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UFC sets Fight Night event in Baku for June, headlined by Hill vs. Roundtree

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The UFC will head to Azerbaijan for the first time later this year.

The federation announced a Fight Night event for June 21 at the Baku Crystal Hall, headlined by a light heavyweight main event featuring Jamahal Hill vs. Khalil Rountree Jr.

“Azerbaijan and the city of Baku have an incredible history of hosting massive global sporting events,” said UFC President and CEO Dana White in a statement. “We have so many great athletes from in and around this country that it was a natural next destination for us.”

Hill is a former light heavyweight champion and Contender Series alum. He will make his second appearance in the octagon this year after a knockout loss to Jiří Procházka at UFC 311 in January. Rountree Jr. hasn’t fought since he lost to Alex Pereira at UFC 307 last October and will have a chance to surpass Hill in the light heavyweight rankings with a win in Baku.

Also on the Baku card will be Kyoji Horiguchi’s return to UFC, who will take on Tagir Ulanbekov in a flyweight bout.

Heavyweight Curtis Blaydes will fact Rizvan Kuniev, a Contender Series alumn who will make his UFC debut.

Ismail Naurdiev and Junyong Park will clash in a middleweight matchup, while Hamdy Abdelwahab and Mohammed Usman will fight at heavyweight. Two bantamweight fights will also be on the card. The first will see Irina Alekseeva face Klaudia Sygula, while the second will feature Daria Zhelezniakova taking on Melissa Mullins.



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Analyst says pro’s slow play led to Rory McIlroy’s Masters collapse

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Jeff Bridges leans into raw truth of his music on ‘Slow Magic’

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With his extraordinary acting prowess, it’s no surprise that Jeff Bridges made “the Dude” as iconic as the greatest rock stars. However, most fans of “The Big Lebowski” probably aren’t aware that Bridges is a real rocker in his own right, a gifted singer-songwriter who plays both guitar and piano. Beyond his acclaimed performances in classic films like “Starman” and “The Last Picture Show,” cult hits like “The Fisher King” and his unforgettable turn in “Crazy Heart,” the legendary actor boasts a music résumé that rivals most full-time musicians’.

Bridges released his debut album, “Be Here Soon,” in 2000. He also co-produced the record with Chris Pelonis and the Doobie Brothers’ Michael McDonald, who sang guest vocals, along with David Crosby. His 2011 self-titled follow-up album, produced by T Bone Burnett, made waves, landing on the Billboard 200 as well as country, folk and rock charts. Ahead of the album’s release, Bridges performed at the Troubadour, where he was introduced onstage by Quincy Jones, who told the star-studded crowd (Jackson Browne among them) that music is Bridges’ “true calling.” Bridges even has his own signature models of Breedlove guitars.

Now, Bridges is poised to release “Slow Magic, 1977-1978,” his first record since his 2015 spoken-word/ambient album, “Sleeping Tapes.” The 10-year gap between records might seem like a long time, but these songs actually have been waiting almost 50 years to make their debut. “Time is so bizarre. I can’t believe we recorded this half a century ago,” Bridges, 75, says during a Zoom call, wearing a brown cable-knit sweater, with his reading glasses perched on his nose, and sporting a bushy white beard.

Sitting in his garage-turned-ceramics studio that doubles as a jam space, at his home in Santa Barbara, surrounded by framed photos, artwork and various mementos, including a “The Big Lebowski”-themed bandanna, Bridges seems just as incredulous that “Slow Magic” is even coming out. He explains that the journey to release it was rather unexpected. He credits Keefus Ciancia, his “Sleeping Tapes” collaborator, for the record making its long-overdue public debut. Bridges had played the decades-old cassette of his songs for Ciancia, who, without Bridges’ knowledge, passed it along to Matt Sullivan, founder of indie label Light in the Attic, who was eager to release it. Bridges was stunned but delighted.

For fans of Bridges’ films, “Slow Magic” is a rare treat, offering a glimpse into a more personal side of his life that was previously hidden from the public eye. In his 20s, as his big-screen career was taking off — with two Oscar nominations, for “The Last Picture Show” and “Thunderbolt and Lightfoot,” already under his belt — Bridges would join a group of his high school friends for weekly nighttime jam sessions. Keeping the vibe loose and spontaneous, they drank whiskey and improvised instrumentals. “Occasionally we’d spout words,” Bridges recalls. “And people who didn’t play a particular instrument were encouraged to play that instrument.”

And, man, were they high. How high? “Pretty damn high,” Bridges says, laughing, recalling late-nights fueled by pot, quaaludes, cocaine and psychedelics. After all, he notes, it was the ’70s, a time of experimentation.

Inspired by these sessions, Bridges would write songs on his own, recording them between film shoots. To co-produce the tracks, he enlisted Ken Lauber, who had arranged and composed the music for 1975 film “Hearts of the West,” in which Bridges starred. It’s rumored that Lauber, who also had worked with Bob Dylan and the Band, contemplated the latter to back Bridges on the recordings, but instead chose Bridges’ crew of jammers due to their unique, irreplaceable chemistry.

Jeff Bridges, left, with fellow jam buddy Steve Baim.

(From Loretta Ayeroff)

Clocking in at approximately 40 minutes, “Slow Magic” offers an eclectic ride, reflecting Bridges’ diverse influences — spanning from Captain Beefheart and Motown to the Beatles, Moondog, the Rolling Stones and Dylan. The lead single, the self-satirizing “Obnoxious,” released in February, finds Bridges singing hilariously about self-indulgence, eating and drinking excessively, and popping pills. The album also features a pair of atmospheric instrumentals, “Space 1” and “Space 2,” co-written by the jammers.

The album’s highlights include the soulful, sax-infused title track, “Slow Magic”; the Band-esque “This Is the One”; a blissful love song Bridges wrote about his wife, Susan; and the upbeat, radio-friendly “You Could Be Ready.”

The record closes with the epic eight-minute “Kong,” which Bridges wrote after director John Guillermin rejected his idea for an alternate ending to the 1976 “King Kong” remake, in which Bridges starred. In his version, the giant monkey turns out to be a machine. The song features the disco-inspired chorus “Do the King Kong, baby,” with actor Burgess Meredith simulating the historic Hindenburg disaster radio broadcast as he narrates the massive ape-machine’s fiery crash to the ground.

The bananas track was detailed in Rolling Stone in 1977, when Bridges graced the magazine’s cover to promote the sci-fi fantasy blockbuster. Titled “What Is Jeff Bridges Afraid of?,” the article chronicles his relentless self-doubt and anxiety, which Bridges confesses still plague him to this day.

It’s an admission that seems curiously at odds with his laid-back demeanor, though. “I think maybe what you’re seeing these days is a version where I’ve covered a lot of that up. All of those fears are still going on, but I polish that shit out,” Bridges says. “I don’t think I’ve changed much. I feel about the same.”

While he acknowledges his “pretty good reputation of being well-liked,” he reveals, “Liking myself, having understanding, affection and empathy for myself — that’s what I could use some work on.”

What’s more, he shares that as an actor he’s imprisoned by his perfectionism, which he describes as “a self-imposed hell.” “Creatively, the sweet spot comes from getting out of the way and letting things come through you,” he says. “And my anxiety comes from feeling that I‘ve got to do it ‘just right,’ but I don’t know if I have the goods to come up with … so that’s what I struggle with.”

To illustrate his point, he references “The Big Lebowski.” “‘Sometimes you eat the bar and sometimes the bar, well, he eats you,’” Bridges says, laughing as he delivers the famous line just like actor Sam Elliott in the film, his Southern drawl turning “bear” into “bar.”

It’s humor that helps to alleviate his anxiety, he says, which includes laughing at himself “for being so ridiculous about it all.” What’s more, Bridges expresses gratitude for his wife’s frequent reminders to lighten up and have fun. “And then it’s like, oh yeah, I forgot — joy. The miracle is available. It’s right there, going on all the time,” he says.

It’s miraculous that Bridges is even alive. In 2020, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Meanwhile, as he battled cancer, he contracted COVID, which, he says, left him “on death’s doorstep.” In remission since 2021, he says his latest CT scan showed no trace of the cancer, making it especially poignant that Bridges is currently learning to play Leonard Cohen’s “Waiting for the Miracle” on guitar.

Self-taught on the instrument, which he first picked up at 14, Bridges began writing songs soon after. When Bridges was 20, Quincy Jones put his song “Lost in Space” in the 1969 film “John and Mary,” starring Dustin Hoffman and Mia Farrow.

Bridges calls it an “amazingly cool” moment. Still, he says he didn’t fantasize about becoming a professional musician. Passionate about ceramics, painting, photography and music, he reveals that he was never particularly career-driven. “I’ve never really been an ambitious person. I never had that kind of drive,” he says.

Even acting was not initially a goal for Bridges, who admits he feared the scrutiny of following in the footsteps of his famous father, Lloyd, who was best known for starring in the TV series “Sea Hunt.” “I had a desire to share what I had to offer, but I didn’t want to be labeled … what do they call it? … ‘Nepo baby,’” Bridges says. “I could understand why people would resent that, and I didn’t want to be resented.”

Nonetheless, his father encouraged him to pursue acting, pointing out that it would bridge his various interests, allowing him to play a musician in a film someday.

Truer words were never spoken. In 1989, Bridges starred in the critically lauded “The Fabulous Baker Boys” alongside his older brother, Beau, as a waning lounge act duo of piano-playing siblings who hire a talented, beautiful singer, played by Michelle Pfeiffer, to revitalize their act.

After his success in “The Fabulous Baker Boys,” Bridges took a sharp turn in 2005 with his next musician character, embracing a darker role in “Tideland,” portraying an electric guitar-toting, drug-addled failed rock star in Terry Gilliam’s surreal tale.

But it was his captivating, starring turn as chainsmoking, alcoholic, washed-up country star Otis “Bad” Blake in the heart-stirring, redemptive “Crazy Heart” several years later that earned him Oscar gold, as well as a Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild Award and an Independent Spirit Award.

Ironically, Bridges initially passed on the part. It felt too risky to play a role so personal to him. “Subconsciously, I think I was turning it down because playing something that was so dear to my heart … exploring my [kind of] music and stuff … if you keep it in the dream world, you’re safe,” he says. “But when it becomes real, you know you could easily fail, and all of your dreams could be shattered.”

The turning point came when Bridges ran into Burnett, who was set to oversee the film’s music, and encouraged him to take the role. “I thought, ‘Wow, this is too cool of an invitation,’” Bridges reflects. “So, I said, ‘F— it. I’m just gonna do it.’”

It was music to the ears of “Crazy Heart” director Scott Cooper. “Jeff changed my life by saying yes to a screenplay that I wrote specifically for him,” Cooper, who made his directorial debut with the film, tells The Times. “I was somewhat besieged by other actors to play the part — all of whom are great actors and movie stars — but which actor can portray an incredibly flawed character, make us see ourselves in that character and, in the end, uplift us? For me, it was only Jeff Bridges.”

Even when Bridges isn’t playing a musician, his cinematic path often intersects with music, whether it’s his cover of Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire” with Kim Carnes that plays over the opening scene of “The Contender” or his role in “Masked and Anonymous,” acting alongside his longtime musical hero, Dylan, who co-wrote the 2003 film.

A young Jeff Bridges, smiling slyly and holding a guitar

Young Jeff Bridges.

(From Candy Clark)

Bridges recalls a particularly surreal moment when the music icon came knock-knock-knockin’ on his trailer door, guitar in hand, for an impromptu jam. Initially trembling with nerves, Bridges says he felt increasingly at ease playing music with Dylan, finding him to be disarmingly down to earth.

“It’s a great blessing to just be alive with that guy,” he says. “It’s like being alive during Shakespeare’s time.”

Bridges has crossed professional paths more than once with Dylan, whose song “The Man in Me” plays during the opening titles of “The Big Lebowski” and a later scene as well.

Soon, Bridges will host a series of “The Big Lebowski” screenings on the West Coast. “They’ll show the movie, and then I’ll do a talk and show my experience through the photographs that I took during [the making of] it,” he says.

In the meantime, as he contemplates what’s next after the cancellation of his TV series “The Old Man,” Bridges says “Slow Magic” has reignited his desire to make music. He’s thinking about getting in touch with “Kenny Lauber and some of the old guys” to reunite the group. As Bridges tells it, playing with a band allows him to act out his long-standing “Beatles fantasy,” and remains one of his most rewarding roles.



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Watch: Fred Couples, 65, holes eagle from 191 yards at Masters

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Fred Couples rolled back the years with an 191-yard eagle en route to a first-round 71 at Augusta – Getty Images/Andrew Redington

At 65, Fred Couples finally looked like a man of pensionable age when he took a hybrid from his bag at the 14th for a shot of just 191 yards during the first round of the Masters.

Who cared about diminished power, though, with his lethal accuracy? The 1992 Masters champion stared intently after his bright yellow ball – one that he has started using, according to his friend Tiger Woods, to allow for his fading eyesight – willing it to “go”. He need not have worried, with the ball obligingly tracking straight into the centre of the cup for an eagle.

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It is the perennial joy of Augusta National, this capacity of the course to turn even the most weathered veterans into contenders again. Couples is perhaps the ultimate exponent: he barely plays these days, on account of his chronic back problems, but his understanding of all the vagaries here is peerless.



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Fred Couples, 65, is 2nd-oldest to break par at the Masters

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — For the past few years, Fred Couples, 65,has watched as younger players continue to outdrive him off the tee at Augusta National by 20, 30, 40 and even 50 yards. Yet the 1992 Masters champion has not let it deter him from showing up and giving the course his best shot.

Two years after becoming the oldest player to ever make the cut at the Masters, Couples opened up his 40th appearance by shooting a 1-under 71 — becoming the second-oldest player to shoot under par in any Masters round.

“Today is a hell of a round. I am exhausted,” Couples said. “I can play golf. I can play around here. If the weather is like this and not hard, I can — as long as I don’t do crazy things — I can shoot 73 or 4 or 5. That’s not embarrassing myself at all.”

Couples, who is only one month younger than Tom Watson was when he shot a 71 in 2015, relied Thursday on his course familiarity along with the right combination of steadiness and creativity, plus a bit of luck.

Off the tee, Couples was nearly automatic, hitting 12 of 14 fairways. But when you average just 275 yards off the tee, the approach shots are the real challenge, as Couples is often hitting two to three — maybe even four — more clubs than his peers.

He hit only 7 of 18 greens in regulation during Thursday’s round.

When he missed the No. 1 green long and to the left, Couples was faced with a tough up-and-down from the short grass. Instead of chipping it, he grabbed his putter and proceeded to make the 48-foot birdie putt.

On No. 9, he left himself just 7 feet for his second birdie of the day.

On the 14th hole, Couples was 186 yards out and proceeded to hit a 6-hybrid that landed short of the pin and rolled straight into the cup for eagle. Couples couldn’t see it go in the hole, but he celebrated once he heard the roar, kissing his club for good measure.

“I thought I had enough to get over there, and then they went crazy,” Couples said. “It was fun.”

Couples said that last year, when he shot 80-76 in the first two days and missed the cut, he wasn’t fully healthy and didn’t have the right clubs in his bag to play what is now a much longer Augusta National at 7,555 yards.

“Last year, I had a bunch of cortisone shots and I was really — it was the most pain I’ve ever been,” Couples said. “If I come here and I can swing a club, I play. It wasn’t awful. I just couldn’t hit it far enough or hit it well enough.”

Now, Couples is relishing his new setup, which includes “a lot of head covers” — as he has added four rescue hybrids. His first iron in the bag is a 7-iron.

“Now I have a set of clubs I feel like I can hit around here,” Couples said. “If I did that today and come back with 70 or 71 tomorrow, the goal for me is to make the cut. Tomorrow may be different, maybe different shots. But it was fun. It was a very fun day.”



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‘Drop’ director inspired by horror-loving dad, Michael Landon

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Chris Landon’s love of horror flicks goes way back. 

The “Drop” director says that he was introduced to the genre by his dad, “Little House on the Prairie” star Michael Landon.

“The truth is, the reason why I got into horror movies is because he loved them,” Chris exclusively told The Post in a recent interview. “So, when I was a kid, we watched them together.”

Michael Landon and son Christopher Landon attend the Third Annual Moonlight Roundup Extravaganza in 1989. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Michael Landon in “Little House on the Prairie.” ©NBC/Courtesy Everett Collection

Michael, whose TV career spanned decades, starred in the 1957 cult classic, “I Was a Teenage Werewolf,” and was born on Halloween. 

“We watched all the movies,” Chris recalled. “All the Friday the 13ths, ‘Halloween,’ ‘Rosemary’s Baby,’ ‘The Shining,’ you name it, we saw it … I grew up on a very, very steady diet of horror movies.”

Michael died from pancreatic cancer in 1994 at age 54, when Chris was just 16.

Michael Landon on “Little House on the Prairie.” Courtesy Everett Collection
The “Little House on the Prairie” cast poses together. ©NBC/Courtesy Everett Collection
Christopher Landon (second from left) and his family attend the premiere of “Drop.” Getty Images

Which makes his latest directorial endeavor, “Drop,” feel like a full circle moment.

The movie stars Meghann Fahy, a widowed mom whose date night with a man named Henry (Brandon Sklenar) goes awry when she receives phone messages from a mysterious hooded figure who threatens to kill her son and babysitter unless she murders Henry. 

“I think that the real fun of the movie was just sort of taking this lone piece of technology and then seeing how it gets turned against us,” he explained.

Michael Landon and son Christopher Landon in 1984 in Malibu. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

Chris added that working with Fahy, fresh off the second season of “The White Lotus,” was a “dream come true.”

“I had to really pinch myself,” he continued. “And, you know, it’s funny though, like when we met, after she read the script, we met for coffee and sort of turned into one of those long meetings because we just really hit it off. And so I walked away from that meeting feeling like, I think I got her.”

The “Happy Death Day” director wants people to go see “Drop” in a movie theater because “it is an absolute thrill ride!”

Michael Landon, wife Cindy Landon, son Sean Landon, daughter Jennifer Landon and son Christopher Landon in 1988. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Cameron Fuller, Christopher Landon, Meghann Fahy, Brandon Sklenar, Bradley Fuller, Michael Bay and Sam Lerner attend the premiere of “Drop.” Getty Images

“They’re going to be scared, they’re gonna be a nervous wreck, they’re gonna laugh and they’re gonna cheer,” he told The Post. “So I’m really hoping that people show up and see it in the theater the way it’s meant to be seen.”

Before working on “Drop,” Chris was attached to helm “Scream 7” — but announced months later that he was no longer involved with the project.

It’s not something he dwells on.

“Oh, I’m over it,” he said. “Very rearview mirror for me.”

Meghann Fahy and Brandon Sklenar in “Drop.” ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection
Meghann Fahy in “Drop.” ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Chris, who came out in his early 20s, and shares two children with his husband, explained that his work has changed since becoming a father.

“They’re the whole reason I do what I do now,” he gushed about his kids. “I think that my work prior to kids and prior to marriage was a little bit darker, a little more cynical. And then sort of having children really sort of opened my eyes and reoriented the way that I want to work and the kinds of things I want put out in the world.”



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See how he fared in second round

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Editor’s note: USA TODAY has live updates from the second round of the Masters Friday. Click here for all the lastest news, scores, and highlights.

Among the biggest headlines from the first round of the 2025 edition of The Masters was Rory McIlroy — just not for the reasons the PGA Tour star would have hoped for.

For much of the day, the Northern Ireland native appeared destined to end his first round at Augusta National Golf Club Thursday as one of the top contenders for the green jacket, but what had been a stellar first 14 holes quickly came apart for the 35 year old. McIlroy had double bogeys on the 15th and 17th holes, dropping him to even par for the day and in a tie for 27th place.

A new day, however, promised a new opportunity for a man still in search of his first Masters championship.

McIlroy has gotten close at golf’s most hallowed event before, finishing second in 2022 and, more famously, holding a four-shot lead on the final day of competition in 2011 before shooting an 8-over 80 on Sunday to finish in a tie for 15th.

With his uneven first round behind him, here’s a look at how McIlroy fared in the tournament’s second round on Friday:

MCILROY: Met with Jack Nicklaus to prepare for Augusta. Here’s what happened

Rory McIlroy scorecard today

After his disastrous finish on Thursday, McIlroy rebounded nicely on Friday, particularly as his round progressed. After going 1-under on the front nine, McIlroy went 5-under on the back nine including finishing under par on four of the first six holes. That hot streak was highlighted by an eagle on the 13th hole.

He finished the round at 6-under for the tournament, putting him in third place behind Justin Rose and Bryson DeChambeau.

Here’s how McIlroy finished after the second round on Friday, including his hole-by-hole score:

  • Friday score: 6-under
  • Overall score: 6-under
  1. 4 (Par)
  2. 4 (Birdie)
  3. 4 (Par)
  4. 3 (Par)
  5. 4 (Par)
  6. 3 (Par)
  7. 4 (Par)
  8. 5 (Par)
  9. 4 (Par)
  10. 3 (Birdie)
  11. 3 (Birdie)
  12. 3 (Par)
  13. 3 (Eagle)
  14. 4 (Par)
  15. 4 (Birdie)
  16. 3 (Par)
  17. 4 (Par)
  18. 4 (Par)

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.



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QB Drew Lock Returning To Seahawks

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QB dominoes are falling Friday, and a third reunion will take place. After Joe Flacco and Josh Johnson made return trips Friday morning, Drew Lock will follow suit.

The Seahawks are re-signing Lock, per NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero. Lock will slide in as a Sam Darnold backup, doing so after playing mostly a backup role as a Giant in 2024. Lock had served as Geno Smith‘s backup from 2022-23.

Initially obtained as part of the eight-asset package the Broncos sent over for Russell Wilson, Lock did not beat out Smith to win the Seahawks’ starting job in 2022. But he became a player the team viewed as valuable. The Seahawks initially re-signed Lock in 2023, keeping him around (at one year and $4MM) despite choosing Smith as their surefire starter. No QB controversy spawned after Smith seized the role as Wilson’s successor, but Lock stayed on after the expiration of his rookie contract. After a rather forgettable Giants one-off, the six-year veteran is coming back to the Pacific Northwest.

Although Pete Carroll is out, the GM who traded for Lock — John Schneider — is calling the shots as Seattle’s top personnel exec. Lock will play behind Darnold, who signed a three-year, $100.5MM deal to replace Smith days after Seattle traded its three-year starter to Las Vegas.

Lock had been on the Seahawks’ radar to retain in 2024, but Schneider stirred up some controversy by indicating he signed with the Giants (one year, $5MM) due partially to being told he could compete for a starting job. Big Blue pushed back on that, not seriously considering a Daniel Jones demotion during the ’24 offseason. But Lock did make his way into the lineup, as the team ultimately did jettison Jones after a six-year partnership fizzled.

Lock’s decision to rejoin the Seahawks hours after Flacco recommitted to the Browns may not be a coincidence. It is certainly possible Cleveland looked at Lock as a potential bridge starter, as he has a bit more experience at the controls than Kenny Pickett. Though, Lock has not been looked at as a preferred starter since the Broncos replaced him with Teddy Bridgewater in 2021. Given a quick hook in Denver, the former second-round pick still has made 28 career starts. A rather notable outing took place last December, helping Lock finalize his case for another QB2 gig.

In a game that dropped the Giants out of the No. 1 draft slot, Lock sliced up the Colts in a shootout win. He completed 17 of 23 passes for 309 yards and four touchdown passes. Lock did not throw an interception against Indianapolis, and while the win looks to have blocked the Giants from solving their QB problem with Cam Ward, it helped Lock secure another opportunity. He will join 2024 trade acquisition Sam Howell on Seattle’s roster. Considering Howell started 17 games for the 2023 Commanders, this represents a gradual fall for the North Carolina product.

Lock, 28, was 1-4 as a starter last season; the Giants initially went with Tommy DeVito over the veteran upon benching Jones. As a Seahawk, Lock went 1-1 as a starter. The win came during a Monday-night game against a cratering Eagles defense, but Lock has been a streaky passer — one prone to INTs — throughout his career. Like fellow Mizzou alums Chase Daniel and Blaine Gabbert, he continues to secure regular QB2 employment.





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Trump Assault on Federal Contractor Wages Could Mean 25% Pay Cuts for Hundreds of Thousands

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After U.S. President Donald Trump last month undid a Biden-era regulation that required businesses that contract with the federal government to pay their workers a $17.75 an hour minimum wage, the Center for American Progress released an analysis Friday which found that some workers impacted by the change could see a 25% pay cut.

Thanks to rollback from Trump, “corporations working on government contracts are free to cut wages for hundreds of thousands of workers,” according to the author of the analysis, who also said that the move constitutes a new front in the Trump administration’s “war on workers.”

Former President Joe Biden’s order, which was announced in 2021 and went into effect in 2022, initially raised the minimum wage to $15 an hour with automatic updates, which bumped it the minimum up to $17.75 in January 2025.

The rescission was part of an executive order that reversed 18 “harmful executive orders and actions” issued by Biden.

According to CAP, a liberal think tank, Trump’s scrapping of the Biden minimum wage protection leaves in place an Obama-era rule, meaning some workers on federal contracts can now be paid a minimum of $13.30 an hour.

The analysis arrived at the 25% pay cut by calculating the difference between the $17.75 floor and $13.30. However, CAP noted that the U.S. Department of Labor still has to issue guidance over how it will enforce this older wage standard.

Other wage protections for workers on federal contracts exist, but CAP argues that “they are inadequate for protecting the workers who just saw their minimum wage taken away.”

The Davis-Bacon Act establishes minimum prevailing wage standards for workers on federal construction sites, for example, but the wages established under the law can be much lower than $17.75 an hour, according to the analysis.

“The boost for workers from the Biden minimum wage increase that the Trump administration just nullified was substantial,” according to CAP, which cites a Department of Labor estimate from 2021 that the change would impact 327,300 employees in the first year of implementation.

In 2021, the left-leaning think tank the Economic Policy Institute estimated that, taking into account the hundreds of thousands of workers who could see their wages raised through Biden’s executive order, the total pay increases thanks to the rule would amount to $1.2 billion in 2022.

“A higher minimum wage for federal contractors helps ensure that taxpayer dollars incentivize good jobs, rather than low-wage jobs where contractors compete with each other in a race to the bottom,” according to a statement from EPI following Trump’s rescission of the minimum wage rule. “A higher federal contractor wage standard is good for employers and the federal government overall.”



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Live results, rules for 2025 Masters

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Jon Rahm, Phil Mickelson and Brooks Koepka are among the golfers in danger of missing the cut at the 2025 Masters. Here’s the latest updates on second-round action at Augusta.

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Editor’s note: USA TODAY has live updates from the second round of the Masters Friday. Click here for all the lastest news, scores, and highlights.

The 2025 Masters is heating up at Augusta National Golf Club as the second round comes to a close. The top of the leaderboard is packed with big names as first-round leader Justin Rose tries to hold off Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler and a pack of the world’s best golfers at the first major of the year.

But Friday at The Masters is also about who will make (and miss) the cut for the weekend. Only the top 50 golfers on the leaderboard at the end of the second round, including ties, make the cut for the third and final rounds on Saturday and Sunday. There were 95 golfers in this year’s field when Thursday’s first round began. Phil Mickelson, Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka are among the notable names in danger of missing this year’s projected Masters cut line, but there’s still more golf to be played.

USA TODAY Sports is tracking the action and where the projected cut line could wind up when the second round is complete on Friday. Here are live updates on the current cut line at the Masters, including which golfers could miss the weekend in 2025:

2025 Masters projected cut line

As of 3:40 p.m. ET Friday at the 2025 Masters, the projected cut line after the second round is +3. Any golfer with a score of +2 or better would make it to the weekend.

Here’s where the cut line fell in the most recent Masters tournaments:

  • 2024: +6
  • 2023: +3
  • 2022: +4
  • 2021: +3
  • 2020: E
  • 2019: +3
  • 2018: +5

How is Masters cut determined?

Only the top 50 golfers on the 2025 Masters leaderboard at the end of the second round, including ties, make the cut for the third and final rounds on Saturday and Sunday.

As Golfweek noted: The Masters cut line was instituted in 1957. From 1957-1961, it was lowest 40 scores and ties. From 1962-2012, it was lowest 44 scores and ties, and those within 10 strokes of the leader. From 2013-2019, the lowest 50 scores and ties, and those within 10 strokes of the leader qualified for the final 36 holes. Beginning in 2020, the lowest 50 and ties qualify for the final 36 holes.

Who will miss cut at 2025 Masters?

  • Dustin Johnson: +3
  • Russell Henley: +3
  • Rafael Campos: +4
  • Adam Schenk: +4
  • Justin Hastings: +4
  • Sergio Garcia: +4
  • Kevin Yu: +4
  • Brooks Koepka: +5
  • Adam Scott: +5
  • Austin Eckroat: +6
  • Hiroshi Tai: +6
  • Jose Maria Olazabal: +7
  • Christiaan Bezuidenhout: +7
  • Lucas Glover: +8
  • Evan Beck: +9
  • Cam Davis: +9
  • Laurie Canter: +10
  • Matthieu Pavon: +10
  • Angel Cabrera: +11
  • Thriston Lawrence: +11

Who will make cut at 2025 Masters?

  • Justin Rose: -8
  • Bryson DeChambeau: -7
  • Rory McIlroy: -6
  • Shane Lowry: -5
  • Matt McCarty: -5
  • Rasmus Højgaard: -4
  • Viktor Hovland: -4
  • Ludvig Åberg: -3
  • Sungjae Im: -3
  • Hideki Matsuyama: -3
  • Xander Schauffele: -2
  • Bubba Watson: -1
  • Tom Hoge: E
  • Max Homa: E
  • Nick Taylor: E
  • Daniel Berger: E
  • Matt Fitzpatrick: E
  • Brian Campbell: +1

Masters 2025 leaderboard

You can get the latest leaderboard updates and tee times here.



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