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'Party of Five' star Scott Wolf's wife Kelley reveals separation after 21-year marriage
'Party of Five' star Scott Wolf's wife Kelley reveals separation after 21-year marriage

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

'Party of Five' star Scott Wolf's wife Kelley reveals separation after 21-year marriage

'Party of Five' star Scott Wolf's wife Kelley reveals separation after 21-year marriage After two decades of marriage, Scott Wolf and his wife Kelley are going their separate ways. Kelley Wolf, who wed the "Party of Five" alum in May 2004, announced the couple's separation in an emotional post on Instagram June 10. "It is with a heavy heart that Scott and I are moving forward with the dissolution of our marriage," Kelley, 48, wrote. "This has been a long, quiet journey for me — rooted in hope, patience, and care for our children," Kelley continued. "While I will not speak publicly about the details, I feel peace knowing that I've done everything I can to walk this path with integrity and compassion." Sydney Sweeney breaks silence on Jonathan Davino breakup, is 'loving' single life USA TODAY has reached out to representatives for Scott Wolf for comment. The Teen Choice Awards-nominated actor, 57, shares three children with Kelley: sons Jackson Kayse, 16, and Miller William, 12, and daughter Lucy Marie, 11. "Scott Wolf is one of the best fathers I've ever known and one of the best partners a woman could have the privilege of sharing life with," Kelley wrote. "He is kind, thoughtful, funny, and beautiful in spirit." She continued: "We both look forward to an extraordinary life centered around the most extraordinary children. My priority has always been their well-being — and my own healing. That will never change." 10 bingeable memoirs to check out: Celebrities tell all about aging, marriage and Beyoncé While Kelley did not specify the cause of her separation from Wolf, the TV personality said she is "stepping into a chapter of peace, freedom, and protection — with grace." "Please respect our privacy during this time," Kelley concluded. "May we all remember: healing isn't loud. It's sacred. 🤍"

How the SEC-Big Ten working to control the College Football Playoff affects Clemson, ACC
How the SEC-Big Ten working to control the College Football Playoff affects Clemson, ACC

USA Today

time21-02-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

How the SEC-Big Ten working to control the College Football Playoff affects Clemson, ACC

How the SEC-Big Ten working to control the College Football Playoff affects Clemson, ACC The SEC and Big Ten are tightening their grip on the College Football Playoff, leaving the rest of the sport, including Clemson and the ACC, to deal with the fallout. Reports this week confirm that once the new ESPN contract begins in 2026, the two powerhouse conferences will have full control over the CFP's format. Their plan prioritizes their own leagues, securing four automatic bids each while limiting the ACC and Big 12 to just two apiece. The highest-ranked Group of Five champion gets one bid, and the CFP selection committee's influence will be drastically reduced. This power move has been in motion for a while. Last spring, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti threatened to break away from the CFP unless they were given more control. The other FBS conferences and Notre Dame ultimately caved, signing an agreement that hands the two leagues authority over the future playoff structure. Even before the new deal takes effect, Sankey and Petitti are pushing for immediate changes. At their joint athletic directors' meeting in New Orleans, they agreed to alter the current seeding process, favoring the highest-ranked teams over conference champions. This comes after Boise State and Arizona State earned byes in last year's playoff, which the SEC and Big Ten opposed. For any changes before 2026, all FBS commissioners and Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua must unanimously agree. But with the SEC and Big Ten dictating the sport's direction, their influence may be tough to stop. Now, the ACC and Big 12 face a critical decision—push back or risk being permanently sidelined. If they don't act soon, college football's future may belong entirely to the SEC and Big Ten. It's a bit scary to see what college football is becoming.

This 14-team CFP proposal from SEC & Big Ten could alter college football FOREVER
This 14-team CFP proposal from SEC & Big Ten could alter college football FOREVER

Yahoo

time17-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

This 14-team CFP proposal from SEC & Big Ten could alter college football FOREVER

Dan Wetzel, Ross Dellenger and SI's Pat Forde look ahead to this week's meeting between the SEC & Big Ten conferences which may change college football as we know it. After only one season of the 12-team College Football Playoff, the SEC & Big Ten conferences have already determined it's time for a change. The conferences are likely to propose a 14 or even 16-team playoff next week that would grant four automatic qualifiers each to the SEC and Big Ten; two each to the ACC and Big 12; and one to the highest-ranked Group of Five champion. Dan, Ross & Pat take a deep dive into all the ways this proposal could alter the college football landscape including the devaluation of conference championship games, non-conference games becoming all but irrelevant, and scheduling disparities that would alienate many conferences. (0:55) SEC & Big Ten meeting to change CFP format (56:30) People's Court: Florida burger brawl Follow Dan @DanWetzel Follow Pat @ByPatForde Follow Ross @RossDellenger 🖥️

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