logo
Donald Trump invites athletes to White House as he reinstates Presidential Fitness Test

Donald Trump invites athletes to White House as he reinstates Presidential Fitness Test

USA Today3 days ago
Current and former professional athletes will be in attendance at the White House today as President Donald Trump reinstates the Presidential Fitness Test, which has been out of commission since the end of the 2012-2013 school year.
The White House claims this decision was made to address "the widespread epidemic of declining health and physical fitness." According to CNN, the presidential council wants to partner with more pro athletes and organizations to help trumpet the President's cause.
That idea may be true, but in today's political climate, it can be difficult to get any public figure, particularly athletes or celebrities, to make an appearance that would have them stand on either side of the political aisle. Still, several athletes will show for the announcement. Here are all the sports figures who will be in attendance.
Sports figures in attendance for Trump's Presidential Fitness Test reinstatement
The most famous sports figure in attendance will be former New York Giants' linebacker Lawrence Taylor, widely-regarded as the greatest defensive player in NFL history. Taylor has spoken at Trump rallies in the past. He won't be the only NFL player, though, as Kansas City Chiefs' kicker Harrison Butker, who came under fire a year ago for a commencement speech he gave telling women to emphasize their home lives above their careers, will also be in attendance. Esteemed LIV golfer Bryson DeChambeau will be there as well. The president played golf with him on DeChambeau's popular YouTube series "Break 50."
Other sports figures set to attend include Chief Content Officer for the WWE Paul Levesque AKA "Triple H", former pro golfer and ten-time major champion Annika Sorenstam, head of Texas Tech's Name, Image and Likeness collective Cody Campbell, and former Trump sports council member Stephen Soloway.
What is the Presidential Fitness Test?
Retired following the 2012-2013 school year, the Presidential Fitness Test was a fitness assessment first administered by President Dwight Eisenhower in 1956, originally consisting of five events − the one-mile run, pull-ups or flexed-arm hang, sit-ups, shuttle run, and the sit-and-reach. Later iterations also included right-angle push-ups.
The goal of the assessment was to track individual progress while also offering a standard for all students to strive for.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cowboys may have stumbled into a superstar as a second-round pick angles toward starting
Cowboys may have stumbled into a superstar as a second-round pick angles toward starting

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Cowboys may have stumbled into a superstar as a second-round pick angles toward starting

The Dallas Cowboys needed help at defensive end for the 2025 season. Facing the loss of long-time starter and multiple-time Pro Bowler DeMarcus Lawrence, the team needed reinforcements. The club had drafted the position, highly, but had yet to reap any dominating rewards. So when the opportunity presented itself to secure themselves the potential steal of the 2025 draft, they jumped on it Dallas secured the services of perhaps the best pass-rushing defensive end of the draft when they drafted Boston College's Donovan Ezeiruaku. But pre-draft accolades don't matter if it doesn't manifest itself on a pro field, and while training camp isn't the real thing, what Ezeiruaku has shown in Oxnard has a lot of people extremely excited. Rundown Position: Defensive End Age: 21 Height: 6-foot-2 Weight: 248 pounds Hometown: Williamstown, NJ High School: Williamstown College: Boston College (Highlights) Draft: 2025 Second Round (No. 44 overall) Acquired: 2025 draft Contract: Four-year contract (2025), $10.2 million 2025 Base Salary: $840,000, $1.85 million cap hit Profile With Micah Parsons not participating in practice due to his contract dispute, Ezeiruaku has been declaring himself as a true force to reckon with. Lining up primarily as a left defensive end, Ezeiruaku has shown a complex rush attack that is far beyond his years. He's also displayed the ability to set the edge, looking like he's ready to take on a starting role sooner rather than later. Dallas brought back Dante Fowler, who left for a season in Washington, and the expectation was that he'd be starting opposite Parsons, but that may not be the case and if it is may not be for long. The Cowboys also signed Payton Turner, a former first-round pick like Fowler, as veteran depth. They join last year's second rounder Marshawn Kneeland as Parsons' supporting cast. That's before mentioning 2022 second-round pick Sam Williams, who is looking to return from an ACL injury. Together, the Cowboys have assembled a tremendously pedigreed group at defensive end, but Ezeiruaku looks like a potential breakout star amongst the room. Follow Cowboys Wire on Facebook to join in on the conversation with fellow fans! This article originally appeared on Cowboys Wire: Dallas Cowboys player profile: No. 31 DE Donovan Ezeiruaku

Nets rookies highlights from 2025 NBA Las Vegas Summer League
Nets rookies highlights from 2025 NBA Las Vegas Summer League

USA Today

time7 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Nets rookies highlights from 2025 NBA Las Vegas Summer League

The Brooklyn Nets came away from the 2025 NBA Las Vegas Summer League with a disappointing 1-4 record as they were trying to incorporate four of the five rookies they drafted. Brooklyn was able to see what Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf, and Danny Wolf had to offer against some NBA competition and the takeaways varied depending on the player. For any Nets fans that weren't able to watch the summer league or just want to reminder of what most of the rookies did in Las Vegas, Brooklyn's content team posted a highlight reel on its YouTube channel. While the Nets' best player in the summer league was undoubtedly center Drew Timme, each of the four rookies that were able to play showed why they were drafted in the first place. Demin, the eighth overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, averaged 11.3 points, 4.3 rebounds, and 1.3 assists per game while shooting 40.7% from the field and 43.5% from three-point land. Demin came into the summer league with questions regarding his long-range shooting ability and his effectiveness off the ball, but he showed that those concerns aren't as major as they seemed during the pre-Draft process. Traore, the 19th overall pick, showcased his trademark speed with the basketball throughout his time in Las Vegas, even though his efficiency left plenty to be desired from one of the players vying for point guard minutes. Traore 7.3 points, 3.3 rebounds, and 2.7 assists per contest while shooting 30.4% from the floor and 14.3% from deep as he tried to share the ball-handling duties with his other three fellow rookies. Saraf, the 26th overall pick, got his first taste of NBA action after coming over from playing overseas and he averaged 7.0 points, 2.0 rebounds, and 3.7 assists per game while shooting 30.4% from the field and 53.8% from the free-throw line. Wolf, the 27th overall pick, had some impressive moments during his time in the summer league, averaging 10.0 points, 7.3 rebounds, and 2.7 assists per contest while shooting 39.1% from the floor and 40.0% from behind the three-point line.

Trump fired America's economic data collector. History shows the perils.
Trump fired America's economic data collector. History shows the perils.

Boston Globe

time7 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump fired America's economic data collector. History shows the perils.

There is the case of China, where earlier this century local authorities manipulated data to hit growth targets mandated by Beijing, forcing analysts and policymakers to turn to alternative measures to gauge the state of the country's economy. Advertisement Perhaps most famously, there is the case of Argentina, which in the 2000s and 2010s systematically understated inflation figures to such a degree that the international community eventually stopped relying on the government's data. That loss of faith drove up the country's borrowing costs, worsening a debt crisis that ultimately led to it defaulting on its international obligations. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up It is too soon to know whether the United States is on a similar path. But economists and other experts said that Trump's decision Friday to fire Erika McEntarfer, the Senate-confirmed head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, was a troubling step in that direction. Janet Yellen, the former Treasury secretary and chair of the Federal Reserve, said the firing was not what is expected from the most advanced economy in the world. Advertisement 'This is the kind of thing you would only expect to see in a banana republic,' Yellen said. Essential data The Bureau of Labor Statistics is officially part of the Labor Department, whose secretary is a member of the president's Cabinet. But the agency operates independently, producing detailed, nonpartisan data on employment, prices, wages and other topics. Economists say that reliable, independently produced statistics are critical to good decision making in both the public and private sector. Officials at the Federal Reserve rely on government-collected data on inflation and unemployment to decide how to set interest rates, which affect how much Americans must pay to get a mortgage or a car loan. 'Good data helps not just the Fed, it helps the government, but it also helps the private sector,' Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, said at a recent news conference. 'The United States has been a leader in that for 100 years,' he added, 'and we really need to continue that in my view.' Experts on government statistics say data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and other agencies is unlikely to deteriorate dramatically overnight. The acting commissioner named to replace McEntarfer on a temporary basis, William J. Wiatrowski, is a longtime employee of the agency who is widely respected by experts inside and outside government. The career employees who collect and analyze the data remain in place, using the same methods and procedures they used before McEntarfer was pushed out. But experts who just days ago were defending the integrity of the statistical agencies now find themselves asking uncomfortable questions about the trajectory of economic data in the United States. Advertisement 'If the poverty numbers come in and look great, is the director of the Census going to get a raise?' said Amy O'Hara, a former Census Bureau official who is now a professor at Georgetown University. 'If the household income numbers don't look great what happens then? What about GDP? What about CPI?' Andreas Georgiou knows the challenges of standing up to such political pressure. After he took over Greece's statistical agency in 2010, he found that the country has been severely understating its budget deficits. Those findings ran afoul of Greek authorities, who spent years trying to prosecute him on a variety of charges related to his work, despite independent reviews that supported his conclusions. (He fared better, though, than Olimpiy Kvitkin, a Soviet census official who was arrested and executed when his population count came in lower than Josef Stalin had announced.) Georgiou refused to bend. Reliable statistics are important for policymaking, he said. But they are also essential to democracy. 'Official statistics, government statistics are a mirror that society holds up to itself,' he said. If that mirror is distorted, or broken entirely, then the accountability that is central to a democratic system cannot work. 'If society cannot see itself clearly, then it cannot identify its problems,' he said. 'If it cannot identify its problems, then it cannot find the right solutions. It cannot find the right persons to solve these problems.' Data integrity at risk Trump said he fired McEntarfer because the numbers produced by her agency were 'rigged' to hurt him politically. Experts on the government statistics, including former commissioners in both Democratic and Republican administrations, have called foul on that accusation. The commissioner, who is the bureau's sole political appointee, does not control the numbers that the agency publishes, or even see them until they have been finalized by a staff of career technocrats whose careers typically span multiple presidential administrations. Advertisement Erica Groshen, who led the bureau under President Barack Obama, recalled getting resistance from the agency's staff when she tried to liven up the language of the monthly jobs reports. The bureau's staff insisted that the agency's job wasn't to say whether the glass was half-full or half-empty, only to report that, 'It is an eight-ounce container with four ounces of liquid.' Groshen relented. That is not to say political interference would be impossible. Government statistics rely on hundreds of methodological decisions, many of them judgment calls with no obviously correct answer. A sufficiently sophisticated agency head might, over time, be able to nudge the data in a politically advantageous direction, without any single decision being so egregious that it led to a mass resignation of career employees. 'I could imagine a new commissioner coming in and trying to make changes to those methods and procedures that try to move those numbers one way or the other,' said Katharine G. Abraham, who led the bureau during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations. 'They would have to know a lot in terms of where to put the finger on the scale.' Private alternatives There are also blunter approaches. In Argentina in 2007, the government of then-President Néstor Kirchner pushed out the mathematician in charge of the country's consumer price data, then released an inflation figure that was dramatically lower than the one the mathematician had calculated. The public wasn't fooled. Nor were international bond investors, who ultimately turned to alternative sources of inflation data, calculated by researchers outside the government. Advertisement But such alternative sources are inherently limited, said Alberto Cavallo, a Harvard University economist who developed one of the most widely used private inflation indexes in Argentina. 'Private alternatives can complement official statistics, but they are not a substitute,' Cavallo wrote in an email. 'Government agencies have the resources and scale to conduct nationwide surveys -- something no private initiative can fully replicate.' Recently, Cavallo has been publishing data on consumer prices in the United States, which has shown the impact of Trump's tariffs more quickly than the government's data. But while such real-time sources are valuable, they don't carry the 'institutional credibility' of government data. The trouble is that once that credibility is eroded, it is hard to repair -- particularly at a time when partisans on both sides of the political aisle are skeptical of numbers put out by members of the opposing party. Nancy Potok, a former Census official who served as chief statistician of the United States during the first Trump administration, said that in the past there had been strong bipartisan support for the statistical system in Congress and the business community. But partisanship seems to have eroded that support at a moment when a combination of political pressures and long-standing budget challenges are making it most necessary. 'There were some people who really understood the value of the economic data, and now that's not the conversation and those champions aren't there that were there in the past,' she said. 'There's no one leading the charge to make these kind of investments.' This article originally appeared in Advertisement

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store