
What's next for Livvy Dunne? The former LSU gymnast plans acting career
Dunne "of course" tuned into Taylor Swift's record-breaking appearance on the "New Heights" podcast alongside Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his brother Jason Kelce on Aug. 13.
And Dunne can relate to Swift, in that the two of them have captured a lot of attention during their respective careers.
"I can't believe that I can even say I have something in common with Taylor's Swift," Dunne told USA TODAY Sports ahead of the release of her Fanatics Sportsbook commercials. "We're in a similar boat where we do have new eyes on us because of a new sports fan base."
After finishing her eligibility at LSU last spring, Dunne is working on what's next. A self-described sports "fanatic," she said she'll "always be an athlete at heart." Whether she's cheering on her Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher boyfriend Paul Skenes or keeping up with the U.S. national gymnastics team, Dunne isn't too far removed from the game. And although she's no longer showcasing her leaps and tumbling passes at LSU, she's still performing.
"To be able to be in the Rose Bowl, first of all is iconic, but it's not every day you get to be in a bathtub on the 50-yard line shooting a commercial," Dunne said of her upcoming commercials with Fanatics Sportsbook. "I've always loved performing, whether it's on the floor exercise or choreographing a routine. I feel like it's kind of a natural transition for me into performing and acting on camera."
USA TODAY Sports caught up with Dunne in a wide-ranging interview that touched her admiration for Taylor Swift, mentorship of budding Olympic gymnast Hezly Rivera and upcoming campaign with Fantatics.
Livvy Dunne relates to Taylor Swift: 'I admire her'
Dunne was one of the 1.3 million viewers tuned into Swift's highly-anticipated debut on "New Heights." Swift has brought a legion of fans to the NFL, but some sports fans have taken offense to how much attention the Grammy award-winning musician's presence receives on the sidelines of Kansas City Chiefs games. Dunne said Swift's experience "really resonated" with her.
"She's a football fan and supporting her boyfriend that's a professional athlete, and I'm supporting my boyfriend that's a professional athlete," Dunne said. "That's something we also have in common is the criticism that can come along with that. And I think she handles it with such grace."
Being the partner of a professional athlete can be challenging. Dunne recently posted a social media video showing her various accounts being inundated with Skenes memes and GIFs. Despite the backlash, Dunne said it's been "really cool to navigate through it and learn and be a big baseball fan," noting that she'll take inspiration from Swift's approach to football critics.
"I admire (Swift) in so many different ways and how she handles the criticism with such grace and how she has her own success alongside her professional athlete partner," Dunne said.
Livvy Dunne hosted LSU gymnastics recruit Hezly Rivera
American gymnast Hezly Rivera — who won a gold medal with the U.S. women's national team at the 2024 Paris Olympics, in addition to the all-around title at the 2025 U.S. National Gymnastics Championships — announced she'll join LSU gymnastics after graduating high school in 2026. Dunne was competing with the Tigers when Rivera came to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, for her official visit.
"I actually was there on (Rivera's) recruiting trip. I was still a gymnast at LSU and actually the gymnasts are a huge part of the recruiting trip," recalled Dunne. "That's why I went to LSU to begin with because the team dynamic was just amazing. It was better than any other school I visited"
Dunne, 22, recalled training alongside Rivera, 17, in their home state of New Jersey when Rivera was 8 years old. Dunne said she remembered Rivera being a "phenomenal gymnast" then, just as she is now.
"My biggest advice to Hezly would just authentically be herself and that's why LSU recruited her," Dunne said. "What makes LSU so special, yes, it is the fan base. Yes, it is the amazing competitive atmosphere being a student athlete there, but the diversity and how different every individual is on LSU's team is so special. And that's what made us win the 2024 national championship. I think that diversity and the adversity we went through as individuals. So I would say be true to herself."
Fanatics rented out Rose Bowl for Livvy Dunne commercial
Livvy Dunne's next act starts now.
Fanatics CEO Michael Rubin is "either all or nothing," Dunne said. That mindset carried over in the making of her commercials with Fanatics Sportsbook as the sports platform rented out the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, to shoot three cinematic ads titled, 'Explained by Livvy Dunne." One of the ads features Dunne sitting in a clawfoot bathtub on the 50-yard line, channeling Margot Robbie in the 2015 film "The Big Short." Another ad shows her snacking on a turkey leg in the stands.
"I knew that this would be a perfect stepping stone into the onscreen acting career that I love and I want to pursue," Dunne added. "This was one of the first commercials and onscreen productions I've done that was that big and where I had to remember a script and honestly, it was so authentic... It was really just a match made in heaven. It was so creative and the production was so cinematic, and I'm so excited for everybody to see the commercial."
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New York Times
13 minutes ago
- New York Times
2026 college football national title odds: Texas enters season as favorite, but field appears wide open
Five of the six national champions from the 2018-23 seasons went undefeated, marking an era filled with dominant teams. Last year's debut of the 12-team College Football Playoff featured a two-loss Ohio State team as national champion, which could signal that being a dominant champion is now more difficult. Advertisement The volume and ease of transfers, NIL spending and a playoff format that is more forgiving of regular-season blemishes appear to have balanced the playing field just enough compared to the recent juggernauts of 2019 LSU and 2020 Alabama. That balance is playing out in the betting odds to win the national title this season. Texas is favored on BetMGM with +450 odds. The Longhorns are No. 1 in both major preseason polls, so their position at the top of the odds board lines up, but those odds do not display much confidence in Texas as the favorite. The +450 odds imply the Longhorns have roughly an 18 percent chance of winning the national title. That's the betting way of saying this appears to be a wide-open season. Seven teams have odds of +1000 (1o-to-1) or shorter. That means the gap between Texas at the top and Alabama in the seventh spot on the odds board is relatively small. Beyond the fact that 12 teams get into the Playoff, lowering the bar to get into the postseason and giving more teams (like Ohio State last year) a chance to win it all, a lot of top programs enter this season with major question marks, especially at quarterback. Texas is getting some love for having Arch Manning, but his recruiting profile and famous last name are still carrying a lot of weight for a quarterback with only 95 pass attempts at the college level, and barely half of those came against power conference opponents. Manning is also the preseason favorite to win the Heisman Trophy, but that doesn't mean there isn't some level of uncertainty about how he will perform. Other premier programs like Ohio State, Alabama, Georgia and Notre Dame are also going with first-year starters at quarterback. Despite that, those teams are all in the top eight of the preseason AP Top 25. Inexperience at quarterback isn't necessarily a detriment to winning a national title. In recent years, Mac Jones (2020 Alabama), Trevor Lawrence (2018 Clemson), Jake Coker (2015 Alabama), J.T. Barrett/Cardale Jones (2014 Ohio State), Jameis Winston (2013 Florida State), A.J. McCarron (2011 Alabama) and Cam Newton (2010 Auburn) were first-year Division I starters to win national titles (and you can include Tua Tagovailoa on that list, even though he didn't start most of the season). Teams can win it all with a first-year starter, but having a lot of top programs with new faces at quarterback does make the season harder to project. That's why the betting odds are relatively balanced among the top contenders. Advertisement Defending champion Ohio State just named Julian Sayin, a redshirt freshman and a five-star recruit out of high school, its starter for the season opener against Texas. Headline writers who like puns will be thrilled to be able to play around with QBs named Arch and Sayin, but that game should have an early impact on national title odds with the Buckeyes just below Texas at +525. Georgia and Penn State follow OSU at +700. The Nittany Lions made the semifinals last year and return quarterback Drew Allar, while Georgia will break in Gunner Stockton. Next up are Oregon and Clemson at +900. Clemson is more in the Penn State category with Cade Klubnik back at quarterback. Oregon has UCLA transfer Dante Moore stepping in after he backed up Dillon Gabriel last season. Alabama also has a relative unknown at quarterback in Ty Simpson, who was named the starter a week ago. Simpson will be tasked with getting Alabama back into national title contention after the Crimson Tide missed the 12-team playoff last season. Last year's championship game loser Notre Dame is +1200. The Fighting Irish haven't even named a starting QB yet, but remain in the top 10 of both the preseason polls and in the betting odds. The Irish are a bit lower in the betting odds than the polls. ND is fifth in the Coaches' Poll and sixth in the AP Top 25, but only eighth on BetMGM's odds board to win the national title. LSU is the last team before a solid dropoff in the odds. The Tigers are +1400 with returning quarterback Garrett Nussmeier guiding the optimism around Brian Kelly's team. Betting/odds links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication. (Photo of Quintrevion Wisner: Alex Slitz / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

USA Today
42 minutes ago
- USA Today
Danger, injury and death are accepted as part of motocross sport, even for children
HURRICANE MILLS, TN — Forty-two teenage boys with helmets and colorful uniforms pushed their dirt bikes to the starting line. They were among about 1,000 riders, who must be at least 4 years old to race. The site is Loretta Lynn's Ranch, about 70 miles west of Nashville and home to the most prestigious event in amateur motocross — the Monster Energy AMA Amateur National Motocross Championship. On the opening day of racing for the 44-year-old annual event held July 28-Aug. 2 event, the teens revved the engines of 250cc motorcycles built to soar off jumps and tear around the 1.1-mile dirt track. It's regarded among the safer tracks in amateur motocross despite three riders having died since 2008 from injuries suffered while racing. The field was full again this year, organizers said, as were 42 gates with riders baking under the sun before the first 250 B race of the week. Organizers resisted calls to leave one gate empty in honor of Aidan Zingg, a 16-year-old rising star who died June 28 during a mid-race crash in Mammoth Lakes, California. Zingg won the Supermini 2 national championship last year and would have graduated to 250 B this year. "Nope, that's not how it works here," said Tim Cotter, Director of MX Sports, which runs the event. "The next guy up, he goes in the gate." The official tribute for Zingg was a hype video made by Kawasaki, which sponsored Zingg, and played during an opening ceremony the night before practice runs began. A Celebration of Life for Zingg was held Monday, Aug. 18 near his family's home in Hemet, California. The event at Loretta Lynn's Ranch was a chance to understand the impact of his death. Chris Wood, the father of a 15-year-old phenom, said he felt compelled to talk to his son Carson after Zingg's fatal crash. "I told him, you have an option to quit, this is your decision," Chris Wood told USA TODAY Sports. "He's risking his life every time he rides that dirt bike. So there has to be a point where it has to be his choice and not mom and dad's anymore." The waiting was over for the 250 B class. The gates dropped. The bikes launched. The riders burst off the line. Carson Wood was among them. Can't afford to lose Some riders wore decals that included Zingg's initials and his riding number, 39. Others mentioned him in post-victory speeches. "It definitely hits your mind like, man, do you really want to do this? Is it worth it?" Carson Wood told USA TODAY Sports. "But once you get this far into the sport, it's really hard to just turn back around and just quit that easily." Zingg won his first AMA national championship last year, which helped him secure a two-year sponsorship deal with Kawasaki. Deals like that can keep dreams alive for kids, who may otherwise be priced out of racing. Race bikes can easily exceed $10,000, gear costs about $1,000 and the high-octane race fuel is more than $20 per gallon. Not to mention the transportation costs of getting to the races. "It's a super expensive sport," Zingg's father, Bob, told USA TODAY Sports. Carson Wood's parents, Chris and Jaclin, said funding their son's motocross career led to their electricity and phones being shut down, one of their cars being repossessed and other bills going unpaid. "Yeah," Chris Wood said. "Scary." When Carson Wood got old enough to collect bonuses by winning races, his parents recalled, he began to say, "I can't afford to lose." "There was definitely some pressure, because anytime I won that's how food gets on the table and that's how rent gets paid and stuff like that," Carson Wood said. "So if I didn't win, that really hurt us a lot, so I had no choice but to win." At Loretta Lynn's, Carson Wood won one of his six races, broke a middle finger and sounded as determined as ever to keep help paying the family's bills. He could turn pro as early as next year. "Yeah, this sport's definitely risky," he said. "Your life's on the line every time you put your leg over that bike, and there's really not much you can do besides just train and stay smart." Too much power Zingg's death did not stem from high speed. The crash took place on a turn. But nonetheless, it spurred talk of safety concerns and injury prevention measures that include the development of an airbag vest. Zingg's mother, Shari, said he died from cardiac tamponade, which can be caused by blunt trauma. Zingg's autopsy report is not complete, according to the Mono County Sheriff's Office that serves Mammoth Lakes and is handling the autopsy. The discussion of safety in motorcross largely has focused on bigger and faster bikes increasingly being raced by younger riders. Zingg was riding a 250. The fastest dirt bike is 450, which can reach speeds upward of 80 mph. The matter surfaced at Loretta Lynn's Ranch when the event organizers met with representatives from nine motorcycle manufacturers: Honda, Kawasaki, Yamaha, Suzuki, Cobra, KRM, Gasgas, Husqvarna and Triumph. They discussed a litany of issues, and nothing seemed to unify the group like discussion of the 450. "I hate that bike," someone said among the crowded room. "I think it has too much power." When the meeting ended, the group seemed to be in agreement: No rider under 18 should be allowed to race on the 450. Later, Mike Burkeen, Deputy Director of Racing for the American Motorcycle Association (AMA) – which sanctions the event at Loretta Lynn's – said the sentiment in the meeting would not necessarily lead to change. Not before a long process, at least. The idea must be submitted to a 30-person committee, which makes proposals, posts them online for public comment, then debates and votes, according to Burkeen, who added, "If they vote yes on something, it comes back to my staff and my boss." Part of the process will assess how the rule change will financially impact manufacturers. "I think that that's always going to be part of it," Burkeen said, noting there are lot of riders under 18 riding the 450. FIRST BROKEN BONE Zingg began riding dirt bikes with his father when he was about 5. Which, by some standards, made him a later starter. The youngest class of riders at Loretta Lynn's is 4 to 6. They ride tyke-sized bikes that travel up to 30 mph. Bretton Gonzales, 8, of Northern California looked like a comparative veteran. He sported a mullet and had a hand-painted red, white and blue helmet that Evel Knievel would have worn with pride. "It's just fun," Gonzales said when asked why he rides. Never mind that this year he broke his right arm in a motocross accident. "First broken bone," said Gonzales' father, Brandon. "He was riding his bike with his cast on all the time." Meredith Lloyd of Bethesda, Maryland, stood near her 6-year-old daughter, Codie Mae Lloyd, who started racing at 4, according to her mother. "In the RV before we head out, we cover her in prayer," Meredith Lloyd said, adding her husband raced ATVs and she comes from a racing family. 'As soon as she could walk she started on a little bicycle, and no fear." Brothers Tripp Roberts, 6, and Cody Roberts, 8, of Dallas were with their mother, Suzanne, a nurse practitioner whose husband rode motocross. She watched as Tripp prepared to race. "Since I work in health care, I might be either the best Moto mom or the worst one," Suzanne Roberts said with a smile. "My kids always laugh and say, unless it's broken, don't go to mom. Because I don't have very much sympathy for them. They know if you're hurt you can come to mom, and if you're not hurt, get back up. "We want to instill in them perseverance and that's the best thing about the Moto community." She said Cody broke his femur two years ago. "We didn't know if he wanted to ride again," Suzanne Roberts said. "He asked to get on the bike and said, 'I got to do it.' That was great to see him overcome that fear." 'Unfortunately, it's part of the sport' Chris Canning, a 31-year-old rider from Connecticut, entered the trailer that serves as the headquarters at Loretta Lynn's with braces on both of his wrists and an unsteady gait. He joined the event's top officials, who tracked him down after seeing video online of Canning hitting a tree on a jump and plummeting to the ground. The organizers said they wanted understand what happened and ended up adjusting the track to avoid the risk of another accident on that jump. According to Canning, his injuries included: broken ribs, a broken scapula, contusions on his right lung and blood in his lungs. "This ain't going to stop me," Canning told USA TODAY Sports. He didn't hold the track or the sport responsible for his latest crash. He and the officials agreed that a bump developed on the track during a day of racing, leading to the wreck. The track would be adjusted, and Canning would heal – again. "Last year, I was off the whole year because I blew this wrist apart," he said. "Unfortunately, it's part of the sport." Despite the broken wrists, Canning said he drove himself to a nearby hospital because he was worried about chest injuries. There are also medical services on site. During one 15-minute period at Loretta Lynn's, three riders who had fallen during the same race were brought to the tented center. One wore an oxygen mask and complained about having trouble swallowing. Another had broken a foot. A third looked dazed sitting in an ice bath. All three riders were treated successfully, said Carole Dempsay, a paramedic helping run the operation. She also said they treated 40 fractures during the six-day event. That included Carson Wood breaking a middle finger but still winning his last race. "We had a relatively safe week at the ranch," said Cotter of MX Sports. "By weekend we only transported two athletes to the hospital. And as of Monday morning, no one was in the hospital. With over 30,000 laps, we believe that is a successful event." And, as Cotter said before the event began, "Motorsports is inherently dangerous. We can't make it safe. If it was safe, it'd be like shuffleboard."


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Former LSU football transfer quarterback Walker Howard named starter for in-state foe
Source: Louisiana has named former Ole Miss/LSU quarterback Walker Howard the school's starting quarterback, and he'll make his first college start against Rice on Aug. 30. Howard ranked as ESPN's No. 3 dual-threat QB recruit in Class of 2022 behind Cade Klubnik and Ty Simpson. Former LSU quarterback Walker Howard earned the starting role at his third school, according to a report from ESPN's Pete Thamel on Tuesday. Howard will make the first start of his collegiate career for Louisiana-Lafayette. The Ragin' Cajuns kick off their season against Rice on August 30 at 8 PM. Howard got the nod over redshirt sophomore Lunch Winfield and redshirt freshman Daniel Beale. Recruited during the 2022 cycle, Howard was the No. 3 dual-threat quarterback in the class behind Cade Klubnik and Ty Simpson as a top-50 overall recruit. He committed to LSU and spent the season backing up Heisman Trophy winner Jayden Daniels and Garrett Nussmeier before transferring. Howard stuck with LSU through a head coaching transition and was one of the top-ranked signees in Brian Kelly's first class. Howard played the past two years at Ole Miss and appeared in four games, completing three passes for 56 yards. The transfer to Louisiana marks a homecoming for the Lafayette native. He won two state titles at St. Thomas More High School.