Month: February 2025
RSF Announces Plans for Breakaway Government in Sudan
Amid reports of new atrocities by their troops in Sudan, leaders of the Rapid Support Forces were cheered at an elaborate political event in Kenya.
OpenAI’s Former Chief Technology Officer Starts Her Own Company
Mira Murati, who left OpenAI last year, has helped establish Thinking Machines Lab, a new artificial intelligence start-up.
Is This Champions League Fixture One of the Most Exciting in All of Soccer?
Manchester City and Real Madrid have exchanged 30 goals between them in their past seven meetings.
More Former N.F.L. Players Are Becoming College Coaches. Is It a Good Thing?
Colorado’s Deion Sanders isn’t the only high-profile N.F.L. alumnus strolling college sidelines. But the depth of the coaches’ experience differs.
How the Indiana Fever Are Managing the Caitlin Clark Mania
“She tries to live her life in an authentic way. But she’s very much Taylor Swift 2.0,” said Clark’s new coach, Stephanie White.
Why a U.S.-Canada Rematch in the Championship Is the 4 Nations’ Dream Scenario
Dominance for the Americans? Redemption for the Canadians? It’s all on the line in Thursday’s final, a columnist for The Athletic writes.
The N.F.L. Prospects Who Could Determine Round 1 of the Draft
If you took a poll of every team’s outlook right now, you would get 32 very different answers, a columnist for The Athletic writes.
Which M.L.B. Teams Aced Their Off-Season Assignments?
The Dodgers seemed to get even better. But here’s how everybody else fared.
Thanks to the Big Ten and SEC, College Football Might Be in Trouble
These two conferences are controlling the sport. They are about to set the whole thing aflame, a columnist for The Athletic writes.
The ‘Relationship of Dependence’ Between a Barred Coach and a Wimbledon Champion
A WTA investigation summary obtained by The Athletic said that Stefano Vukov engaged in “abusive conduct” toward Elena Rybakina.