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Sunday, January 31, 2021

Key Takeaways From Trump’s Effort to Overturn the Election - The New York Times

For 77 days between the election and the inauguration, President Donald J. Trump attempted to subvert American democracy with a lie about election fraud that he had been grooming for years.

A New York Times examination of the events that unfolded after the election shows how the president — enabled by Republican leaders, advised by conspiracy-minded lawyers and bankrolled by a new class of Trump-era donors — waged an extralegal campaign that convinced tens of millions of Americans the election had been stolen and made the deadly Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol almost inevitable.

Interviews with central players, along with documents, videos and previously unreported emails, tell the story of a campaign that was more coordinated than previously understood, even as it strayed farther from reality with each passing day.

Here are some key takeaways:

Within 10 days of the election, even as Mr. Trump and his supporters promoted allegation after allegation of voter fraud, his team of election lawyers knew that the reality was the inverse of what Mr. Trump was presenting: They were not finding substantial evidence of malfeasance or enough irregularities to overturn the election.

That reality was hammered home on Nov. 12, when final Arizona results showed Joseph R. Biden Jr. with an irreversible lead of more than 10,000 votes that rendered the legal team’s main lawsuit in that state — which had identified 191 ballots to contest — moot.

At an Oval Office meeting that day, the election lawyers squared off against the president’s personal lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani, over Mr. Giuliani’s embrace of questionable legal tactics and conspiracy theories like one that Dominion voting machines had transformed Trump votes into Biden votes.

Ultimately, Mr. Trump decided to give Mr. Giuliani leadership of the entire legal strategy, making Nov. 12 the day when Mr. Trump’s effort to reverse his loss in the courts became an all-out, extralegal campaign to disenfranchise millions of voters based on the false notion of pervasive fraud.

The Dominion conspiracy theory taking root among the president and many of his supporters had been weeks in the making. In late October, an obscure conservative website, The American Report, was pushing stories about a supercomputer called The Hammer that it said was running software called Scorecard to steal votes from Mr. Trump.

The theory found amplification the day before the election on the podcast of Mr. Trump’s former political strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, who invited two proponents of the theory onto his show to speak about it: Thomas McInerney, a retired Air Force lieutenant general who had previously been banned from Fox News for lies about Senator John McCain’s record as a prison of war in Vietnam, and Sidney Powell, a lawyer who would become one of Mr. Trump’s most controversial and unbridled defenders.

Mr. Trump was given vital room to run by key Republicans, especially the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, who made an early decision to join his fellow party members in breaking from the tradition of recognizing the victor after the major television networks and The Associated Press called the race.

Mr. McConnell feared alienating a president whose help he needed in two Georgia Senate runoffs that would decide his control of the chamber. He also heeded misplaced assurances from White House aides like Jared Kushner that Mr. Trump would eventually accede to reality, people close to the senator told The Times. His later recognition of Mr. Biden’s victory would not be enough to stop 14 Republican senators from joining a late effort to nullify millions of Americans’ votes just ahead of Jan. 6.

The Texas attorney general’s Supreme Court lawsuit seeking to effectively wipe out 20 million votes in four battleground states won by Mr. Biden was secretly drafted by lawyers close to the White House, The Times found. Two-thirds of the country’s Republican state attorneys general, 18 in all, would join an amicus brief, but only after senior officials in several of their offices raised red flags.

“It is most likely that the court will deny this in one sentence,” North Dakota’s deputy solicitor general, James E. Nicolai, wrote in an email to his boss.

On Dec. 11, the court did just that, ruling that Texas had no right to challenge other states’ votes. Three days later, the Electoral College affirmed Mr. Biden’s win.

At a White House meeting four days later, Mr. Trump met with Ms. Powell, and two prominent associates: the former Overstock.com chief executive Patrick Byrne, who was financing his own team of “cybersleuths” to help prove voter fraud, and Michael T. Flynn, the disgraced and newly pardoned former national security adviser who had by then publicly raised the notion that Mr. Trump should declare martial law. The session descended into a shouting match between the three and members of Mr. Trump’s White House team, including his White House counsel, Pat Cipollone.

“It was really damned close to fistfights,” Mr. Byrne recalled on the “Operation Freedom” YouTube show.

Ultimately, Mr. Trump agreed to focus on a different goal: blocking congressional certification of the results on Jan. 6.

With attention focused on the president’s daily tirades and subversive maneuvers, a group of activists — little known but increasingly influential — was going town to town in MAGA-red buses, holding rallies to pressure key senators to contest the vote. The bus tour was organized by a group called Women for America First.

The group would help build an acutely Trumpian coalition that included sitting and incoming members of Congress, rank-and-file voters and the “de-platformed” extremists and conspiracy theorists promoted on an early version of its “Trump March” home page — since deleted but found through the Internet Archive — including the white nationalist Jared Taylor, prominent QAnon proponents and the Proud Boys leader, Enrique Tarrio.

Women for America First had various ties to the president and those close to him. Its leader, Amy Kremer, was a leading organizer of the Tea Party era and an early supporter of Mr. Trump, having started a Women for Trump super PAC in 2016. And two of the group’s organizers had their own important ties. One, Jennifer Lawrence, knew Mr. Trump through her father, who had done business with him; another, Dustin Stockton, had credibility in the gun-rights community as a coordinator with Gun Owners of America. Both had worked with Mr. Bannon as well.

Among the sponsors of the bus tour were Mr. Bannon and Mike Lindell, the founder of MyPillow, who says he has spent $2 million so far investigating voting machines and foreign interference. Mr. Lindell, along with Mr. Byrne, was part of a shift taking place in the Republican Party as traditional donors withdrew from what became an open attack on the democratic system, and new donors rose to finance the stolen-election narrative.

Women for America First was the original organizer of the Jan. 6 rally in Washington. But at the turn of the year, Mr. Trump decided to join the rally himself, and the event effectively became a White House production, with several people close to the administration and the Trump campaign joining the team.

The former Trump campaign adviser Katrina Pierson was the liaison to the White House, a former administration official said. And the president discussed the speaking lineup, as well as the music to be played, according to a person with direct knowledge of the conversations.

Mr. Stockton, the bus-tour organizer, said that he had been surprised to learn that the protest would include a march from the Ellipse to the Capitol. That march — the prelude to the riot — had not been the plan before the White House became involved.

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Ex-Michigan Wolverines QB Dylan McCaffrey transferring to Northern Colorado - ESPN

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Former Michigan quarterback Dylan McCaffrey is transferring to Northern Colorado, where he will have the chance to play for his father, Ed McCaffrey.

Dylan McCaffrey had been an ESPN 300 recruit in the 2017 class but was never able to win the starting job at Michigan. He attempted only 15 passes in 2018 and suffered a broken collarbone that shortened his season. He was a backup to Shea Patterson in 2019.

McCaffrey couldn't get his career started at Michigan and opted out of the 2020 season before it commenced.

The elder McCaffrey became the head coach for the Bears in December 2019, but he has yet to coach a game for Northern Colorado because the Big Sky moved its season to the spring due to COVID-19.

Northern Colorado recently announced it will not participate in the Big Sky's spring season and championship season but will instead pursue a modified, nonconference schedule in late spring.

Ed McCaffrey will add his son to the roster with two years of eligibility remaining; and because Dylan McCaffrey is a graduate transfer, he is eligible to play immediately.

McCaffrey is brothers with former Nebraska quarterback Luke McCaffrey and Carolina Panthers star Christian McCaffrey.

Michigan still has quarterbacks Cade McNamara and Joe Milton on the roster, and the staff also added ESPN 300 quarterback J.J. McCarthy in this 2021 class. McCarthy enrolled early at Michigan and was the No. 25-ranked recruit overall, as well as the No. 2 dual-threat quarterback in the class.

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Biden to meet with GOP lawmakers to discuss virus relief - WVLT.TV

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is set to meet Monday afternoon with a group of 10 Republican senators who have proposed spending about one-third of the $1.9 trillion he is seeking in coronavirus aid, though congressional Democrats are poised to move ahead without Republican support.

An invitation to the White House came hours after the lawmakers sent Biden a letter Sunday urging him to negotiate rather than try to ram through his relief package solely on Democratic votes. The House and Senate are on track to vote as soon as this week on a budget resolution, which would lay the groundwork for passing an aid package under rules requiring only a simple majority vote in the closely divided Senate.

The goal is for passage by March, when extra unemployment assistance and other pandemic aid expires. The meeting to be hosted by Biden would amount to the most public involvement for the president in the negotiations for the next round of virus relief. Democratic and Republican lawmakers are far apart in their proposals for assistance.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Sunday that Biden had spoken with the leader of the group, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine. Though Biden is wanting “a full exchange of views,” Psaki reiterated that the president remains in favor of moving forward with a far-reaching relief package.

“With the virus posing a grave threat to the country, and economic conditions grim for so many, the need for action is urgent, and the scale of what must be done is large,” Psaki said.

In challenging Biden to fulfill his pledge of unity, the group said in its letter that its counterproposal will include $160 billion for vaccines, testing, treatment and personal protective equipment and call for more targeted relief than Biden’s plan to issue $1,400 stimulus checks for most Americans.

Winning the support of 10 Republicans would be significant for Biden in the 50-50 Senate where Vice President Kamala Harris is the tie-breaker. If all Democrats were to back an eventual compromise bill, the legislation would reach the 60-vote threshold necessary to overcome potential blocking efforts and pass under regular Senate procedures.

“In the spirit of bipartisanship and unity, we have developed a COVID-19 relief framework that builds on prior COVID assistance laws, all of which passed with bipartisan support,” the Republican senators wrote. “Our proposal reflects many of your stated priorities, and with your support, we believe that this plan could be approved quickly by Congress with bipartisan support.”

The plea for Biden to give bipartisan negotiations more time comes as the president has shown signs of impatience as the more liberal wing of his party considers passing the relief package through a process known as budget reconciliation. That would allow the bill to advance with only the backing of his Democratic majority.

The Republicans did not provide many details of their proposal. One of the signatories, Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, said that it would cost about $600 billion.

“If you can’t find bipartisan compromise on COVID-19, I don’t know where you can find it,” said Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, who also signed the letter.

But even as Biden extended the invitation to the Republican lawmakers, Psaki said that $1,400 relief checks, substantial funding for reopening schools, aid to small businesses and hurting families, and more “is badly needed.”

“As leading economists have said, the danger now is not in doing too much: it is in doing too little,” Psaki said. “Americans of both parties are looking to their leaders to meet the moment.”

Biden also spoke on Sunday with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who are facing a growing push from the more liberal Democratic members to move forward with Biden’s legislation with or without Republican support.

The other GOP senators invited to meet with Biden are Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Todd Young of Indiana, Jerry Moran of Kansas, Mike Rounds of South Dakota, and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

Brian Deese, the top White House economic adviser who is leading the administration’s outreach to Congress, said earlier Sunday that administration officials were reviewing the letter. He did not immediately commit to a Biden meeting with the lawmakers.

But Cedric Richmond, a senior Biden adviser, said the president “is very willing to meet with anyone to advance the agenda.” When asked about the senators’ plan, Richmond said, “This is about seriousness of purpose.”

Deese indicated the White House could be open to negotiating on further limiting who would receive stimulus checks. Portman suggested the checks should go to individuals who make no more than $50,000 per year and families capped at $100,000 per year.

Under the Biden plan, families with incomes up to $300,000 could receive some stimulus money.

“That is certainly a place that we’re willing to sit down and think about, are there ways to make the entire package more effective?” Deese said.

As a candidate, Biden predicted his decades in the Senate and his eight years as Barack Obama’s vice president gave him credibility as a deal-maker and would help him bring Republicans and Democrats to consensus on the most important matters facing the country.

But less than two weeks into his presidency, Biden showed frustration with the pace of negotiations at a time when the economy exhibited further evidence of wear from the pandemic. Last week, 847,000 Americans applied for unemployment benefits, a sign that layoffs remain high as the coronavirus pandemic continues to rage.

“I support passing COVID relief with support from Republicans if we can get it. But the COVID relief has to pass — no ifs, ands or buts,” Biden said on Friday.

In the letter, the Republican lawmakers reminded Biden that in his inaugural address, he proclaimed that the challenges facing the nation require “the most elusive of things in a democracy: Unity.”

Cassidy separately criticized the current Biden plan as “chock-full of handouts and payoffs to Democratic constituency groups.”

“You want the patina of bipartisanship ... so that’s not unity,” Cassidy said.

Jared Bernstein, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said Biden remains willing to negotiate but that officials needed to see more details from Republicans. At the same time, Bernstein pressed the administration’s argument that doing too little to stimulate the economy could have enormous impact on the economy in the near- and long-term.

“Look, the American people really couldn’t care less about budget process, whether it’s regular order, bipartisanship, whether it’s filibuster, whether it’s reconciliation,” Bernstein said. “They need relief, and they need it now.”

Portman and Deese were on CNN’s “State of the Union,” and Deese also was interviewed on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Cassidy and Bernstein appeared on “Fox News Sunday” and Richmond was on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Statement from White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki - The White House

“The President spoke to Speaker Pelosi and Leader Schumer today; he is grateful that Congress is prepared to begin action on the American Rescue Plan in just his second full week in office.

“As has been widely reported, the President received a letter today from 10 Republican Senators asking to meet with him to discuss their ideas about the actions needed to address these crises.  In response, the President spoke to Senator Collins, and invited her and other signers of the letter to come to the White House early this week for a full exchange of views.

“With the virus posing a grave threat to the country, and economic conditions grim for so many, the need for action is urgent, and the scale of what must be done is large.  The American Rescue Plan – including $1400 relief checks, a substantial investment in fighting COVID and reopening schools, aid to small businesses and hurting families, and funds to keep first responders on the job (and more) – is badly needed.   As leading economists have said, the danger now is not in doing too much: it is in doing too little.  Americans of both parties are looking to their leaders to meet the moment.

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Startup bluShift Aerospace launches its 1st commercial biofuel rocket from Maine - Space.com

A small rocket billed as the world's first commercial booster powered by biofuel has launched from Maine.

The Brunswick-based startup bluShift Aerospace launched its first rocket prototype, called Stardust 1.0, on Sunday (Jan. 31), despite freezing temperatures and two false starts. The rocket didn't reach space (or even a mile up), but marked a major milestone for a company aiming to launch bespoke missions tailored for tiny satellites.

"It went perfectly," bluShift CEO Sascha Deri told reporters after the launch, which lifted off Sunday afternoon from a snow-covered runway at the Loring Commerce Center in Limestone, Maine. "It landed right where we were hoping for and where we were planning for. It couldn't have been better than that." 

Stardust 1.0 is a small sounding rocket powered by a "bio-derived" solid fuel to act as as a testbed for future bluShift rockets capable of launching tiny nanosatellites. It stands 20 feet tall (6 meters) and  can carry 17 lbs. (8 kilograms) of payload.

Video: Meet the bluShift Aerospace team for smallsat rocket launches

It took several tries for bluShift to launch Stardust 1.0. A launch attempt on Jan. 14 was prevented by bad weather. Then on Sunday, a pressure issue with an oxidizer valve prevented the rocket from lifting off, even as its solid fuel ignited. 

"It's not launching!" someone could be heard saying in bluShift's live webcast. A second attempt about 90 minutes later failed when the rocket's igniter didn't kick off as planned. The company also battled freezing temperatures and network issues during the countdown.

But the third time was the charm when, in mid-afternoon, Stardust 1.0 launched off its support rail, flew over 4,000 feet (1,219 m) up and then deployed a parachute to fall back to Earth. A drogue chute did pop free unexpectedly and was retrieved by two small girls and their parents using a snowmobile (several of which were on hand from volunteers to recover the rocket), Deri said.

"We couldn't be more delighted than [with] what happened today," Deri said. 

The Stardust 1.0 rocket floats back to Earth under its main parachute after a successful first low-altitude launch test from Loring Commerce Center in Limestone, Maine on Jan. 31, 2021.  (Image credit: bluShift Aerospace)

Founded in 2014, bluShift Aerospace is a team of eight people who aim to launch tiny satellites into polar orbits from the coast of Maine. The company is targeting customers with nanosatellites who want more flexibility or control over their orbits that may be unavailable by riding as a secondary payload with another launch provider like SpaceX or Rocket Lab.

"We want to be the Uber to space providing that true nano-launch service for nanosatellites," Deri said before the launch.

It took several tries for bluShift Aerospace to launch Stardust 1.0. Here, the rocket ignites its engine but did not lift off due to a pressure issue with its main oxidizer valve. The rocket finally lifted of on its third attempt.  (Image credit: bluShift Aerospace)

To do that, the company is planning two larger suborbital rockets, called Stardust 2.0 and its bigger cousin the Starless Rogue to provide up to 6 minutes of weightlessness for payloads at a cost of up to $300,000. A planned orbital rocket, called Red Dwarf, would then launch nanosatellites of up to 66 lbs. (30 kg to orbit for about $60,000 a kilogram.

bluShift's rocket engine, a hybrid of solid and liquid propellant called the Modular Adaptable Rocket Engine for Vehicle Launch (MAREVL), uses a proprietary solid biofuel that the company says is non-toxic, carbon neutral and "can be cheaply sourced from farms across America." It uses nitrous oxide bubbled with oxygen as an oxidizer, Deri said. 

Sunday's Stardust 1.0 launch carried three primary payloads: a cubesat built by students of Falmouth High School students with a GoPro camera, radio transmitter and sensors onboard; an experiment by Kellogg's Research Labs of Nashua, New Hampshire to test the vibration-dampening effects of nitinol, a nickel-titanium shape memory alloy; and a cubesat enclosure filled with stroopwafels, the Dutch wafer cookies, for the software development company Rocket Insights as an homage to their Amsterdam-based parent company Dept. 

The rocket is also carried some bluShift pens for future investors. 

Deri said bluShift hoped to use Sunday's launch to draw investor interest as the company seeks to raise $650,000 to fund the development of Stardust 2.0 and its successors. The company's core team members invested $500,000 of their own money into the project and won a $125,000 NASA grant, along with funds from the Maine Technology Institute, to fuel their effort so far. 

The company is also looking for a new launch site Maine's coast to handle its larger rockets. If all goes well, the bluShift could launch its first Stardust 2.0 rocket by the end of the year, Deri said after Sunday's launch.

"We hope to demonstrate to the world that Maine is open for aerospace."

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Instagram.

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Gov. Wolf Urges Motorists to Avoid Travel as Winter Weather Conditions Worsen - pa.gov

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January 31, 2021

Governor Tom Wolf is urging motorists to avoid unnecessary travel and encouraging employers to offer telework options if possible, as winter weather conditions are expected to worsen Monday.

“As this winter storm continues, the best plan of action is to stay home,” Gov. Wolf said. “If you are required to travel, have all the proper safety precautions in place and stay alert for rapidly changing conditions.”

Vehicle restrictions are currently in place on several Pennsylvania interstates that align with Tier 1 of the commonwealth’s weather event vehicle restriction plan, and the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) anticipates that additional restrictions will be added as conditions warrant. It is possible that a Tier 4 restriction could be enacted in the Harrisburg, Lehigh Valley and Pocono regions. Under a Tier 4 restriction, no commercial vehicles are permitted.

Motorists are encouraged to sign up for personalized alerts and find the latest restriction and travel information at www.511pa.com.

Strong wind and blowing/drifting snow are expected with this storm and reduced visibility is expected in some areas. Motorists always should be alert for sudden white-out conditions during the storm, virtually eliminating a driver’s visibility.

If travel is necessary, to help make decisions regarding winter travel, motorists are encouraged to “Know Before You Go” by checking conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles, including color-coded winter conditions on 2,900 miles, by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras. Users can also see plow truck statuses and travel alerts along a specific route using the “Check My Route” tool.

511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional Twitter alerts accessible on the 511PA website.

Motorists are reminded that roadways will not be free of snow while precipitation is falling. With freezing temperatures, roads that look wet may actually be icy, and extra caution is needed when approaching bridges and highway ramps where ice can form without warning.

If you must travel, slow down and increase your following distance. Most collisions in snowy and icy conditions are the result of driving too fast for the conditions or following too closely. Four-wheel drive may help with driving in the snow, but it does nothing to help with stopping, so leave plenty of room. And remember, speed limits are designed for ideal conditions. Drivers can be cited for driving too fast for the conditions, even below the speed limit.

Drivers should prepare or restock their emergency kits with items such as non-perishable food, water, first-aid supplies, warm clothes, a blanket, cell phone charger and a small snow shovel. Motorists should tailor their kits to any specific needs that they or their families have such as baby supplies, extra medication and pet supplies.

Motorists should be extra cautious around operating snow-removal equipment. When encountering a plow truck, drivers should:

  • Stay at least six car lengths behind an operating plow truck and remember that the main plow is wider than the truck.
  • Be alert since plow trucks generally travel much more slowly than other traffic.
  • When a plow truck is traveling toward you, move as far away from the center of the road as is safely possible, and remember that snow can obscure the actual snow plow width.
  • Never try to pass or get between several trucks plowing side by side in a “plow train.” The weight of the snow thrown from the plow can quickly cause smaller vehicles to lose control, creating a hazard for nearby vehicles.
  • Never travel next to a plow truck since there are blind spots where the operator can’t see, and they can occasionally be moved sideways when hitting drifts or heavy snowpack.
  • Keep your lights on to help the operator better see your vehicle. Also remember that under Pennsylvania state law, vehicle lights must be on every time a vehicle’s wipers are on due to inclement weather.

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Jeffrey Lurie offers unique insight into the process that led to Nick Sirianni - PhiladelphiaEagles.com

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• What was Lurie looking for in a head coach?

"The first step I think in being a great coach in modern football today, modern sports today, is to care very much about the players and coaches you work with, and everybody," Lurie said. "But a player who is 22, 30 years old, in this world, if you care, you can earn trust. If the caring is not real, if you're not being genuine, players are too smart and they see right through that, as they should.

"One of the prerequisites for this job was to be able to have a head coach who literally cares every single day. That continues the culture that we've been building over the last five years, and potentially accentuates it even further.

"I think for the Eagles, what we've harped on very, very much is we're looking for the best football leader going forward. It's not about who is the hot coordinator, who is the best X's and O's, who is the best résumé. Everything is important. Everything is important.

"It's much more about the people and how they conduct themselves, how they surround themselves, do they reach for greatness, are they risk-averse, do they manage well, do they have a great attention to detail, how are they to work with, how are they to work with when there's ups and downs of a season, how are they under enormous stress, how are they in competitive situations. The list goes on and on and on about the characteristics."

• How did Nick Sirianni stand out above the rest?

"Nick, with a group of so many good candidates, just shined throughout the process from the very beginning. The research on Nick was terrific. It was somebody that knew the game as well as anybody, football IQ off the charts, a grinder, somebody that had an unlimited work ethic and a desire to be great," Lurie said.

"As soon as you got to spend time with Nick, and we probably spent about, I don't know, 10, 12 hours together over two days, it became apparent that this is a very special communicator, not just a brilliant football IQ, which was very evident early on as we went through how he gameplans, how he attacks defenses, how he maximizes personnel, not just relying on a scheme but how to each week attack exactly who you're playing, what their strengths and weaknesses are in great detail. Much more than that.

"Nick was sort of the culmination of a lot of thought that went into it, a lot of projection. Of course, that's what it is. It's an evaluation of what is now and what coach he can become and what organization we can become with his leadership.

"Football IQ, off the charts, as I said. Leadership, it goes hand-in-hand with what I've been talking about, but it's even bigger than that. Can command a room. He has an edge. I think he'll be himself and at times it will be with an edge. I think that's great. I encourage that.

"Independent thinker. Not tied to a particular scheme that's in fashion at any moment, but wants to maximize the individuals on the team. Bring everybody together for a common good. With all that, the most important, a teacher who wants teachers around him at all times.

"It's the man. It's the teacher. It's the coach. It's the father. It's the husband. A lot goes into it. It's an important decision for an owner. It's an important decision for an organization. I'm very, very excited by Nick and want to welcome his family, Brett, (and) their three kids."

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MLBPA mulls MLB pitch for delayed 154-game season, sources say - ESPN

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The Major League Baseball Players Association is mulling over a proposal by MLB to delay the start of the 2021 season, and if the union does not provide a counteroffer early next week, spring training is likely to start in mid-February as scheduled, sources familiar with the situation told ESPN.

After months of scattered dialogue, the parties find themselves in a similar position to last year when the coronavirus pandemic shut down the season: disagreeing over the proper path forward. The league's proposal to push back the start of spring training to late March and the beginning of the season to late April includes a 154-game schedule that would pay players their full 162-game salaries, according to sources.

The proposal concerns the MLBPA on multiple fronts, players and union sources told ESPN. With pitchers having ramped up to start spring training around Feb. 17, they are reticent to shut down and start again by the proposed March 22 spring training start for a season that would begin April 28, according to sources. Further, players believe language in the proposal would grant commissioner Rob Manfred power beyond what he currently has to cancel games and, accordingly, potentially cut into players' pay.

The league disagrees with that interpretation. While Manfred had the right under the March 26 deal struck by the sides in the wake of the pandemic's early days last year to cancel games or shut down the sport -- something he considered amid early outbreaks -- he never did so once the season began. The proposal, league sources said, is intended to protect MLB from a worsening national situation, whether it's a COVID-19 variant being resistant to the vaccine or an unexpected uptick in cases.

The language, according to sources, gives Manfred the right to act if government restrictions prevent more than five teams at once from playing, if travel is restricted or if "competitive integrity is undermined" by players sitting due to COVID-19. Both sides, sources said, would retain their rights to pursue legal action. The disagreement on the broadness of the language could be changed if the sides continue bargaining.

MLB's desire to delay the season, according to league sources, is based on the recommendation of health experts and the likelihood that doing so would enable the 2021 season to be held when COVID-19 cases have dipped -- particularly in Arizona, which currently has the country's highest rates and where half of the league holds spring training. Cases in Arizona and Florida have recently dropped, and health officials project they will go down even more between now and the proposal's start date.

The potential for an agreement is possible, but the animus and mistrust between the sides is deep enough that sources were dubious about the likelihood of a deal. Something as simple as the timing of the offer is a point of contention. League officials were frustrated at the union when in December it rejected the possibility of a delay unless players were paid for 162 games -- something the league believes it acceded to in its proposal. In messages sent Sunday by player representatives to the union's rank and file obtained by ESPN, they called the proposal this close to spring training a "tactic" by MLB.

The last deal the sides made led to months of back-and-forth as to when the 2020 season should start, and Manfred wound up implementing a 60-game season when they couldn't come to an agreement. Both sides accused the other of bad faith, and the detritus of those negotiations remains palpable today as baseball figures out what its 2021 season is going to look like.

The union's eight-player executive council and player representatives were briefed on the offer that was delivered Friday, according to sources, and were skeptical about the pathway to a deal. They believe, sources said, that because players are entitled to 162 games' pay by the collective bargaining agreement, the terms of the offer -- which would include expanding the postseason from 10 to 14 teams and adding the designated hitter to the National League -- do not offer enough to push back the season.

In the absence of an agreement, there are two possibilities.

The first, and likeliest, according to sources, would be for teams and players to show up at spring training sites on their report dates and proceed as scheduled. The other is that Manfred invokes the national-emergency clause in the collective bargaining agreement and suspends the uniform player contract -- a possibility but one that would guarantee the sides face one another in court, a prospect that's unappealing to both, according to sources.

MLB's desire to push back the season has been clear for months. Currently, there are nearly twice as many daily COVID-19 cases than there were July 24, 2020, when MLB's 60-game season began. The possibility of an outbreak affecting individual teams remains acute. The Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals last year missed long stretches because of outbreaks and needed to cram doubleheaders into their schedules to near their full complement of games.

It's not just the fear of an outbreak that fuels the owners' desire to delay the season. Doing so would allow greater proliferation of the coronavirus vaccine and heighten the likelihood that fans go to stadiums -- and that local health officials allow a larger number of fans into stadiums. In discussions with the union, the league claimed it lost billions of dollars last season -- a figure that has not been verified. With regular-season, in-stadium revenues nonexistent in 2020, revenues unquestionably were down.

MLB's frustration with the reaction to what it believed to be a reasonable compromise was palpable Sunday. Discussions with the union have been scattershot, and at this juncture, two players said, it's likely too late in the process to come to an agreement. While the players said they recognize a delay could be pragmatic, doing so when some players are already in spring training cities -- and all of them have housing they would need to cancel, likely costing thousands and even tens of thousands of dollars -- would be impractical.

"We're ready to play," one player said. "The NFL is playing. The NBA is playing. The NHL is playing. Colleges are playing. Why shouldn't we play?"

The NBA shortened its season by 10 games in early November -- about three weeks before training camps opened and six weeks before its first games were played. The NHL cut its season by about one-third. Both were coming off shortened seasons that ended later than usual. MLB's season ended on time after an expanded postseason, something the league would like to implement again.

The union has expressed skepticism, fearful that expanding the playoffs would have a negative effect on the free-agent market because teams would be likelier to play for a win total in the 80s instead of the 90s. The league, and team executives, disagree, arguing that the expanded postseason -- in this case three wild-card series in each league -- is better for the sport's long-term health. In the proposal, MLB guaranteed an $80.9 million pool for players who participate in the postseason.

Getting to that juncture, of course, is the imperative, and the league believes a delay makes it likelier to occur -- and likelier that players will play the scheduled games to receive their full salaries. Absent an agreement, the expanded playoffs might well be off the table until 2022, and the universal DH, seven-inning doubleheaders and a runner starting on second base in extra innings would be up in the air.

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Auburn battles to the finish at No. 6 Georgia Tech - Auburn Tigers Official Athletic Site

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ATLANTA – Auburn pushed three crucial matches to third sets, but the Tigers came up just short in a fight to the finish with No. 6 Georgia Tech, falling 5-2 Sunday afternoon.

"When you are climbing a mountain, you can't always take the same path to the top," Auburn head coach Caroline Lilley said. "You have to climb in inches, focusing on the very next step instead of the entirety of the journey ahead. Inch by inch, step by step. Climbing is just like a tennis match, point by point until the job is complete.

"We fought today. We certainly earned windows of opportunity in both doubles and singles. As we return to the practice court this week, we have to bring a climber's mentality. Inch by inch, ball by ball, and minute by minute. We will be better because of competitive matches like today, and we are grateful for the opportunity to develop and hone our craft."

Georgia Tech took a 1-0 lead after doubles. Auburn's team of Georgie Axon and Adeline Flach grabbed a 6-2 win at the No. 2 spot, but Ansari and Chen fell on court 3, 6-3, and Ovunc and Russo dropped a 6-3 decision at the top spot to the fifth-ranked team of Jones and Flores.

The Yellow Jackets moved ahead 2-0 as 13th-ranked Kenya Jones downed 62nd-ranked Selin Ovunc 7-5, 6-2. Auburn got on the board as Axon improved to 4-0 on the spring with a 6-3, 6-4 win over 123rd-ranked Gia Cohen, 6-3, 6-4. Tech then pushed its lead to 3-1 as Flach fell on court six, 6-4, 6-4.

The remaining three matches went the distance. Taylor Russo, ranked 99th in singles, fought back from a first-set loss to earn a 1-6, 6-2, 6-1 win at the No. 5 spot to pull Auburn within a point at 3-2. But Georgia Tech clinched the match on court three as Carolyn Ansari fell 6-2, 3-6, 6-4. Yu Chen also went to a third set with 56th-ranked Victoria Flores at No. 2 singles before falling 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.

Auburn is back in action next Sunday on the road at Clemson. Match time is set for 11 a.m. CT in Clemson, S.C.

For the latest on Auburn women's tennis, follow @AuburnWTennis on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

#6 Georgia Tech 5, Auburn 2

Singles
1. #13 Kenya Jones (GT) def. #62 Selin Ovunc (AU), 7-5, 6-2
2. #56 Victoria Flores (GT) def. Yu Chen (AU), 4-6, 6-4, 6-3
3. Ava Hrastar (GT) def. Carolyn Ansari (AU), 6-2, 3-6, 6-4
4. Georgie Axon (AU) def. #123 Gia Cohen (GT), 6-3, 6-4
5. #99 Taylor Russo (AU) def. Carol Lee (GT), 1-6, 6-2, 6-1
6. Mahak Jain (GT) def. Adeline Flach (AU), 6-4, 6-4
Order of finish: 1, 4, 6, 5, 3, 2

Doubles
1. #5 Jones/Flores (GT) def. #11 Ovunc/Russo (AU), 6-3
2. Axon/Flach (AU) def. Cohen/Marsh (GT), 6-2
3. Hrastar/Dedaj (GT) def. Ansari/Chen (AU), 6-3
Order of finish: 2, 3, 1

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Rams give Matthew Stafford long-awaited chance to compete for title - Los Angeles Rams Blog- ESPN - ESPN

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THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- The Los Angeles Rams finished the 2020 season with a top-ranked defense worthy of a Super Bowl title.

Now they hope that with the addition of Matthew Stafford in a blockbuster trade with the Detroit Lions they also have a Super Bowl-caliber quarterback.

The Rams traded quarterback Jared Goff, two future first-round picks and a third-round pick to the Lions in exchange for Stafford, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter. The deal will be official at the start of the league year.

With Stafford, who will turn 33 next month, the Rams hope to revive an offense that propelled them to consecutive division titles and a Super Bowl LIII appearance at the end of the 2018 season but that has fallen into mediocrity the past two seasons.

However, it remains to be determined whether Stafford, who has two seasons remaining on a five-year, $135 million extension, is the missing piece on a unit that last season averaged 377 yards (ranked 11th) and 23.3 points (22nd) per game.

In Detroit, Stafford was plagued by an organization that could not field a competitive defense.

That will not be the case in L.A., with a stout unit that features All-Pro defensive tackle Aaron Donald and All-Pro cornerback Jalen Ramsey and that allowed only 18.5 points per game last season, tops in the NFL.

The No. 1 pick in the 2009 NFL draft, Stafford is 74-90-1 in 12 seasons, has never won an NFC North title and has never won a playoff game in three postseason appearances.

However, he has eight seasons with at least 4,000 passing yards, and he most recently passed for 4,084 yards and 26 touchdowns, with 10 interceptions, as the Lions went 5-11 this past season.

He departs Detroit as the organization's all-time leader in every important passing category and is No. 4 on the NFL all-time list in passing yards per game (273.4), behind Patrick Mahomes, Drew Brees and Andrew Luck.

At the end of a 10-6 season that resulted in a divisional playoff loss at the Green Bay Packers on Jan. 16, Rams coach Sean McVay said that every position would be evaluated, including quarterback, and made no guarantee that Goff would return in 2021.

McVay also acknowledged that his own playcalling was not up to standard.

"I have high expectations and standards for myself and for our offense," McVay said. "This year was not up to par for a lot of reasons, and that's something that I'm excited about attacking, but I do still feel confident in my ability to do that at a high level."

In L.A., Stafford joins an offense that includes sure-handed wide receivers Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp (who each signed significant extensions before last season) and tight end Tyler Higbee. The Rams also are expected to find Stafford the deep threat that the offense has lacked since trading Brandin Cooks last offseason.

With Saturday's trade, the Rams will go seven years without a first-round pick, a streak that started in 2017 and ends in 2024, at the earliest. Their last first-round selection was Goff, whom they traded up from No. 15 to select No. 1 overall in 2016.

The Rams signed Goff to a four-year, $134 million extension that included $110 million in guarantees after their Super Bowl LIII appearance.

In four seasons with McVay, Goff won 42 games, tied with Russell Wilson for second during that span, behind only Tom Brady.

However, since the New England Patriots held the Rams to three points in that Super Bowl, McVay was unable to consistently put Goff in position to succeed.

Over the past two seasons, Goff turned the ball over 38 times, the second-most turnovers in the NFL over that span.

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China temporarily bars entry of foreigners travelling from Canada - Reuters

FILE PHOTO: A traveller checks her mobile phone at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Wuhan, Hubei province, China January 2, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has temporarily banned entry of foreign nationals travelling from Canada, even if they hold valid Chinese residence permits for work, the Chinese consulate in Toronto said.

“All foreign nationals who hold valid Chinese residence permits for work, personal matters and reunion are temporarily not allowed to enter China from Canada,” the consulate said in a statement on its website on Saturday.

Entry with diplomatic and service visas will not be affected, it said.

The suspension comes as Canada clamps down on cross-border travel due to COVID-19 concerns. Canada reported 4,255 new cases on Saturday, with 19,942 deaths since the start of the pandemic.

All airline passengers arriving in Canada will be required to take a COVID-19 test at the airport and wait in a hotel for up to three days at their expense until the results arrive, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday.

In coming weeks Canadian vacationers returning from the United States by land will have to show a negative COVID-19 test result before being allowed entry.

Reporting by Ryan Woo; Editing by William Mallard

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Saturday, January 30, 2021

WATCH: Patrick Reed explains why he picked up his ball from the rough in controversial use of 'embedded' rule - CBS Sports

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Patrick Reed, who never seems short on controversy, found it once again on Saturday during the third round of the Farmers Insurance Open on the par-4 10th hole when he removed his ball from an embedded lie and took a free drop. The 10th was part of a roller coaster 18 in which Reed shot 70 and is tied for the lead going into Sunday's final round.

After his second shot on the par-4 10th hole bounded off to the left side of the hole in the thick rough, Reed walked toward it, bent over and picked it up. He claimed that it was embedded even though video evidence shows that it took a bounce after it first landed and jumped no more than 3 feet back up in the air. For it to be embedded, the ground would have had to been insanely wet. 

Reed said after his round that nobody in his group nor the volunteer standing near the ball saw it bounce so he was checking to see if it had "broken the plane" of the ground.

After moving it, Reed called a rules official over and had him stick his fingers in the pitch mark. The official, clearly surprised Reed had already moved the ball, confirmed that there was indeed a lip where Reed's ball first came to rest and deemed that Reed was correct to remove the embedded ball. From there, Reed went on to get a drop and got up and down for par.

Reed was shocked that the post-round video showed that the ball had bounced and confirmed that it's "almost impossible" for a ball to plug (or embed) if it bounces at all. That begs a lot of questions, not the least of which is what lip he and the rules official were feeling if it's "almost impossible" for the ball to plug when it bounces.

Reed confirmed that the rules official told him that everything was done "perfectly" and it was a "textbook" handling of a wonky situation. He also seemed to pass off blame onto the volunteer who never saw the ball bounce as well as the rules official who confirmed the embed. If it was an attempt to see how much leeway the rules official would give him (he wouldn't be the first one to do this), it was a successful one.

"If you had 100 people around there, bunch of fans out there and one fan said they saw it bounce, I never would have had to put a tee down and even check to see if it was embedded," Reed said."You go by best judgment as well as that's why you always call a rules official, because at the end of the day they're going to have the best judgment over everybody. If they believe that it's embedded as well, that's then when you go by what they say."

Reed said he would not have done anything differently and in fact, holds himself as a model for what players on the PGA Tour should do in situations like these.

"It is an unfortunate thing that happened today, but at the same time it's exactly what I would have done every time, exactly what every player should do," Reed said. "You should ask your playing opponents if they've seen whether it's a ball bounce or whether it crosses a hazard line, you always ask them first and then you ask the volunteer, and then from there you check to see and at that point, you call a rules official. 

"It's unfortunate, but at the same time when you have the rules officials and everybody come up and said that you did it textbook and did it exactly how you're supposed to do, then that's all you can do. I mean, when we're out there and we're playing, we can't see everything. That's why you rely on the other players, other opponents, you rely on the volunteers as well as rely on the rules officials. When they all say what we've done is the right thing, then you move on and you go on."

The whole thing was questionable for somebody who's never had a run-in with the rules. For Reed? It borders on the indefensible, and the more he talked after the round, the worse it seemed to get. Following the brouhaha at the 10th, Reed made four bogeys in his next six holes before a birdie at the last got him in at 10 under and tied for the lead going into Sunday.

Want the sharpest DFS advice, picks and data-driven golf analysis? Listen below and subscribe to The First Cut Golf podcast where we explain what's happening on the course so you can win off of it, including instant reaction to Round 3 and the controversy surrounding Patrick Reed at Torrey Pines below.

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Ira Jaffe retires from law firm he founded, starts business - Crain's Detroit Business

Ira Jaffe pulls his golf club cart around the country club near his winter condo in Naples, Fla., a few days a week. It's an exercise in boredom, but exercise nonetheless. The 81-year-old attorney retired from Southfield-based Jaffe Raitt Heuer & Weiss, the law firm he founded in 1968, at the end of last year. A year earlier, he stepped down as the president and CEO of The Fisher Group, which handles the financial affairs of the Max Fisher family.

But retirement doesn't agree with Jaffe.

"Since I started working 60 years ago, work always equaled fun," Jaffe said. "It doesn't have the connotation of negative for me, even now. I want to be busy using my energy in productive ways."

Jaffe's restlessness led to the founding of his own consulting firm, Ira Jaffe Consulting LLC, last month. The octogenarian said the consulting work is a carryover from the kind of work he was performing at his law firm as he aged.

"At my stage of the game, what I had been doing for years would be called consulting," Jaffe said. "Almost 20 years ago, I was running everything at the firm. We had a consultant come in to talk about strategic planning and he sat me down and said 'Ira, do you love this firm? Then you must stop being the managing partner and set up a true board of directors and have a plan for client succession.' So that's what I did. This is the culmination of that plan. Now it's my time to share what I've learned."

Under his consulting firm, Jaffe will consult high-net worth clients on succession planning, business planning, estate planning, advice on family and trust disputes, family foundations and board membership.

Jaffe's board membership has been prolific throughout his career, with stints on nearly a dozen family foundation and nonprofit boards, including: The Fred A. & Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation; Cranbrook Educational Community; Cranbrook Institute of Science; McGregor Fund; Beyond Basics; The Parade Company; Detroit Zoological Society; eLab Ventures; and Michigan Capital Advisors.

He's also the current chairman of the board for commercial real estate development firm Redico.

Jaffe said several clients of the law firm are using his new consulting services as he's maintained several relationships for many years.

"Most of my clients don't want to change counsel, but want a set of new eyes ... ," Jaffe said. "They usually know the answers. They just need someone with the gray hair and the experience to say to them, 'Don't make these mistakes.'"

He already has a small business office in Naples and plans to establish one in metro Detroit in the coming months.

Jaffe plans to work from 7 a.m. to noon most days or as clients demand his assistance.

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news Lions to trade Matthew Stafford to Rams in blockbuster deal involving Jared Goff, picks NFL - NFL.com

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A pair of prime-time quarterbacks are moving to new cities.

NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport and NFL Network's Tom Pelissero reported Saturday night that Detroit Lions QB Matthew Stafford is heading to the Los Angeles Rams in a massive blockbuster trade for QB Jared Goff and a package of picks.

Detroit will acquire Goff, a 2021 third-round pick and first-round picks in 2022 and 2023 in exchange for Stafford, per Pelissero.

Pelissero also reported that multiple teams offered first-round picks in this year's draft but this deal will ultimately give both sides what they desired. He also noted that the trade cannot become official until the start of the league year on March 17.

The Rams will inherit the two years, $43 million remaining on Stafford's contract, and the Lions will carry a $17.8 million dead cap hit in 2021, per Pelissero.

In return, Detroit will inherit the four years and $106.6M remaining on Goff's contract. L.A. will carry a $22.2 million dead cap hit in 2021.

The Lions had more than six offers, including a few worth more than a first-round pick, Rapoport added. Detroit's decision to take on Goff's large contract ended up costing L.A. more.

Pelissero highlighted the particulars of Goff's current contract: he has $43 million in fully guaranteed money left -- $25 million in base salary in 2021, a $2.5 million roster bonus due on the second day of the 2021 league year in March and another $15.5 million roster bonus due on the second day of the 2022 league year.

The clock on a potential deal began ticking ever since Pelissero reported Jan. 23 that Detroit and its franchise signal-caller mutually agreed to part ways. Now, at age 32, Stafford -- the 2009 No. 1 overall pick -- will get a fresh start under coach Sean McVay in the City of Angels.

For Goff, 26, the deal comes after sketchy end to the 2020 season. Near the end of what was an up-and-down campaign, Goff suffered a broken right thumb in Week 16 that caused him to miss the season finale and begin the Rams' wild card matchup against the Seahawks as a backup to John Wolford.

Rams GM Les Snead said earlier this week that Goff "is a Ram in this moment," a sentiment that echoed the seemingly rocky foundation the former No. 1 overall pick was standing on. Rapoport reported the next day that the team expected to have an open QB competition if Goff wasn't traded. This move certainly takes that off the table.

In addition to getting a restart of his own, Goff will reunite with new Lions GM Brad Holmes whom he knows well. The former Rams director of college scouting evaluated Goff coming out of California in 2016. Alongside offensive coordinator Anthony Lynn, Goff will play a central role in the Lions' rebuild under head coach Dan Campbell.

While the date is still to be determined, the 2021 season already has one of its first must-see matchups with Goff and Stafford getting a chance to exact some revenge against their old teams when the Rams host the Lions at SoFi Stadium.

NFL Network's Mike Giardi confirmed, per an informed source, that the New England Patriots were among the interested teams. Giardi added that it's unclear how far it went beyond that but he surmised that, considering the price, it's hard to imagine the Pats stayed in for long.

Despite dealing with numerous nagging injuries, Stafford finished the year with 4,084 yards, his most since 2017, 26 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. He departs Detroit with a bevy of franchise records in his name, including most career passing yards (41,025), highest career completion percentage (62.48%) and most career passing touchdowns (256). The one-time Pro Bowler and 2011 Comeback Player of the Year posted a 74-90-1 record in 165 starts.

Goff recorded 18,171 yards, 107 TD and 55 INT in five seasons with L.A. His best year came in 2018 -- the second of his two Pro Bowl selections -- when he logged a career-high 4,688 yards en route to leading the 13-3 Rams to a Super Bowl LII showdown against the Patriots. He is 42-27 in his 69 career starts.

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Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard hits two 3s in 8.9 seconds to bury Chicago Bulls late - ESPN

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Down five points to the Chicago Bulls on Saturday night with 8.9 seconds left, the Portland Trail Blazers entered what NBA fans have come to know simply as "Dame Time."

Damian Lillard hit a 37-foot 3-point shot with less than 10 seconds left to put the Blazers within two points. The Blazers then tied up Bulls star Zach LaVine and won the jump ball -- which eventually ended up in Lillard's hands.

Lillard proceeded to drill a buzzer-beating, step-back 3 over the long arms of Lauri Markkanen to beat Chicago 123-122.

"This one is special because in these situations where we're down five, I think, with 11 seconds left, those are the moments where the winning team thinks they've got the game pretty much wrapped up," said Lillard, who scored 14 points in the fourth. "And the opposing team is discouraged."

Not Lillard.

Blazers coach Terry Stotts struggled with words to describe Lillard's clutch gene after the victory.

"It's innate. It's God-given," Stotts said. "He's born with it, and you can't teach it."

Lillard finished with a game-high 44 points, 9 assists and 5 rebounds and hit his third career game-winning buzzer-beater, including the playoffs. That is the most in Trail Blazers history, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

For Lillard, it was also his 35th career 40-point game, more than double of any other player in franchise history. Clyde Drexler has the next-most with 17.

Lillard's teammates Enes Kanter and Gary Trent Jr. weren't surprised by his late-game heroics. Inside the fanless United Center in Chicago, Kanter was among the first of his teammates to greet him with a hug. Kanter said he's "used to that shot" but also recognizes that it's "unbelievable what he can do."

So, too, does Trent.

"The first time, I was shocked when I got here at first as a rookie, seeing it from day one, whether it was ending practice, ending games," Trent added. "But now at this point, it's what he does. Nobody is surprised in a sense. He makes big-time shots. He's done this time after time after time, so at this point, I knew it was going in when he shot it."

Chicago trailed by as many as 19 points on the night before, clawing back to make it a close game in the second half. Markkanen ended with a team-high 31 points with six rebounds, and LaVine contributed 26 points with 7 rebounds and 4 assists.

Portland was playing without Jusuf Nurkic (right wrist fracture), CJ McCollum (midfoot sprain), Derrick Jones Jr. (left foot sprain) and Zach Collins (left ankle stress fracture).

According to the Elias Sports Bureau data, this is the first time a jump ball and a game-winning buzzer-beater occurred on the same possession inside the final 10 seconds since April 30, 2006. On that date, the Los Angeles Lakers won a jump ball against the Suns, and Kobe Bryant hit the game-winning buzzer-beater.

After nailing the shot Saturday, Lillard credited his relatives for planting those roots within him of pushing through adversity in critical moments.

"It started in my own family. That's the crazy thing, and I think that's why I always reference my upbringing and the kind of family that I come from because of just the challenge and how competitive it is in my own family," Lillard said. "It can be something like a spelling bee. It can be anything. We compete to the death and it don't matter. You're held to a certain standard in my family where it's just like you're going to be built for the low moments, you're going to be built to handle the high moments properly.

"Your skin is gonna be tough," he added. "You're gonna be prepared to rise, and you're gonna be prepared to deal with failure. But, you learn to keep moving forward regardless of what the outcome is."

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