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MILAN — The women's hockey competition atthe Olympicshas an influence you might not have expected.

Ohio State.

Perhaps you know the Buckeyes best as a football powerhouse. Yet with 12 current or former Buckeyes playing for five different countries at the Milan Cortina Olympics, "it's a women's ice hockey school, for sure," said Joy Dunne, an Ohio State junior who scored for the U.S. on Thursday in its 5-1 win against Czechia.

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Since Nadine Muzerall became the school's coach in 2016, the university has developed from a hockey also-ran into the NCAA champion in both 2022 and 2024. The team also appeared in the 2023 and 2025 title games. This season, it's ranked second nationally.

Five players from this season's team are now foes. Three current Buckeyes play for Sweden alone. Trash talk has been kept to a minimum, said Hilda Svensson, a Swedish forward who has become one of the NCAA's top scorers in her freshman year at Ohio State.

"We have been pretty nice to each other so far," she said, "but I think if we play against them, we're going to be a little bit more mean, maybe. And especially maybe against Joy."

The U.S. and Sweden aren't scheduled to face each other in the preliminary round, meaning any meeting between the squads would come in the knockout round. That possibility was discussed immediately after the tournament's draw was announced, Dunne said.

"Me and the Swedish girls really want to play each other because one's a big chirper and I think it'd be fun," Dunne told NBC News. "We battle a lot in practices, so it would just be nice to actually do it against each other in a game."

Dunne and the U.S. faced off against a current Buckeye teammate Saturday, when the U.S. played its second preliminary game against Finland. Its roster includes Sanni Vanhanen, a freshman forward at Ohio State who was part of Finland's 2022 bronze medal-winning team at the Beijing Olympics.

Muzerall's allegiances might lean toward her native Canada, where she has coached within the national team's developmental system. But holding ties to five teams makes rooting interests more difficult.

"You feel like a parent, an immense amount of pride," Muzeralltold reporters in Ohiothis week. "So, it's going to be tough to choose who I'm cheering for."

Ohio State's outsize presence at these Olympics should be seen as a credit to Muzerall's coaching, Dunne said. But the school is just one example of collegiate hockey's role as a de facto feeder system for national teams. Of the 230 total women's hockey players taking part in these Games, 122 have NCAA experience,according tothe governing body, including 40 active college players.

The Western Collegiate Hockey Association, a hockey-only conference that includes Ohio State, has the most representation among conferences, with 54 athletes.

Dunne isn't even the first member of her family to represent both Ohio State and the U.S. Her older sister, Jincy, was part of the U.S. hockey team that won a silver medal at the 2022 Olympics.

This is the first Winter Olympics since the creation of the Professional Women's Hockey League, and with 61 PWHL players heading to Italy to represent their countries, the league opted to take a three-week break from competition.

The NCAA season, however, did not pause.

"A part of me actually wants to fly over there and just go," Muzerall said.

Instead, the Buckeyes will play four games between Thursday's opening of the preliminary round and the Feb. 19 gold-medal game. Svensson said she was watching from afar as the Buckeyes try to compensate for their Olympic-sized roster hole.

"I'm so impressed how they did their last game against Duluth," Svensson said. "I hope they can just keep going and win against Wisconsin this weekend."

Ohio State isn't just a football powerhouse. It's also fueling Olympic hockey.

MILAN — The women's hockey competition atthe Olympicshas an influence you might not have expected. Ohio State. Perhaps you know the B...
Pro Football Hall of Fame selection will return to in-person vote in light of Bill Belichick controversy

The Pro Football Hall of Fame will make changes to its voting process in light of controversy over Bill Belichick not being elected to the 2026 class in his first year of eligibility.

Hall of Fame president Jim Portertold the Associated Pressthat the vote will go back to an in-person meeting and discussion among the 50-member committee. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the conversation and voting process was held virtually.

Additionally, the vote will occur closer to the announcement of the inductees at the NFL Honors event, held the Thursday prior to the Super Bowl. That scheduling change, likely for Super Bowl week in the host city, is intended to decrease the possibility of discussion and results leaking to the public, as happened when reports ofBelichick falling short of the 40 votesnecessary for election circulated among media.

The first official photo of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026 presented by@visualedgeit🏈✨@drewbrees@lukeKeuchly@LarryFitzgerald@adamvinatieri@histepper33pic.twitter.com/C5d1AfggMJ

— Pro Football Hall of Fame (@ProFootballHOF)February 6, 2026

Porter also said the Hall would consider releasing vote totals and individual ballots to the public in future balloting, much like the Baseball Hall of Fame and Baseball Writers Association of America do. However, that won't be done for the 2026 class.

One part of the voting process that will be reviewed is a rule that groups coaches and contributors with older players who have been on the ballot for multiple years. Votersfelt they had to choosebetween longtime candidates who were running out of eligibility, such as running back Roger Craig (who was elected) and quarterback Ken Anderson (who was not), rather than vote for Belichick. That was viewed as a primary reason why the six-time Super Bowl winner was not elected.

Voters who might have violated rules by discussing the voting debate publicly and the process by which candidates were elected or left off the ballot could be replaced on the committee, according to Porter.

"I'm not here to tell them who the most deserving is,"Porter told the AP's Josh Dubow. "If the Hall was to tell who the most deserving is, we wouldn't need them to vote. We understand that. We just want the rules followed."

Five players were electedto the Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class, as announced at Thursday's NFL Honors ceremony. Quarterback Drew Brees, receiver Larry Fitzgerald, linebacker Luke Kuechly, kicker Adam Vinatieri and Craig will be formally inducted into the Canton, Ohio, institution on Aug. 8.

Pro Football Hall of Fame selection will return to in-person vote in light of Bill Belichick controversy

The Pro Football Hall of Fame will make changes to its voting process in light of controversy over Bill Belichick not bei...
Hideki Matsuyama overtakes Ryo Hisatsune for Phoenix Open lead

Hideki Matsuyama and Ryo Hisatsune played in the final group at the WM Phoenix Open together on Saturday, and it was set up for the Japanese countrymen to do the same on Sunday.

Field Level Media

One missed putt at the end of the day changed those plans.

Matsuyama overtook Hisatsune for the lead after three rounds when Hisatsune bogeyed the last hole Saturday at TPC Scottsdale in Arizona.

Hisatsune, 23, led his more-accomplished peer by one stroke through two rounds. Matsuyama's 3-under-par 68 propelled him to a 13-under 200 through three rounds while Hisatsune's late blunder led him to a round of 70.

"Yeah, it was a great day today. Kind of a first today for Japan to have two Japanese pros play in a final group," Matsuyama said through a translator. "I was hoping we could do it tomorrow, but, again, I hope tomorrow just to play well and stay on top."

Hisatsune, meanwhile, dropped into a four-way tie at 12-under with Maverick McNealy (65), Denmark's Nicolai Hojgaard (65) and South Korea's Si Woo Kim (66). The final threesome to go off Sunday will be Matsuyama, McNealy and Hojgaard.

Matsuyama and Hisatsune were tied at 13 under after Hisatsune birdied Nos. 10 and 17 to catch up. Matsuyama parred No. 18 and Hisatsune escaped a greenside bunker, leaving himself 5 1/2 feet to save par.

But Hisatsune's putt started left and stayed left, missing the cup altogether for a difficult bogey.

Hisatsune later said it was "special" to play alongside the 33-year-old Matsuyama, who became the first Japanese man to win a major when he captured the 2021 Masters.

"You know, he's like won Masters and then like 11 times PGA winner, so like very different for me," Hisatsune said. "But more chasing Hideki tomorrow, like going to also today as well."

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Two of those PGA Tour wins for Matsuyama were the 2016 and 2017 Phoenix Opens. Matsuyama brushed that off Saturday by saying this is a "brand-new tournament," and he had a funny response to a follow-up about what he likes about TPC Scottsdale.

"I like this course because even if I miss a fairway, I can still find my ball," he said. "Unless it's in the cactuses."

Matsuyama mixed three birdies and two bogeys over his first five holes Saturday. He took over the lead with an 11-foot birdie putt at the par-4 10th, and he added his last birdie at the par-5 13th.

Hojgaard, 24, is a three-time winner in Europe seeking his first PGA Tour victory. His bogey-free round was buoyed by five birdies in the closing six holes.

"It's easy to then go out and hunt the birdies a little bit, but I stayed patient, hitting into the right zones and hit some really, really good shots coming in and capitalized with some birdies, so it was a great way to finish," Hojgaard said.

Then there's McNealy, who at 30 is seeking his second PGA Tour title. He ranks second this week in greens in regulation (44 of 54) and made eight birdies Saturday. A bogey at the par-4 17th kept him from a share of the lead through 54 holes.

"You have to take every hole as it comes," McNealy said about an aggressive approach to Sunday. "If you hit the fairway, you can be aggressive if you have the right number. Miss the fairway, you just can't shoot yourself out of the tournament and make soft bogeys."

England's Matt Fitzpatrick held a share of the lead after consecutive birdies at Nos. 14-15, but he made a mess of the par-3 16th "Stadium Hole" and recorded a double bogey. A birdie-bogey finish left him at 67 for his round and tied at 11 under with Michael Thorbjornsen (65), Jake Knapp (66) and Akshay Bhatia (67).

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler posted a 67 that featured a chip-in birdie from the sand at No. 10. He's five off the pace at 8 under entering Sunday.

--Field Level Media

Hideki Matsuyama overtakes Ryo Hisatsune for Phoenix Open lead

Hideki Matsuyama and Ryo Hisatsune played in the final group at the WM Phoenix Open together on Saturday, and it was s...
Carmen Electra at Steven Tyler's 7th Annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party in L.A. on Feb. 1, 2026 Araya Doheny/Getty

Araya Doheny/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Carmen Electra revealed which one of her famous exes taught "how to be romantic"

  • Electra, 53, caught up with PEOPLE exclusively while at a pre-Grammys event in L.A.

  • The actress and model also shared one of her biggest relationship deal breakers

Carmen Electrasays she wasn't always particularly romantic —  until she met one specific guy.

Electra, 53, caught up with PEOPLE exclusively atSteven Tyler's7th Annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party in Hollywood, Calif. During the conversation, the actress and model — who is currently single — said that while dating is on her agenda for 2026, she has some definite deal breakers.

"I don't like liars," Electra told PEOPLE.

Carmen Electra at the 7th Annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party on Feb. 1, 2026 CraSH/imageSPACE/Shutterstock

CraSH/imageSPACE/Shutterstock

She added, "It's just really nice when you're with someone [who's] just really into you. I have had that before. It obviously didn't last. But once you know what it feels like to really be with someone [who] is so there for you, you can't undo that feeling. You know, it's just beautiful."

"[I want] somebody that's very romantic," she continued. "I remember when I was datingDave [Navarro], I was so not romantic, and he was teaching me how to be romantic, but now I am."

Dave Navarro and Carmen Electra in 2006 Mirek Towski/FilmMagic

Mirek Towski/FilmMagic

Electra and Navarro, the lead guitarist forJane's Addiction, married in 2003 and announced their separation in 2006, finalizing their divorce in 2007. Their relationship was documented on the reality show 'Till Death Do Us Part: Carmen and Dave, which aired on MTV for one season in 2004. The couple had no children, anda sourcedescribed their split as "amicable" at the time.

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Electra had previously been married to former NBA starDennis Rodman. The pair tied the knot in November 1998 and divorcingsix months later.

Carmen Electra and Dennis Rodman in 1999 Denny Keeler/Hulton Archive

She also briefly datedPrincein the '90s, and was linked toSimon Cowellfrom late 2012 to early 2013 — and was known to have remained on good terms with them both.

While speaking to PEOPLE at the Jam for Janie event, Electra shared that she feels stronger than ever — and showed off a newback tattoothat she said symbolized both strength and protection.

"I got the back [tattoo]," she said, revealing a black tattoo of hands in prayer near her right shoulder blade.

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"You know, I've been stabbed in the back so many times. I figured if I have God's hands on my back, go ahead and try to stab me and see what kind of karma you get," she explained.

"Oh, yes, I've had so many swords I pulled out of my back. I've turned them into paddles, and I've used them as paddles to get to shore. Now I'm on the other side, and now I see and now I know what I don't want," she explained.

Read the original article onPeople

Carmen Electra Reveals Which of Her Famous Exes Taught Her 'How to Be Romantic' (Exclusive)

Araya Doheny/Getty NEED TO KNOW Carmen Electra revealed which one of her famous exes taught "how to be romantic" Electra, 53, c...
Billie Joe Armstrong performs with Green Day at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, Calif., on April 12, 2025 Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty

Key points

  • Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong had a special message for ICE agents at a Super Bowl pre-party in San Francisco.

  • The singer urged ICE personnel to "quit that s---ty job you have."

  • The singer also predicted that the Trump administration will "drop you like a bad f---ing habit" in the future.

Green Day'sBillie Joe Armstrongdoesn't envision a bright future for ICE agents.

The "Basket Case" singer, who isset to perform during the opening ceremonyat Super Bowl LX alongside his bandmates on Sunday, shared a candid message directed toward Immigration and Customs Enforcement during a performance on Friday night.

"This goes out to all the ICE agents out there, wherever you are,"Armstrong saidfrom the stage at an invitation-only concert held at San Francisco's Pier 29 on the Embarcadero, which was sponsored by FanDuel and Spotify. "Quit that s---ty job you have."

Mike Dirt, Tré Cool, and Billie Joe Armstrong performing with Green Day at the American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Oct. 6, 2024 Rich Polk/Penske Media via Getty

Rich Polk/Penske Media via Getty

Armstrong went on to project that at some point in the future, key figures in the Trump administration would abandon the people enforcing their immigration policies. "Because when this is over — and it will be over at some point in time — Kristi Noem, Stephen Miller,JD Vance,Donald Trump: They're gonna drop you like a bad f---ing habit. Come on this side of the line."

Armstrong also reportedly amended two of Green Day's hits to include more timely political targets within the lyrics, as he has in past performances. During "American Idiot," the singer changed the line "I'm not a part of a redneck agenda" to "I'm not a part of the MAGA agenda," in reference to Trump's campaign slogan Make America Great Again.

Additionally, while performing "Holiday," Armstrong changed the line "The representative from California has the floor" to "The representative from Epstein Island has the floor."

At the beginning of that song, Armstrong said, "This goes out to Minneapolis," in reference to the city that has seen widespread ICE activity that resulted in the slayings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti last month.

Representatives for the White House and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond toEntertainment Weekly's requests for comment.

President Donald Trump speaks during the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 5, 2026  SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty

SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty

Trump previouslyopposed the decisionto hire Green Day for a Super Bowl performance, and also condemned Bad Bunny's upcoming set at the game's halftime show.

"I'm anti-them," Trump said of the musicians last month. "I think it's a terrible choice. All it does is sow hatred. Terrible."

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Armstrong has repeatedly antagonized Trump and his associates in past performances. The singerheld up a Trump maskwith "IDIOT" written on it at a concert in Washington, D.C., in 2024. He has alsochanted, "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA" during performances of the group's song "Bang Bang." The frontman alsocompared Trump to Hitlerduring his 2016 presidential campaign.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Green Day urges ICE agents to quit their 's---ty' jobs at Super Bowl pre-party

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Key points Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong had a special message for ICE agents at a Super Bowl...
35th Anniversary of 'L.A. Law's' Lesbian Kiss

On February 7, 1991—35 years ago today—network television crossed a line it had spent decades carefully skirting, and then almost immediately stopped short of going any further.

That night,NBCaired an episode ofL.A. Lawtitled "He's a Crowd," which featured what would quickly be labeled the first lesbian kiss on U.S. television. The scene, brief but unmistakably tender, showed attorneys Abby Perkins (Michele Greene) and C.J. Lamb (Amanda Donohoe) sharing an intimate moment outside a restaurant after celebrating a professional victory.

The kiss wasn't played for shock value. It wasn't ajoke, a dare, or a throwaway gag. And unlike earlier momentssometimes cited as precedents, it was mutual—two characters genuinely drawn to each other, leaning in by choice.

RELATED: The Only Time the Entire 'Brady Bunch' Reunited After the Series

That distinction is why the moment landed differently.

Abby had long been established as heterosexual. C.J. would soon be revealed asbisexual, making her the first openly bisexual regular character on a network television series. The episode itself was written by series creatorDavid E. Kelley, whose show had already earned a reputation for tackling controversial social issues.

The reaction was swift but telling.According to Steven Capsuto's book"Alternate Channels: The Uncensored Story of Gay and Lesbian Images on Radio and Television," some advertisers pulled commercials from the broadcast, and NBC received complaints, though far fewer than might have been expected. Network executives acknowledged the pushback while also noting that other sponsors were willing to step in, albeit at reduced rates.

RELATED: Classic '70s Cop Drama Returning to TV

Within the LGBTQ community, the moment resonated far more deeply than its brief screen time suggested. For many viewers, it was the first time they had seen even a fragment of their own experience reflected on one of television's most prestigious dramas. The scene became a touchstone, replayed and discussed well beyond its original airing, wrote Capsuto in his book.

And yet, despite the attention, the story quietly stalled.

Although later episodes hinted that Abby and C.J.'s relationship might develop, it never truly did. Abby ultimately left the series at the end of the season, and the possibility of a sustained same-sex romance disappeared with her. The kiss remained historic, but isolated.

RELATED: 'Spenser: For Hire' Star Makes Rare Comment About Robert Urich

In the years that followed, television would repeatedly return to the idea of women kissing women—often during ratings sweeps—without committing to long-term storytelling. The pattern became so familiar that it earned its own shorthand: the "lesbian kiss episode." The moment would appear, generate buzz, and then vanish without consequence.

Even a decade later, writers continued to encounter resistance.Buffy the Vampire SlayerwriterMarti Noxonlater recalled being told by executives that while audiences might tolerate seeing women kiss once, showing it again implied something deeper, which was unacceptable.

RELATED: '60s Child Star 'Absolutely Heartbroken' Over Distressing News About TV Home Away From Home

"You can show girls kissing once, but you can't show them kissing twice… because the second time, it means that they liked it," said Noxonin a 2002 interview with NPR.

Seen in hindsight,L.A. Law's1991 kiss didn't just make history. It revealed the limits of what network television was willing to allow at the time. Progress, it turned out, could be acknowledged—as long as it didn't linger.

The moment opened a door. Television simply wasn't ready to walk through it yet.

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35th Anniversary of 'L.A. Law's' Lesbian Kiss

On February 7, 1991—35 years ago today—network television crossed a line it had spent decades carefully skirting, and the...
Tulsi Gabbard responds to senator's criticism over handling of whistleblower complaint

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard responded to criticism from Sen. Mark Warner and others that she allegedly "hid" a complaint from a whistleblower.

NBC Universal Karoline Leavitt holds daily White House press briefing (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)

"Senator Mark Warner and his friends in the Propaganda Media have repeatedly lied to the American people that I or the ODNI 'hid' a whistleblower complaint in a safe for eight months," Gabbard said in apost on X."This is a blatant lie."

A U.S. intelligence officialalleged wrongdoing by Gabbardin the handling of a whistleblower complaint that was filed with the intelligence community's inspector general in 2025, according to the official's lawyer and Gabbard's office. The official's attorney, Andrew Bakaj, said the complaint was filed with the intelligence community's inspector general in May and the whistleblower asked in June to share their complaint with lawmakers.

Warner, D-Va., is the vice chairman of theSenate Select Committee on Intelligence. He told NBC News Thursday that Congress didn't receive the complaint until February and that "much of it was redacted."

The senator said that the monthslong delay to share the complaint with lawmakers showed that Gabbard is "either not competent to do the job, or if her legal advisors didn't tell her she didn't have competent legal advice."

"This was, again, a complete avoidance of and I think it was an effort to try to bury this whistleblower complaint," Warner said.

Gabbard addressed the criticism in a long post Saturday, writing that she is not, and never has been, in possession or control of the complaint. She said that the inspector general "was in possession of and responsible for securing the complaint for months."

Gabbard said the first time that she saw the complaint was two weeks ago, "when I had to review it to provide guidance on how it should be securely shared with Congress."

She said the complaint "contains baseless allegations," but nonetheless needed to be secured in a safe, like all whistleblower complaints due to them containing "highly classified and compartmented intelligence."

Gabbard went on to lay out a timeline in her post, writing that she first became aware of the complaint against her in June, but that neither former inspector general Tamara Johnson or current inspector general Christopher Fox — whostarted his role on Oct. 7— found it to be credible.

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Olivia Coleman, press secretary for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, confirmed in an email to NBC News that both inspector generals "did not find the complaint credible."

Gabbard said that while she communicated with Inspector General Johnson during the investigation, she was not informed that the whistleblower wished to show the complaint to Congress and therefore did not issue security instructions to do so.

Gabbard said she was "made aware of the need to provide security guidance" by inspector general Fox on Dec. 4.

"I took immediate action to provide the security guidance to the Intelligence Community Inspector General who then shared the complaint and referenced intelligence with relevant members of Congress last week," Gabbard wrote in her post.

"Senator Warner's decision to spread lies and baseless accusations over the months for political gain, undermines our national security and is a disservice to the American people and the Intelligence Community," the post continued.

Bakaj on Monday accused Gabbard of trying to hide the complaint from Congress.

"After nearly eight months of taking illegal actions to protect herself, the time has come for Tulsi Gabbard to comply with the law and fully release the disclosure to Congress," Bakaj said in a statement released by Whistle Blower Aid, a nonprofit group representing employees of the government and private-sector aiming to uncover wrongdoing.

Coleman denied any wrongdoing by the director of national intelligence, writingin a poston Monday that the whistleblower was a "politically motivated individual."

Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark.,who chairs the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, saidin a postTuesday that he concurred with the inspector generals' conclusions that the complaint was not credible.

"The ensuing media firestorm—fed by speculation and little fact—was an attempt to smear @DNIGabbard and the Trump Administration," Crawford wrote.

Tulsi Gabbard responds to senator's criticism over handling of whistleblower complaint

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard responded to criticism from Sen. Mark Warner and others that she allegedl...

 

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