DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year dealNew Foto - DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal

TheDallas Cowboyshave agreed to terms on a contract extension for a key, All-Pro defensive player. Obviously, it's notMicah Parsons. Instead, cornerbackDaRon Blandgets his deal, according tomultiplereportsSunday: a four-year, $92 million extension with $50 million in guaranteed money. Bland earned his first Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro nods in 2023 after leading the NFL with nine interceptions, including five that he returned for a touchdown. It was an excellent follow-up to something of a breakout rookie year with his five interceptions in 2022. The All-Pro corner missed the first 10 games of the 2024 season while recovering from a stress fracture he suffered during training camp. Bland did not record an interception in his seven appearances after his return. 1989: Cowboys trade Herschel Walker to Vikings for picks haul Now, after an offseason that already included an extension for tight end Jake Ferguson and, notably,not one for Parsons, theCowboyshave locked up their former fifth-rounder four days before the start of the season. Here's what to know about Bland's extension: MICAH PARSONS TRADE:Cowboys deal 4x Pro Bowler to Packers in blockbuster Length:Four years Value:$92 million ($50 million guaranteed) Average annual value (AAV):$23 million Bland's four-year, $92 million extension includes $50 million in guaranteed money, the 12th-most money in guarantees at the position and notably ahead of fellow Cowboys corner Trevon Diggs' $42.3 million in guarantees. The deal's $23 million average annual value (AAV) is the sixth-highest of all cornerbacks, just behind Broncos cornerback – and reigning Defensive Player of the Year – Patrick Surtain II. The Cowboys' decision to extend Bland instead of Parsons will be even more notable given its timing. Dallas traded Parsons to Green Bay on Thursday and extended Bland three days later. The value of each player is obviously different, a statement backed up by the fact that the AAV on Parsons' new deal with the Packers is more than twice that of Bland's. Still, Cowboys owner/general manager Jerry Jones has certainly put more of a microscope on how Bland performs after receiving his new extension, given its timing. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:DaRon Bland contract details after Cowboys grant CB four-year deal

DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal

DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal TheDallas Cowboyshave agreed to terms on a contract extension for a key, All-Pro d...
Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probeNew Foto - Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe

Major League Baseball and its players association extended the non-disciplinary paid leave of Cleveland Guardians right-handers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz "until further notice" amid an ongoing sports betting investigation. Ortiz and Clase were placed on leave July 3 and July 28, respectively. The leave had been set to expire on Sunday prior to the extension. "We have been informed of the extension and will continue to fully cooperate with the investigation," the Guardians said in a statement. The regular season ends Sept. 28. Clase, 27, is 5-3 with a 3.23 ERA and 24 saves in 48 appearances this season. He led the American League in saves and made the All-Star team in each of the three previous campaigns and had a career-high 47 saves in 2024. Clase is 21-26 with 182 saves and a 1.88 ERA in 366 career games (one start) with the Texas Rangers (2019) and the Guardians. According to reports, Ortiz's investigation focuses on in-game prop bets involving two pitches that garnered higher activity than usual. One was tossed in a June 15 game against the Seattle Mariners, and another on June 27 versus the St. Louis Cardinals. Ortiz, 26, is 4-9 with a 4.36 ERA in 16 starts this season. The native of the Dominican Republic was acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates as part of a three-team trade that included the Toronto Blue Jays on Dec. 10. --Field Level Media

Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe

Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe Major League Baseball and its players association extended the non-disc...
CBS News' Mark Knoller, veteran White House correspondent, dies at 73New Foto - CBS News' Mark Knoller, veteran White House correspondent, dies at 73

Mark Knoller, a longtime White House correspondent for CBS News, has died,according to the network. He was 73. A cause of death was was not disclosed, but he had reportedly suffered from diabetes and was in poor health. "Mark Knoller was the hardest-working and most prolific White House correspondent of a generation," Tom Cibrowski, president and executive editor of CBS News, said. "Everyone in America knew his distinctive voice and his up-to-the-minute reporting across eight Presidential administrations." Born in Brooklyn, New York, on Feb. 20, 1952, Knoller worked at WNEW Radio and the Associated Press Radio Network before moving to CBS, where in just a few years he became the White House correspondent for CBS Radio. Knoller covered the administrations of Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, andDonald Trump. He left CBS in 2020,telling the Washington Examinerthat he was laid off. "Mark Knoller was the heart and soul of the White House press corps, bringing unmatched passion to a beat he loved," said White House Correspondents Association President Weijia Jiang. "He wasn't just one of the most trusted voices covering the presidency — he was also the colleague you could always count on for help, perspective, or a bit of good humor." Countless former colleagues described Knoller as a world class journalist with an unrelenting work ethic who was committed to simply reporting the facts for his audience. He was known in Washington as the unofficial presidential archivist thanks to his encyclopedic knowledge of the White House and the presidency, chronicling details such as how many times a president had gone golfing or had answered questions from the press. "Mark represented the best of the White House press corps," said AP Executive Editor Julie Pace, who worked alongside Knoller as the AP's chief White House correspondent. "He demanded the same level of accountability and transparency from every president he covered, regardless of party. He carried out his work in the spirit of true public service, sharing his meticulous records of the presidency with any colleague who asked for a data point." Pace recalled how she "took advantage of his record keeping numerous times as a reporter" and was "always grateful for both his generosity and dedication to his craft." Nancy Benac, the AP's former White House editor, recalled that "you could go to Mark with any question, and he had the answer." Mark Smith, who worked with Knoller at AP Radio and for nearly two decades as an AP White House correspondent, described their relationship as "competitors/comrades." He said that Knoller "was famous for keeping brutal hours" and on foreign trips "was almost always the last person in the filing center — and there again to open it in the morning." Smith continued: "As a result presidents got used to seeing him and familiar with his booming voice asking questions. He was blunt and to the point, persistent but not hectoring. He absolutely loved getting a rise or a laugh out of the president (and I'm thinking here of Clinton, Bush and Obama), but he also never accepted casual evasion." Indeed, Knoller's stellar reputation extended not just to his fellow reporters in the press corps, but to the administrations he was covering. "Mark was a gem of a man and the definition of what a good reporter should be," said Ari Fleischer, who served as White House press secretary under Bush from 2001 to 2003. "Mark never betrayed any bias, any personal views. He was probably of the last generation of reporters who viewed their job as just telling the news with no inkling at all of their personal thoughts." Fleischer, who described Knoller as "the classic old school, get the story, get it right reporter," also recalled his "booming voice" and penchant for compiling statistics that he frequently shared with his competition. He spoke of Knoller's love for Crawford, Texas, home of the Bush family ranch, and how the Brooklyn native fit in seamlessly. Above all though, Knoller is remembered by those who knew him as a thoughtful, generous and funny man in a town known for egos and power. Benac pointed to his "amazing sense of humor" with dry zingers that would land minutes later. She described him as "just a wonderful person and a wonderful journalist." For Smith, what set Knoller apart was his "playfulness." Fleischer called him "one of the kindest, most courteous, modest people in the press corps." "You know I'm smiling as I think about him even though this is really hard because Mark kept the humanity in the White House for me," said Ben Feller, who worked with Knoller as the AP's chief White House correspondent. "He knew it was always about the people, even in that deeply intense beat where it feels like the whole world's happening in that briefing room."

CBS News' Mark Knoller, veteran White House correspondent, dies at 73

CBS News' Mark Knoller, veteran White House correspondent, dies at 73 Mark Knoller, a longtime White House correspondent for CBS News, h...
Here's the biggest news you missed this weekendNew Foto - Here's the biggest news you missed this weekend

National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard blindsided CIA leaders last week when shedisclosed the name of an undercover CIA officeron a list of people she stripped of security clearances, multiple current and former intelligence sources said. The move, which alarmed the agency's workforce, sources said, is the latest example of simmering tensions and crossed signals between Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe. The two have clashed previously over her decisions, including this month when Gabbard declassified a lightly redacted document related to Russian election interference. Two former government officials said their read of the situation is that Gabbard is under pressure to regain President Donald Trump's confidence. Gabbard fell out of favor with Trump and his aides this year when she posted a video and delivered testimony about Iran's nuclear capabilities. But the tensions seem to have subsided for now. On Tuesday, as he presided over a Cabinet meeting before television cameras, Trump praised Gabbard. "You found some interesting things, Tulsi," he said. "She's becoming a bigger and bigger star every day." Trump has continued his long-running calls to do away with mail-in voting, but people inside his own partyaren't so sure that's a good idea. Voter turnout by mail exceeded 30% in at least 14 states and the District of Columbia, according to the most recent data available. Trump won half of those states, most of which have Republican governors or secretaries of state overseeing elections. Others, like Arizona and Michigan, have Democrats overseeing elections but are major electoral battlegrounds. Michigan state House Majority Leader Bryan Posthumus, a Republican who endorsed Trump last year, is among those with concerns over calls to scrap mail-in voting, though he has proposed amending the state constitution to require proof of citizenship to register to vote and a photo ID to cast a ballot. In South Dakota, a state with high vote-by-mail turnout, GOP Chair Jim Eschenbaum expressed concern that a ban could unfairly disenfranchise military personnel. "If anybody deserves a vote in our elections, it's the people that are willing to die for us," Eschenbaum said. "So we can't ban it, but I think it should be limited in the respect that it is somewhat ripe for fraud." Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook should release her mortgage documents but accused Trump of"following Richard Nixon's playbook to interfere with"the Fed. Khanna made the remarks Sunday in an interview on NBC News' "Meet the Press." Trump moved to fire Cook last week, pointing to allegations of mortgage fraud; she is challenging the move in a lawsuit. Khanna was referring to President Richard Nixon's pressuring the Fed chair to keep interest rates lower before the 1972 election, which Nixon won. He resigned two years later because of the Watergate scandal. Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., declined Sunday to say he had 100% confidence in Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., saying instead that Kennedy hasnot "gone a wrong direction" on vaccines. Deportations paused:A federal judgetemporarily blocked thedeportationof a group of Guatemalan children who had crossed the border without their families. Summer showdowns:Trump and the Republicans may have full control of Washington, but protesters spared neither party boos, jeers and tense confrontations atcongressional town halls this summer. VOA cuts:Kari Lake announced more than 500 peoplehave been cut from Voice of Americaand its parent agency, which could ratchet up a monthslong legal challenge over the news outlets' fate. Tariff effects:Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modiis visiting Chinafor the first time in seven years in an effort to mend ties, days after the Trump administration raised tariffs on Indian imports to 50%. Doctors discovered a bullet fragmentin the neck of a 10-year-old boywho went viral for recounting how his friend jumped on top of him to shield him during a mass shooting that killed two at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis. Weston Halsne, a fifth grade student, described running under a pew and covering his head during the attack and said his friend Victor was shot while as he was shielding him. "I think I got, like, gunpowder on my neck," he said. But doctors later discovered it was a bullet fragment. Weston's father told NBC News that the fragment was just shy of his carotid artery, which a doctor described as a "miracle." Young survivors Pablo and Pilar Maldonado are leaning on faith and friendsas they navigate healing. An art teacher who had the Minneapolis church shooter in her class in 2017 said shesaw signs of self-harmon her then-student. The Rev. Dennis Zehren wept duringthe first Mass since the attackas he recalled the congregation being told to stay down as rounds rang out. Pope Leo XIV called for an end to the"pandemic of arms, large and small,"as he prayed publicly for the victims. The same artificial intelligence technology that was supposed to replace content creators isnow giving some of them new jobs. Writers are asked to spruce up ChatGPT's writing. Artists are being hired to patch up wonky AI images. Even software developers are tasked with fixing buggy apps coded by AI assistants. New technology means anyone can generate content. The problem is it's not always good. A recent MIT report found that 95% of businesses' generative AI pilots are getting zero return on investment. The issue lies in AI's inability to "retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time" the way a human can, the report says. Half of freelance writer Kiesha Richardson's jobs nowadays come from clients who hire her to tweak or rewrite AI-generated articles that "don't look remotely human at all." And while fixing AI's mistakes isn't an ideal job for some, she said, it helps pay the bills. We do not want grandmothers thrown into the back of unmarked vans. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson hassigned an executive orderaimed at curbing the power of federal law enforcement officers and National Guard troops Trump has threatened to deploy to the city. Israel's latest assault on Gazakilled at least 70 people across the strip Saturday, 47 of them in Gaza City alone, a spokesman for Gaza's Health Ministry told NBC News. Dominican artists and activists aretelling the stories of womenwho've died from high-risk pregnancies in a push to change the Dominican Republic's total abortion ban. Jeremy Lin, whosparked a global crazewhen he led the New York Knicks to a career-defining winning streak, announced his retirement from basketball. British celebrity chef and restaurateur Gordon Ramsay disclosed that he wasdiagnosed with skin cancer. Asilent heart disease risk factormay explain why some women end up having heart attacks and strokes despite appearing healthy, a new study suggests. The English flag ispopping up across the countryas part of a new grassroots campaign, which some critics say is rooted in anti-immigration sentiment instead of patriotism. Lil Nas X's father opened up about thepressures his son faces and visiting him in jailafter the singer's arrest in Los Angeles. Outbreaks of rabiesseem to be risingacross the United States, CDC surveillance shows, with six deaths reported over the last 12 months.

Here's the biggest news you missed this weekend

Here's the biggest news you missed this weekend National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard blindsided CIA leaders last week when shedi...
Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons tradeNew Foto - Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Dallas Cowboyslegend Michael Irvin appeared to be extremely unhappy with Jerry Jones over the decision to trade pass rusher Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers this week. The deal was announced on Thursday with Dallas receiving two first-round picks and defensive linemanKenny Clarkin the trade. The move ended weeks of drama between Jones and Parsons over contract extension negotiations that never bore fruit. Parsons agreed to a long-term deal with the Packers as soon as the trade was completed. Click Here For More Sports Coverage On Foxnews.com Irvin said he was "in a state of shock" over the deal that sent Parsons to the Packers. "In order for us to be right here, something had to go down that hurt Jerry personally to make this crazy, dumb move. … This is a gamble 'The Gambler' should not have taken in my personal opinion," he said on hisYouTube page. Parsons requested a trade on Aug. 1 when negotiations initially fell through. Jones said a trade wouldn't occur and urged Cowboys fans not to lose sleep over the possibility. Parsons wanted his agent to be a part of the discussions but the sides never made any meaningful progress. Read On The Fox News App Cowboys Announce Death Of Super Bowl Champion, 'Doomsday Defense' Anchor Lee Roy Jordan The star linebacker then made a spectacle of his final preseason outing with the team. He was lying on the training table behind the bench as the game was going on. "This trade was not just thought about today," Jones said Thursday. "This trade has been going on in our mind and our strategies and being talked about, it's been going on all spring. It culminated today, and it came quick. But that's the way things go. It does happen fast when it happens." Parsons welcomed the fresh start inGreen Bayon Friday. "I would say these last four months have probably been the hardest four months of my life," Parsons said. Parsons, when healthy, is arguably the best pass rusher in the NFL. He racked up 52.5 sacks in 63 games with the Cowboys. He was the Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2021. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow Fox News Digital'ssports coverage on Xand subscribe tothe Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source:Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade Dallas Cowboyslegend Michael Irvin appeared to be extremely unhappy...

 

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