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NFL luxury players in 2025: Best slot CB, backup QB, more

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For all the superstars the Eagles had on offense during their two Super Bowl title runs over the past decade, the players who were in what are commonly characterized as situational roles might have played just as big of a part in their victories.

In February, it was third defensive tackle Milton Williams tormenting the interior of the Chiefs’ offensive line and slot corner Cooper DeJean returning a Patrick Mahomes pick to the house. In 2018, it was reserve pass-catching back Corey Clement racking up 100 receiving yards, third-string tight end Trey Burton throwing a touchdown pass, and, of course, backup quarterback Nick Foles adding to his touchdown catch with 373 passing yards and three scores.

Let’s celebrate what I like to refer to as the NFL’s luxury players. No organization builds a roster prioritizing its swing tackle or fourth wide receiver, but it can sure be useful to have in a weekly game plan. These players might have been limited to one role or certain snaps, and they aren’t necessarily going to be that caliber of performer if given a larger role in 2025. We should laud them for what they are and how effective they were at what they were asked to do last season, though.

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Keep in mind that we’re focusing here on players in specialized roles. The best third-down back in the league might be Saquon Barkley, Jahmyr Gibbs or Christian McCaffrey, but those guys are great on all downs. This would be the place to celebrate someone like Ameer Abdullah, an unsigned veteran who has been solid as a pass blocker and special-teamer, caught 85% of the passes thrown in his direction in 2024 and even chipped in a 115-yard performance as a starter in Week 17. Some of these players are already household names, but others are respected around the NFL for what they do in a specialized role.

Jump to a position:
Sixth OL | Blitzing off-ball LB
Slot CB | Kickoffs | Gunner
Blocking TE | Short-yardage RB
Fourth WR | Gadget player | QB2 | Two-down DT

Sixth offensive lineman

Some teams bring extra offensive linemen onto the field in short-yardage and goal-line situations, hoping to use the added bulk to generate more movement at the line of scrimmage. Over the past couple of years, though, the Bills have used the sixth offensive lineman tactic as something close to a core offensive concept.

Offensive coordinator Joe Brady utilized six linemen 93 times on first-and-10 last season, more than twice as often as any other offense. The league’s other 31 teams did that an average of just over 10 times on first-and-10 in 2024. And while the Bills went with six linemen to help their run game, the extra lineman also forced teams into the same bind we’ve seen defenses struggle with against multi-TE groupings. Play nickel and dime sub packages versus a six-lineman set and the Bills will run it. Play base defense and the Bills were happy to throw; Josh Allen averaged 9.4 yards per attempt out of those six-lineman groupings last season, up nearly two full yards from his mark with five linemen on the field (7.6).

All of those personnel grouping mismatches look great on paper, but offenses need the personnel to actually pull them off. While the Bills used David Edwards in this role before he moved into the starting lineup in 2024, Anderson has taken it to another level. The 305-pound tackle spent two years on the Buffalo practice squad before making his debut last season. Brady carved out a regular role for Anderson immediately, as he averaged 14 snaps per game, excluding the Week 18 game in which the Bills played their backups against the Pats.

Anderson has been a sound run blocker, but he has excelled protecting Allen on the edge. Amid his 79 pass-blocking snaps, the 25-year-old allowed just one quarterback pressure and zero sacks, per NFL Next Gen Stats. Being able to rely on Anderson as a solid pass blocker allows the Bills to take shots downfield out of those jumbo packages, which then scares defenses into protecting against the deep passing attack and creates softer boxes for Allen and James Cook in the run game.


Blitzing off-ball linebacker

During his final season in New Orleans in 2022 and over his first two seasons in Atlanta, Elliss has been one of the league’s most unique defenders. The Saints used him as more of an edge rusher for significant stretches than the Falcons have, but both defenses found ways to maximize his ability to get after the quarterback.

Elliss’ athleticism and timing have made him a valuable player on “green dog” rushes, where a defender adds onto a pass rush if his coverage responsibility stays in as part of the pass protection unit. Coach Raheem Morris also had some success using him on twists last season, including a snap in which he was the lead rusher in a twist/stunt and managed to get around the guard assigned to block him and strip-sack Drew Lock.

As a one-on-one pass rusher, though, Elliss is much better than people realize. How good was he in 2024? By reducing the threshold for ESPN’s pass rush win rate to include players who had at least 100 plays with a win or loss, his 26.4% PRWR was tied with Danielle Hunter for second in the NFL, trailing only Aidan Hutchinson. Over the past two seasons, setting the limit at 150 plays with a win or loss, Elliss’ 23.6% PRWR is the league’s fourth-best mark.

When Elliss gets matched up against running backs, he is too explosive to block. Watch him spin and run through Aaron Jones to take down Sam Darnold a year ago. Not many off-ball linebackers have that sort of burst or wriggle, and he does a good job of finishing the play by keeping Darnold in his grasp and getting the Vikings quarterback down with a Jake Roberts-esque DDT.

Elliss finished last season with five sacks and a team-high 16 knockdowns of opposing quarterbacks, excellent numbers for a player who rushed the quarterback only 148 times. It’s a little bizarre to think of an Atlanta pass rusher as a luxury given that the organization has struggled for so many years to find its primary edge rushers, but consider Elliss to be the world-class sound system in a car whose brakes and engine don’t work. He’s doing his part.


Slot cornerback

Yes, he’s already there. DeJean spent the first month of his rookie season on the sideline, but after Philadelphia’s Week 5 bye, his move into the starting lineup coincided with a massive defensive improvement. After ranking 26th in expected points added (EPA) per play on defense before the bye, the Eagles were comfortably the league’s best defense by the same metric afterward — the second-place Texans ranked closer to 13th than they did to first.

It would probably be unrealistic to suggest DeJean was the single driver of those improvements, but he certainly served as a revelation in the secondary. From Week 6 onward, his minus-22.7 EPA allowed as the nearest defender in coverage ranked second in the league, with fellow rookie standout Nate Wiggins the only cornerback ahead of him, per NFL Next Gen Stats. He didn’t allow a single touchdown on 68 targets. And while he didn’t record any interceptions during the regular season, you might remember what he did to Patrick Mahomes in the Super Bowl.

With the Eagles releasing Darius Slay, DeJean will play outside more often in 2025, as he’ll likely start outside in their base defense and work out of the slot in sub packages. He was in coverage as an outside cornerback on just six snaps last season, none of which came during the postseason. He moved all around the backfield in college at Iowa, which should help his chances of handling the added responsibilities. A dominant rookie season also bodes well for his chances of being a great NFL cornerback regardless of where he lines up pre-snap.


Kickoffs

The various changes to the league’s kickoff rules over the past few years have changed the way kickers approach their jobs. With touchbacks on kickoffs pushing the ball to the 30-yard line last season, there was added value in both kickoff distance and placement. With the new dynamic kickoff preventing teams from covering kickoffs until the ball is caught, the goal for kickers is to produce a kick that is deep enough to force a meaningful return without pushing the ball into the end zone for a touchback.

Nobody did a better job of that last year than Grupe, who produced touchbacks on a league-low 26.9% of his kicks. He ranked 31st among all kickers in yards per kickoff, but a lack of touchbacks, good placement and reliable coverage by the Saints meant that his average kickoff produced a drive that started 71.9 yards from the end zone. That was the league’s best rate among kickers with at least 40 kickoffs. New Orleans ranked second in EPA per kickoff, trailing only the Jets, who got a great half-season from Anders Carlson.

In 2025, the league is further incentivizing kickoff returns and discouraging touchbacks by pushing the ball 5 yards forward, giving offenses the ability to start on the 35-yard line if the opposing team kicks the ball into or through the end zone. The Saints lost special teams coach Darren Rizzi to the Broncos this offseason, but if Grupe and his coverage team can continue to avoid touchbacks and consistently cover returns, the difference will be even more meaningful under the even-more-dynamic kickoff rules.


Special teams gunner

While the once-vaunted Patriots special teams fell apart and ranked among the worst in football by the time Bill Belichick was fired after the 2023 season, the third facet of the game was one of the few places where the Pats held their own a year ago. New England ranked second in special teams EPA, trailing only the Steelers, who forced an unreal 11 fumbles on kickoff and punt plays, the most by any team since 2004.

The most significant force behind that special teams performance was Schooler, who was rewarded for his efforts with a first-team All-Pro nod. Schooler is not quite as consistent of a tackler as Nick Bellore (Commanders) or J.T. Gray (Saints), but the 28-year-old was unblockable at times on punt duties last season; he played a significant role in helping the Patriots upset the Bengals in the opener with his coverage work. He’s also an excellent blocker when called upon to do so.

In addition to blocking a punt in an October game against the Dolphins, Schooler added something to his résumé: defense. The Patriots used Schooler on 50 snaps, and while half of them came in a meaningless Week 18 win over the Bills, he was used more regularly to spy opposing quarterbacks. In limited time, he managed to chase down a pair of sacks, which left him tied for fourth on the team in that category.

Signed to a three-year extension last fall, Schooler is one of the few Patriots to come out of 2024 looking like he would have fit in during New England’s dynasty.


Blocking tight end

It’s clear that the Vikings see their second tight end as a critical part of the offense. As I was working on this piece, they signed Oliver to a three-year, $23.3 million extension, which would seem to be a lofty figure for a player with 701 career receiving yards across six NFL seasons with three different teams. It’s the second time the Vikings have paid Oliver, who joined the team on a three-year, $21 million deal two years ago.

The numbers back up the idea that Oliver is an elite blocker. He ranked fourth among eligible tight ends in ESPN’s run block win rate a year ago, finishing just behind a former teammate in now-Jaguars tight end Johnny Mundt. NFL Next Gen Stats credited Oliver with only two pressures allowed across 55 pass-blocking snaps, producing a pressure rate that was just about half the league average among tight ends.

Is that worth more than $7 million per year in a market where good blockers such as Mundt ($2.8 million) and Chris Manhertz ($1.4 million, Giants) are making way less? It’s tough to say. Oliver is just good enough of a receiver to give teams pause when he’s running routes up the seam and off play-action boot concepts. Combine that with great blocking and he’s a very useful player, one who lined up on just about half of the offensive snaps for the Vikings in 2024. As teams lean further into 12 personnel groupings, Oliver and John Bates (Commanders) could end up as undervalued examples of an archetype seeing the field more than ever before.


Short-yardage running back

The league’s best back in short yardage is about to become a luxury with an expensive contract in Los Angeles. If rumors hold true and Kyren Williams gets a new deal with the Rams, coach Sean McVay & Co. will be locking up a back who has gone 39-of-45 (86.7%) in converting third or fourth down with 1 or 2 yards to go over the past two seasons. He is more than just a short-yardage back, but he has been particularly valuable in that role for the Rams.

Limiting this pick to backs who aren’t standouts in other ways, the best option is Hunt, who was forced into a lead role with the Chiefs last season after Isiah Pacheco went down and rookie Carson Steele fumbled away his opportunity. Hunt wasn’t great, but the one thing he did well was convert in short yardage. He went 15-of-18 (83.3%) in those situations, one year after he went 15-of-20 (75%) in those same spots for the Browns.

Doing that for an offense that relied heavily on converting third downs and wasn’t willing to run Patrick Mahomes on sneaks was a critical piece of the puzzle for Kansas City. With Pacheco back to full health and free agent Elijah Mitchell joining the mix, it would be a surprise if the Chiefs relied on Hunt in a featured role again in 2025. However, he could still be a useful third running back in the right situations.


Gadget player

The idea of a gadget player means less than it did in the past, if only because offensive coordinators realized that using star players in the same places they once used situational playmakers is a great way to create mismatches. Just about every superstar “X” wide receiver (typically sets up on the line of scrimmage to the side of the field opposite the tight end) has seen a meaningful number of snaps from the slot and out of bunches and stacks, but we’re now seeing playcallers move wideouts such as Justin Jefferson and CeeDee Lamb into the backfield to sow chaos and confusion for opposing defenses.

Thinking about the classic idea of an undersized gadget player who moves around the formation to thrive, catches all kinds of passes near the line of scrimmage and creates big plays with the ball in his hands, Mims comes to mind. Like many gadget players from years past, he adds value on special teams: He was the league’s first-team All-Pro return man in 2024, averaging an NFL-best 15.7 yards per punt return.

As a receiver, though, Mims was plenty valuable in his own role. After using him primarily on the outside as a rookie, coach Sean Payton moved him around more often in 2024. Mims averaged just 0.8 yards per route run on the outside last season, but that jumped to a whopping 5.5 yards per route run out of the slot and in the backfield, as he proved to be an interesting player when lined up next to Bo Nix.

From Week 11 onward, Mims’ 4.4 yards per route run was the best mark in the league for any player who ran 80 routes or more. While that came in a small sample and included some blown coverages along the way, he caught Nix’s best pass of the year on a seam route versus a Tampa 2 scheme for a 93-yard touchdown against the Browns. He also had one of the best catches by any wide receiver all season, outjumping two Bengals defenders on a fourth-and-the-game prayer with nine seconds left to push another late-season game to overtime.

Is Mims really going to produce like Puka Nacua over a full season? No. As a player who can get the most out of the many bubble and swing screens he runs, show enough speed to threaten linebackers and safeties vertically, and serve as a high-end return man, he doesn’t need to average 4-plus yards per route run to be valuable.


Fourth wide receiver

There are certainly bigger names who might fall fourth on a depth chart at wide receiver, such as Diontae Johnson (Browns) or Demarcus Robinson (49ers), but this is a spot where receivers are expected to do more than catch passes. Teams need their fourth and fifth wideouts to block in the run and screen games and still make an impact as a pass catcher when their number is called or when the top guys aren’t on the field.

While Zaccheaus might have been something closer to the second or third wide receiver for the Commanders last season, he is expected to slot in behind DJ Moore, Rome Odunze and rookie second-round pick Luther Burden III in Chicago. Don’t be surprised if Zaccheaus is on the field more often than you would expect — coaches love him.

Zaccheaus is undersized at 5-foot-8, 193 pounds, but he has still carved out a role in the NFL by being an aggressive, willing blocker. He was effective as both a blocker and receiver on the tunnel and bubble screens the Commanders ran last season; he was also capable of finding holes in coverage out of the slot. He averaged a respectable 1.9 yards per route run last season, just ahead of DK Metcalf (Seahawks) and Jordan Addison (Vikings). And while Zaccheaus is never going to command their sort of target share, the 27-year-old is one of the league’s most effective wideouts without the ball in his hands. He even ran through tackles in the Eagles’ secondary for a critical score in the fourth quarter of a December win over the eventual Super Bowl champs.

The only blemish on Zaccheaus’ 2024 record is his three fumbles, all of which came on punt return duties. The Bears signed Devin Duvernay to take over the return work in Chicago, and Zaccheaus had only one fumble in his career before last season, so I’m willing to write that off as a bit of a fluke. Zaccheaus won’t be the Bears’ wideout who sells the most jerseys this offseason, but he should be on the field plenty.


Backup quarterback

These rankings don’t include the financial investment made for players at each position. Obviously, teams would prefer to avoid paying their backup quarterback $27.5 million while guaranteeing him $10 million for next season, especially when he’ll be 38 years old and potentially playing for another franchise.

At this point, the 2025 season and what Cousins is owed is a sunk cost for the Falcons. Yet looking around the league, it’s pretty clear he would be the best choice of any backup passer to start one meaningful game.

The Falcons undoubtedly lost faith in Cousins during his late-season collapse in 2024, and reports afterward that he was battling a shoulder injury added some logical context to the situation. Before that stretch, though, his 59.3 QBR ranked 12th in the league, a reasonable figure since his early-season mobility was compromised by a torn Achilles injury in 2023. He led a late comeback to beat the Eagles in Week 2 and threw for 509 yards and four touchdowns in an October win over the Buccaneers. He also managed to make the occasional big throw, like this go route that travelled 50 yards in the air to Darnell Mooney against the Vikings.

Admittedly, Cousins missed or underthrew plenty of passes during that early stretch, but the hope has to be that the offseason has given his shoulder time to heal. Even with that disastrous end to his first year in Atlanta, he finished the season 23rd in QBR, ahead of starters C.J. Stroud, Dak Prescott and Aaron Rodgers. He averaged nearly 7.7 yards per attempt and completed just under 67% of his passes. Would I want to sign him to a contract for what the Falcons are paying him? Of course not. Then again, what’s more luxurious than paying too much for something you won’t use?

play

2:05

Mad Dog lets rip at Falcons’ front office over Kirk Cousins’ injuries

Chris “Mad Dog” Russo fumes at the Atlanta Falcons’ front office for saying they were unaware of Kirk Cousins’ injuries during the season.


Two-down defensive tackle

The Bengals signed Slaton to a two-year, $14.1 million deal this offseason, and while that’s not exactly Dak Prescott or Josh Allen money, it’s a testament to the difference the 2021 fifth-round pick made in his role with the Packers.

Listed at 330 pounds, it’s no surprise that Slaton was asked to do the dirty work on early downs against the run. Last season, he played about 45% of Green Bay’s snaps on first and second down, but that fell to just under 19% of the snaps on third and fourth downs.

With two sacks and seven quarterback knockdowns over his four seasons in Green Bay, Slaton isn’t going to show off a series of nuanced pass-rush moves. What he can do is control gaps and maul the player in front of him when asked.

In 2024, Slaton’s 45.5% run stop win rate on the interior led all defenders, just ahead of highly compensated tackles D.J. Jones, Grover Stewart and DeForest Buckner. The highlight of his season might have been a fourth-and-goal snap in the fourth quarter against the Dolphins, where Slaton drove the guard backward, drew a holding penalty and pressured Tua Tagovailoa into the arms of Quay Walker for a drive-ending sack. It wasn’t pretty, but it sure was effective.

Slaton’s not going to be a replacement for Trey Hendrickson or even former Bengals tackle DJ Reader, but for a team that ranked 30th in EPA per play against designed runs last season, Slaton was a much-needed addition.



Best Early Amazon Prime Day 2025 Shoe Deals

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Amazon Prime Day 2025

Our writers and editors independently determine what we cover and recommend. When you buy through our links, E! may earn a commission. Learn more.

Once upon a time, I squeezed my feet into sky-high heels and trendy-but-torturous shoes—all in the name of looking cute. The result? Limping home, begging my feet for forgiveness.

But now that I’m older, wiser, and still extremely cool (with great skin, thank you very much), I’ve cracked the code: Comfortable shoes are essential—and guess what? They can also be stylish and majorly discounted during Amazon’s early Prime Day sale.

To save you time (and foot pain), I’ve rounded up the best shoe deals happening right now, all with glowing reviews and prices that won’t break the bank or your feet.

Whether you need sneakers for work, comfy slides for lounging, or a chic pair of wedges that won’t leave you wincing, this list has it all. We’re talking must-have brands including Adidas, New Balance, Crocs, Reebok, Dr. Scholl’s, and more—all up to 50% off ahead of Prime Day.

So, what are you waiting for? Keep scrolling for the comfiest, cutest, and deeply discounted shoes your feet will thank you for.

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England vs India first test: Brydon Carse bowls Shubman Gill for eight runs

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England vs India

Brydon Carse takes the wicket of Shubman Gill early on day four as India’s captain is dismissed for eight to leave India on 92-3 in their second innings of the first Test at Headingley.

FOLLOW LIVE: England v India first Test – day four

Available to UK users only.

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Maine Dems launch website targeting Collins over abortion ahead of Dobbs anniversary

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Dobbs anniversary

Dobbs anniversary : The Maine Democratic Party has launched a website targeting Republican Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) for votes she they say have caused a significant rollback in abortion rights. 

The release of the website, shared exclusively with The Hill, comes ahead of the third Doobs anniversary of the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned its longstanding precedent of Roe v. Wade. The ruling allowed states to make their own decisions on abortion access and has led to more than a dozen states moving to restrict access to the procedure.

A video released along with the website blames Collins for her votes to confirm Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, who were part of the five-justice majority that overturned Roe.

The video starts and ends with a recording of Collins announcing on the Senate floor that she would vote to confirm Kavanaugh.

“The overturning of Roe vs Wade falls squarely on Susan Collins’ shoulders. Mainers recognize and remember how Collins’ ‘no regrets’ decisive vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court — despite clear warnings of the threat he posed to Roe — led to bans on reproductive freedom nationwide, and it will cost her in 2026 when voters reject her,” said state Democratic Party spokesperson Tommy Garcia.

Collins’s vote on Kavanaugh in particular received significant attention as his nomination was ultimately approved in a 50-48 vote. In her message announcing her decision to vote for Kavanaugh, she expressed her belief that he wouldn’t be likely to vote in favor of overturning Roe.

After the court overturned Roe, Collins said the decision was “inconsistent” with what Gorsuch and Kavanaugh said during their testimonies and in their meetings wither her.

The website also notes Collins’s vote against advancing the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would have codified Roe into law, in 2022. The Maine Republican argued at the time that the legislation would have violated the rights of individuals and organizations who have religious objections to performing abortions and exceeded what Roe protected, striking down laws prohibiting sex-based abortions and requiring parental notification for minors seeking abortions.

Collins instead pointed to the legislation she introduced, called the Reproductive Choice Act, which would restore the rights of Roe.

The website also attacks Collins over votes she’s taken in favor of federal judges who ultimately upheld abortion restrictions in certain states, including Stuart Kyle Duncan in Texas and Kenneth Lee from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Collins will be a top target for Democrats seeking to make gains in the Senate in 2026 after losing a few seats last year, falling to a 53-47 minority.

The longtime senator, representing a state that voted for former Vice President Harris in 2024, has long been a target and was viewed as particularly vulnerable in 2020 but has repeatedly held on. She won her last election by more than 8 points.

Still, this would be the first time Collins is seeking reelection following the court’s overturning of Roe, giving Democrats hope that abortion rights can be a rallying point as it was in the 2022 midterms. A high-profile Democrat has yet to enter the race, but some in the state believe Gov. Janet Mills (D) may be the strongest choice if she decides to run.

So, Maine Dems launch website targeting Collins over abortion ahead of Dobbs anniversary.

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Exclusive-UAW investment blunder cost the union an estimated $80 million, documents show

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UAW investment blunder cost

By Kalea Hall and Nora Eckert

DETROIT (Reuters) -The United Auto Workers’ leadership is mired in turmoil over allegations of an investment blunder that officials say cost the union about $80 million in potential gains from its financial portfolio, according to seven UAW officials and employees and union documents reviewed by Reuters.

The investment funds were liquidated to pay striking workers in 2023 but weren’t reinvested in accordance with the union’s investment policy for more than a year, according to the documents and the UAW officials and staffers who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The details of the investment dispute at the union, including the estimate of foregone gains, have not previously been reported. The loss is an estimate of what the union would have earned had the money been invested in the stock market and other assets in accordance with the union’s policy during that time.

The UAW represents nearly 400,000 members, including 150,000 workers at the Detroit Three automakers: General Motors, Ford, and Jeep-maker Stellantis.

UAW investment policy calls for keeping about 30% of its money in stocks, 53% fixed income and 17% alternative investments, according to three union sources and the documents.

The board voted to liquidate about $340 million in stock investments in August 2023 to pay strike costs, according to a union document reviewed by Reuters. The wording of the vote stipulated that the money be reinvested according to union policy after the strike ended and the labor contracts were ratified, though it didn’t specify how quickly.

But almost none of its portfolio was invested in stocks during the year after the strike began in September 2023, according to the records reviewed by Reuters. The news agency was unable to establish why the stock investment wasn’t made.

The issue of why the union did not reinvest the funds for more than a year is now being investigated by the federal monitor which was appointed as part of a 2020 settlement between the UAW and the U.S. Department of Justice to resolve a union corruption scandal, according to a statement from a majority of UAW board members.

UAW President Shawn Fain and Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock did not respond to requests for comment on the failure to invest union dues.

Mock’s attorney, Michael Nicholson, declined to comment on why the union’s money wasn’t promptly reinvested in stocks or Mock’s role, but told Reuters that responsibility for UAW’s investments is shared by the union president, secretary-treasurer and its three vice presidents, citing a 1996 UAW resolution.

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The Largest Camera Ever Built Releases Its First Images of the Cosmos

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The Largest Camera Ever Built Releases : Perched atop the Cerro Pachón mountain in Chile, 8,684 feet high in the Atacama Desert, where the dry air creates some of the best conditions in the world to view the night sky, a new telescope unlike anything built before has begun its survey of the cosmos. The Vera C. Rubin Observatory, named for the astronomer who discovered evidence of dark matter in 1978, is expected to reveal some 20 billion galaxies, 17 billion stars in the Milky Way, 10 million supernovas, and millions of smaller objects within the solar system.

“We’re absolutely guaranteed to find something that blows people’s minds,” says Anthony Tyson, chief scientist of the Rubin Observatory. “Something that we cannot tell you, because we don’t know it. Something unusual.”

This tremendous astronomical haul will come from the observatory’s 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time, which is slated to begin later this year. The first science images from the telescope were released to the public today.

Rubin’s unprecedented survey of the night sky promises to transform our understanding of the cosmos. What happened during the early stages of planet formation in the solar system? What types of exotic, high-energy explosions occur in the universe? And how does the esoteric force that scientists call dark energy actually work?

“Usually you would design a telescope or a project to go and answer one of these questions,” says Mario Juric, the data management project scientist for Rubin. “What makes Rubin so powerful is that we can build one machine that supplies data to the entire community to solve all of these questions at once.”

The telescope will create a decade-long, high-resolution movie of the universe. It will generate about 20 terabytes of data per day, the equivalent of three years streaming Netflix, piling up some 60,000 terabytes by the end of its survey. In its first year alone, Rubin will compile more data than all previous optical observatories combined.

“You have to have an almost fully automated software suite behind it, because no human can process or even look at these images,” Juric says. “The vast majority of pixels that Rubin is going to collect from the sky will never ever be seen by human eyes, so we have to build software eyes to go through all these images and identify … the most unusual objects.”

Those unusual objects—asteroids from other solar systems, supermassive black holes devouring stars, high-energy blasts with no known source—contain secrets about the workings of the cosmos.

“You build a telescope like this, and it’s the equivalent of building four or five telescopes for specific areas,” Juric says. “But you can do it all at once.”

Largest Camera

The observatory on the summit of Cerro Pachón in Chile.NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory/A. Pizarro D.

A Telescope Like No Other

Housed in a 10-story building, the Rubin Observatory is equipped with an 8.4-meter primary mirror and a 3,200-megapixel digital camera, the largest ever built. The telescope rotates on a specialized mount, taking 30-second exposures of the sky before quickly pivoting to a new position. Rubin will take about 1,000 images every night, photographing the entire Southern Hemisphere sky in extraordinary detail every three to four days.

“It’s an amazing piece of engineering,” says Sandrine Thomas, a project scientist who works on the optical instruments of the Rubin Observatory.

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Thunder take Game 7, cap historic season with first title

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OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma City Thunder took home the 2025 NBA championship — the first in the franchise’s 17 years here — with a 103-91 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Sunday in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, capping a historically dominant year and remarkable turnaround.

The Thunder went from winning 22 and 24 games, respectively, in 2020-21 and 2021-22 to claiming the top spot in the Western Conference playoffs each of the past two seasons. They followed up a 56-win campaign last season with 68 wins in 2024-25 — one of the seven best single-season marks in NBA history. They set the record for the largest point differential of all time in the regular season, smashing a mark that had stood for more than half a century.

Oklahoma City ultimately won 84 games between the regular season and the playoffs, tying the 1996-97 Chicago Bulls for third most in any season. Only Golden State (88 in 2016-17) and the Bulls (87 in 2015-16) won more.

Despite the Thunder’s accomplishment, Game 7 might be most remembered for an unfortunate reason as Pacers superstar Tyrese Haliburton suffered what his father confirmed was a right Achilles injury while trying to drive to the basket with 4:55 left in the first quarter. He would be ruled out for the rest of the game a short time later because of the injury — bringing what had been, to that point, a breathtaking postseason to a heartbreaking conclusion.

The Pacers hung tough immediately following Haliburton’s injury and took a 48-47 lead into halftime. However, that’s when Oklahoma City — behind a brilliant stretch of play from the league’s Most Valuable Player, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — had one of its dominating third quarters, outscoring Indiana 34-20 to take a 13-point lead into the fourth quarter.

It wouldn’t have been a Pacers playoff game, though, without Indiana making its opponent sweat with a potential comeback. The Pacers eventually got what was a 22-point deficit down to 10 on Andrew Nembhard‘s 3-pointer with just under two minutes remaining. But unlike Indiana’s magical comebacks earlier in these playoffs, Oklahoma City hung on and survived.

“It doesn’t feel real,” Gilgeous-Alexander said after the game. “So many hours. So many moments. So many emotions. So many nights of disbelief. So many nights of belief. It’s crazy to know that we’re all here, but this group worked for it. This group put in the hours, and we deserve this.”

The championship is the culmination of the vision of the team’s general manager, Sam Presti, who has been in charge since the franchise’s final season in Seattle in 2007-08. Since arriving in Oklahoma City in 2008, the Thunder have the second-most regular-season victories, behind only the Boston Celtics, and the fifth-most postseason victories.

But, until this season, the ultimate prize — a championship — had eluded the Thunder. After near misses when they lost in the NBA Finals to the Miami Heat in five games in 2012 and then in the Western Conference finals in 2014 and 2016, it was unclear if it would ever happen for one of the NBA’s smallest-market teams.

Ironically, it did on the same day Kevin Durant, the foundational member of that first contending Thunder squad, was traded to the Houston Rockets, potentially making them Oklahoma City’s biggest threat to getting out of the Western Conference playoffs again next season.

But although Durant left in 2016, it wouldn’t be until 2019 that the first era of Thunder basketball officially came to a close when Presti traded Russell Westbrook and Paul George in a dizzying series of moves that laid the foundation for this current roster — most notably by getting Gilgeous-Alexander in the deal that sent George to the LA Clippers that summer.

A couple of weeks later, Presti penned a letter in The Oklahoman, a local Oklahoma City newspaper, laying out his vision for the franchise.

“In saying goodbye to the past, we have begun to chart our future,” Presti wrote. “The next great Thunder team is out there somewhere, but it will take time to seize and discipline to ultimately sustain.”

It turned out that it didn’t take much time at all. Arriving alongside Gilgeous-Alexander in 2019 was Luguentz Dort, an undrafted free agent who has developed into a first-team All-Defense selection. In 2022, Oklahoma City landed its other two foundational players in Chet Holmgren, who went second out of Gonzaga, and Jalen Williams, who was the 12th pick out of Santa Clara.

Holmgren and Williams played massive roles in OKC’s playoff run. Williams, who struggled at times earlier in these playoffs, had a fantastic series in the Finals, including going for a career-high 40 points in Game 5. Holmgren, who missed more than half of the regular season because of a hip injury, didn’t shoot well in the Finals but impacted the game in other ways. He had five blocks in Sunday’s win, the most by a player in an NBA Finals Game 7 since blocks were first recorded in the 1973-74 season.

“Honestly, I never really play for records,” the 7-foot-1 forward said. “I never play for stats. All that will be forgotten. But us winning is forever. It’s immortal. I’m just so happy we were able to do that together as a team.”

With both Williams and Holmgren likely to sign long-term contract extensions in the coming weeks — along with Gilgeous-Alexander, who is eligible for a massive one as well — this could be merely the beginning for a team that has just two players on its roster older than 27 and is now the second-youngest champion in NBA history, behind only the 1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers.

“They behave like champions. They compete like champions,” coach Mark Daigneault said. “They root for each other’s success, which is rare in professional sports. I’ve said it many times, and now I’m going to say it one more time. They are an uncommon team, and now they’re champions.”

Oklahoma City’s win continues an unprecedented run of parity in the NBA. The Thunder are the ninth franchise to win a title in NBA commissioner Adam Silver’s 12 seasons. His predecessor, David Stern, saw eight franchises win titles in his 30 seasons as commissioner.

Gilgeous-Alexander, meanwhile, capped his historic season with 29 points and 12 assists to hit a rare superfecta of honors: regular-season MVP, Finals MVP, NBA champion and scoring champion. Doing all of those things put Gilgeous-Alexander on a variety of short lists, among them becoming the first player to win league MVP award and a championship in the same season since Stephen Curry with the 2014-15 Golden State Warriors.

That season, Curry won his first title with a young, suddenly ascendant Warriors team, one that would go on to make six Finals appearances in an eight-year span and earn four championships as part of the NBA’s most recent dynastic team.

Time will tell whether this will start a similar run for the Thunder. But to have that sort of run, it has to start with a championship.

And, after 17 years, Oklahoma City can finally say it has its first.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Queen’s Piper Plays Bagpipes At Funeral

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Queen’s Piper Plays Bagpipes At Funeral : The moving moments were especially symbolic given the Queen started most days with the sound of bagpipes.

As something of an alarm clock, the piper would play at 9 a.m. for 15 minutes for the monarch wherever she was in residence.

Pipe Major Scott Methven, who held the role between 2015 and 2019, told the BBC last week that he got to know the Queen very well during his time in the position.

“It was a pleasure as her Majesty would stand and watch you play,” he told the BBC. “She enjoyed the bagpipes, but she got to know you as a person.”

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National investigation into maternity care announced

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Health Secretary Wes Streeting has announced a national investigation into maternity care in England.

The “rapid” inquiry will urgently look at the worst-performing maternity and neonatal services in the country, including Leeds, Sussex, Gloucester, and Mid and South Essex.

Streeting has met parents who have lost babies in a series of maternity scandals at some NHS trusts and said the investigation would “make sure these families get the truth and the accountability they deserve”.

It will begin this summer and report back by December 2025.

The review will look across the entire maternity system, bringing together the findings of past reviews into a clear national set of actions to ensure every woman and baby receives safe, high-quality and compassionate care.

Making the announcement on Monday, Streeting apologised on behalf of the NHS to those families who had suffered avoidable harm.

It comes after a series of maternity scandals, including in Morecambe Bay, East Kent, Shrewsbury and Telford and Nottingham.

Streeting said the review would be co-produced with the victims of maternity scandals, giving families a voice into how the inquiry is run.

He said he wants to ensure “no parent or baby is ever let down again”. So, National investigation into maternity care announced.

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Republicans order key panel to score extension of Trump tax cuts as budget neutral

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Trump tax cuts

Senate Republicans have directed the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) to score the cost of extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts as a continuation of current policy that would not add significantly to federal deficits, which would allow them to make those tax rates permanent.

The joint panel on taxation, which projects the deficit impact of all tax bills, scored the extension of 26 provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act as a continuation of “current policy” and therefore budget neutral, which dramatically lowers the projected cost of President Trump’s megabill.

In a score released Saturday, the JCT projects tax-related provisions of the Republican bill as adding $441.5 billion to the deficit over the next decade, instead of the $4 trillion that Democrats say would be the projected cost of the tax provisions if they were scored on a “current law” baseline.

Much of the 2017 tax law, including a reduction in individual income tax rates, is due to expire at the end of 2025.

“Republicans finally showed their hand, and it’s completely dishonest. ‘Current policy baseline’ is a budget gimmick that is nothing more than smoke and mirrors instead of honest accounting. This bill will add trillions upon trillions of dollars to the national debt to fund tax breaks for billionaires — while Republicans want everyone to think it adds zero,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), the ranking member of the Budget Committee.

“Republicans who claim to care about fiscal responsibility should be outraged and doing everything they can to stop it. This is the Great Betrayal of working families where families lose, and billionaires win,” Merkley said.

Senate Republicans have argued for months that Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has authority under the 1974 Budget and Impoundment Control Act to determine the baseline for scoring the budget reconciliation bill.

Republicans argue that Congress has used an asymmetrical system for scoring spending bills and tax bills in recent decades, as extensions of spending authorizations are often scored as extensions of current policy and therefore as budget neutral, while extensions of expiring tax law are scored as adding to the deficit.

Democrats could challenge the Republicans’ use of a “current policy” baseline to score the extension of the expiring 2017 tax cuts as a violation of the Byrd Rule.

The Byrd Rule states that changes in law that increase the deficit for fiscal years beyond the 10-year budget window are subject to a 60-vote point-of-order objection.

If the parliamentarian rules that scoring the extension of the 2017 tax cuts as largely budget neutral in the years beyond 2034 would be a violation of the Byrd Rule, Republicans may have to vote to override the parliamentarian or rewrite the bill.

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