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Former LSU guard Alexis Morris sounds off on star player Angel Reese amid tension with coach Kim Mul

Former LSU player and member of the 2023 NCAA championship squad Alexis Morris had plenty to say about the tension surrounding her former team.  In the midst of LSU star and 2023 Most Outstanding Player Angel Reese being benched for an apparent attitude problem, the Connecticut Sun guard took the opportunity to express her thoughts on Reese and the situation.  ‘I never wanted to be at odds, or cared about likes, media, nil none of those things,’ Morris said on X (formerly Twitter on Saturday).

Jeff McNeil's single in 10th falls in and lifts Mets over Braves 3-2 for 4-game winning streak

NEW YORK — Jeff McNeil hit a winning single in the 10th inning on a fly ball that fell when Ramón Laureano overran it in the right-field corner, and the New York Mets beat the Atlanta 3-2 on Thursday night for their fourth straight win. “That was a lot of fun,” McNeil said. “Just happy we came out on top.” Atlanta retired 17 straight batters before Pierce Johnson (3-2) intentionally walked Pete Alonso with one out in the 10th.

Jeff Rossen Net Worth

Jeff Rossen net worth is $2 Million Jeff Rossen Wiki Biography Jeff Rossen (born November 13, 1976) is an American television journalist who is employed by NBC News. He joined the network in September 2008. Rossen contributes to all NBC News programs and platforms, including NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, and Today. Rossen also fills in at the anchor desk for Weekend Today and MSNBC. #Fact1Today (1952) national investigative correspondent [January 2012].

NFL Network not bringing back Jim Trotter

Explore More NFL Media is reshaping its roster. Veteran football reporter Jim Trotter, who has had awkward interactions with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell at the last two Super Bowl press conferences, announced Monday that his time at NFL Network is coming to an end. “Some personal news: This will be my final week with the NFL Media Group,” Trotter tweeted Monday morning. “I was informed over the weekend that my contract is not being renewed.

OceanGate CEO used college interns to work on sub: report

Explore More OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush College hired college interns to design the electrical systems for the ill-fated Titan submersible that killed him and four other people, according to an explosive new report. Rush, who allegedly ignored safety warnings while charging wealthy tourists $250,000 for dives to the Titanic shipwreck, hired students from Washington State University to work on the critical systems, The New Yorker reported. “The whole electrical system — that was our design, we implemented it, and it works,” a former intern told the college paper in February 2018, according to the mag.