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Seven adopted dogs on their way to their forever homes are killed after vehicle transporting them bursts into flames
Seven adopted dogs on their way to their forever homes are killed after vehicle transporting them bursts into flames

The Independent

time6 days ago

  • General
  • The Independent

Seven adopted dogs on their way to their forever homes are killed after vehicle transporting them bursts into flames

A van carrying 11 dogs rescued and rehabilitated by Cypress Lucky Mutt Rescue in Texas was en route to New York to meet their new families when the vehicle caught fire in Illinois on Friday, Click2Houston reported. The van's drivers managed to save just four dogs after their vehicle went up in flames. Seven of the dogs did not survive the fire, the rescue said. One of the dogs, named Guapo, suffered severe burns from the fire and was hospitalized, but is expected to make a full recovery. It was not immediately clear how the fire started, but the rescue team described the blaze as 'fast and intense.' In a post on social media, Cypress Lucky Mutt Rescue thanked their drivers for being able to save four dogs – Guapo, Sasha, Charlie and Magnolia. The rescue also paid tribute to the seven dogs who did not survive, writing 'RIP Pancho, Piglet, Penny, Clover, Stetson, Lancelot and Presto.' 'We are devastated by this loss. Words cannot express the grief we feel, nor the gratitude we have for our drivers—true heroes in this unimaginable moment—and for the many people who stepped in to help at the scene,' the rescue wrote on social media. 'We take a small amount of comfort in hoping the ones that did not survive passed quickly and without prolonged suffering,' the post continued. While Guapo remains in the hospital receiving care, the three other surviving dogs have since been united with their adoptive families.

Colleges are about to pay players. Plus, best season ever by an NCAA men's basketball league?
Colleges are about to pay players. Plus, best season ever by an NCAA men's basketball league?

New York Times

time08-04-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

Colleges are about to pay players. Plus, best season ever by an NCAA men's basketball league?

Until Saturday Newsletter 🏈 | This is The Athletic's college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news, I don't think Far Cry 6 is an excellent game, but it does have a helpful crocodile named Guapo. Two things that happened on Aug. 3, 1852, in New Hampshire: Since literally day one in 1852, college sports has been a business contorting itself around amateurism. But it would take about a century for all of college sports' powers to agree to universities compensating that labor with mere scholarships. And roughly another half-century for the NCAA to agree athletes can make NIL money, as long as it doesn't come from the piles of revenue they generate for schools. Advertisement And now look at us, nearly 173 years after that day on the lake. College sports is finally about to go somewhat legit. That House v. NCAA thing that's been in news headlines for seemingly forever? It's wrapping up. Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken held a hearing on a proposed settlement, and her final approval is likely coming soon. From our thorough explainer: 'If approved, schools will be permitted to directly pay athletes through about $20.5 million in revenue sharing during the 2025-26 athletic year. 'In addition, nearly $2.8 billion will be set aside as back-pay damages for athletes dating back to 2016 who did not have the opportunity to be compensated for their name, image and likeness.' If a version of that deal goes through, pending Wilken's few remaining questions during a follow-up next week, amateurism will no longer be the Division I business model. (Non-scholarship programs in Division III and elsewhere: proceed as normal.) This would be a truly new era. The portal and NIL have felt revolutionary, but they just expanded and codified things that had always been happening. Schools paying players actual money? That would be new. Power programs had already been operating as if this settlement will happen. SEC schools, for instance, are expected to distribute their $20.5 million budgets by adapting the settlement's back-pay formula: '75 percent to football players, 15 percent for men's basketball, 5 percent for women's basketball and 5 percent for others.' (Player payments in those first three would average in the low six figures or high fives, along with scholarships and NIL.) 'The NCAA and its members are finally acknowledging theirs is a multibillion-dollar commercial enterprise, not an after-school activity,' wrote Stewart Mandel after visiting Wilken's courtroom again. 'The revenue from their massive TV contracts will finally be accessible to the athletes that generate it.' Also, in case the judge's name sounds familiar: Yep, Wilken handled 2014's Ed O'Bannon case that, among other things, forced EA Sports' college football game to go away until it could do things legally. That worked out fine. 🌀 With the portal reopening next week, who are the teams to watch? Stanford just changed head coaches, while Texas Tech might continue loading up. ❓ After Tulane suspended QB TJ Finley following his arrest on a charge of possessing a stolen vehicle, his lawyers said he'd been the victim of a scam. 💰 Even if someone who's sold over 25 million albums buys the naming rights to your stadium, NIL remains a challenge. Advertisement ⏰ New mock draft by Nick Baumgardner. Shedeur Sanders tumbles. 🏀 Former NCAA president Cedric Dempsey died Saturday at 92. He oversaw the organization's Y2K-era TV money boom. 🏈 Brock Huard is stepping away from calling CFB games for Fox so he can coach tight ends on his son's high school team. 🌎 In year one of the Pac-2's sports calendar, Oregon State and Washington State have had a hard time on various fields and courts. 🏈 From late last week: The NCAA is investigating Michigan State over potential recruiting violations during former head coach Mel Tucker's tenure. The best season ever had by any men's college basketball league: quite arguably the SEC's run that ended last night with Florida beating Houston for the title. 'Nine years after hitting rock bottom with three NCAA bids,' explains Joe Rexrode, 'the SEC collected on a concerted effort to prioritize the sport.' Joe also notes: As someone who remembers the 2010s' mocking #SECBasketballFever hashtag, which would appear whenever pre-Bruce Pearl Auburn was sadly fumbling around or when a team like 2013 Ole Miss remained unranked even while winning the SEC tournament, this is still taking some getting used to. Still, one program held the conference up even when it was at its most feverish. Seth Emerson notes these are the championship leaders in men's basketball over the past 20 seasons: No such consternation on the women's side, where Geno Auriemma won UConn's record-setting 12th title (no matter how many times per year he tries to retire), thanks in large part to Paige Bueckers, who was already a legend anyway. Pretty straightforward, relatively. That's it for today. Last week's most-clicked link: Which college football team has the most fans? 📫 Love Until Saturday? Check out The Athletic's other newsletters.

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