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College football’s top 25 portal classes from the 2026 cycle

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College football’s lone transfer portal window for the 2026 season has, for all intents and purposes, closed. Thousands of players entered and programs across the country vigorously filled needs — and in some cases radically overhauled their roster. Even in a condensed two-week window, the movement left behind a wake of change.

Some programs prioritized retention and leaned more heavily on traditional recruiting, a path that can still produce winning results. Regardless of approach, the portal touches every program.

While roster movement isn’t over — players who entered the portal prior to last week’s deadline are still free to sign in the coming days and weeks — the fervor has died down, allowing us to examine which programs best utilized the portal to strengthen their roster for the upcoming season.

Here are our top portal classes for the 2026 cycle:

LSU knew hiring Lane Kiffin would invite plenty of scrutiny, but also plenty of big fish in the transfer portal. Kiffin lived up to his reputation as a dealmaker by securing multiple top players in the portal.

Landing quarterback Sam Leavitt from Arizona State was a high-wire act, but the Tigers emerged from the transfer cycle with one of the most dynamic players available and, if all goes according to plan, Leavitt’s heir apparent in Husan Longstreet of USC. A cavalcade of new receivers, including Eugene Wilson III (Florida), Jayce Brown (Kansas State), Tre’ Brown III (Old Dominion) and Winston Watkins (Ole Miss) should help revamp LSU’s passing attack.

Add in Boise State defensive back Ty Benefield, who had the seventh-most tackles (105) among defensive backs nationally in 2025, and some reinforcements along the defensive line, including top-ranked edge Princewill Umanmielen, and the Tigers reloaded about as well as they could have hoped, though their offensive line depth remains a bit murky.


Nailing a transfer portal class can alter the trajectory of a program. Just ask Texas Tech, which dominated the portal in 2025, then reached the College Football Playoff. The Red Raiders were once again among the most prolific teams — and spenders — in 2026. They landed Brendan Sorsby, the top-ranked quarterback on the market. A three-year starter, Sorsby’s track record, improvisational skills and dual-threat athleticism give Texas Tech a higher ceiling than it had with Behren Morton.

The Red Raiders have some work to do to simply maintain their momentum. They need to replace 24.5 combined sacks between pass rushers David Bailey and Romello Height, their leading tackler at linebacker (Jacob Rodriguez) and their leading tackler in the secondary in Cole Wisniewski.

To do so, coach Joey McGuire leaned on a familiar blueprint. The headliner is top-10 transfer Mateen Ibirogba (No. 8), a versatile defensive lineman from Wake Forest, and he’s joined by a pair of ultra-productive Group of 5 defensive ends in Trey White (San Diego State) and Adam Trick (Miami-Ohio). Inside linebacker Austin Romaine comes over from Kansas State, where he had one of his best outings of the year against Texas Tech when he had eight tackles and a sack in Week 10.


Few programs have taken advantage of the portal like Indiana, and coach Curt Cignetti stuck to his blueprint again for 2026 by prioritizing starting experience at positions of need to coalesce around a new quarterback.

Josh Hoover doesn’t have the physical upside of other top-ranked transfer quarterbacks, but he has enough arm strength and accuracy to push the ball vertically in Indiana’s system if he can keep his turnovers in check. He has a ready-made No. 1 wide receiver in Nick Marsh. The Michigan State transfer is Indiana’s highest-ranked portal addition because of his 6-foot-3 frame, speed and big-play ability. Expect him to step into Elijah Sarratt‘s role seamlessly.

Elsewhere, Joe Brunner comes over from Wisconsin and is a coveted experienced plug-and-play OL. Boston College running back Turbo Richard is a great scheme fit at a position that will lose two trusted seniors. Defensively, Indiana restocked with Tobi Osunsanmi (Kansas State), AJ Harris (Penn State) Joshua Burnham (Notre Dame), Chiddi Obiazor (Kansas State) and Joe Hjelle (Tulsa) — a group that arrives with 162 combined games of college experience.


Texas’ transfer portal class checks every box. The Longhorns landed one of the top prospects in wide receiver Cam Coleman to create one of the sport’s more exciting receiver pairings alongside Ryan Wingo. Coleman’s ceiling rivals any receiver in the country.

They also overhauled their running backs room, landing Hollywood Smothers (NC State) and Raleek Brown (Arizona State). Their overlapping skill sets and three-down ability should allow them to function seamlessly as a tandem.

Coach Steve Sarkisian didn’t stop there. Defensive tackle Ian Geffrard (Arkansas) is a massive, overpowering presence up the middle, especially against the run, and Pittsburgh transfer Rasheem Biles is a tackling machine who should help offset the loss of Liona Lefau. Texas’ new additions can make immediate impacts and take some of the short-term pressure off incoming five-stars, such as running back Derrek Cooper, and their portal crop left little doubt about the Longhorns’ intention to reload at skill positions to support Arch Manning in 2026.


Ohio State fielded college football’s most feared defense during the regular season, and its most prominent portal additions focused on reloading defensive coordinator Matt Patricia’s group.

The Buckeyes hope they can coax a bit more production out of a pair of Alabama transfers: defensive lineman James Smith and outside linebacker Qua Russaw. At 6-foot-3, 310 pounds, Smith has great size, active hands and the versatility to move around the defensive line, though his play didn’t grade out as favorably in 2025 compared to 2024. Russaw is a one-time five-star prospect with some physical markers that jump on tape, but staying healthy and productive has been a struggle.

They’ll also need to replace a major hole left by the departure of Caleb Downs. Florida State transfer Earl Little Jr. has some of the same rover-style tendencies that made Downs so impactful around the line of scrimmage, and don’t be surprised if Duke transfer Terry Moore outperforms his portal pedigree if he can get healthy in 2026. He has tremendous closing speed and great instincts on the back end.


Matt Campbell needed to attack the portal with roster defections and having inherited an almost nonexistent 2026 recruiting class. He won’t have trouble establishing culture and identity in State College. Penn State’s new coach brought nearly two dozen transfers with him from Iowa State as he assembled a portal class approaching 40 players during a dizzying stretch of roster movement.

Quarterback Rocco Becht is the nucleus of the group. He started 39 games for Campbell at Iowa State and Penn State will entrust the offense to him, including checks at the line, because he’s a quick processor who is also comfortable using his mobility to extend plays when protection breaks down.

While Becht is the headliner, Marcus Neal was a disruptive hybrid safety-linebacker in Campbell’s defensive scheme. Penn State’s top nine transfers all arrive via Iowa State, but Campbell also went outside his program, including landing running back James Peoples from Ohio State, where he averaged 5.6 yards per carry in a part-time role behind breakout freshman Bo Jackson.


Fair or not, one of the major subplots to Pete Golding’s first offseason in Oxford was how he would respond to the roster movement that followed Lane Kiffin’s departure for LSU. Ole Miss’ class lacks the same star power, but it’s plenty deep.

Golding landed multiple top-100 caliber portal prospects and reshaped his secondary, headlined by Florida State transfer Edwin Joseph, a long, rangy safety with impressive ball skills who is strong in run support, plus hard-hitting Georgia safety Joenel Aguero.

Young, projectable offensive tackles are a premium in the portal, and Golding landed freshman Carius Curne from LSU no less. The Rebels also brought in untested yet ultra-talented dual-threat quarterback Deuce Knight, who was out of Mississippi and could be thrust into a starting role if Trinidad Chambliss’ lawsuit against the NCAA seeking another year of eligibility fails.


Kentucky hasn’t finished in the top half of the SEC since 2022, so one strong portal class alone likely won’t flip the script in Lexington. Still, new coach Will Stein clearly received the institutional support to make an instant splash and outperform several SEC peers the Wildcats are chasing in the standings.

Stein has a great track record with quarterbacks and prioritized Notre Dame transfer Kenny Minchey. Minchey hasn’t played much, but the former four-star has polish, mobility and some creativity even when off script.

Kentucky also prioritized offensive line reinforcements to address one of the SEC’s least imposing passing offenses. Lance Heard earned All-SEC honors at left tackle with Tennessee, Coleton Price started 31 consecutive games on Baylor’s interior line and Tegra Tshabola was a two-year starter at Ohio State. That collective experience should help stabilize the offense and give Minchey a much-needed runway during his first extended stretch of college playing time.


Kyle Whittingham’s first plunge into the portal at Michigan was largely successful. He retained enough talent to avoid a mass exodus and landed three top-50 transfers. Defensive end John Henry Daley, one of several transfers to follow Whittingham to Ann Arbor, is by far the most impactful. He’s a plug-and-play contributor who has a mean streak against the run. Daley’s arrival could take some pressure off incoming five-star defensive end Carter Meadows to make an immediate impact.

Smith Snowden was a two-year starter at cornerback for Whittingham at Utah. Michigan’s class also has some younger transfers with upside and plenty of runway, including tight end JJ Buchanan (Utah), wide receiver Jaime Ffrench Jr. (Texas) and offensive guard Houston Ka’aha’aina-Torres (Nebraska). Michigan also landed SC Next 300 prospect Salesi Moa, who originally signed with Utah last month but has jumped to the Wolverines and can develop at WR or in the secondary.

Michigan even revamped its quarterback depth behind Bryce Underwood, bringing in both Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi (Colorado State) and Colin Hurley (LSU).


Identifying KC Concepcion and Mario Craver in the portal transformed Texas A&M’s passing attack in 2025 and netted the Aggies their top two receivers. Craver will return in 2026, but Texas A&M jumped back into the portal in search of a complementary target and landed 6-foot-4 Alabama transfer Isaiah Horton. Horton is a jump-ball specialist who knows how to use his size working in the deep middle of the field, and his three-touchdown performance in the Iron Bowl showed his upside.

Horton was one of four, four-star caliber transfers Mike Elko added this cycle. Fellow Alabama transfer Wilkin Formby has a massive 6-foot-7, 324-pound frame and positional versatility after splitting time between right guard and right tackle in 2025. Tennessee defensive back Rickey Gibson III is comfortable in man coverage and as a one-on-one tackler, and he’s a bounce-back candidate after missing most of last season with a left arm injury. Anto Saka (Northwestern) adds depth to the defensive line and could take a step forward if he can find a bit more bend off the edge.


Auburn hasn’t had a quarterback finish among the SEC’s top five in passing yards since Bo Nix. It’s no coincidence that Nix is also the last Tigers starter with a winning record. The Tigers are hoping new coach Alex Golesh, who arrived with quarterback Byrum Brown in tow, has the track record to reverse recent history.

Brown, one of the top players available in the portal, accounted for 4,166 yards and 42 total touchdowns in 2025 for South Florida. He has great size, mobility and arm strength and has always been productive despite an unusual release. If Auburn takes off under Golesh, it very well could be because Brown helped lay the foundation.

Golesh brought several South Florida players with him, but he also landed Baylor running back Bryson Washington, who has logged at least 154 carries in each of the past two seasons and is steady between the tackles. Ole Miss transfer edge Da’Shawn Womack, the No. 49 player in the class of 2023, began his career at LSU.


The college football landscape shifts at a mind-melting pace. Just ask Arizona State. Two years ago, Kenny Dillingham guided the Sun Devils to the College Football Playoff. Fast-forward to this offseason, and he was forced to rebuild Arizona State on the fly after his top quarterback (Sam Leavitt, LSU), running back (Raleek Brown, Texas) and receiver (Jordyn Tyson, NFL) all moved on.

To Dillingham’s credit, Arizona State took some big swings in its attempt to replace Tyson’s production. Omarion Miller (Colorado) and Reed Harris (Boston College) were two of the better receivers available. Miller is a deep-ball threat, and Harris, who has a big 6-foot-5 frame, can beat man coverage on the boundary. Both averaged more than 17 yards per catch in 2025.

The Sun Devils’ class hinges on the development of transfer quarterback Cutter Boley, who they hope will fare better with an improved supporting cast and a more level playing field after Kentucky’s offense was outmatched in 2025. If he struggles, Dillingham could also consider turning to his top incoming high schooler, SC Next 300 four-star quarterback Jake Fette.


There are so many new faces in Stillwater that incoming coach Eric Morris may need name tags once everyone reports. But turnover was necessary after Oklahoma State bottomed out in 2025, and the Cowboys will benefit from continuity after their top three additions all arrive via Morris’ North Texas pipeline, which brought more than a dozen Mean Green transfers overall.

Quarterback Drew Mestemaker commands the biggest spotlight after emerging from walk-on obscurity to lead the FBS in passing yards and touchdowns in 2025. His mechanics are unorthodox, but the production speaks volumes and his familiarity with Morris’ offense will help speed up the installation process. Morris also unearthed running back Caleb Hawkins, an explosive runner who led the FBS in rushing touchdowns in 2025 with North Texas, and wide receiver Wyatt Young completes the triumvirate of newcomers at key skill positions.

The best part for Oklahoma State fans? They all arrive with multiple years of eligibility remaining.


James Franklin’s arrival supercharged Virginia Tech’s recruiting efforts and established a well-traveled pipeline of former Penn State players or commits headed to Blacksburg. While most of his splashy additions came from the high school ranks, Franklin also dipped into the portal.

Quarterback Ethan Grunkemeyer unexpectedly replaced Drew Allar last year as Penn State’s starter and grew more comfortable by the week. He’s a rhythm passer with a competitive spirit that teammates gravitate toward. Expect him to lean on Luke Reynolds, a 6-foot-4, 250-pound target with some wiggle and solid blocking skills who could take a leap if his hands become a bit more reliable.

Grunkemeyer’s addition could allow Franklin to slow-play the development of incoming four-star quarterback Troy Huhn or untested North Carolina transfer Bryce Baker. He’ll also benefit from throwing to Duke transfer Que’Sean Brown, a slot receiver who is dynamic in space.

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Ethan Grunkemeyer airs it out for 53-yard touchdown pass

Ethan Grunkemeyer connects for 53-yard TD pass


Marcus Freeman prioritized quality over quantity in the portal, with a clear emphasis on restocking Notre Dame’s defensive line. Tionne Gray is a true space eater in the middle at nearly 340 pounds, though carving out a significant role in Oregon’s defensive line rotation was a challenge. Pittsburgh transfer Francis Brewu stepped into a larger role in 2025 and graded out favorably, especially against the run, despite lacking high-end size. Keon Keeley might have the highest ceiling of the three but has the most work remaining to reach it. The 2023 five-star has immense physical measurables but fell short of expectations over two choppy years at Alabama.

Notre Dame’s highest-profile addition, however, is Ohio State receiver Quincy Porter. The No. 9 receiver in the 2025 high school class, Porter is a tall, physical target who consistently outperforms his testing times. He should help replace production left behind by Malachi Fields and Will Pauling and could blossom with a much clearer path to playing time in South Bend — an opportunity that wasn’t available with the Buckeyes.


Jeff Brohm has built one of the ACC’s most consistent scoring offenses since his arrival at Louisville. This year’s portal class is built with the intention of keeping that rolling.

Louisville’s top five highest-graded additions currently are on offense, headlined by Vanderbilt transfer receiver Tre Richardson. He’s an explosive route runner with great initial burst out of the slot and a play style similar to Georgia’s Zachariah Branch. He’s joined by Tulsa tight end Brody Foley, Florida State wide receiver Lawayne McCoy and Missouri running back Marquise Davis.

They will all need to gel around quarterback Lincoln Kienholz, who arrives from Ohio State with limited in-game experience. Brohm has shown great feel for adding transfer quarterbacks like Jack Plummer and Miller Moss. Kienholz has impressive mobility, but there’s more risk given he has thrown just 36 career passes and arrives with far less experience than Brohm’s previous additions.


Deion Sanders went back to the portal to fix a Buffaloes roster that went 3-9 in 2025, including just one Big 12 win. Former Texas wide receiver DeAndre Moore Jr. is the biggest coup, and he reunites with new Colorado offensive coordinator Brennan Marion, who recruited him to Texas. Moore is explosive in the open field with a solid track record of production for the Longhorns and should command a significant target share after Omarion Miller departed for Arizona State.

Defensive back Boo Carter made the 2024 SEC All-Freshman team at Tennessee but is in need of a fresh start after being dismissed from the team in Knoxville. He’s an ideal nickel corner with a penchant for forcing turnovers who can also flip the field as a punt returner. Colorado also went back to the Texas transfer pipeline on defense to land Liona Lefau. He was a two-year starter in Austin and a well-rounded linebacker who can be left on the field for all three downs.


Tosh Lupoi arrives in Berkeley with a defensive background, but his early portal work made it clear he prioritized the other side of the ball as Cal looks to surround Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele with more firepower in 2026.

Three of Cal’s top five additions are currently all pass catchers. Chase Hendricks levels up to the Power 4 after a breakout season at Ohio, where the wide receiver caught 71 passes for 1,037 yards and 7 touchdowns. He’s a smooth, reliable route runner. So, too, is Ian Strong, who arrives via Rutgers and was productive even in an offense that often struggled to move the ball in the air. New Mexico transfer Dorian Thomas could emerge as a safety valve at tight end in the short passing game and ease the transition for four-star tight end Taimane Purcell, the team’s top-ranked high school commit. Add in running back Adam Mohammed (Washington) and Lupoi has injected much-needed life into Cal’s offense.

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Ian Strong makes impressive TD grab on Rutgers’ opening drive

Ian Strong’s nice catch in the end zone is ruled a touchdown, giving Rutgers an early 7-0 lead over Northwestern.


There was some anxiety in Eugene earlier in January. The Ducks lost both coordinators and saw nearly twice as many players exit via the portal compared to new arrivals. But Dante Moore‘s return eased some worries, and Oregon didn’t have a ton of holes to fill in the first place.

Dan Lanning and his staff were shrewd in their additions. They replaced standout safety transfer Dillon Thieneman with another high-end option in Koi Perich out of Minnesota. Perich was one of the best players available regardless of position. He’s a dynamic athlete and reliable tackler with great recognition skills along with a nose for the ball.

Moore’s future replacement, Dylan Raiola, now gets a year to grow and prove he’s willing to take a long-term approach to his development. Oregon also has a trio of five-star freshmen on the way, so the cupboard remains well stocked.


After fielding one of the SEC’s worst defenses in 2025, Tennessee hired ex-Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles to rebuild the unit. He’ll lean on several players who know his system well.

The Volunteers added Penn State defensive transfers at all three levels, led by freshman edge rusher Chaz Coleman. The 6-foot-4, 240-pounder has some of the highest upside of any transfer in the country with an envious blend of power, speed and fluidity, though he’s still developing physically. The other former Nittany Lions added are linebacker Amare Campbell and defensive tackle Xavier Gilliam. Cornerback Kayin Lee jumps over from Auburn, and although he has good speed and length, it’s his physicality that stands out.

About the only thing missing from Tennessee’s portal haul is a veteran quarterback, though sophomore Ryan Staub got into four games with Colorado. Five-star signal-caller Faizon Brandon and fellow five-star receiver Tristen Keys are also on the way via the high school ranks.


Shane Beamer gets a second chance to rebuild around LaNorris Sellers after a lackluster four-win season. Beamer’s top priority in the portal was addressing an offensive line that fell well short of expectations in 2025. NC State transfer Jacarrius Peak, a top-10 portal prospect, is a great place to start. Peak offers premium positional value. He can replace Tree Babalade at right tackle but was also first-team All-ACC at left tackle in 2025. Peak is athletic, explosive and could take another leap with more consistent footwork, and he’s a great veteran example for incoming four-star tackle Darius Gray.

Defensively, Tomiwa Durojaiye adds experience and some run-stuffing chops along South Carolina’s interior defensive line. He’s on his fifth school in as many years: Kentucky (2022), West Virginia (2023), Florida State (2024) and Illinois (2025).


Georgia took a businesslike approach to the portal, highlighted by the addition of Auburn defensive lineman Amaris Williams. A four-star recruit out of high school, Williams has a wealth of pass-rushing tools that are accentuated by a high motor, though he’ll need to string together more consistent performances after an up-and-down sophomore season with the Tigers.

Clemson transfer Khalil Barnes‘ scheme versatility certainly appealed to Kirby Smart. Barnes is a dependable back-end option at safety who is comfortable patrolling the middle of the field. Keep an eye on incoming Georgia Tech receiver Isiah Canion as well. He has a huge 6-foot-4, 215-pound frame, explosive athleticism and deft body control. Zachariah Branch’s departure will leave a massive number of targets up for grabs and no obvious choice to step up and fill the void, but Canion gives UGA a talented option to try and replace some of that production.


Alabama’s early exit from the College Football Playoff coupled with a sluggish start to the portal cycle sparked some unease in Tuscaloosa. While Kalen DeBoer’s class isn’t loaded with blue-chip talent, he closed strong by targeting the trenches and addressing some of the roster’s most pressing needs.

Currently six of Alabama’s seven highest-graded transfers project to the offensive or defensive line, led by USC transfer defensive tackle Devan Thompkins. He’s a late bloomer who flashes some disruptive qualities despite weighing just 290 pounds as an interior defensive lineman. He could team with 330-pound Oregon transfer Terrance Green to help reshape Alabama’s run defense. On the other side of the trenches, the Tide capitalized on Michigan’s coaching shuffle to reel in offensive tackle Ty Haywood and guard Kaden Strayhorn, two young linemen who just came out in the 2025 class.


Oklahoma’s portal class is on the smaller side relative to other SEC peers, but it’s clear the Sooners prioritized finding John Mateer some help. Their six highest-graded additions are all on offense. That includes doubling up at receiver, tight end and along the offensive line.

Arkansas offensive lineman E’Marion Harris started 24 games between guard and tackle over the past two seasons. He’s a sound pass blocker with a huge 6-foot-7, 313-pound frame. Oklahoma also added guard Peyton Joseph from Georgia Tech, though he’s a bit more of a long-term project with four years of eligibility remaining.

The Sooners brought both Trell Harris (Virginia) and Parker Livingstone (Texas) into the fold at receiver. Harris is smaller, quicker and a nightmare to reel in after the catch. Livingstone has a bigger frame at 6-foot-4 and his departure was a bit of a surprise given his chemistry with Arch Manning. They also added several tight ends including a pair with complementary skill sets: Hayden Hansen (Florida) is a more experienced, traditional in-line option while Jack Van Dorselaer (Tennessee) has some upside as a pass catcher.


Missouri faces a fascinating program crossroads. The Tigers aren’t sneaking up on anyone anymore — not after winning 29 games over the past three seasons under Eli Drinkwitz — but now must find the right formula to help the program take the next step into the College Football Playoff.

Missouri is betting on a higher ceiling at quarterback after getting uneven production from Penn State transfer Beau Pribula in 2025. Ole Miss transfer Austin Simmons won the starting job out of camp and brings clear upside. Usurped by Trinidad Chambliss last season, Simmons flashes impressive arm talent but remains unpolished, meaning patience might be required early.

Missouri worked to surround him with some new pass catchers. The Tigers landed multiple receivers in the portal: Horatio Fields (Auburn), Naeshaun Montgomery (Florida), Caleb Goodie (Cincinnati) and Kenric Lanier II (Minnesota). They’ll need to replace the production of leading receiver Kevin Coleman Jr., who caught 66 passes for 732 yards.



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Pentagon strategy shifts focus

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The Pentagon released a priority-shifting National Defense Strategy late Friday that chastised U.S. allies to take control of their own security and reasserted the Trump administration’s focus on dominance in the Western Hemisphere above a longtime goal of countering China.The 34-page document, the first since 2022, was highly political for a military blueprint, criticizing partners from Europe to Asia for relying on previous U.S. administrations to subsidize their defense. It called for “a sharp shift — in approach, focus, and tone.” That translated to a blunt assessment that allies would take on more of the burden of countering nations from Russia to North Korea.“For too long, the U.S. Government neglected — even rejected — putting Americans and their concrete interests first,” read the opening sentence.It capped off a week of animosity between President Donald Trump’s administration and traditional allies like Europe, with Trump threatening to impose tariffs on some European partners to press a bid to acquire Greenland before announcing a deal that lowered the temperature.As allies confront what some see as a hostile attitude from the U.S., they will almost certainly be unhappy to see that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s department will provide “credible options to guarantee U.S. military and commercial access to key terrain,” especially Greenland and the Panama Canal.Following a tiff this week at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, the strategy at once urges cooperation with Canada and other neighbors while still issuing a stark warning.“We will engage in good faith with our neighbors, from Canada to our partners in Central and South America, but we will ensure that they respect and do their part to defend our shared interests,” the document says. “And where they do not, we will stand ready to take focused, decisive action that concretely advances U.S. interests.”Much like the White House’s National Security Strategy that preceded it, the defense blueprint reinforces Trump’s “America First” philosophy, which favors nonintervention overseas, questions decades of strategic relationships and prioritizes U.S. interests. The National Defense Strategy last was published in 2022 under then-President Joe Biden and focused on China as America’s “pacing challenge.”Western HemisphereThe strategy simultaneously courts help from partners in America’s backyard, while warning them that the U.S. will “actively and fearlessly defend America’s interests throughout the Western Hemisphere.”It specifically points to access to the Panama Canal and Greenland. It comes just days after Trump said he reached a “framework of a future deal” on Arctic security with NATO leader Mark Rutte that would offer the U.S. “total access” to Greenland, a territory of NATO ally Denmark.Danish officials, who spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive negotiations, say formal negotiations have yet to begin.Trump previously suggested that the U.S. should potentially consider retaking control of the Panama Canal and accused Panama of ceding influence to China. Asked this week if the U.S. reclaiming the canal was still on the table, Trump demurred.“I don’t want to tell you that,” the president responded. “Sort of, I must say, soft of. That’s sort of on the table.”The Pentagon also touted the operation that ousted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this month, saying “all narco-terrorists should take note.”China and the greater Asia-Pacific regionThe new policy document views China — which the Biden administration saw as a top adversary — as a settled force in the Indo-Pacific region that only needs to be deterred from dominating the U.S. or its allies.The goal “is not to dominate China; nor is it to strangle or humiliate them,” the document says. It later adds, “This does not require regime change or some other existential struggle.”“President Trump seeks a stable peace, fair trade, and respectful relations with China,” it says, which follows efforts to climb down from a trade war sparked by the administration’s sky-high tariffs. It says it will “open a wider range of military-to-military communications” with China’s army.The strategy, meanwhile, makes no mention of or guarantee to Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing claims as its own and says it will take by force if necessary. The U.S. is obligated by its own laws to give military support to Taiwan.By contrast, the Biden administration’s 2022 strategy said the U.S. would “support Taiwan’s asymmetric self-defense.”In another example of offloading regional security to allies, the document says, “South Korea is capable of taking primary responsibility for deterring North Korea with critical but more limited U.S. support.”EuropeWhile saying that “Russia will remain a persistent but manageable threat to NATO’s eastern members for the foreseeable future,” the defense strategy asserts that NATO allies are much more powerful and so are “strongly positioned to take primary responsibility for Europe’s conventional defense.”It says the Pentagon will play a key role in NATO “even as we calibrate U.S. force posture and activities in the European theater” to focus on priorities closer to home.The U.S. already has confirmed that it will reduce its troop presence on NATO’s borders with Ukraine, with allies expressing concern that the Trump administration might drastically cut their numbers and leave a security vacuum as European countries confront an increasingly aggressive Russia.

The Pentagon released a priority-shifting National Defense Strategy late Friday that chastised U.S. allies to take control of their own security and reasserted the Trump administration’s focus on dominance in the Western Hemisphere above a longtime goal of countering China.

The 34-page document, the first since 2022, was highly political for a military blueprint, criticizing partners from Europe to Asia for relying on previous U.S. administrations to subsidize their defense. It called for “a sharp shift — in approach, focus, and tone.” That translated to a blunt assessment that allies would take on more of the burden of countering nations from Russia to North Korea.

“For too long, the U.S. Government neglected — even rejected — putting Americans and their concrete interests first,” read the opening sentence.

It capped off a week of animosity between President Donald Trump’s administration and traditional allies like Europe, with Trump threatening to impose tariffs on some European partners to press a bid to acquire Greenland before announcing a deal that lowered the temperature.

As allies confront what some see as a hostile attitude from the U.S., they will almost certainly be unhappy to see that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s department will provide “credible options to guarantee U.S. military and commercial access to key terrain,” especially Greenland and the Panama Canal.

Following a tiff this week at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, the strategy at once urges cooperation with Canada and other neighbors while still issuing a stark warning.

“We will engage in good faith with our neighbors, from Canada to our partners in Central and South America, but we will ensure that they respect and do their part to defend our shared interests,” the document says. “And where they do not, we will stand ready to take focused, decisive action that concretely advances U.S. interests.”

Much like the White House’s National Security Strategy that preceded it, the defense blueprint reinforces Trump’s “America First” philosophy, which favors nonintervention overseas, questions decades of strategic relationships and prioritizes U.S. interests. The National Defense Strategy last was published in 2022 under then-President Joe Biden and focused on China as America’s “pacing challenge.”

Western Hemisphere

The strategy simultaneously courts help from partners in America’s backyard, while warning them that the U.S. will “actively and fearlessly defend America’s interests throughout the Western Hemisphere.”

It specifically points to access to the Panama Canal and Greenland. It comes just days after Trump said he reached a “framework of a future deal” on Arctic security with NATO leader Mark Rutte that would offer the U.S. “total access” to Greenland, a territory of NATO ally Denmark.

Danish officials, who spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive negotiations, say formal negotiations have yet to begin.

Trump previously suggested that the U.S. should potentially consider retaking control of the Panama Canal and accused Panama of ceding influence to China. Asked this week if the U.S. reclaiming the canal was still on the table, Trump demurred.

“I don’t want to tell you that,” the president responded. “Sort of, I must say, soft of. That’s sort of on the table.”

The Pentagon also touted the operation that ousted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this month, saying “all narco-terrorists should take note.”

China and the greater Asia-Pacific region

The new policy document views China — which the Biden administration saw as a top adversary — as a settled force in the Indo-Pacific region that only needs to be deterred from dominating the U.S. or its allies.

The goal “is not to dominate China; nor is it to strangle or humiliate them,” the document says. It later adds, “This does not require regime change or some other existential struggle.”

“President Trump seeks a stable peace, fair trade, and respectful relations with China,” it says, which follows efforts to climb down from a trade war sparked by the administration’s sky-high tariffs. It says it will “open a wider range of military-to-military communications” with China’s army.

The strategy, meanwhile, makes no mention of or guarantee to Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing claims as its own and says it will take by force if necessary. The U.S. is obligated by its own laws to give military support to Taiwan.

By contrast, the Biden administration’s 2022 strategy said the U.S. would “support Taiwan’s asymmetric self-defense.”

In another example of offloading regional security to allies, the document says, “South Korea is capable of taking primary responsibility for deterring North Korea with critical but more limited U.S. support.”

Europe

While saying that “Russia will remain a persistent but manageable threat to NATO’s eastern members for the foreseeable future,” the defense strategy asserts that NATO allies are much more powerful and so are “strongly positioned to take primary responsibility for Europe’s conventional defense.”

It says the Pentagon will play a key role in NATO “even as we calibrate U.S. force posture and activities in the European theater” to focus on priorities closer to home.

The U.S. already has confirmed that it will reduce its troop presence on NATO’s borders with Ukraine, with allies expressing concern that the Trump administration might drastically cut their numbers and leave a security vacuum as European countries confront an increasingly aggressive Russia.



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Haiti’s transitional council deepens political chaos by voting to oust the prime minister

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Haiti’s political crisis deepened Friday when a member of the country’s transitional council announced that a majority of the panel has voted to fire the country’s embattled Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé.

Edgard Leblanc Fils made the announcement at a news conference alongside fellow council member Leslie Voltaire, defying U.S. government calls to maintain stability in the country’s leadership.

Leblanc said the council would replace Fils-Aimé within 30 days.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the council’s current leader, Laurent Saint-Cyr, supported dismissing the prime minister. Saint-Cyr said in a statement earlier this week that he opposes any push to undermine the government’s stability ahead of Feb. 7, when the council is provisionally scheduled to step down.



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‘Marshals’ Trailer Offers Evidence That Monica Dutton Died

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Two scenes from the just-released, official trailer for Yellowstone spin-off series Marshals explain what happened to Monica Dutton. A third scene undermines everything we thought we knew.

  • Luke Grimes is the star of Marshals on CBS. He previously played Kayce Dutton on Yellowstone.
  • Kelsey Asbille played his wife Monica through all five seasons of the show. She’s yet to be attached to this new show.
  • Marshals (previously called Y: Marshals) debuts on March 1.

Related: Everything We Know About Yellowstone Spin-off Marshals

The rest of the 2-minute-plus-long trailer focuses on Kayce Dutton’s new job with the U.S. Marshals. We meet the cast and watch them chase bad guys through tough terrain and impossible circumstances.

It all feels like a pretty standard CBS procedural, albeit one set in rural Montana and not New York City or L.A.

What Happened To Monica Dutton on Marshals?

Kelsey Asbille’s Monica Dutton has been absent from any and all promotion of this show which — five weeks out — seems to be confirmation that she’s not a part of it. For a Yellowstone fan, this is confusing if not frustrating. She ended the OG Taylor Sheridan show in good health and the marriage was strong.

The first 25 seconds of the trailer provide answers but the last 25 seconds ask new questions. Watch, and then we’ll discuss.

After a small explosion, we see Kayce startled awake inside the cabin set aside for him after the Yellowstone Ranch was demolished. He’s alone in bed however.

Eight seconds later a nurse is seen pulling the sheet over the head of a body lying in that same bed. Squint and you’ll see medicine bottles on the window-side table. So there you have it. Monica Dutton was either A) very ill and died in her sleep or B) secretly battling addiction.

But wait!

At the 1:50 mark, we see Kayce looking over a rock-strewn field when a shrouded figure glides up alongside him. That gentle swagger and his easy comfort with whomever he sees suggests it’s his wife. Of course this happens as we hear him say, “Well, the Yellowstone is gone. Same for most of my family.”

Related: The Madison Trailer Teases Tragedy + I Think I Know What It Is

This TV show is definitely playing with the minds of longtime Yellowstone fans, which is the kind of mean we love. For what it’s worth, the rest of the trailer does feature Thomas Rainwater (Gil Birmingham) and previous releases have confirmed Tate Dutton (Brecken Merrill) is in for Season 1 of Marshals.

So, it’s just Monica we’re wondering about. The show’s logline tilts us back to believing Monica is dead:

“With the Yellowstone Ranch behind him, Dutton joins an elite unit of U.S. Marshals, combining his skills as a cowboy and Navy SEAL to bring range justice to Montana. Kayce and his teammates — Pete Calvin, Belle Skinner, Andrea Cruz and Miles Kittle – must balance the high psychological cost of serving as the last line of defense in the region’s war on violence with their duty to their families, which for Kayce includes his son Tate and his confidantes Mo and Thomas Rainwater from the Broken Rock reservation.”

A shot of Kayce kneeling at a crude burial site is another mark in the “She Gone” ledger. Interestingly, Asbille has gone radio silent. After years of being pretty active on Instagram, she hasn’t said anything since Dec. 24 when she gushed over how much she liked working with Grimes.

Maybe she just wasn’t down for doing it all over again. Maybe she’s the next person to be added to this list of stars who said “No” to Sheridan:

Yellowstone: Who Said ‘No’ To Taylor Sheridan?

Why in the world would anyone turn down a chance to star on Yellowstone? It happened, more than once. In fact the show’s biggest star nearly quit after one season while an entire network passed because the hit TV show didn’t groove with their ideology.

See who passed on Yellowstone and how it ended up working out.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

17 Most Stunning Yellowstone Franchise Deaths

No character is safe in Taylor Sheridan’s Yellowstone universe. Here are the 17 most stunning deaths from 1883, 1923 and five seasons of Yellowstone.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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Opinion | Will Virginia Go the Way of Illinois?

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The plaintiff bar poses the first big test for new Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger.



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Patriots vs. Broncos prediction, odds, line: 2026 AFC Championship Game picks by proven model

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The Denver Broncos will look to overcome the loss of quarterback Bo Nix (ankle) when they battle the New England Patriots in the 2026 AFC Championship Game on Sunday. The winner will advance to Super Bowl LX. New England downed Houston 28-16 on Sunday, while Denver outlasted Buffalo 33-30 in overtime on Saturday. The Patriots (14-3), the second seed in the AFC, are 8-0 on the road this season. The Broncos (14-3), the top seed in the conference, are 9-1 at home, including the postseason.

Kickoff from Empower Field at Mile High in Denver is set for 3 p.m. ET on CBS and Paramount+ (sign up here). The Patriots are 3.5-point favorites in the latest Patriots vs. Broncos odds, a 2-point drop since opening as 5.5-point favorites. The over/under for total points scored is 42.5 via DraftKings Sportsbooks. Before making any Broncos vs. Patriots picks, check out the NFL predictions from the SportsLine Projection Model

The model, which simulates every NFL game 10,000 times, is up well over $7,000 for $100 players on top-rated NFL picks since its inception. The model enters the AFC and NFC Championship Games on a 53-37 run on top-rated picks dating back to 2024. Anybody following its NFL betting picks at sportsbooks and on betting apps could have seen strong returns.    

Now, the model has set its sights on Patriots vs. Broncos. You can visit SportsLine now to see the picks. Here are the NFL odds and trends for Broncos vs. Patriots

Patriots vs. Broncos spread

New England -3.5 at DraftKings Sportsbook

Patriots vs. Broncos over/under

42.5 points

Patriots vs. Broncos money line 

New England -218, Denver +180

Patriots vs. Broncos picks

See picks at SportsLine

Patriots vs. Broncos streaming 

Paramount+

Why the Patriots can cover

MVP candidate Drake Maye helps power the New England offense. In 17 regular-season games, he completed 72% of his passes for 4,394 yards and 31 touchdowns with eight interceptions and a 113.5 rating. In the postseason, he has thrown for four touchdowns with two interceptions. In the win over the Texans, he completed 16 of 27 passes for 179 yards and three touchdowns with one interception.

His top target has been Stefon Diggs. In 17 regular-season games, he caught 85 passes for 1,013 yards and four touchdowns. He had 17 explosive plays of 20 yards or more, including a long of 34. He also had 354 yards after the catch with 51 first-down conversions. He caught four passes for 40 yards and a score in the win over Houston. See which team to back at SportsLine

Why the Broncos can cover

Backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham will take over for the injured Nix. He will be making his first extended appearance since Jan. 7, 2024, when he guided Denver against the Las Vegas Raiders. In a 27-14 loss, he completed 20 of 34 passes for 272 yards and one touchdown with one interception. For his career, he has played in 20 games, completing 59.4% of his passes for 1,422 yards and eight touchdowns with eight interceptions.

Veteran wide receiver Courtland Sutton will be a key target. In 18 games, including playoffs, he has 78 receptions for 1,070 yards and seven touchdowns. Sutton had four catches for 53 yards in the win over Buffalo. He’s had two games with seven or more receptions, including seven for 113 yards (16.1 average) and one touchdown in a 34-26 win over Green Bay on Dec. 14. See which team to back at SportsLine.

How to make Patriots vs. Broncos picks

SportsLine’s model is going Under on the total, projecting 40 combined points. It also says one side of the spread hits in nearly 60% of simulations. You can only get the pick at SportsLine. 

So who wins Broncos vs. Patriots, and which side of the spread hits nearly 60% of the time? Visit SportsLine now to see which side of the Patriots vs. Broncos spread to jump on, all from the advanced model that finished up over $7,000 on its NFL picks since its inception, and find out.





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State senate bill could give nearly half-a-billion dollars to help fund new UNM School of Medicine

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SANTA FE, N.M. (KRQE) –There’s a big push at the Roundhouse this year to get more doctors practicing in New Mexico, and one of the possibilities is funding a new medical school with a half-billion-dollar price tag. The University of New Mexico said they’ve outgrown its current school of medicine and is ready for a big expansion. On the northeast […]



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Climber Alex Honnold to scale skyscraper live on Netflix

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Climber Alex Honnold is set to scale one of the world’s tallest skyscrapers. The elite climber is doing it as part of a Netflix special called “Skyscraper Live.” NBC News’ Steve Patterson reports.

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BACKENGRILLEN Drop Ferocious Self-Titled Debut, Blending Hardcore, Punk & Free-Form Death Jazz

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The new Umeå-based ensemble Backengrillen have officially arrived with their self-titled debut album, out today January 23, 2026 on vinyl, CD and digitally via Bandcamp, released through Svart Records.

Rooted in hardcore, punk, noise and free jazz, Backengrillen are less a band than a collision. Their lineup draws from the original incarnation of Refused, alongside deep ties to projects such as Fire Orchestra, The International Noise Conspiracy, INVSN, TEXT, Final Exit, The Thing and classic jazz outfits — with one member even tracing their origins back to the 1980 jazz-rock ensemble Nirvana.

As saxophonist and experimental icon Mats Gustafsson puts it, the band’s ethos is about tearing down borders entirely: “Music and art without definite labels is a necessity for a better living — create your own individual genres and open up for more death-jazz-core-noise-metal-poetry to enter your world of destroying the local and global stupidities around us.”

That sense of joyful destruction runs straight through the record. Drummer David Sandström sums it up with typical bluntness: “We really hope this slab of stupid, violent death rock will ruin someone’s day. Haha.”

Backengrillen describe themselves as anti-fascist, anti-racist, free-form death jazz, operating in the memory of Lars Lystedt while carving out new perspectives on both jazz and punk. The result is a confrontational, in-your-face hybrid — hardcore jazz that’s as physical as it is chaotic.

Sonically, the band pull inspiration from an intentionally unruly spectrum: The Cramps, Little Richard, Albert Ayler, Polly Bradfield, Entombed, John Zorn, Misfits, The Stooges, Lars Gullin and Can all loom somewhere in the wreckage. It’s music that swings, screams and convulses — four “colliding locomotives,” as the band describe it, generating a new kind of brutal beauty.

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Enphase Energy to Cut Jobs as End of Tax Credits Dents Demand

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The company plans to cut about 6% of its workforce as part of a broader restructuring after the expiration of a federal tax credit sapped demand for residential solar panels.



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