ProShares UltraShort Silver ETF (ARCA:ZSL)

Total assets: US$73.71 million
Unit price: US$9.51

The ProShares UltraShort Silver ETF is designed to provide investors with a hedge against declines in the silver market. ProShares launched it alongside the ProShares Ultra Silver ETF in late 2008. It also has an expense ratio of 0.95 percent.

Because the fund is built around providing results at a negative two times daily performance of the Bloomberg Silver Subindex, it is meant for traders who have a high capacity for risk and who are willing to monitor their positions on a daily basis. The fund should be treated in the same way as the Ultra Silver ETF.

5 ETFs for exposure to silver-mining stocks

1. Global X Silver Miners ETF (ARCA:SIL)

Total assets: US$3.93 billion
Unit price: US$77.66

The Global X Silver Miners ETF gives investors access to a basket of silver-mining and royalty stocks. The ETF benefits from the fact that these companies can climb when the silver price is rising. It also allows investors to avoid the risks associated with individual companies and lets them add geographical diversity to their portfolios.

This ETF has an expense ratio of 0.65 percent, and its top holdings include streaming company Wheaton Precious Metals (TSX:WPM,NYSE:WPM) at a weight of 22.5 percent, Pan American Silver (TSX:PAAS) at a weight of 12.3 percent and Coeur Mining (NYSE:CDE) at 8.1 percent.

2. Amplify Junior Silver Miners ETF (ARCA:SILJ)

Total assets: US$2.97 billion
Unit price: US$26.09

The Amplify Junior Silver Miners ETF bills itself as the ‘first and only ETF to target small cap silver miners.’ The index provides a benchmark for investors to track public small-cap companies in the silver space.

The ETF has an expense ratio of 0.69 percent and its holdings span Canada, the US and the UK, with key silver companies such as Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL) at a weight of 11.3 percent, First Majestic Silver (TSX:AG,NYSE:AG) at 10.3 percent and Coeur Mining at 8.7 percent.

3. iShares MSCI Global Silver Miners ETF (BATS:SLVP)

Total assets: US$630 million
Unit price: US$31.59

The iShares MSCI Global Silver Miners ETF tracks an index composed of global equities of companies primarily engaged in silver exploration or metals mining.

The ETF has the lowest expense ratio of the three ETFs focused on silver stocks at 0.39 percent.

The large majority of companies in its holdings, about 69 percent, are traded on Canadian exchanges, and companies on US and Mexican exchanges combine for 27 percent.

The top three holdings for the iShares MSCI Global Silver Miners ETF are Hecla Mining at a weight of 15.5 percent, Industrias Peñoles (BMV:PE&OLES) with a weight of 11.7 percent and Fresnillo (LSE:FRES) at 10 percent.

4. Sprott Silver Miners & Physical Silver ETF (NASDAQ:SLVR)

Total assets: US$453.7 million
Unit price: US$51.31

The Sprott Silver Miners & Physical Silver includes a combination of physical silver holdings as well as equities, setting it apart from the other silver-mining ETFs on the list.

The fund launched in January 2025, making it one of the newest entries to the list. Its management fee is 0.65 percent.

This silver ETF’s second largest holding is its counterpart Sprott Physical Silver Trust, which provides investors exposure to physical silver, at a 14.3 percent weight. Its other top holdings are First Majestic Silver at 27.12 percent and Endeavour Silver (TSX:EDR,NYSE:EXK) at 10.6 percent.

5. Sprott Active Gold and Silver Miners ETF (NASDAQ:GBUG)

Total assets: US$134.42 million
Unit price: US$41.18

Established in February 2025, the Sprott Active Gold and Silver Miners ETF is designed to provide investors broad access to both gold and silver equities. Additionally, as an active fund, it will see more frequent rebalancing to increase the potential of better returns for investors.

The fund’s top holdings consist of OceanaGold (TSX:OGC,OTCQX:OCANF) weighted at 4.32 percent, G Mining Ventures (TSX:GMIN,OTCQX:GMINF) at 4.18 percent and Equinox Gold (TSX:EQX,NYSEAMERICAN:EQX) at 4.16 percent.

Its management fee is 0.89 percent.

Securities Disclosure: I, Dean Belder, hold an investment in Sprott Active Gold and Silver Miners ETF.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

PARIS — Airbus fleets were returning toward normal operations on Monday after the European plane maker pushed through abrupt software changes faster than expected, as it wrestled with safety headlines long focused on rival Boeing.

Dozens of airlines from Asia to the United States said they had carried out a snap software retrofit ordered by Airbus, and mandated by global regulators, after a vulnerability to solar flares emerged in a recent mid-air incident on a JetBlue A320.

Airbus said on Monday that the vast majority of around 6,000 of its A320-family fleet affected by the safety alert had been modified, with fewer than 100 jets still requiring work.

JetBlue Airbus A320 planes at LaGuardia Airport in New York City.Nicolas Economou / NurPhoto via Getty Images file

But some require a longer process and Colombia’s Avianca continued to halt bookings for dates until December 8.

Sources familiar with the matter said the unprecedented decision to recall about half the A320-family fleet was taken shortly after the possible but unproven link to a drop in altitude on the JetBlue jet emerged late last week.

Shares in Airbus were down 2.1% in early trading in Paris.

Following talks with regulators, Airbus issued its 8-page alert to hundreds of operators on Friday, effectively ordering a temporary grounding by ordering the repair before next flight.

“The thing hit us about 9 p.m. [Jeddah time] and I was back in here about 9:30. I was actually quite surprised how quickly we got through it: there are always complexities,” said Steven Greenway, CEO of Saudi budget carrier Flyadeal.

The instruction was seen as the broadest emergency recall in the company’s history and raised immediate concerns of travel disruption particularly during the busy U.S. Thanksgiving weekend.

The sweeping warning exposed the fact that Airbus does not have full real-time awareness of which software version is used given reporting lags, industry sources said.

At first airlines struggled to gauge the impact since the blanket alert lacked affected jets’ serial numbers. A Finnair passenger said a flight was delayed on the tarmac for checks.

Over 24 hours, engineers zeroed in on individual jets.

Several airlines revised down estimates of the number of jets impacted and time needed for the work, which Airbus initially pegged at three hours per plane.

“It has come down a lot,” an industry source said on Sunday, referring to the overall number of aircraft affected.

The fix involved reverting to an earlier version of software that handles the nose angle. It involves uploading the previous version via a cable from a device called a data loader, which is carried into the cockpit to prevent cyberattacks.

At least one major airline faced delays because it lacked enough data loaders to handle dozens of jets in such a short time, according to an executive speaking privately.

UK’s easyJet and Wizz Air said on Monday they had completed the updates over the weekend without cancelling any flights.

JetBlue said late Sunday it expected to have completed work to return to service 137 of 150 impacted aircraft by Monday and plans to cancel approximately 20 flights for Monday due to the issue.

Questions remain over a subset of generally older A320-family jets that will need a new computer rather than a mere software reset. The number of those involved has been reduced below initial estimates of 1,000, industry sources said.

Industry executives said the weekend furor highlighted changes in the industry’s playbook since the Boeing 737 MAX crisis, in which the U.S. plane maker was heavily criticized over its handling of fatal crashes blamed on a software design error.

It is the first time Airbus has had to deal with global safety attention on such a scale since that crisis. CEO Guillaume Faury publicly apologized in a deliberate shift of tone for an industry beset by lawsuits and conservative public relations. Boeing has also declared itself more open.

“Is Airbus acting with the Boeing MAX crisis in mind? Absolutely — every company in the aviation sector is,” said Ronn Torossian, chairman of New York-based 5W Public Relations.

“Boeing paid the reputational price for hesitation and opacity. Airbus clearly wants to show … a willingness to say, ‘We could have done better.’ That resonates with regulators, customers, and the flying public.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

COPPER MOUNTAIN, Colo. — Mikaela Shiffrin’s skiing greatness doesn’t come from the wins or the records.

It comes from the quiet moments in training, when she’s obsessing over the tiniest of details and repeating a drill over and over to perfect her technique. Without those moments, the ones only her team sees, you wouldn’t get the big moments the whole world sees.

‘The attention to detail, that’s where she’s got it,’ Karin Harjo, Shiffrin’s head coach, said after Shiffrin won the slalom at Copper Mountain for her 104th World Cup victory.

‘What’s great is that she’s getting into this place, especially in slalom, where she’s really comfortable and she’s bringing the training scheme to racing,’ Harjo continued. ‘And that speed is something that I think for the world to see is great because it’s pushing the level of sport, showing what is possible, and I think that’s one of the coolest things that you can ever do.’

It may seem as if Shiffrin’s entire career has occurred in rarefied air. A World Cup winner at 17. The youngest to win the Olympic slalom. A five-time overall champion. A two-time Olympic gold medalist. Winner of a record 17 World Cups in a single season. Most World Cup wins of any skier, male or female.

But Shiffrin is human, and her current dominance came out of that frailty.

It was a year ago this weekend that Shiffrin suffered a puncture wound in her abdomen in a crash during the second run of the giant slalom at the World Cup in Killington, Vermont. She would miss the next two months of the season and, even after she returned, struggled with PTSD about the GS. Slalom was safer, but she was still fighting to regain her rhythm and momentum.

The offseason gave Shiffrin a chance to reset and immerse herself in the process, her favorite thing about skiing.

Some people ski for the medals or fame or money. Shiffrin skis for the joy she gets from making good turns and figuring out how to squeeze another tenth of a second or two out of herself.

‘I am so obsessed with the feeling that I get in between the start and the finish when it’s good,’ Shiffrin said Sunday. ‘It’s just such a beautiful feeling, and when I can improve that a little bit, that’s motivating. The second run was the motivating thing for me. And then to do it and to anticipate it, to visualize it and then to execute it and to actually get to the bottom and see that it was indeed well done, that’s the best feeling.’

That feeling feeds her confidence. And her confidence feeds her skiing.

She talked after the first run of being able to trust her slalom skiing. She hasn’t had a lot of time training slalom of late, but what she did have was solid and that allows her to trust that the work she’s put in will carry over onto the race course.

‘She’s found a place in which she can start to push again,’ said Paula Moltzan, who has been skiing with Shiffrin since they were teenagers.

‘I think after the crash in GS, she lacked confidence. She could clearly still win, but you just see that confidence coming back into her every turn, every race,’ Moltzan said. ‘That second run, the conditions are really tough, it’s a hometown crowd and she just handles everything with such grace. It’s pretty inspiring.’

The wins, the results — they just reinforce that it’s pushing herself in training that matters. It’s that constant challenge of making her turns just a tad quicker, just a bit tighter that’s her superpower.

‘Everybody talks about momentum, and really momentum is just an action or force that leads to the next step,’ Harjo said. ‘And so we’re always looking forward and taking the next step and working hard. Results in the past, both successful and not successful, happen. But we keep moving forward.’

Shiffrin is still trying to replicate what she’s doing in slalom in GS, which is no surprise given the trauma of last season. But she knows she is getting closer.

Though she finished 14th in the GS on Saturday, she was able to make adjustments from the first run to the second. After being 18th in the first run, she was 10th in the second, and was briefly atop the leaderboard.

‘It was another step,’ Harjo said. ‘I think sometimes people forget the mental side, how long it takes to come back from that. They have an expectation that she’s just going to dominate everything.’

Shiffrin isn’t worried about meeting other peoples’ expectations or even being back on the podium in GS or racing super-G. She is searching for that sweet spot in her training, because she knows once she finds it, it’ll be there on race day, too.

‘It’s going to just continue to take time,’ Shiffrin said. ‘But that’s a really motivating thing.’

Because it’s those little things that make her many, many great things possible.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Alex Golesh to Auburn may have gone under the radar considering Lane Kiffin grabbed the spotlight and Florida had Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer gloss its new hire.

Golesh led South Florida to a 9-3 record this season, the program’s most wins in eight years. Over his three-year tenure at USF, Golesh went 23-15. He took over a Bulls program that had gone just 4-29 in the three seasons before he was hired.

Under the 41-year-old Golesh, the Bulls finished among the top 35 FBS teams in scoring offense in each of his three seasons. This season, it averaged 43 points per game, the fourth-best mark in the FBS.

Here’s who we grade the Tigers’ hire:

Grade: B-

Auburn needs help on offense to pull it out of yearslong rut, and Golesh shows some chops for the assignment. He’s worked inside the SEC and was Josh Heupel’s offensive coordinator when Tennessee toppled Alabama in 2022 and the Vols’ up-tempo spread system led the nation in offense.

Golesh did a solid job at South Florida in his first coaching gig. The Bulls were 1-11 the year before he arrived. By this season, Golesh’s Year 3, the Bulls upset Florida and went 9-3. They fizzled a bit in the second half of the schedule. USF enjoys an advantage as one of the best-resourced programs in the American Conference, and it’s located in enviable recruiting territory.

Golesh can’t expect such a head-start on his SEC peers while at Auburn, and USF fans were appropriately disappointed Golesh couldn’t get this year’s team to the American Conference championship game, after peaking early in wins against Boise State and Florida.

Golesh is a more unproven hire than Auburn’s past two, but after Bryan Harsin and Hugh Freeze failed miserably, you could argue it’s worth taking a shot on a rising 41-year-old talent.

The up-tempo spread system Golesh is trained in has become less novel inside the SEC in recent years. Golesh will join Heupel, Lane Kiffin and Jeff Lebby as coaches who operate a version of this offense. Does that increase in familiarity sacrifice some of the advantage Tennessee enjoyed while Golesh was there? Perhaps.

He also must prove himself as a recruiter while going toe-to-toe with the likes of Kirby Smart, Kalen DeBoer and others in blue-chip battles.

Golesh is a bit of a gamble, but not a total Hail Mary, and he’s a hopeful choice after the retread shot with Freeze flopped.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

INGLEWOOD, CA —  Justin Herbert and the Los Angeles Chargers’ 31-14 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders didn’t come without a scare.

Herbert left the game briefly in the first half due to a fracture in his left hand. He returned to the game with a white glove on the injured hand.

“He’s as tough as they come. Taped it up with a glove,” Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said. “He played a great game.”

Sunday’s victory improved the Chargers (8-4) to 4-0 in the AFC West, and they currently occupy fifth place in the AFC playoff picture.

However, Herbert’s health looms large. Herbert is scheduled to undergo a procedure to repair his left hand on Monday, a week before the Chargers host the Philadelphia Eagles. The Chargers quarterback is optimistic he’ll be able to play in the prime-time game.

Herbert’s been under constant pressure this season as the Chargers adjust to life without starting offensive tackles Rashawn Slater (knee) and Joe Alt (ankle), who are both out for the year.

Herbert faced pressure an NFL-high 188 times entering Week 13, according to Pro Football Focus. He was sacked three times and hit another four times Sunday.  

The Chargers can ill-afford to be without Herbert for any duration if they hope to get into the playoffs. Los Angeles is currently second in the AFC West behind the Denver Broncos (9-2). Surpassing Denver in the division appears unlikely, so a wild-card spot seems to be the team’s most realistic path to the postseason. Sunday’s win gave the Chargers a 61% chance to reach the postseason as the calendar flips to the December stretch run.

However, the Chargers are approaching a daunting five-game stretch to close the regular season as they face the Eagles, Kansas City Chiefs, Dallas Cowboys, Houston Texans and Broncos to end the year. All five opponents are .500 or better and in the playoff hunt. Week 13’s tilt was a game the Chargers needed to have as they embark on a five-game gauntlet.

‘We got some great teams coming up, all playoff caliber teams,’ Chargers safety Derwin James said. “This was a big win moving forward. And any time you can stay 4-0 on the division, you give yourself a chance with five games left.”

Chargers players know what’s on the horizon, beginning with the Eagles, but they insist they aren’t looking too far ahead.

“For us to be able to come away with a win (Sunday) was big for us,” Herbert said. “I think it’s just week by week. We got to do our job. Especially when we when we play on Sundays, or whether we’re playing on Monday. All we can control is our attitude, our effort, and how we take care of business. Anything outside of that is out of our control. You can monitor it, but you can’t do too much to change it.”

The Chargers did “take care of business” against the lowly Raiders (2-10). But it came with an injury scare. The Chargers’ most indispensable player needs a fracture in his left non-throwing hand repaired, and questions about the team’s ability to protect him are bound to persist.  

All the while, the next handful of games will determine their playoff fate.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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