Tag Archives: ignite

Pro-Palestinian protestors ignite smoke bombs, throw fake blood outside Jewish family’s Brentwood home – KABC-TV

  1. Pro-Palestinian protestors ignite smoke bombs, throw fake blood outside Jewish family’s Brentwood home KABC-TV
  2. Protesters target AIPAC president’s home with ‘baby killer’ accusations, red paint Fox News
  3. Protesters set off smoke bombs outside AIPAC head Michael Tuchin’s home on Thanksgiving: ‘F–k ur holiday!’ New York Post
  4. Smoke bombs apparently set off, red paint spilled outside AIPAC President’s Brentwood home KTLA Los Angeles
  5. Protesters set off smoke bombs outside AIPAC head’s home, call him ‘baby killer’ The Times of Israel
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José Ramírez says Tim Anderson has ‘been disrespecting the game for a while’ after players ignite brawl – CBS Sports

  1. José Ramírez says Tim Anderson has ‘been disrespecting the game for a while’ after players ignite brawl CBS Sports
  2. With Paul-Diaz, the UFC and all the weekend’s MMA, the best punch may have been on the baseball diamond MMA Junkie
  3. Jose Ramirez: Tim Anderson has been disrespecting the game for a while Bally Sports Ohio & Great Lakes
  4. Jose Ramirez, Tim Anderson ejected after brawl at second base – ESPN ESPN
  5. WATCH: White Sox Tim Anderson, Guardians José Ramirez throw punches, brawl ensues #Shorts #fight NBC Sports Chicago
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‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ To Ignite Franchise Record With $250M+ Global Opening- Box Office Preview – Deadline

  1. ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ To Ignite Franchise Record With $250M+ Global Opening- Box Office Preview Deadline
  2. Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One | Final Trailer (2023 Movie) – Tom Cruise Paramount Pictures
  3. Mission Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One Movie Review: Tom Cruise Fights AI in This Breathtaking and LatestLY
  4. Review: ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part 1’ has Tom Cruise fly, jump & go crazy – better than ever India Forums
  5. Movie Review: Take the leap with Tom Cruise in ‘Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning, Part One’ AOL
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Upcoming week can ignite a new Bitcoin rally; Here’s what you should know – Finbold – Finance in Bold

  1. Upcoming week can ignite a new Bitcoin rally; Here’s what you should know Finbold – Finance in Bold
  2. Top Trader Issues Bitcoin Alert, Warns BTC Could Witness $100,000,000,000 in Cascading Long Liquidations The Daily Hodl
  3. Here’s the Final Resistance for BTC Before a Potential Rally to $30K (Bitcoin Price Analysis) CryptoPotato
  4. Chances of Bitcoin’s ‘drop below $20k as of any month-end is very small’ – Here’s why AMBCrypto News
  5. Bitcoin Doesn’t Appear to be Ripe for a Bullish Break Just Yet DailyFX
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Chelsea outclass Milan in Champions League to ignite Graham Potter era | Champions League

Chelsea’s Champions League campaign has its ignition point and so does the managerial tenure of Graham Potter. It feels strange to think that this was only his third match in charge of the club following his appointment on 8 September, the first having been the 1-1 draw here against Red Bull Salzburg.

That had been a strange jumble of emotions in the wake of the loss at Dinamo Zagreb and Thomas Tuchel’s sacking. But with Chelsea desperately needing a victory in the competition everything came together, the blue shirts pouring forward from all angles; Milan chased out of west London, fortunate to escape a serious beating.

It was still chastening. There is a particular kind of event glamour when it comes to Milan – the cool shirts; the sight of Paolo Maldini, the technical director, strolling the touchline before kick-off. Clarence Seedorf, the former Milan midfielder, was here as a media pundit – alongside the Chelsea icon, Gianfranco Zola, in front of the press box.

But apart from the electricity generated whenever Rafael Leão got the ball and started to run, Milan offered nothing and it was certainly jarring to see the champions of Italy defend so generously. The die was cast when Wesley Fofana opening the scoring midway through the first half following a poorly defended corner and, thereafter, Chelsea threatened to run riot.

Potter has had to feel his way into the role on the training ground and he could delight at how his players mapped the moves from Cobham on to the big stage. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang added the second and it was a night when pretty much everybody impressed. Thiago Silva was pitch perfect in defence while Mateo Kovacic and Ruben Loftus-Cheek ran the midfield. But, as so often, it was Reece James who was the dominant figure.

The right wing-back drove the team, a menace to Milan with his surges and deliveries. It was his cross that teed up Aubameyang and it was fitting that he set the seal on one of the best Chelsea victories for some time with the third goal, slammed high inside the near post after a Raheem Sterling pass. It was James who the TV cameras followed at full-time, him that the home crowd saluted in song.

Wesley Fofana goes down with the injury that would force his first-half substitution. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Chelsea had flickered at the outset against a Milan defence that missed the No 1 goalkeeper, Mike Maignan, and three of the regular back four – Davide Calabria, Simon Kjær and Theo Hernández.

Mason Mount extended Ciprian Tatarusanu but it was after a flurry of set pieces midway through the first half that Chelsea took control – four of them to be precise, each bringing a free header and worry lines for Stefano Pioli, the Milan manager. How was this happening?

From the fourth, a Ben Chilwell corner, Silva – as he had done twice previously – unloaded his header, which was pushed out by Tatarusanu and from there, it was a scramble. Aubameyang put himself about, so did Loftus-Cheek and, when the ball broke, it did so kindly for Fofana, who rolled it home.

Chelsea were well balanced in Potter’s 3-4-2-1 system; Sterling and Mount finding spaces as the No 10s, James and Chilwell offering width and thrust. They might have been out of sight by the interval.

Mount saw a shot blocked after James had combined with Sterling to pull back, and Mount also had the ball in the net after a nice finish but had strayed offside. Sterling, too, went close on a quick break.

Milan’s threat came exclusively through Leão, their fast rising star – an uncommon blend of explosiveness and strength. His first involvement had been to blast away from a clutch of blue shirts and he made it clear that he intended to do it again and again. Chelsea needed Silva to stretch into an excellent slide challenge on him in the 19th minute after Fofana had been caught on the ball.

What a run it was that Leão produced in first-half stoppage time, taking him past four Chelsea players, the alarm bells ringing loudly. Charles De Ketelaere prodded goalwards and, when Kepa Arrizabalaga – who kept his place ahead of the fit again Édouard Mendy – patted the ball out, Rade Krunic had to score. From point-blank range, his shot went high. It was a huge let-off for Chelsea.

There was needle, some bad challenges, with those from Krunic and Fodé Ballo-Touré in the first half fully meriting their yellow cards. But there did not appear to have been much in the tussle between Fofana and Leão that saw the former forced off on 38 minutes. The frustration for the goalscorer was intense.

Chelsea deserved a second goal to allow themselves to breathe more easily and it came on 56 minutes when James crossed and Aubameyang gave Fikayo Tomori the slip all too easily. Tomori was left to perform a despairing lunge; it was a horror moment for the Chelsea youth product. That was that in terms of the result. But after Sterling had volleyed high, James brought the flourish.

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Victor Wembanyama exceeds hype in game vs. G League Ignite

HENDERSON, Nev. — The first of many signs that Victor Wembanyama is a singular proposition, a true one of one, came as soon as he approached the Dollar Loan Center’s makeshift security station next to the arena’s loading dock.

His basketball team, the Boulogne-Levallois Metropolitans 92, had flown in from Paris so that Wembanyama, the consensus favorite to be the top pick in the 2023 NBA draft, could play in a pair of nationally-televised exhibitions attended by more than 200 team executives and scouts.

In preparation for Tuesday’s showcase game against the G League Ignite, a select NBA minor league team, the Metros players handed their backpacks to screeners as they stepped through a hulking gray metal detector that stood nearly 7 feet tall. But Wembanyama, who has reportedly been measured at 7-foot-4 without shoes, had to hunch his shoulders and duck sharply to avoid a head-on collision.

Victor Wembanyama is coming to America. Here’s where he might land.

The building wasn’t prepared for its main attraction, and neither were its salivating occupants.

Wembanyama then made his way to the court, where he went through an extensive pregame stretching routine barefoot. As trainers flexed his hips, Wembanyama’s massive sneakers, long enough to look almost like snowshoes, waited for him nearby. A Metros staffer estimated that Wembanyama wears Nikes in size 55 in Europe, equivalent to a size 20.5 in the United States. For reference, Nike’s basketball sneakers are typically only available up to size 18 on its website, and its official sizing scale tops out at 22.

Standard measures don’t really apply to Wembanyama, an off-the-charts basketball prodigy who is among the most captivating prospects in the history of the sport. Without much effort, Wembanyama can jump and tap his head against the backboard. While warming up Tuesday, he casually threw down a windmill dunk with his toes just an inch or two off the hardwood.

Once the game began, the 18-year-old Wembanyama kept surprising the Ignite’s players by appearing from nowhere to block their shots. Wembanyama’s 8-foot wingspan ensures that he is rarely out of the action, even if he’s out of position. Whereas centers usually need to sprint across the paint to contest layups, Wembanyama can often get the job done simply by stretching his arms to full extension.

When he was ready and waiting for Ignite drives, hilarity ensued. Wembanyama sent Scoot Henderson flying to the court with the force of one block, and he volleyball-spiked another shot so hard that it sailed over to the Metros’ bench, prompting teammate Ibrahima Fall Faye to break into a teeth-bearing smile.

The NBA, of course, was built on tall players with long arms and leaping ability: 30 different 7-footers took the court last season alone, and giants such as Manute Bol (7-foot-7) and Yao Ming (7-foot-6) remain well-known long after they retired. Over the past decade, a wave of skilled big men, including Washington Wizards center Kristaps Porzingis, were even dubbed “unicorns” for their rare ability to shoot and dribble despite their massive frames.

As Japan nears a pandemic turning point, NBA fans can’t help but clap

But no player as big as Wembanyama has ever done what he can already do, and his performance on Tuesday was more fantastical than a mere unicorn.

Consider: This was his first game in the United States, and the first time he had played with NBA rules and in an NBA-standard 48-minute game. Consider also that the Metros were more than 5,400 miles from home and that their transatlantic journey had taken place in the middle of their French league season. Finally, consider that more than 100 media members had swarmed the Nevada desert from at least three continents, that Phoenix Suns stars Chris Paul and Devin Booker were seated courtside and that representatives from all 30 NBA teams were in attendance.

“In terms of recognition worldwide, this has got to be the biggest game I’ve played in my life,” Wembanyama predicted Monday.

None of that fazed Wembanyama, who finished with a game-high 37 points, seven three-pointers, four rebounds and five blocks in a 122-115 loss to the Ignite. How high did Wembanyama set the bar during his premiere? Danny Green is the only player in NBA history to record seven three-pointers and five blocks in the same game, and he needed three overtime periods to do it.

Henderson, a savvy 6-foot-2 guard who is widely regarded as the second-best player in the 2023 class, made a point to attack Wembanyama early and often, finishing with 28 points, five rebounds and nine assists in an impressive showing of his own. Wembanyama responded by coolly biding his time before taking over in the third quarter with a flurry of three-pointers to cut into the Ignite’s double-digit lead.

Each shot was more preposterous, and graceful, than the last. Wembanyama created his own looks off the dribble, sidestepped into a fadeaway three in the corner and converted a four-point play from the top of the key. After one midrange jumper, he broke from his typical even-keeled demeanor to flash a glare and turn both palms upward in a Michael Jordan shrug.

Unlike many sky-scraping teenagers, Wembanyama doesn’t look like he’s trying to regain control of his body after a disorienting growth spurt. He moves fluidly and decisively, and he looks more comfortable sizing up defenders on the perimeter than he does fighting for post position.

“I’ve been playing this way for years,” Wembanyama said. “Even when I was 9, 10, 11, 15, I was always shooting threes and handling the ball. I didn’t look up to players for me to do that. I inspired myself with whatever I wanted to do.”

There are heavy doses of Kevin Durant in how Wembanyama sets up and uncorks his pure jump shots, but he’s far taller and far longer than the Brooklyn Nets superstar. Wembanyama’s rim protection recalls Rudy Gobert, except his fellow Frenchman rarely dares to dribble in traffic or pull up from deep.

Rudy Gobert’s struggles in the EuroBasket final are a bit of a warning

While Oklahoma City Thunder rookie Chet Holmgren can roam from the rim to the arc, he can’t quite match Wembanyama’s physical dimensions. Anthony Davis was the most highly-regarded big man prospect of the past 15 years, winning an NCAA title as a Kentucky freshman and going No. 1 overall in the 2012 draft. Yet Wembanyama is a much better outside shooter than Davis was at the same age, and he dwarfs the 6-foot-10 Los Angeles Lakers forward.

“Ain’t nothing to compare it to,” G League Ignite Coach Jason Hart said. “Special talent.”

No one, not Wembanyama or the Mets’ Coach, Vincent Collet, would pitch him as a perfect player. The venerable Collet, who has guided the French National Team to silver medals at the 2020 Olympics and 2022 EuroBasket, said that Wembanyama must get stronger physically, smarter with his decision-making and more efficient with his shot distribution.

Collet noted, though, that he had considered not coaching during the French league season because of the quick turnaround from EuroBasket. Ultimately, he decided that guiding the final step of Wembanyama’s journey to the NBA was a “very special” opportunity that would never come again. Collet’s next hope is that Wembanyama will play for France at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

“He’s the best prospect we’ve ever had in our league,” Collet said. “He’s amazing, not only by his size but incredible skills. I’m impressed by how calm he is with all the buzz around him. He has a real impressive ability to listen.”

For now, but not for long, Wembanyama remains a fishbowl phenom, known to basketball die-hards around the world but not yet a household name. Tuesday’s exhibition played to a half-full crowd in a 5,500-seat minor league hockey arena, a far cry from the sellouts that LeBron James consistently drew as an Ohio teenager.

Fame and acclaim are coming, and Wembanyama appears ready for the storm, in part because he played his first pro game at age 15 and has years of experience handling media obligations. There were no obvious nerves when Wembanyama faced rooms full of cameras and recorders this week, and he lamented, in fluent English, that he would soon need to leave France behind because his “destiny is here in the States.”

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Then, with his sights set, Wembanyama laid out his next major milepost with the clarity of a young man who understands there is no one else quite like him.

“Of all the prospects I’ve heard about in our class, I think [Henderson] is my favorite one,” Wembanyama said. “He’s the most reliable that I’ve seen. He’s a really great player. If I was never born, I think he would deserve the first spot.”

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Shaquille O’Neal’s son Shareef signs with G League Ignite

After going undrafted in this year’s NBA Draft, Shareef O’Neal has found a new home. 

O’Neal — the son of Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal — is signing a six-figure contract with the NBA G League Ignite, according to Shams Charania. 

O’Neal recently played for his father’s former team, the Lakers, in the NBA Summer League. He averaged 4.7 points and 3.7 rebounds per game over six contests. Before that, the 6-foot-10, 215-pound O’Neal participated in the G League Elite prospect camp in May. 

Charania noted that “NBA teams were intrigued with O’Neal’s athleticism and pedigree throughout the pre-draft and summer-league process.” 

O’Neal caused a stir in June when he conceded that his father wanted him to stay in school, rather than enter the draft. 

Shareef O’Neal played for the Lakers in the NBA Summer League.
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

“I know he probably doesn’t want me saying this, but sorry. We’re both grown, we’ll get past it,” O’Neal said. “I know he’s an NBA legend. I know he’s my Dad. But it was right in front of me. I had to go get it. So, if he likes it or not, it’s not really going to stop me from doing what I want to do.” 

O’Neal, 22, played in just 37 collegiate games across three seasons with UCLA and LSU, limited due to a myriad of health issues. 



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Boeing set to ignite sweltering Farnborough Airshow

An aerial view of a Boeing 737 MAX 10 airplane parked at King County International Airport-Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, U.S, June 1, 2022. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson

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  • Delta to announce deal for 100 Boeing 737 MAX 10 – sources
  • Lufthansa to firm up deal for 10 Boeing freighters – sources
  • Boeing ‘very close’ to resuming 787 deliveries – executive
  • Cancelling 737 MAX 10 not a high probability – executive

FARNBOROUGH, England, July 17 (Reuters) – Boeing (BA.N) will seek to shore up its troubled 737 MAX 10 and 777X jetliners with orders officially worth over $15 billion from Delta Air Lines and Lufthansa this week, as the aerospace industry swelters at its largest event since COVID-19.

Industry sources said the U.S. planemaker, struggling to maintain a grip on its duopoly with Europe’s Airbus (AIR.PA), would strike early at the Farnborough Airshow, which opens on Monday, after months of talks on its largest 737 with Delta.

Reuters first reported in March that Delta (DAL.N) was discussing buying 100 MAX 10 and reported last week that the airline was in talks to order around 12 more Airbus A220s in a deal likely be announced on Tuesday. read more

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Germany’s Lufthansa (LHAG.DE) is likely to firm up a deal for around 10 large Boeing freighters, including seven of the recently launched cargo version of the 777X, sources said.

None of the parties commented ahead of the show, which is going ahead despite an emergency weather warning and transport disruption caused by forecasts for record high temperatures.

As Britain melts, aerospace firms will do their best to show civil demand is intact after the worst downturn in their history. Rising defence spending will also be in focus as the industry gathers under the shadow of war in Ukraine.

Boeing unveiled broadly stable civil airplane forecasts on Sunday. read more

Even so, many of the deals will be provisional ones or formal signings of business already in the works, and virtually all will be packaged as contributions to lower emissions in support of a common goal of net zero by 2050, delegates said.

EasyJet (EZJ.L) is set to win shareholder approval for a recent deal for 56 Airbus A320neos, placing it on Farnborough’s radar. Etihad has firmed up an order for seven A350 freighters, though it is unclear whether these will be unveiled at the show.

Poland’s LOT is studying proposals from existing suppliers Boeing and Embraer as well Airbus and engine firms, but will not make a decision at the show, a person close to the talks said, denying a report that the airline had already picked Airbus.

Demand for jets peaked in 2016 but remained buoyant until the pandemic crippled air transport. Now, travel is rebounding, passengers face long lines and some jets are back in demand.

Yet, apart from Delta’s expected MAX purchase, the big-ticket orders that dominated past events are rarer as airlines repair balance sheets weakened by COVID-19 travel restrictions.

Airbus and Boeing officials flew to India ahead of the show chasing a potential $50 billion blockbuster from Air India owner Tata Group. It is studying 200-300 narrowbodies and 30-70 wide-bodies split between suppliers, but hopes of a sizzling order to match this week’s temperature are on hold for now, sources said.

That means most attention will be on the MAX 10 and 777X which Boeing plans to fly in a scaled-down Farnborough display.

MAJOR HEADACHES

Both airplanes are the source of major headaches as Boeing wrestles with regulatory problems in the wake of a two-year safety crisis triggered by crashes of a smaller MAX.

Boeing has a December deadline to win approval for the 737 MAX 10 – the largest member of its single-aisle family – or meet new cockpit alerting requirements, unless Congress waives it.

Chief Executive Dave Calhoun has said Boeing could be forced to cancel the 737 MAX 10 – a move that could have repercussions across the industry including for rival Airbus, reluctant to be dragged into a race to develop new jets too soon.

However, the head of Boeing’s commercial division, Stan Deal, told reporters on Sunday that cancelling the MAX 10, which analysts say is needed to compete with strong sales of the Airbus A321neo, is “not a high probability path”.

Boeing is also close to delivering its first 787 in a year after a spate of regulatory and production problems, Deal said.

Aerospace leaders will also be under pressure this week to address concerns over supply chains and a spike in inflation that raise questions over both input costs and consumer demand.

Current market leader Airbus is sticking with plans to raise single-aisle A320neo output to 75 jets a month in 2025 from 50 now, but some suppliers fear supply chains may not keep up.

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Reporting by Tim Hepher, David Shepardson, Paul Sandle; Editing by Mark Potter and Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Russia’s Medvedev: Attack on Crimea will ignite ‘Judgement Day’ response

Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of Russia’s Security Council, delivers a speech during a ceremony marking Shipbuilder’s Day in Saint Petersburg, Russia June 29, 2022. Sputnik/Valentin Yegorshin/Pool

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  • This content was produced in Russia where the law restricts coverage of Russian military operations in Ukraine

MOSCOW, July 17 (Reuters) – The refusal of Ukraine and Western powers to recognise Moscow’s control of Crimea poses a “systemic threat” for Russia and any outside attack on the region will prompt a “Judgment Day” response, former president Dmitry Medvedev said on Sunday.

Russia annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 after a pro-Moscow president in Kyiv was toppled amid mass street protests. Moscow then also backed pro-Russian armed separatists in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

In the event of an attack on Crimea, Medvedev was quoted by TASS news agency as saying, “Judgment Day will come very fast and hard. It will be very difficult to hide.”

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Medvedev did not elaborate but has previously warned the United States of the dangers of attempting to punish a nuclear power such as Russia over its actions in Ukraine, saying this could endanger humanity. read more

His comments were aired a day after a Ukrainian official suggested that Crimea, which most of the world still recognises as part of Ukraine, could be a target for U.S.-made HIMARS missiles, recently deployed by Kyiv as it battles Russian forces.

Earlier on Sunday, Interfax news agency quoted Medvedev as telling World War Two veterans: “If any other state, be it Ukraine or NATO countries, believes that Crimea is not Russian, then this is a systemic threat for us.”

“This is a direct and an explicit threat, especially given what had happened to Crimea. Crimea returned to Russia,” said Medvedev, who now serves as deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council.

Vadym Skibitskyi, an official at Ukrainian military intelligence, was asked on Saturday in a televised interview if HIMARS could be used on targets in Crimea.

He said Russia had carried out strikes on Ukrainian territory from Crimea and the Black Sea and so these were also justified targets.

Crimea is of particular strategic importance to Russia as it includes the headquarters of its Black Sea fleet at Sevastopol.

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Reporting by Reuters
Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Gareth Jones

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Texas and Oklahoma to SEC? Live news updates as Big 12 football powers ignite conference realignment

The news cycle in college football has moved rapidly over the summer between College Football expansion and newly-implemented name, image and likeness rules. Nothing truly gets college football fans going like college football and conference realignment drama, however, and that’s exactly what’s been dropped in our laps. Texas and Oklahoma intend to announce their decision to leave the Big 12 in favor of a move to the SEC, sources tell CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd. That announcement could come Monday as both schools are still expected to leave the Big 12. 

Citing “a high-ranking college official with knowledge of the situation,” the Houston Chronicle’s Brent Zwerneman was first to report that the SEC could announce the additions of the Longhorns and Sooners “within a couple of weeks.” 

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, along with officials from Texas and Oklahoma, have all refused to comment on the initial reports, but there have been no outward denials. Smoke is only growing exponentially with each passing hour. This despite resistance from some tangential parties, namely Texas A&M (not wanting another Lone Star State team in the SEC) and Oklahoma State (not wanting to be left alone in the Big 12).

The additions of Texas and Oklahoma would make the SEC the first 16-team superconference while simultaneously adding massive brand power to a league already seen as the best in college sports. Whether these programs leave now or leave for the SEC specifically, their departure from the Big 12 appears inevitable. CBS Sports will continue covering this developing story with live updates below.

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