• SPORTS.YAHOO.COM
    Oregon Ducks announce numerous coaching promotions, additions for 2026
    The Oregon Ducks are kicking off the spring football season later this week, and with their first practice just a couple of days away, the official coaching staff for the 2026 season has been set in stone. On Monday evening, the Ducks announced their full coaching staff lineup on social media. The new staff features a handful of promotions, many of which came from within, as well as a number of additions. Of course, the main promotions came at the coordinator spots, with Drew Mehringer moving up to replace Will Stein, who left to take over as the head coach of the Kentucky Wildcats, while Chris Hampton was promoted to replace Tosh Lupoi, who left to become the head coach of the California Golden Bears. To backfill those spots on offense, we saw Koa Ka'ai promoted from assistant QB coach to QB coach, and Jack Smith promoted from graduate assistant to TE coach. Meanwhile, on defense, the defensive secondary has been split, with Chris Hampton taking over the safeties, as well as the DC spot, and Rashad Wadood taking over the cornerbacks. Updated 2026 Oregon Football coaching staff. #GoDuckspic.twitter.com/XQLF81t8K8 Oregon Football (@oregonfootball) March 10, 2026There were also a handful of additions on the staff, one of which is a familiar face in Mike Cavanaugh. A couple of years ago, Cavanaugh was on the staff as an assistant in the OL room, but he left to take a spot on the Oregon State Beavers staff. Now, it appears that he will be back in Eugene for the 2026 season as an offensive assistant. It also appears that the Ducks added former NFL wide receiver Ryan Switzer as an offensive analyst as well. Most recently, Switzer was the WR coach and passing game coordinator for Tulsa. Contact/Follow@Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page onFacebookto follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Oregon Ducks football announces coaching additions, promotions
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  • WWW.FOXSPORTS.COM.AU
    Aussie champion goes missing for One-Day Cup final after very unselfish call
    Australian leg-spinner Adam Zampa will not play New South Wales One-Day Cup final against the Tasmania in Hobart after making the very unselfish decision to step aside for his heir apparent.
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  • WWW.DAILYMAIL.CO.UK
    The behind-the-scenes twist of fate that foiled Iranian regime's plot to get their football team home before Australia could offer asylum
    The new report comes after five brave football stars were given humanitarian visas by the Australian government.
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  • WWW.KSAT.COM
    White House war promo videos marry action movies, sports and video games to real-life combat footage
    Peaceful and violent, in video game screenshots and movie clips and on professional playing fields, the icons come fast and furious in quick-cut footage some of the most renowned slivers of 21st-century American popular culture, harnessed by the Trump administration to promote the freshly launched war with Iran.The White House's social media feed has issued a series of pumped-up videos that mix real Iran war explosions with movie action heroes, gaming footage and bone-crunching football tackles, leading critics like a top cleric of the U.S. Catholic Church to condemn a trivialization of deadly real-life conflict.Clips from Braveheart," Superman," Top Gun," Breaking Bad," and Iron Man. All appear cut between declassified imagery of what is presumably the Iran war. Even the cartoon likeness of SpongeBob SquarePants is spliced in, asking, You wanna see me do it again? in between images of buildings, planes and vehicles blown up by American bombs. The caption on one bomb-heavy post: Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue the title of a post-9/11 Toby Keith song about war that is subtitled The Angry American."The fiction-meets-reality product of the White House's aggressive social media team cuts a wide swath through cultural touchstones that resonate with young men, including the video games Call of Duty, Grand Theft Auto, Mortal Kombat and Halo. Two videos feature NFL and college football tackles and Major League Baseball home runs with the cracks of bats interspersed with explosions.They're set to ominous or aggressive music, including Childish Gambino's Bonfire, Miami XO's Bazooka and AC/DC's Thunderstruck. One of the White House postings described the video as JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY, accompanied by flag and fire emojis.It's hard not to see the thinking here: The more cinematic the content, the more people might support the war.Two actors call for their depictions to be removed from videosThe sounds and images of American popular culture, a sure attention-getter in many contexts, have increasingly been used in politics in recent decades, at least as far back as Bill Clinton's use of Fleetwood Mac's Don't Stop during his 1992 presidential campaign. Never, though, has a White House built and disseminated content quite like this, drawing explicit parallels between the aggressive moments of modern entertainment a video game kill shot, a hard football hit, a towering home run and battle footage to amplify the enthusiasm for war. Whats happening with the White House videos, which some call the gamification of war, hasnt landed well in some quarters. Two actors whose work appeared in the videos Ben Stiller, who starred in the 2008 movie Tropic Thunder, and Steve Downes, who portrays Master Chief, the protagonist in Halo said the material was used without permission and called for their depictions to be removed.Stiller said on X that he had no interest in being part of your propaganda machine. War is not a movie. Downes called the videos disgusting and juvenile war porn. Neither the NFL nor Major League Baseball would comment on the use of their footage in the war videos.The discussion reached a high level in the U.S. Catholic Church as well. Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, said he found it sickening to see a war that has brought real death and suffering being treated like a video game. That approach, he said, dishonors the people who have died, including U.S. servicemen.Our government is treating the suffering of the Iranian people as a backdrop for our own entertainment, as if it's just another piece of content to be swiped through while we're waiting in line at the grocery store, Cupich said in a weekend statement. But, in the end, we lose our humanity when we are thrilled by the destructive power of our military."Asked for comment, the White House would not say whether or not it would accommodate artists who said their work was used without permission.America's heroic warfighters are meeting or surpassing all of their goals under Operation Epic Fury, said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly. The legacy media wants us to apologize for highlighting the United States Militarys incredible success, but the White House will continue showcasing the many examples of Irans ballistic missiles, production facilities, and dreams of owning a nuclear weapon being destroyed in real time.Its not the first time this White House has trotted out game-related memes. Last year, it posted a drawing of Trump dressed as Master Chief. In another, it made Trump look like a blocky Minecraft character with the caption: Americas most pro-gamer president.Every war has a psychological dimension, and this seems to be part of it, said Zia Haque, director of the Baker Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies at Juniata College in Pennsylvania. We live in a digital age, and I see this as a use of the space to propagate the message across the board, he said. A motivation to be cool? Some observers also cast the administration's content as potential efforts to encourage gamers to join the military. It wouldnt be a first: The Pentagons efforts to recruit players date to at least 2002, with the release of a first-person shooter called Americas Army. The Defense Department also sends recruiters to video game conventions and esports tournaments.Today, many of Trumps loudest fans are young white men who are gamers and heavy consumers of sports and popular culture and thus likely a receptive audience for such imagery and music.Many young men are motivated to join the military because they want to be cool like the people they see in action movies, said Ray Deptula, who recently retired from the U.S. Navy after 24 years and rose to the rank of commander. That's what motivated him, he said. So he can see the appeal of the videos. But, he says, there's a caveat a big one.That's not what your life is going to be like, said Deptula, who recently wrote a novel, A Dog Before a Soldier, about a young man who joined the military out of desperation during the Revolutionary War. Your life is going to be about hard work and humility.But Jeff Fromm, co-author of Marketing to Gen Z, has doubts about the videos long-term effectiveness. Many young people in Generation Z are keenly interested in transparency and the values of organizations they are seeking to join, and Fromm questions whether the current administration rates highly in those areas.Sometimes the overlap between real life and game culture is accidental. Last week, Trump posted on Truth Social that defense contractors had agreed to quadruple Production of the Exquisite Class Weaponry. Policy experts were puzzled but Final Fantasy XIV players were reminded of the game's most powerful weapons. Still, the president probably wasnt calling for the games Exquisite Wrathgrinder to go into production.___Associated Press correspondents Matt Brown in Washington and Ali Swenson in New York contributed to this report.
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  • WWW.CLICK2HOUSTON.COM
    White House war promo videos marry action movies, sports and video games to real-life combat footage
    Peaceful and violent, in video game screenshots and movie clips and on professional playing fields, the icons come fast and furious in quick-cut footage some of the most renowned slivers of 21st-century American popular culture, harnessed by the Trump administration to promote the freshly launched war with Iran.The White House's social media feed has issued a series of pumped-up videos that mix real Iran war explosions with movie action heroes, gaming footage and bone-crunching football tackles, leading critics like a top cleric of the U.S. Catholic Church to condemn a trivialization of deadly real-life conflict.Clips from Braveheart," Superman," Top Gun," Breaking Bad," and Iron Man. All appear cut between declassified imagery of what is presumably the Iran war. Even the cartoon likeness of SpongeBob SquarePants is spliced in, asking, You wanna see me do it again? in between images of buildings, planes and vehicles blown up by American bombs. The caption on one bomb-heavy post: Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue the title of a post-9/11 Toby Keith song about war that is subtitled The Angry American."The fiction-meets-reality product of the White House's aggressive social media team cuts a wide swath through cultural touchstones that resonate with young men, including the video games Call of Duty, Grand Theft Auto, Mortal Kombat and Halo. Two videos feature NFL and college football tackles and Major League Baseball home runs with the cracks of bats interspersed with explosions.They're set to ominous or aggressive music, including Childish Gambino's Bonfire, Miami XO's Bazooka and AC/DC's Thunderstruck. One of the White House postings described the video as JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY, accompanied by flag and fire emojis.It's hard not to see the thinking here: The more cinematic the content, the more people might support the war.Two actors call for their depictions to be removed from videosThe sounds and images of American popular culture, a sure attention-getter in many contexts, have increasingly been used in politics in recent decades, at least as far back as Bill Clinton's use of Fleetwood Mac's Don't Stop during his 1992 presidential campaign. Never, though, has a White House built and disseminated content quite like this, drawing explicit parallels between the aggressive moments of modern entertainment a video game kill shot, a hard football hit, a towering home run and battle footage to amplify the enthusiasm for war. Whats happening with the White House videos, which some call the gamification of war, hasnt landed well in some quarters. Two actors whose work appeared in the videos Ben Stiller, who starred in the 2008 movie Tropic Thunder, and Steve Downes, who portrays Master Chief, the protagonist in Halo said the material was used without permission and called for their depictions to be removed.Stiller said on X that he had no interest in being part of your propaganda machine. War is not a movie. Downes called the videos disgusting and juvenile war porn. Neither the NFL nor Major League Baseball would comment on the use of their footage in the war videos.The discussion reached a high level in the U.S. Catholic Church as well. Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, said he found it sickening to see a war that has brought real death and suffering being treated like a video game. That approach, he said, dishonors the people who have died, including U.S. servicemen.Our government is treating the suffering of the Iranian people as a backdrop for our own entertainment, as if it's just another piece of content to be swiped through while we're waiting in line at the grocery store, Cupich said in a weekend statement. But, in the end, we lose our humanity when we are thrilled by the destructive power of our military."Asked for comment, the White House would not say whether or not it would accommodate artists who said their work was used without permission.America's heroic warfighters are meeting or surpassing all of their goals under Operation Epic Fury, said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly. The legacy media wants us to apologize for highlighting the United States Militarys incredible success, but the White House will continue showcasing the many examples of Irans ballistic missiles, production facilities, and dreams of owning a nuclear weapon being destroyed in real time.Its not the first time this White House has trotted out game-related memes. Last year, it posted a drawing of Trump dressed as Master Chief. In another, it made Trump look like a blocky Minecraft character with the caption: Americas most pro-gamer president.Every war has a psychological dimension, and this seems to be part of it, said Zia Haque, director of the Baker Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies at Juniata College in Pennsylvania. We live in a digital age, and I see this as a use of the space to propagate the message across the board, he said. A motivation to be cool? Some observers also cast the administration's content as potential efforts to encourage gamers to join the military. It wouldnt be a first: The Pentagons efforts to recruit players date to at least 2002, with the release of a first-person shooter called Americas Army. The Defense Department also sends recruiters to video game conventions and esports tournaments.Today, many of Trumps loudest fans are young white men who are gamers and heavy consumers of sports and popular culture and thus likely a receptive audience for such imagery and music.Many young men are motivated to join the military because they want to be cool like the people they see in action movies, said Ray Deptula, who recently retired from the U.S. Navy after 24 years and rose to the rank of commander. That's what motivated him, he said. So he can see the appeal of the videos. But, he says, there's a caveat a big one.That's not what your life is going to be like, said Deptula, who recently wrote a novel, A Dog Before a Soldier, about a young man who joined the military out of desperation during the Revolutionary War. Your life is going to be about hard work and humility.But Jeff Fromm, co-author of Marketing to Gen Z, has doubts about the videos long-term effectiveness. Many young people in Generation Z are keenly interested in transparency and the values of organizations they are seeking to join, and Fromm questions whether the current administration rates highly in those areas.Sometimes the overlap between real life and game culture is accidental. Last week, Trump posted on Truth Social that defense contractors had agreed to quadruple Production of the Exquisite Class Weaponry. Policy experts were puzzled but Final Fantasy XIV players were reminded of the game's most powerful weapons. Still, the president probably wasnt calling for the games Exquisite Wrathgrinder to go into production.___Associated Press correspondents Matt Brown in Washington and Ali Swenson in New York contributed to this report.
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  • WWW.BBC.COM
    Faisal Islam: Trump comments may have eased oil price spiral, but havoc remains
    It has been the most volatile day of oil trading in world history, and there is much still to play out.
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  • WWW.SPORTSCHAU.DE
    Paralympics live - Para Ski alpin: Super-Kombi (F/M), Slalom, alle Startklassen
    Para Ski alpin: Beim alpinen Skiwettbewerb kommt es bei Frauen und Mnnern zur Entscheidung im Slalom. Im Anschluss erfolgen die jeweiligen Siegerehrungen!Kommentiert von Marcel Seufert (ARD).[mehr]
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  • WWW.OURSPORTSCENTRAL.COM
    Spring Breakout Rosters Announced
    NASHVILLE - As the 2026 Spring Training season continues, the preliminary 40-man rosters for the 2026 Spring Breakout Games has been announced by the ... - IL Nashville Sounds
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  • RMCSPORT.BFMTV.COM
    Manchester City: la lourde amende que devra payer Rodri pour ses propos envers les arbitres
    Aprs des propos critiquant l'arbitre lors du match nul concd par Manchester City contre Tottenham (2-2) le 1er fvrier dernier, Rodri a t condamn verser 80.000 livres (92.000 euros) d'amende. Le milieu de terrain avait dnonc un manque de neutralit.
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