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Coal Prices Rise as Iran Conflict Stokes Fears of Energy Crisis

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The price of coal used in power generation is starting to heat up again, as conflict in the Middle East fans concerns about global energy security.



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Miami (Ohio) beats Toledo to extend 30-game winning streak

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OXFORD, Ohio — Peter Suder scored 19 points, Antwone Woolfolk added 14 and No. 19 Miami (Ohio) closed to within a victory of a perfect regular season with a 74-72 win over Toledo on Tuesday night that extended the RedHawks’ season-opening winning streak to 30 games.

The RedHawks (17-0 Mid-American Conference) remain the only undefeated team in Division I men’s basketball. They’re only the fourth team in the past 35 years to start 30-0, joining 2013-14 Wichita State, 2014-15 Kentucky and 2020-21 Gonzaga.

With the victory, Miami claimed its first MAC regular-season title since 2004-05, extended the best start in program history and added to its school record for wins in a season. Miami also boasts the best start and longest win streak in MAC history.

Brant Byers added 13 points and Luke Skaljac chipped in 12 for the RedHawks, who extended their home winning streak to 31 games in front of a sellout crowd of 10,640 at Millett Hall. That home mark matches Duke for the longest in the nation.

Leroy Blyden Jr. led Toledo (16-4, 10-7) with 21 points and Sonny Wilson added 13.

Miami was coming off a 69-67 win over Western Kentucky on Friday night, when it needed a buzzer-beater from freshman Trey Perry. In Tuesday’s game, the RedHawks jumped out to an early double-digit lead against the Rockets and never trailed.

Toledo cut the deficit to one on four occasions and looked as though it would take the lead on an Austin Parks drive to the basket with nine minutes left, but Miami’s Eian Elmer stuffed him at the rim and hit a 3-pointer a few seconds later to push the lead back to four points.

The Rockets trailed by two points and had the ball with 13 seconds left but turned it over with less than a second to play. It was the RedHawks’ seventh game decided by three points or fewer, tied for the most to keep a perfect season alive since 1948-49.

The victory gave the RedHawks their first season sweep of Toledo since the 1996-97 season, and it ran their series winning streak to three in a row overall after losing 22 straight from 2012 to 2024.

The Associated Press and ESPN Research contributed to this report.



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Macron orders France’s nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean

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PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday ordered France’s nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to move from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean to help protect allied assets during the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Macron said the Charles de Gaulle will be escorted by its air wing, and its escorting frigates.

In a pre-recorded speech aired on French TV, Macron added that Rafale fighter jets, air-defense systems, and airborne radar systems have been deployed over the past few hours in the Middle East.

“And we will continue this effort as much as necessary,” Macron said.

He cited Monday’s strike on a British air force base on Cyprus, adding that Cyprus was a member of the European Union with which France has recently signed a strategic partnership.

“This requires our support. That is why I have decided to send additional air-defense assets there as well, along with a French frigate, the Languedoc, which will arrive off the coast of Cyprus later this evening,” Macron said.

France, the U.K. and Germany have previously said that they weren’t involved in the strikes on Iran, but were prepared to enable necessary and proportionate defensive action to destroy Iran’s capability to fire missiles and drones.

Macron said France has defense agreements binding the EU nation to Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as strong commitments to Jordan and Iraq.

Noting that the war had spread to Lebanon, Macron said the Iran-backed militant Hezbollah group made “the grave mistake of striking Israel” and putting the Lebanese people in danger but warned against Israel launching a ground operation.



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Police investigate shooting in northwest Albuquerque

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Police are responding to a shooting in northwest Albuquerque.An Albuquerque Police Department spokesperson confirmed a shooting happened in the area of Coors Boulevard and Fortuna Road NW. The shooting injuries are not believed to be deadly.It is unknown how many people were injured.Police detectives are beginning to investigate the shooting. The police response has closed northbound traffic on Coors, at Cloudcroft Road NW.This is a developing story and will be updated as information becomes available.Stay updated on the latest news with the KOAT app. You can download it here.

Police are responding to a shooting in northwest Albuquerque.

An Albuquerque Police Department spokesperson confirmed a shooting happened in the area of Coors Boulevard and Fortuna Road NW. The shooting injuries are not believed to be deadly.

It is unknown how many people were injured.

Police detectives are beginning to investigate the shooting. The police response has closed northbound traffic on Coors, at Cloudcroft Road NW.

This is a developing story and will be updated as information becomes available.

Stay updated on the latest news with the KOAT app. You can download it here.



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NERVOSA Unleash Ferocious New Single “Ghost Notes” Ahead Of Their New Album, Slave Machine

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Brazilian thrash titans Nervosa are ready to tear through 2026 with the release of their sixth album, Slave Machine, arriving April 3 via Napalm Records. Leading the charge is their latest single, “Ghost Notes,” a relentless storm of groove-laden riffs, pounding drums, and the raw, furious vocals of founding guitarist-turned-frontwoman Prika Amaral.

“Strong and heavy riffs with a lot of groove showing deep feelings in a very poetic way, this song is definitely special in many ways,” the band says of the track.

The single also reunites the band with producer Martin Furia, known for his work with German metal legends Destruction, ensuring that Slave Machine bridges the gap between classic thrash power and contemporary ferocity.

Slave Machine is the most brutal and melodic album of Nervosa, and we are proud to take this step further, keeping our roots,” the band adds.

Having dominated stages from Wacken Open Air to Hellfest, Nervosa are no strangers to commanding attention. With Amaral now firmly at the helm on vocals since their 2023 record Jailbreak, the band delivers a sound as precise and crushing as a sledgehammer, reaffirming their status as genre frontrunners.

Fans can pre-order Slave Machine ahead of the April 3 release here.

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Asian Equities Fall, Oil Rises Amid Ongoing Middle East Conflict

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Asian equities fell with South Korean stocks particularly hard hit as the conflict in the Middle East escalated.



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College basketball coaching carousel 2026: Tracking all the changes so far

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We’re in the first week of March, and there are already double-digit college basketball coaching jobs guaranteed to change. Eleven schools are involved in the 2026 carousel. In a week’s time, that number may well double, with the expected flips popping at the mid-major level. 

Among the power-conference openings, we’re looking at anywhere from nine to potentially as many as 12 job swaps by the first week of April. You can get a wide view of the hot seat and what will/should/might/won’t change among the big schools right here. (I also can’t shake the feeling we’re going to have one power-conference school come open that’s not on the radar as of today.)

Anyway, welcome back to my annual coaching tracker. The thing about March: The basketball is irresistible and loud, but the off-the-court headlines are nearly as noisy. So as March moves along, I’ll update this story daily with information and context on the jobs that come open and potential candidates to know about. If you’re interested in keeping up with the scuttlebutt, check back in frequently and be sure to follow me on social media to get the news as it happens in real time

Here’s the first filing on the carousel, with more to come very soon.

High-majors

KANSAS STATE | OUT: Jerome Tang
The first power conference job to hit the market in 2026, and it did so in a noisy fashion. Kansas State athletic director Gene Taylor fired Tang for cause on Feb. 15. University lawyers and Tang’s legal representation are in an ongoing legal dispute over the validity of a for-cause firing which, if K-State was successful, would mean $0 owed to Tang. If fully unsuccessful, Tang has more than $18 million coming his way. I’m expecting a settlement with terms undisclosed. Regardless, it’s a messy end that was precluded by a postgame rant that made national headlines — one in which Tang called out his players and said many of them would not be back with the program next season. The search for Tang’s replacement is already well underway, with a variety of initial interviews having already been conducted quietly behind the scenes in the past week. K-State’s goal is to land a sitting head coach. Its pool for NIL will be a sticking point, as Tang was given a lot of money to use the past two cycles, only to see it largely go to waste. 


Mid-majors

AIR FORCE | OUT: Joe Scott
Scott had two runs at Air Force, the first from 1999-2004, the second from 2020 until earlier this year, when Scott was put on leave in January amid an investigation into his treatment of players. That ultimately led to a severance between he and the school, though the two sides ended things amicably with kind words when the split was made official on Feb. 26. A military academy program in the Mountain West, Air Force easily ranks among the 10 toughest jobs in all of college hoops. Scott had four single-digit win seasons in his second run here and didn’t finish above .500 once.

CAL STATE BAKERSFIELD | OUT: Rod Barnes
There are a few jobs that have been open the entire season, and this one applies. Barnes was fired last September after 14 years on the job. The school never offered clarity on the reason for the split, and the spot’s taken an image hit in the process. There have also been changes in leadership in the athletic department. The team has sputtered under interim coach Mike Scott as well, going 8-22 with a last-place finish in the Big West. 

KANSAS CITY | OUT: Marvin Menzies »» IN: Mark Turgeon
A huge get for the Roos, who have pulled off a rarity: A school with zero NCAA Tournament appearances hired a coach with at least 10 NCAA Tournament appearances, at least 15 years of experience of high-major coaching and at least 450 wins. The only other instance of this that I can recall where that exact scenario applied is when High Point hired Tubby Smith in 2018, but he was an alum. Turgeon played at Kansas and therefore has some semi-local ties. He heads to the Summit League with a healthy boost in NIL support, determined not to let his rickety exit from Maryland in 2021 be the end of his story. 

LAMAR | OUT: Alvin Brooks
Brooks went 62-95 across five seasons in the Southland. This season’s team went 12-19 overall, but didn’t qualify for the conference tournament after finishing outside the top eight by ending the season on a nine-game losing streak. The Cardinals last made the NCAA Tournament in 2012 under Pat Knight. 

NORTH FLORIDA | OUT: Matthew Driscoll
This job has been open dating back to last May, when Driscoll left after 16 seasons to be Jerome Tang’s top assistant at Kansas State. Now Driscoll is wrapping up a disappointing season in Manhattan, Kansas, in the wake of Tang’s mid-February firing. At UNF, the Ospreys struggled under interim Bobby Kennen; the team went 7-24 this season. It’s been a Division I program for two decades, with its lone NCAA Tournament trip coming in 2015 under Driscoll. 

OREGON STATE | OUT: Wayne Tinkle 
For Tinkle, the high point was the unexpected run to the Elite Eight in the 2021 COVID NCAA tourney, when the Beavers won three games as a 12-seed after earning the auto bid by winning the Pac-12 Tournament. But now, one of the tallest coaches in college hoops (Tinkle is 6-10) is out after a dozen years in Corvallis. Tinkle will coach out the string with OSU in the WCC Tournament, but the search is already on for his replacement. Athletic director Scott Barnes may well turn to a young, ambitious coach to get Oregon State into the mix immediately as the school transitions to the reborn Pac-12 later this year. 

SAN DIEGO | OUT: Steve Lavin   
The 61-year-old Lavin will move on after his team’s run in the WCC Tournament comes to an end. He was hired in 2022 after his second lengthy stint working as an on-air commentator, but Lavin couldn’t bring the program to consistency in the Gonzaga-dominated WCC. The program has not made the NCAAs since 2008 under Bill Grier. Athletic director Kimya Massey has been interviewing a variety of candidates in the past two weeks (mid-major head coaches and high-major assistants), with the intention of landing on a replacement sooner than later, sources said, ideally before Selection Sunday.

TARLETON STATE | OUT: Billy Gillispie 
The former Kentucky and Texas A&M coach oversaw Tarleton State’s transition into Division I, with the high point being a 25-10 season in 2023-24. The WAC-based school went 92-90 in six years at the D-I level under Gillispie. The university, based in Stephenville, Texas, is about 70 miles southwest of Fort Worth. “On behalf of Texan Nation, I want to thank head coach Billy Gillispie for his efforts in building upon the storied history of Tarleton State basketball,” school president Dr. James Hurley said. “Coach Gillispie helped usher us into NCAA Division I competition and celebrated some incredible wins during his tenure. We wish him the very best moving forward.”

TENNESSEE TECH | OUTJohn Pelphrey
The program fired Pelphrey on Tuesday after his seven-year run in the Ohio Valley. Pelphrey went 79–138 at what is obviously a very hard job with limited resources. The school says it will use CSA Search & Consulting to land its next coach. TTU last won the regular-season title in the OVC in 2005.

WAGNER | OUT: Donald Copeland 
Wagner has been coached by interim Dwan McMillan since the start of the season after Copeland was put on indefinite leave amid a school investigation into alleged abusive coaching tactics, including withholding water breaks during practice. One former player went on record with the New York Post last fall to confirm the allegations, but the school has yet to fire Copeland, who is still listed on the team’s website. The Seahawks went 16-13 in the regular season and are the 7-seed in the NEC bracket. 





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N.C. primary wins pit Roy Cooper against Michael Whatley in key Senate race

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The matchup is set in North Carolina’s crucial Senate race, with Democratic former Gov. Roy Cooper and former Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley winning their primaries, NBC News projects.

The North Carolina race will be central to this year’s battle for the Senate as Republicans defend their 53-47 majority. It’s a must-win race for Democrats if they have any hope of netting the four seats they need to take control of the chamber.

Democrats are confident that Cooper will be a formidable candidate after he won races for governor in 2016 and 2020 even as President Donald Trump carried the state. Trump also won the state in 2024, by 3 percentage points.

Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara Trump, a North Carolina native, passed on running to replace retiring GOP Sen. Thom Tillis. So Republicans turned to Whatley, who was chairman of the Republican National Committee at the time and had previously led the North Carolina GOP.

Trump encouraged Whatley to run and endorsed his campaign when he launched in late July. And the RNC gave Whatley an early boost by approving the national party to spend resources helping his campaign, even though he had not yet won the primary.

Whatley thanked Trump for his support in his victory speech on Tuesday night, also casting the race as “a choice between a conservative champion for North Carolina, who will be an ally for President Trump in the Senate, or a champion for the failed policies of the left.”

Whatley, who tied himself to Trump in the early stages of the race, touted that endorsement in the run-up to Tuesday’s primary, launching a TV ad featuring Trump saying of Whatley that it is “so important that he wins” and that he “represents your values.”

Whatley also launched an ad on streaming services ahead of Tuesday’s primary, offering a preview of his case against Cooper in the coming months.

The spot ties Cooper to a fatal stabbing last year on a train, where Iryna Zarutska, 23, a Ukrainian refugee, was killed. The suspect, Decarlos Brown Jr., had served time in prison for robbery with a dangerous weapon. A federal grand jury indicted him in October.

Whatley’s ad, which features video of the stabbing, also features a narrator knocking Cooper’s support for a “woke agenda of cashless bail,” without a source for that claim, and saying Cooper “has her blood on his hands.”

“The murder of Iryna Zarutska was a despicable act of evil and it’s disturbing that Michael Whatley continues using the footage of her death in his ads against her family’s explicit wishes,” Cooper campaign spokesperson Jordan Monaghan told NBC News in a statement, referring to a report that Zarutska’s family had asked the public in September to stop sharing the video. “Political candidates should stop lying about this tragedy for political gain and actually work to keep our communities safe.”

“Roy Cooper is the only candidate who spent his career prosecuting violent criminals and keeping thousands of them behind bars as attorney general, and signing tough on crime laws and stricter bail and pretrial release rules as governor,” Monaghan said.

Cooper, who had been state attorney general before he became governor, signed a bill into law in 2023 changing bail procedures for violent offenses.

Cooper, meanwhile, has been stressing affordability on the campaign trail, and he is launching a “Make Stuff Cost Less” tour after the primary.

“If you want change in Washington, do you, this campaign is for you,” Cooper said Tuesday night. “If you want to toss out the D.C. insiders, do you? This campaign is for you. You know, if you just think things cost too much, do you? This campaign is for you. I’ve never been in a race that this crucial for the people of North Carolina and for our country, and I need all of you to get this job done.”

Cooper has also been building up his campaign coffers. He had raised $21.1 million and had $14.2 million in his bank account as of Feb. 11, while Whatley had raised $6.3 million and had $2.5 million on hand.



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What does an early bloom mean for Albuquerque plants and trees?

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – Spots of pinks, whites, and greens are starting to bloom across the Metro as warmer-than-average temperatures are tricking some plants into thinking that spring has arrived. Sunny and nearly 80-degree days in early March are causing some trees to spring to life. “Certain plants like apricots, cherries, plums, other fruit trees in that […]



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Megan Moroney Wants to Team Up With Two Country Icons [EXCLUSIVE]

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Megan Moroney just released her much anticipated Cloud 9 album, and on it there are two collaborations: One with Ed Sheeran and the other with Kacey Musgraves.

When Moroney hung out with me on Taste of Country Nights, I wanted to get the scoop on her dream collaborations other than them, and Moroney delivered.

The “Tennessee Orange” singer said, “Probably Miranda Lambert or Chris Stapleton.”

It’s ironic that the two country singers that she wants to collaborate with currently have a collaboration together with their song on country radio, “A Song to Sing.”

While Lambert and Moroney could collaborate sometime down the road, Lambert is currently mentoring Ella Langley, who she wrote “Choosin’ Texas” with. Lambert has been giving her advice on how to stay positive during dark mental health days.

Taste of Country logo

Have Megan Moroney and Miranda Lambert Met?

Yes, Lambert and Moroney have met on numerous occasions at this point, but Moroney also told me about a time before she was famous that she accidentally ran into Lambert at a bar in Nashville — literally.

Moroney told the story of a time she was at the Red Door, a speakeasy in Nashville.

“I was in sweatpants and I stepped on someone on accident, and I turn around and say, ‘Oh my God, I’m so sorry.’ Then I see it’s Miranda Lambert and I’m like, ‘Oh my God, I’m so sorry.'”

READ MORE: Miranda Lambert Covers Ella Langley’s ‘Choosin’ Texas’ at Daytona 500 [Watch]

I predict that a Moroney and Lambert collaboration will happen by 2028 — or the next time one of them releases another album.

The 10 Best Megan Moroney Songs

With a sharp pen and even sharper observational skills, Megan Moroney has recorded some of the very most relatable lyrics in country music during her years in the spotlight to date.

Moroney’s breakout hit was “Tennessee Orange,” a song about flipping football teams (however hesitantly) to align with a love interest. That song has held up — it’s in our list of her Top 10 songs — but it’s just scratching the surface of this singer’s songwriting capabilities.

Keep reading for Taste of Country’s list of the best sad, smart and laugh-out-loud funny Megan Moroney songs.

Gallery Credit: Carena Liptak

The Best Photos of Megan Moroney

Check out the best photos of rising country star Megan Moroney.

Gallery Credit: Nicole Taylor





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