logo
Mahomes says he will not participate in Olympic flag football

Mahomes says he will not participate in Olympic flag football

Japan Times2 days ago

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes has ruled out playing flag football at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics, saying he will leave representing the United States in the sport's Olympic debut to "the younger guys."
NFL teams approved a resolution last month allowing their players to compete in flag football at the LA Games. Mahomes, twice the NFL's MVP and a three-time Super Bowl MVP, will be 32 when the 2028 Games begin.
Speaking during the offseason organized team activities this week, Mahomes told reporters, "I'll probably leave that to the younger guys. I'll be a little older by the time that comes around."
"It's awesome. Honestly, just to be able to showcase the NFL to the whole world through flag football."
The NFL has ramped up its promotion of flag football, a non-contact format of football, since the International Olympic Committee approved it for the 2028 program in 2023, with an eye toward drawing more women into an arena long dominated by men.
The league itself had long been on board with players competing in the Games, while multiple athletes, including Mahomes, said two years ago they wanted to compete at the Olympics.
Six men's teams and six women's teams are set to compete in flag football at the LA Games, with 10 players per team competing in a five-on-five format.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US proposed allowing Iran limited low-level uranium enrichment, report says
US proposed allowing Iran limited low-level uranium enrichment, report says

NHK

timean hour ago

  • NHK

US proposed allowing Iran limited low-level uranium enrichment, report says

A US media outlet says the United States has proposed allowing Iran to conduct limited low-level uranium enrichment on its own soil. President Donald Trump quickly posted a denial. On Monday, Axios reported what it said were the details of a US proposal made to Iran last Saturday, citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter. The Trump administration has been pressing Iran to completely halt its uranium enrichment. The two sides have been engaged in talks, but have failed to narrow their differences. Axios says the latest proposal would not allow Iran to build new enrichment facilities and calls for a halt to new research and development on centrifuges. However, the report says Iran would be permitted to engage in limited enrichment activities at a concentration level of 3 percent -- a key threshold for the peaceful use of uranium. The Axios report says the proposal shows "far more flexibility" than past US demands. Trump responded in a social media post that "Under our potential Agreement -- WE WILL NOT ALLOW ANY ENRICHMENT OF URANIUM!" Also on Monday, Reuters news agency quoted a senior diplomat close to Iran's negotiating team as saying that "Iran is drafting a negative response to the US proposal."

China's rare earths grip gives Xi leverage in U.S. trade duel
China's rare earths grip gives Xi leverage in U.S. trade duel

Japan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Japan Times

China's rare earths grip gives Xi leverage in U.S. trade duel

After the U.S. and China agreed in Geneva to lower tariffs from astronomical heights, tensions are now surging over access to chips and rare earths. And Beijing increasingly appears to have an edge. President Donald Trump on Friday accused China of violating the agreement struck last month, and sought a call with Xi Jinping to sort things out. The main sticking point appears to be critical minerals, with U.S. officials complaining Beijing hadn't sped up exports needed for cutting-edge electronics. The U.S. has said the decision to reduce tariffs hinged on a Chinese agreement to lift controls on some rare earths. "It's going to require a discussion between the presidents of the two countries,' Deputy U.S. Treasury Secretary Michael Faulkender said Monday in a brief interview. As China keeps constraints on metals critical to America's national security, Washington is ramping up its own tech restrictions. Over the past three weeks, the U.S. has barred the shipping of critical jet engine parts to China, throttled Beijing's access to chip-design software and slapped fresh curbs on Huawei chips. That's sparked anger in the world's second-largest economy. Chinese officials on Monday vowed to respond and accused the U.S. of undermining the Geneva consensus, dimming the chance of a leaders call. For years, Washington was believed to have the advantage over China in the fight for technological dominance thanks to its grip on semiconductor supply chains. Xi has shown he's ready to fight back, in part by tightening controls over critical minerals in a bid to force the U.S. into easing its restrictions. While the Trump administration has shown little sign of relenting on chip curbs, it has discovered replacing China as a supplier of rare earths could take years and cause pain for key industries. The Asian nation produces almost 70% of the world's metals crucial for making fighter jets, nuclear reactor control rods and other critical technology. China is gaining ground in the standoff, according to Cory Combs, associate director at consultancy Trivium China who specializes in supply chains. Washington is still a decade away from securing rare earths independently from Beijing, while Chinese firms have developed capable alternatives to most U.S. chips, he said. U.S. President Donald Trump (left) and Chinese leader Xi Jinping | Bloomberg "China's leverage is more durable than a lot of the U.S. leverage at this stage,' he added. "I'm not sure if this works out well for the U.S..' The dispute has the potential to endanger the fragile trade truce between Washington and Beijing. In theory, tariffs could snap back to more than 100% after the 90-day negotiating period. Trump has incentive to avoid that, after the U.S. economy shrank at the start of the year and markets panicked under the weight of huge tariffs. Supply-chain warfare As part of the agreement struck in Switzerland, China promised to remove or suspend "non-tariff countermeasures taken against the United States' after Trump announced punitive duties in April. The Chinese government did not elaborate on what that entailed. Rare-earth exporters must apply for permits from the Ministry of Commerce. That process is opaque and difficult to verify, allowing officials to turn it on and off again with little visibility from the outside world. The paperwork involved has caused hold-ups, which are only now showing signs of easing. "We are seeing some approvals come through — certainly slower than industry would like,' said Michael Hart, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. "Some of the delay is related to China working through their new system.' For some U.S. firms, the metals can't flow fast enough. Ford temporarily shuttered a factory in Chicago last month because it ran short of rare earth components. At a long-running U.S. defense aviation conference Combs recently attended, rare earths were a top talking point. Attendees took the threat "very seriously,' he said. Such concerns show why export controls have become a central pillar of China's supply-chain warfare: They can hurt U.S. industries while causing little harm at home. Tariffs, in comparison, can be costly both for Chinese manufacturers and consumers. Giving Xi even greater leverage, the impact of China's rare earths controls aren't limited to American importers. India's largest electric scooter maker, Bajaj Auto, warned last week that the country's vehicle production will take a hit as early as July if China doesn't resume shipments. "Supplies and stocks are getting depleted as we speak,' said the firm's executive director Rakesh Sharma. Over 30 such applications have been made for shipping to Indian companies — and none have been approved so far, Sharma added. Companies from another large Asian importer only started getting permits last week, according to an official from the country who asked not to be named. China's squeeze on all countries highlights another risk for Trump: Strategic U.S. sectors, such as batteries and semiconductors, depend on South Korea and Japan for components. If Beijing cuts off those U.S. allies from rare earths, American firms could face even more pain. Japan's top trade negotiator Ryosei Akazawa called rare earths "undoubtedly a critical theme for economic security,' after emerging Friday from his latest round of trade negotiations with U.S. counterparts. Next battleground Critical minerals were flagged as the next battleground in U.S.-China ties at the height of Trump's first trade war, when Xi visited one of his country's biggest permanent magnet producers — a trip widely seen as an implied threat. In July 2023, Beijing followed through by slapping export curbs on gallium and germanium — minerals used to make semiconductors — after the U.S. sought to restrict China's access to artificial intelligence chips. Miners at the Bayan Obo mine in Inner Mongolia, China, in 2011 | REUTERS Recognizing the danger, the U.S. Department of Defense has pledged to develop a complete mine-to-magnet rare earth supply chain for all domestic defense needs by 2027. A lack of commercially viable natural reserves, few engineers trained in the extraction process and limited numbers of companies able to compete at the industry's thin price margins are just some of the challenges the department faces. The U.S. national security establishment has known about its dependency on China for years yet hasn't come up with a solution at scale, according to Liza Tobin, managing director of risk advisory firm Garnaut Global. Despite that, she said, the Trump adminstration isn't making concessions. "Over the last couple of weeks, you've seen them doubling down with this empowered Commerce Department strengthening and broadening the export controls,' she said. Catching up will depend on how deeply Washington is willing to spend. Trump is already tapping foreign capital. During the president's trip last month to the Middle East, MP Materials — the sole U.S. producer of rare earths — signed a deal with Saudi Arabia's top mining firm to develop a supply chain. The U.S. could also intensify cooperation with Australia's Lynas Rare Earths — the largest producer of separated rare earths outside of China, although that operation still sends some of its oxides to the Asian nation for refining. While capacity is building in Brazil, South Africa, Japan and Vietnam, they can't offer an immediate fix for U.S. firms. Beijing hasn't exhausted its leverage. Restrictions so far have targeted medium- and heavy-rare earths, which are concentrated in defense applications. Weaponizing light rare earths — such as neodymium and praseodymium — could deal an even bigger blow to the U.S. economy, as they're more widespread in consumer goods. For now, Xi is unlikely to pursue the most extreme options as it could invite blowback from vulnerable industries, said Neil Thomas, a fellow for Chinese politics at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis. "Beijing's controls on rare earths are a warning against further escalation,' he added. "But if U.S.-China tensions worsen again, then Beijing may start to inflict real pain on U.S. defense supply chains.'

For volatile Trump, trade pacts with China, Europe prove elusive
For volatile Trump, trade pacts with China, Europe prove elusive

Japan Times

time4 hours ago

  • Japan Times

For volatile Trump, trade pacts with China, Europe prove elusive

U.S. President Donald Trump is eager to land more trade deals, but talks with China and Europe continue to languish amid communications breakdowns and fresh tariff threats. So far, there have been few signs of a breakthrough with either of America's two biggest trading partners. In recent days, the path forward has only grown more complicated, with Trump engaging again in trade brinkmanship and pronouncements that have fueled tensions. Friction between the U.S. and China increased as Beijing claimed Washington had "seriously undermined' a recent tariff truce and threatened to defend its interests — hinting at possible retaliation. That came as the Trump administration accused the Chinese government of dragging its feet on lifting export controls on rare earths the U.S. saw as a linchpin of the deal. The White House on Monday sought to push ahead with efforts to arrange a call between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping to ease tensions, with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt saying she expected the leaders to speak this week. But representatives of the Chinese leader have yet to publicly reciprocate interest. Meanwhile, the European Union issued a fresh warning of countermeasures if Trump follows through on his tariff threats. The European Commission, which handles trade matters for the bloc, slammed Trump's promised 50% levy on steel and aluminum, saying it would undermine efforts to reach a resolution on trade barriers. Retaliatory measures are ready if no deal is reached, EU officials warned. Trump's negotiating style is driven by his fundamental faith in tariffs as an economic tool to reshape global trade, as well as a belief that outsize threats would help deliver maximum results during the 90-pause on his April 2 higher duties to allow time for negotiations. Thus far, that approach has delivered limited results. Aside from the pause with China, the U.S. president has reached a broad framework with the U.K. Deals with other major partners that Trump and his advisers have promised for weeks have yet to materialize. Despite the recent tumult, Trump's team has projected optimism that his approach will work. Leavitt argued Monday that Trump's threats brought the EU to the negotiating table and that the White House remains "hopeful and optimistic' they will reach a deal. "As you know, we are in discussions with many other countries around the world as well who understand the need to cut a good deal with this president and the administration,' she added. Trump's tariffs are also under legal threat after the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled last week that the majority of the levies were issued illegally and ordered them blocked. The ruling was paused by an appeals court to give the body time to review it. If the trade court ruling is upheld, it would deal a major setback for Trump's economic agenda and his ability to wield leverage with foreign capitals. Still, U.S. officials have pointed to some opportunities for progress. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer is set to meet with his European counterpart this week in Paris. If a call between Trump and Xi does materialize, it would be their first known conversation since January, before Trump's inauguration. Investors are watching the turbulent negotiations warily. European stocks edged lower Monday as global trade tensions rose. On Wall Street, stocks wavered as the tariff agenda caused market angst. As firms pulled back in the face of tariffs, U.S. factory activity contracted and a gauge of imports hit a 16-year low. The fragile detente between the U.S. and China has been under threat in recent weeks as the U.S. has taken a series of actions that frustrated the Chinese government. The Trump administration announced it planned to start revoking visas for Chinese students. Officials have also moved to restrict the sale of chip design software and critical U.S. jet engine parts to China, and crack down on Huawei Technologies exports. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said a call between Trump and Xi might be necessary to move forward. On Sunday, he expressed confidence that a direct conversation between Trump and Xi will help the two nations iron out some of their issues. "I think we're going to let the two principals have a conversation, and then everything will stem from that,' he said on CBS News' Face the Nation. Trump's complaints about the EU are longstanding. He recently accused the bloc of slow-walking negotiations and unfairly targeting U.S. companies with lawsuits and regulations. He threatened a higher 50% tariff on the bloc starting June 1, but delayed it until July 9 after a phone call with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store