New Photo - Texans QB C.J. Stroud leaves loss against Broncos with a concussion

Texans QB C.J. Stroud leaves loss against Broncos with a concussion KRISTIE RIEKEN November 2, 2025 at 7:57 PM 1 1 / 2Broncos Texans FootballHouston Texans' C.J. Stroud scrambles out of the pocket in the first half of an NFL football game against the Denver Broncos Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith) HOUSTON (AP) — Houston's C.J. Stroud sustained a concussion after hitting his head hard on the ground at the end of a run in the second quarter of Sunday's 1815 loss to Denver.

- - Texans QB C.J. Stroud leaves loss against Broncos with a concussion

KRISTIE RIEKEN November 2, 2025 at 7:57 PM

1

1 / 2Broncos Texans FootballHouston Texans' C.J. Stroud scrambles out of the pocket in the first half of an NFL football game against the Denver Broncos Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith)

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston's C.J. Stroud sustained a concussion after hitting his head hard on the ground at the end of a run in the second quarter of Sunday's 18-15 loss to Denver.

The team announced just after halftime that he had a concussion and was out for the remainder of the game. With Davis Mills in for him, the Texans struggled to move the ball and punted on six straight possessions after a field goal made it 15-7 on the first drive of the second half.

"Anytime you lose your starting quarterback, it's always tough," coach DeMeco Ryans said. "I thought Davis battled, tried to do a good job there and battle, but it just couldn't do well offensively once we lost C.J."

Stroud scrambled for 6 yards and was hit on the shoulder near the end of his slide by Kris Abrams-Draine and the back of his head violently bounced off the ground.

Abrams-Draine was initially flagged for unnecessary roughness. But the play was reviewed and the call was overturned when officials said he didn't make contact with Stroud's head or neck.

Ryans was unhappy that the call was overturned.

"He slid and the guy came up and hit him and as I see it that's unnecessary roughness," Ryans said. "He hit the quarterback when he was sliding and giving himself up. If I'm incorrect on the rules, I've seen that happen multiple times with our guys and we get the penalty, but for some reason, it just didn't happen there."

Stroud remained on the ground for a few minutes while he was tended to by the medical staff. He eventually got up and walked to the sideline and entered the medical tent before going to the locker room.

Despite Stroud's injury, Ryans wouldn't make excuses for the loss and said they had plenty of chances to win.

"We just have to be able to make the plays we need to make," he said. "We've gotta run the ball better, and we just gotta be able finish drives. It's third down for me. You go 3 of 17 on third down, that's not winning football."

Mills was 17 of 30 for 137 yards as the Texans fell to 3-5. They managed just 77 yards rushing.

The Texans have had offensive struggles with Stroud under center, but things got much worse with Mills in the game. They failed to score a touchdown for just the second time this season and first since their opener against the Rams.

"Yeah, if I could draw it up that way, I would make sure C.J. didn't get hurt," Ryans said. "The guy didn't hit C.J. like that and we were in a good spot to continue to press forward and drive the football, but we don't control that. So what do you control? Whoever steps in, are you doing your job? Are you're doing what you're supposed to do to help the team win the game?"

___

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Texans QB C.J. Stroud leaves loss against Broncos with a concussion

Texans QB C.J. Stroud leaves loss against Broncos with a concussion KRISTIE RIEKEN November 2, 2025 at 7:57 PM 1 1 / 2...
New Photo - The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL season

The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL season Rohan NadkarniNovember 3, 2025 at 12:53 AM 0 Chicago Bears tight end Colston Loveland scores a touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. (Jeff Dean / The ) The Chicago Bears and Cincinnati Bengals played one of the most thrilling games of the NFL season Sunday, a rollercoaster ride that ended with a 4742 win for the Bears. Joe Flacco threw for 470 yards and four touchdowns in the loss, while Caleb Williams threw for 280 yards and three scores.

- - The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL season

Rohan NadkarniNovember 3, 2025 at 12:53 AM

0

Chicago Bears tight end Colston Loveland scores a touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. (Jeff Dean / The )

The Chicago Bears and Cincinnati Bengals played one of the most thrilling games of the NFL season Sunday, a rollercoaster ride that ended with a 47-42 win for the Bears.

Joe Flacco threw for 470 yards and four touchdowns in the loss, while Caleb Williams threw for 280 yards and three scores. The teams combined for 31 points in a thrilling fourth quarter — including 28 in the final five minutes.

The chaos began with less than six minutes to go. The Bears were leading 34-27 when the Bengals lined up for a 54-yard field goal, only for Evan McPherson to miss the kick short.

Two plays later, Chicago wide receiver D.J. Moore was ruled out at the 1-yard line on a running play, but Cincinnati challenged to see if Moore fumbled out of the endzone for a touchback. The Bengals technically won the challenge, but it backfired: The play was overturned to a touchdown, giving the Bears a 41-27 lead.

On Cincinnati's next drive, Flacco brought the offense all the way to the way to the 5-yard line before he was picked off by a diving Tremaine Edmunds, who ran the ball all the way back for a pick-six. Upon review however, Edmunds was ruled down by contact, taking the touchdown off the board.

Following the interception, the Bears had a two-score lead with two minutes and 42 seconds to go — a 99.6% win probability, per ESPN.

But Chicago went three-and-out in only 27 seconds, giving the Bengals the ball back quickly. Flacco needed only four plays to go 55 yards and find Noah Fant for a 23-yard touchdown. After the Fant score, Cincinnati also converted a two-point conversion to cut the lead to 41-35.

After the 2-pointer, the Bengals miraculously recovered an onside kick. The ball didn't travel 10 yards, but it touched the foot of a Bears player, allowing Cincinnati to pounce on the kick.

This time, Flacco drove down the field in six plays, finding Andrei Iosavas for the go-ahead touchdown with only 54 seconds to go.

Chicago's next drive started poorly. Williams threw back-to-back incompletions before finally scrambling for a first on 3rd-and-10, causing the Bears to use their final timeout.

That set up a 1st-and-10 for Chicago on its own 42 with 25 seconds to go. On that play, Williams fired a strike to tight end Colston Loveland over the middle of the field. Loveland somehow escaped the grasp of two Bengals, and then outran the rest of the defense for a 58-yard touchdown.

Cincinnati had one last possession, but its magic finally ran out when Flacco was intercepted on a Hail Mary attempt on the game's final play.

It was a true up-and-down fourth quarter for the Bears. Their win probability peaked at 99.7% and valleyed at 14.1% — an 85.6% swing. Ultimately, Chicago hung on to improve to 5-3, while the Bengals fell to 3-6.

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The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL season

The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL season Rohan NadkarniNovember 3, 2...
New Photo - Bills fluster Patrick Mahomes, reassert themselves as Super Bowl contenders with win over Chiefs

Bills fluster Patrick Mahomes, reassert themselves as Super Bowl contenders with win over Chiefs Jason OwensNovember 3, 2025 at 1:25 AM 0 Eight weeks into the season, the shine of a 40 start for the Buffalo Bills had worn off. Consider that luster returned. In a marquee matchup with a playoff feel, the Bills asserted control early, then held on for a 2821 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday. Buffalo's highoctane offense powered by Josh Allen did its thing against a strong Chiefs defense that had few answers Sunday afternoon.

- - Bills fluster Patrick Mahomes, reassert themselves as Super Bowl contenders with win over Chiefs

Jason OwensNovember 3, 2025 at 1:25 AM

0

Eight weeks into the season, the shine of a 4-0 start for the Buffalo Bills had worn off.

Consider that luster returned. In a marquee matchup with a playoff feel, the Bills asserted control early, then held on for a 28-21 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

Buffalo's high-octane offense powered by Josh Allen did its thing against a strong Chiefs defense that had few answers Sunday afternoon. And a beleaguered Bills defense blamed for Buffalo's fall from 4-0 to 5-2 entering Sunday's game repeatedly flustered Patrick Mahomes and limited Kansas City's ground game.

Career-worst effort from Mahomes

The Bills held Mahomes to a career-worst 44.1% completion percentage. And they held Kansas City runners to 79 yards on the ground.

The end result is a 6-2 record and tiebreaker over the now 5-4 Chiefs that looms large for a potential playoff matchup in January.

Buffalo's pass rush helped limit Patrick Mahomes to the worst completion percentage of his career. (Bryan M. Bennett via Getty Images)Bills take early control, fend off Chiefs rally

The Bills struck first with an opening-drive touchdown and built up a 21-13 halftime lead. While their offense thrived, their defense set the tone. Buffalo forced a first-half turnover on downs, then held the Chiefs to a field goal after Kansas City set up first-and-goal at the 1-yard line at the end of the half.

The Bills then forced a three-and-out punt on Kansas City's first possession of the second half before Allen's second rushing touchdown of the day gave the Bills a 28-13 advantage late in third quarter.

Chiefs put pressure on late

The Chiefs didn't wilt. Mahomes converted on a fourth-and-17 gamble with a 29-yard pass to Rashee Rice on Kansas City's next possession. The end result was a touchdown and two-point conversion to cut Buffalo's lead to 28-21, putting pressure squarely back on the Bills.

But that was the last time the Chiefs would score. Kansas City had two more chances to tie the game after forcing a punt with 6:46 remaining. The Bills forced the Chiefs into third-and-10 on their ensuing possession, which resulted in a desperation downfield heave from Mahomes into double coverage.

Rookie Maxwell Hariston came up with an interception to take the ball back for Buffalo.

Joey Bosa gets the pressure and the rookie Maxwell Hairston picks off Mahomes!KCvsBUF on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/oMCbSYaFEn

— NFL (@NFL) November 3, 2025

And as he was all game, pass rusher Joey Bosa was there with pressure to force the off-target throw.

But the Bills didn't quite ice the game from there. They ran all but 22 seconds off the clock on their ensuing possession. But Matt Prater's 52-yard field goal attempt hit the right upright to give the Chiefs one last chance, raising anxiety levels at Highmark Stadium for Bills fans who have had their hearts broken by Mahomes before.

But there was no Mahomes miracle this time. He had two looks from the Buffalo 40-yard line in the game's final seconds. Both efforts fell incomplete, and the celebration was on in Buffalo.

Buffalo defense steps up

The Chiefs and Bills were on markedly different trajectories heading into Sunday. While Buffalo had given up its early-season mantle as Super Bowl favorites, the Chiefs had won three straight to turn an 0-2 start into 5-3, reclaiming their regular position as a force to contend for the title.

But it was Buffalo's defense that flipped that script again on Sunday. Anchored by Bosa's pressure, the Bills held Mahomes to a 15 of 34 passing day for 254 yards and the late-game interception. In addition to logging his worst career completion rate, Mahomes did not throw a touchdown.

Bosa, who joined the Bills in the offseason after nine seasons with the Chargers, repeatedly penetrated the Kansas City backfield. The result was one sack, five quarterback hits and multiple pressures. He also tallied two tackles for loss.

A Kansas City rushing attack playing without injured starter Isiah Pacheco (knee), gained little traction. Kareem Hunt tallied 49 yards and a touchdown on 11 carries (4.5 yards per carry) as Kansas City's lead back. But there was little help for the veteran back as the Chiefs mustered just 79 yards (4 yards per carry) against a Bills defense that entered Sunday surrendering 150.3 rushing yards per game, good for 31st in the league.

Allen, meanwhile, completed 23 of 26 pass attempts (88.5%) for 273 yards with a touchdown and no turnovers in addition to his two rushing scores. James Cook paced Buffalo's run game with 114 yards on 27 carries.

The Bills outgained the Chiefs 404 yards to 305 and secured a 34:25-25:15 advantage in time of possession. Mahomes' interception was the only turnover of the game.

The Bills and their fans, of course, are yearning for a repeat performance in the postseason, where the Chiefs have repeatedly had the upper hand. But for a Sunday in early November with a playoff atmosphere, this will certainly do in Buffalo for now.

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Bills fluster Patrick Mahomes, reassert themselves as Super Bowl contenders with win over Chiefs

Bills fluster Patrick Mahomes, reassert themselves as Super Bowl contenders with win over Chiefs Jason OwensNovembe...
New Photo - 'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A Six-Figure Job In Some Sections Of The World

'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A SixFigure Job In Some Sections Of The World Madison TroyerNovember 2, 2025 at 11:44 PM 0 'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A SixFigure Job In Some Sections Of The World Gina began her career as a house cleaner nearly three decades ago, tidying up the homes of San Francisco's middle class. Now, she works as an executive housekeeper for some of the Bay Area's wealthiest families. "It's a lot of levels of cleaning that I've done to get where I am right now," she told Bloomberg. "You've got to know about art.

- - 'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A Six-Figure Job In Some Sections Of The World

Madison TroyerNovember 2, 2025 at 11:44 PM

0

'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A Six-Figure Job In Some Sections Of The World

Gina began her career as a house cleaner nearly three decades ago, tidying up the homes of San Francisco's middle class. Now, she works as an executive housekeeper for some of the Bay Area's wealthiest families.

"It's a lot of levels of cleaning that I've done to get where I am right now," she told Bloomberg. "You've got to know about art. You've got to know about antiques. There's a lot of custom pieces, and of course they're not replaceable."

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Gina is one of a growing number of highly specialized housekeepers working for America's ultra-high-net-worth families. As fortunes boom, these elite homeowners are splashing out on luxury homewares with prices that classify them more as art than pieces of furniture.

"High-end houses have crazy prices in almost everything," Gina said. "I just research everything before I even touch anything."

Charles MacPherson, who runs an eponymous staffing agency in Toronto, told Bloomberg that he's seen requests for housekeepers who have experience caring for luxury and contemporary designs skyrocket over the last few years.

"The demand has increased for people who actually know what they're doing," he said.

Trending: GM-Backed EnergyX Is Solving the Lithium Supply Crisis — Invest Before They Scale Global Production

It's not a demand that's been particularly easy to meet, either.

"Not anybody can clean, and cleaning is not for just stupid people who can't get a job," MacPherson told Bloomberg. "Cleaning correctly is actually a skill that has to be taught and learned, and it's actually a serious job."

As a result, salaries for high-end housekeepers are growing. Before COVID, a knowledgeable, well-trained housekeeper could expect to earn around $60,000, MacPherson said. Now, they're frequently being offered salaries of $100,000 or more, plus full benefits.

"Rich people are richer, and they're buying more delicate things," he told Bloomberg. "They want their homes to be more museum-quality, versus just normal stuff. And then there's a lack of supply of trained people. You put those two together — it's supply and demand — and salaries go through the roof."

Hiring an inexperienced housekeeper can often have devastating consequences for the ultra-wealthy.

See Also: Wall Street's $12B Real Estate Manager Is Opening Its Doors to Individual Investors — Without the Crowdfunding Middlemen

MacPherson recalled a time a house cleaner had mistakenly polished every hinge and doorknob in a client's home, erasing an intentional patinaed finish. For the homeowner, who took the mistake in stride, acknowledging that they hadn't trained and educated the cleaner well enough, it was a $75,000 mistake.

"You'd rather overpay and be overcovered, rather than underpay and be under-covered," Ben Schwartz, president of Michigan-based staffing agency Harper Associates, told Bloomberg.

"I'll tell a client, 'You are better off to hire the right, open-minded person with the right attitude who can be trained, versus trying to hire what you think is the perfect housekeeper because of her experience,'" he continued.

As for Gina, she's happy with her chosen career path. "There's not a lot of people who are professional in this area," she told Bloomberg. "A lot of people see housekeeper services as a low end of society, so a lot of people don't want to do it."

Read Next: Forget Flipping Houses — This $36 Trillion Asset Class Lets You Invest Without Owning Property

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'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A Six-Figure Job In Some Sections Of The World

'Not Anybody Can Clean,' How Housekeeping Has Become A SixFigure Job In Some Sections Of The World Madison Troye...
New Photo - Trump says his tariffs will help American businesses. So why are they suing?

Trump says his tariffs will help American businesses. So why are they suing? Maureen Groppe, USA TODAYNovember 2, 2025 at 9:01 AM 10 WASHINGTON − The sine wave on David Levi's Tshirt illustrates the physics behind the STEM kits he creates to teach kids how to build electronic musical instruments from scratch. But the oscillating line could also represent President Donald Trump's tariffs that have bounced up and down, creating higher costs and uncertainty for small businessmen like Levi.

- - Trump says his tariffs will help American businesses. So why are they suing?

Maureen Groppe, USA TODAYNovember 2, 2025 at 9:01 AM

10

WASHINGTON − The sine wave on David Levi's T-shirt illustrates the physics behind the STEM kits he creates to teach kids how to build electronic musical instruments from scratch.

But the oscillating line could also represent President Donald Trump's tariffs that have bounced up and down, creating higher costs and uncertainty for small businessmen like Levi.

Levi, an electrical engineer who founded MicroKits in 2020, has had to raise prices, slow production and pause plans to launch a new product – Banan-a-Synth – that lets kids turn a bunch of bananas into a kind of keyboard.

1 / 11Canadians fighting Trump's tariffs, surge in patriotismAlain Ejeil and his wife Joyce Takla at their Bidon Taverne Culinaire in St. Lambert, Quebec in the Montreal area at the bar. Ejeil stopped buying American food items and pulled U.S.-made wines and spirits from his shelves back in February after President Donald Trump started to taunt Canada with the threat of tariffs and American statehood. It wasn't an easy decision, he said, but as a Canadian, it was the right thing to do.

And if the tariffs that Trump has imposed on nearly every imported good – including many of the electronic components Levi uses to build his kits in Charlottesville, Virginia, − are going to remain high for the foreseeable future, Levi said he might have to move production out of the country.

That could be needed both to allow Levi to sell his kits at a competitive price and to gain more predictability about costs. Trump is setting rates by bypassing laws that require a more detailed process for imposing tariffs in limited circumstances.

"I can't really plan if the rates might change again next month," he told USA TODAY.

More: Are Trump's tariffs too big to fail at the Supreme Court?

David Levi, founder of MicroKits, in his workshop in Charlottesville, Va. Levi is one of the small business owners challenging the legality of President Donald Trump's tariffs.Businesses are not embracing Trump's tariffs

American businesses moving overseas is the opposite outcome Trump promised when he imposed tariffs on nearly every product imported into the United States.

Trump said persistent trade deficits have become an emergency because they've hollowed out the nation's manufacturing base. He's also used tariffs as a way to get China, Mexico and Canada to do more to stop illegal drugs from coming into the United States.

But businesses are not embracing his strategy.

Levi is among the small business owners challenging Trump's tariffs, an issue the Supreme Court will take up on Nov. 5.

Other businesses arguing that Trump overstepped his authority include a Vermont company that makes women's cycling gear, two Illinois-based businesses that sell educational toys and a wine-importer based in New York City.

"These tariffs threatened the very existence of small businesses like mine, making it difficult to survive, let alone grow," Victor Owen Schwartz, who founded his wine and spirits import business nearly 40 years ago with his mother, said of his decision to take on the president. "I was shocked that those with much more power and money did not step up."

More: Canada's PM Carney says he apologized to Trump over anti-tariff ad

Victor Owen Schwartz, president of VOS Selections, a wine and spirits importer and distributor based in New York City. Schwartz is one of the small business owners challenging President Donald Trump's tariffs.U.S. Chamber of Commerce opposes Trump's tariffs

While Fortune 500 companies did not file suit as Schwartz did, major business organizations have spoken out against the tariffs.

In a filing supporting the challenges, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Consumer Technology Association told the Supreme Court the question of whether the tariffs are legal is of "paramount importance to the business community."

Trump's tariffs injected greater uncertainty into the trade economy than the disruptions caused by the COVID pandemic and, unless stopped by the court, would let presidents claim "unprecedented authority to upend the domestic economy through taxation," the groups wrote.

More: Will the Supreme Court treat Trump's tariffs like Biden's policies?

A 'blessing for the American factory worker'

Drew Greenblatt, CEO of Marlin Steel Wire Products, is a rare businessman championing the tariffs.

Greenblatt said the import fees evened the playing field for companies like his which rely on U.S.-made steel to make metal baskets and other wire products in Baltimore, Michigan and Indiana factories.

Greenblatt competes against companies that get their steel from China, which subsidizes its steel industry.

But after tariffs were imposed on Canada, Marlin Steel took a $1.3 million job away from a Canadian company that uses Chinese steel. That order is funding six shifts around the clock, he said.

"Tariffs are a leveling tactic because there are a lot of people out there not playing fair," he said. "It's a blessing for the American factory worker."

Greenblatt said he's not naïve enough to think all the manufacturing jobs that migrated overseas will come back because of the tariffs. But if just 10% or 20% do, he said, "our factories will double or triple in size."

Drew Greenblatt (center), president of Marlin Steel Wire Products, stands with steel workers at the company's factory in Baltimore, Maryland.Economists argue tariffs hurt more than they help

Michael Strain, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank that promotes the free enterprise system, said there's no question the tariffs help some businesses.

But on balance, he said, American manufacturers are worse off.

Domestic manufacturers import a lot of materials and equipment they need to make their finished product, he said. And the higher cost from those "intermediate goods," are greater than the benefits of import protections.

That was proven, Strain said, during the trade war of Trump's first administration. Economists for the Federal Reserve estimated that the U.S. lost five times more manufacturing jobs than it gained.

A group of economists – including Strain and former U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke – told the Supreme Court that the decline in domestic manufacturing jobs has nothing to do with the trade deficit.

"In fact, the United States does not manufacture less today than it did in the past," the economists said in a filing supporting the businesses challenging the tariffs. "Instead, the same manufacturing now requires fewer people and is less expensive relative to other goods."

President Donald Trump delivers remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025.Small businesses could be hurt the most

More than 700 small businesses signed onto a separate brief telling the court their decision "will determine whether many small and micro businesses across the United States can survive."

Cassie Abel, the CEO of Wild Rye, an Idaho company that produces outdoor apparel for women that is made in China, said she leveraged her house to help finance her business.

"So every tariff increase means the risk of losing my home," she said. "My family's housing is at stake in addition to everything else."

Jess Nepstad, the chief adventure officer with a Montana-based company that designs and sells coffee storage and brewing equipment, said he hadn't realized how nerve-wracking the tariffs are until the day in May when a lower court ruled that Trump lacked the power to impose sweeping tariffs.

"I remember sitting out on my porch, eight o'clock at night, hearing that ruling and I actually wept," he said. "I had no idea I was carrying that much stress."

David Levi, founder of MicroKits, in his workshop in Charlottesville, Virginia. Levi is one of the small business owners challenging President Donald Trump's tariffs.

Asked what it's like taking on the president of the United States from his small workshop in Charlottesville, Levi – the founder of MicroKits – said it "kind of just feels like being a citizen."

"As a citizen, you can go to the courts and be like, 'I'm not sure if the government can do this. Let's figure this out,'" he said.

Whatever the justices decide, Levi hopes they will rule quickly.

"The main thing is I just want enough certainty," he said, "to be able to move my business forward."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Meet the businesses taking on Trump's tariffs at the Supreme Court

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Trump says his tariffs will help American businesses. So why are they suing?

Trump says his tariffs will help American businesses. So why are they suing? Maureen Groppe, USA TODAYNovember 2, 2025 ...
New Photo - Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast. Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast. By Samantha Highfill :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/SamanthaHighfillauthorphoto0917254112e875604542d49744a27de908d183.jpg) Samantha Highfill Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at , where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television. EW's editorial guidelines August 27, 2021 9:00 a.m.

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast.

Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast.

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 27, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

For *The Vampire Diaries* creatives, casting Enzo was a particularly difficult task. Because originally, the role was going to be very different.

"You were supposed to be the third Salvatore brother," executive producer Julie Plec tells star Michael Malarkey in episode 8 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*. Writer Brett Matthews adds, "That was always the plan, and then it went a different direction, but that's why it was so hard to find the person. We thought it was going to be a Salvatore brother, so we cast a very wide net [and] looked very hard." Ultimately, they scrapped that plan and made it so Enzo didn't share Salvatore blood, but he was a brother figure for Damon (Ian Somerhalder) for many years (and he was sired by Lily Salvatore).

But that wasn't the only plan that changed in the writers' room over the years. In discussing the *Vampire Diaries*' final season, Plec and Matthews recall the final major debate: Which Salvatore were they going to kill in the series finale? "We went back and forth in the writers' room all season long," Plec says. "We finally landed on: We're killing Damon. That's the right thing to do. He is the one with the consequence to pay. Stefan was morally a bit stronger of a character."

The Vampire Diaries

Michael Malarkey as Enzo and Ian Somerhalder as Damon on 'The Vampire Diaries'. Annette Brown/The CW; Bob Mahoney/The CW

Matthews adds, "Damon's a fairly obvious choice," noting that the writers really fell in love with the idea of Damon compelling Stefan (Paul Wesley) to let him die. But when executive producer Kevin Williamson proposed that it should be Stefan that dies, they started to rethink their plan. "It felt like dying for Stefan freed him from a lot of weight, whereas it felt like living for Damon freed him to go and be the man that he was always supposed to be," Plec says.

Of course, both Salvatores were meant to die in the original ending Plec and Williamson came up with during the show's second season. In that ending, "The boys would sacrifice themselves to save Elena so that Elena could go and have a life and be human and live," Plec recalls during the podcast. "To save her, they would die together, and that was always the pitch. And then when Nina [Dobrev] left, it felt like the show can't be as much about protecting Elena's happiness, although that's important to us, but we want to protect the bothers' happiness, we want them to get something out of this. Then it shifted to: We can't kill both of them for her because that feels somehow like nobody got what they wanted. Let's find a different way to give one of these brothers the happiness that they need and the other brother the closure that they need."

(One other way Dobrev leaving changed the plan? Plec says, "I thought that by the time we came back to the end of the series, whenever it was, that Elena would've found her way back to Stefan and Damon would've found a different path.")

For more about the final season, listen to the full podcast episode below:

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

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Published: November 02, 2025 at 06:18PM on Source: COSMOPOLITE

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New Photo - BYU, Texas Tech give Big 12 two top 10 teams for 1st time in 2 years ahead of their Top 25 showdown

BYU, Texas Tech give Big 12 two top 10 teams for 1st time in 2 years ahead of their Top 25 showdown ERIC OLSON November 2, 2025 at 8:01 PM 0 1 / 3Texas Tech Kansas St FootballTexas Tech wide receiver Caleb Douglas (5) celebrates with offensive lineman Sheridan Wilson after scoring a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Kansas State, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Manhattan, Kan.

- - BYU, Texas Tech give Big 12 two top 10 teams for 1st time in 2 years ahead of their Top 25 showdown

ERIC OLSON November 2, 2025 at 8:01 PM

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1 / 3Texas Tech Kansas St FootballTexas Tech wide receiver Caleb Douglas (5) celebrates with offensive lineman Sheridan Wilson after scoring a touchdown during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Kansas State, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Manhattan, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

The Big 12 had two teams in the top 10 of The Top 25 college football poll for the first time in two years Sunday, Notre Dame was back in the top 10 after a two-month absence and Oklahoma and Texas made the biggest upward moves.

The top seven teams were unchanged in the final poll before the College Football Playoff committee releases its first rankings Tuesday night to kick off the run-up to the CFP bracket release Dec. 7.

No. 1 Ohio State, which pulled way in the second half to beat Penn State, is at the top of the AP poll for a 10th straight week. Indiana, which scored 50-plus points against a Big Ten opponent for the third time while hammering Maryland, is No. 2 for a third straight week.

The Buckeyes and Hoosiers again were followed by Texas A&M, Alabama, Georgia, Oregon and Mississippi. Losses by Georgia Tech, Vanderbilt and Miami shuffled the Nos. 8, 9 and 10 spots, now held by BYU, Texas Tech and Notre Dame.

The distribution of first-place votes was the same as last week. Ohio State received 54, Indiana got 11 and Texas A&M one.

No. 8 BYU and No. 9 Texas Tech gave the Big 12 two teams in the top 10 for the first time since Oct. 29, 2023. The Cougars, who were idle, have their highest ranking of the season. The Red Raiders won at Kansas State and re-entered the top 10 for the first time in three weeks. The two teams face each other this weekend.

Notre Dame, winner of six straight, was pushed by a one-win Boston College on the road before it won by 15 points and moved up two spots to No. 10. The Fighting Irish were last in the top 10 in Week 3, at No. 8, before a home loss to Texas A&M dropped them to 0-2 and dropped them to No. 24.

No. 11 Oklahoma and No. 13 Texas received seven-spot promotions for their wins Saturday. The Sooners beat Tennessee on the road and the Longhorns knocked off Vanderbilt at home. Tennessee took the biggest fall, dropping nine spots to No. 23.

In and out

— No. 24 Washington, which was idle, is in the poll for the first time since it finished the 2023 season at No. 2 following its loss to Michigan in the national championship game. The Huskies' only losses are to No. 1 Ohio State at home and to a then-unranked Michigan on the road.

— Houston, whose No. 22 ranking last week was its first Top 25 appearance since 2022, dropped out after losing at home to West Virginia.

Poll points

— BYU has risen in the poll six straight weeks since making its debut on Sept. 21. The Cougars have gone from No. 25 to No. 8 over that span.

— Miami's losses to two then-unranked opponents in three weeks have caused a 16-spot plummet, from No. 2 to No. 18.

— Ohio State is in the Top 25 for a 90th straight poll, third-most on the active list. Notre Dame is in a 50th straight time, fifth on the active list.

— Texas made its 800th appearance in the poll, seventh all-time.

Conference call

SEC (9 teams) — Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 11, 13, 15, 19, 23.

Big Ten (6) — Nos. 1, 2, 6, 20, 21, 24.

Big 12 (4) — Nos. 8, 9, 17, 25.

ACC (4) — Nos. 12, 14, 16, 18.

American (1) — No. 22.

Independent (1) — No. 10.

Ranked vs. ranked

— No. 8 BYU (8-0, 5-0 Big 12) at No. 9 Texas Tech (8-1, 5-1): The game of the year in the Big 12. The Red Raiders have lost 16 straight against top-10 teams.

— No. 3 Texas A&M (8-0, 5-0 SEC) at No. 19 Missouri (6-2, 2-2): The Aggies embarrassed Missouri in College Station last year, getting out to a 34-0 lead and winning 41-7.

___

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://ift.tt/JgZqK0F and https://ift.tt/XyQG0Nf

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Sports"

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Source: Sports

Published: November 02, 2025 at 05:27PM on Source: COSMOPOLITE

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BYU, Texas Tech give Big 12 two top 10 teams for 1st time in 2 years ahead of their Top 25 showdown

BYU, Texas Tech give Big 12 two top 10 teams for 1st time in 2 years ahead of their Top 25 showdown ERIC OLSON Novemb...

 

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