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Forget The 2025 Season, Experts Are Already Saying The 2026 NFL Draft Will Be The Year of The Tiger
Forget The 2025 Season, Experts Are Already Saying The 2026 NFL Draft Will Be The Year of The Tiger

Yahoo

time18-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Forget The 2025 Season, Experts Are Already Saying The 2026 NFL Draft Will Be The Year of The Tiger

Forget The 2025 Season, Experts Are Already Saying The 2026 NFL Draft Will Be The Year of The Tiger originally appeared on Athlon Sports. In a stunning projection that has the college football world buzzing, a recent 2026 NFL mock draft from CBS Sports' Ryan Wilson has Clemson looking like a future NFL powerhouse, with a staggering five Tigers slated to be first-round picks. Even more impressively, three of those are projected to go in the top 10. Advertisement Leading the charge are defensive linemen T.J. Parker and Peter Woods, who are projected to be off the board in the top five. Wilson has Parker going to the New York Jets at No. 3 overall, praising his "long frame," "speed and power," and "high-motor." He describes Woods, projected to the Tennessee Titans at No. 5, as a player with "leverage, power and a low center of gravity," who can "toss offensive linemen off-balance." ESPN analyst Mel Kiper Jr during the 2011 NFL Draft at Radio City Music Smith-Imagn Images But the Tigers' dominance doesn't stop in the trenches. Wide receiver Antonio Williams is projected to be a top-10 pick as well, landing with the Miami Dolphins at No. 10. Wilson notes that Williams "consistently wins off the line of scrimmage" and "has legit separation ability." Rounding out the Clemson first-rounders are cornerback Avieon Terrell and quarterback Cade Klubnik. Terrell, who has "NFL bloodlines" as the brother of former first-rounder A.J. Terrell, is projected to the Minnesota Vikings at No. 20. Wilson highlights Terrell's physicality and ball skills. Klubnik, a 2025 Heisman contender, is projected to the Los Angeles Rams at No. 27. Wilson writes that Klubnik "got better as the '24 season progressed" and praises his "big arm" and "deep-ball" accuracy. Advertisement While Clemson is getting a lot of love, the mock draft also features some of their upcoming opponents. LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier is projected as the No. 1 overall pick to the New Orleans Saints. Other notable prospects include Duke cornerback Chandler Rivers (No. 11, Rams) and South Carolina defensive back Jalon Kilgore (No. 19, Texans) and quarterback LaNorris Sellers (No. 32, Jets). The 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh is still a long way off, but if this early mock draft is any indication, expect to hear a lot of "Clemson" called on day one. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 16, 2025, where it first appeared.

Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year
Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year

CBS News

time18-06-2025

  • Health
  • CBS News

Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year

Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year Health care premiums for Coloradans on the state exchange expected to double at the end of the year Republicans' sweeping measure to cut taxes and reduce spending is expected to hit the Senate floor next week. In addition to making big changes to Medicaid, the bill also allows tax credits for those who get health insurance on the state exchange to expire. Connect for Health Colorado says Coloradans on the exchange could see premiums increase by $3,000 a year if that happens. Approximately 80 percent of people who get insurance on the state exchange receive a federal subsidy. While credits were initially tied to income, the American Rescue Plan expanded them to everyone. In rural and mountain communities where insurance can run a family upwards of $30,000 a year, those credits have made insurance affordable for tens of thousands of Coloradans, including Ryan and Robin Wilson. You'd be hard pressed to find a couple more civic-minded. Both work for nonprofits in the town of Fraser. He runs a community radio station. She manages an affordable housing community. CBS Together, they make just enough to make ends meet, which made them eligible for tax credits under the Affordable Care Act -- until this year. To qualify, they can't make more than 400% of the federal poverty level, which is $85,000 for a couple. "We're at 402%, so we're just 2% over," said Robin. She considered quitting a community college teaching job to lower their income until she heard the about another advanced premium tax credit created during COVID. It caps premiums -- regardless of income -- at 8.5% of a household's earnings, which has made insurance affordable and led to record enrollment on the state health exchange. The average premium on Connect for Health is now $115 a month. But CEO Kevin Patterson says when the expanded tax credit expires in December, premiums will more than double to $235-$279 a month. "Across the board, we expect monthly premiums to increase by about 50%. For the folks that have financial assistance - which is about 80% of our 280,000 customers - we anticipate those premiums could increase by about 104%." The Wilsons say instead of expanding their nonprofits, they will now likely have to shrink their income to qualify for the original credit. "It shouldn't be a financial sacrifice to do good work in a good place," said Robin. "We've been able to dedicate our lives to our local community more so than if the tax credits weren't there," said Ryan. "A vote against these premium subsidies is vote against the middle class. It's a vote against the poor." Connect for Health says Coloradans receive about $328 million a year in tax credits. The state Reinsurance program -- which has lowered premiums by about $2 billion over the last five years in Colorado -- would also take a hit if the tax credits expire. The credits are based on the cost of premiums so, when premiums drop, the federal government pays less in tax credits. The feds have passed those savings on to states and Colorado has used the money to bolster the Reinsurance program and lower premiums further. But those savings -- about $100 million a year in Colorado -- would be lost with the elimination of the tax credits. Gov. Jared Polis is lobbying Colorado's congressional delegation to keep the credits rather than allowing them to expire in December.

PlexTrac Expands Offering with Enhanced Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) Capabilities
PlexTrac Expands Offering with Enhanced Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) Capabilities

Associated Press

time15-04-2025

  • Business
  • Associated Press

PlexTrac Expands Offering with Enhanced Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) Capabilities

BOISE, Idaho--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr 15, 2025-- PlexTrac ™, the #1 platform for pentest reporting and threat exposure management, today announced the launch of PlexTrac ™ for CTEM —expanding the platform's capabilities with a proactive and continuous threat exposure management solution designed to help security teams centralize security data, prioritize risk based on business impact, and automate validation and remediation workflows. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: PlexTrac for CTEM: Proactively manage exposure risk with PlexTrac for Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM). Consolidate security data from tools and manual testing, automatically prioritize risks based on business impact, and automate remediation and retesting workflows for ongoing, more effective threat management. PlexTrac ™ for CTEM enables organizations to move beyond traditional point-in-time assessments and embrace a continuous, proactive security approach. Key capabilities include: Centralized Data Management for Comprehensive Threat Analysis Vulnerability Risk Prioritization Based on Business Impact Automated Remediation Orchestration with Rule-Based Workflows Continuous Validation & Threat Exposure Tracking Framework-Based Reporting & Compliance Alignment 'Security teams are overwhelmed with too many vulnerabilities and not enough time to remediate all of them,' said Dan DeCloss, CEO & Founder of PlexTrac ™. 'With PlexTrac ™ for CTEM, we're equipping security teams with the ability to take a continuous, proactive approach to exposure management by centralizing all pentesting and scanning data, contextually prioritizing risk, and automating remediation workflows. That's how teams move from reactive to proactive security and drive measurable risk reduction.' 'PlexTrac for CTEM has fundamentally changed the way we manage vulnerabilities,' said Ryan Wilson, at ECS, part of the Federal Government Segment of ASGN Incorporated. 'By centralizing our findings from pentest data and other security scanners, and automating remediation workflows, we're able to focus our team's energy on the risks that actually matter and clearly demonstrate progress in reducing our threat exposure.' PlexTrac ™ for CTEM aligns with Gartner's vision for Continuous Threat Exposure Management, which involves constantly exposing an organization's networks, systems, and assets to simulated attacks to identify vulnerabilities and weaknesses. The solution supports the five key stages of CTEM as defined by Gartner: To help organizations stay ahead of the evolving threat landscape, PlexTrac™ for CTEM delivers a comprehensive solution that enables both enterprises and Managed Security Service Providers (MSSPs) to streamline security operations, unify cross-functional teams within a centralized platform, strengthen threat exposure management, and demonstrate measurable improvements in their overall security posture. Tailored for Enterprises and MSSPs For Enterprises: Evolve beyond periodic assessment and cut through the noise of data overwhelm by evolving into continuous threat and exposure management with PlexTrac. Centralize security data, contextually prioritize risk, and automate remediation workflows to streamline the CTEM lifecycle in one platform. For Service Providers: Stay ahead of emerging industry trends and stand out in a crowded market by delivering risk-based exposure management services to help your clients stay ahead of incoming threats. Deliver more value to the pentest and offensive security report you are already delivering by helping your clients prioritize issues and manage threat exposures on a continuous basis. Meet PlexTrac at RSA Conference 2025 PlexTrac will be showcasing PlexTrac for CTEM live at the RSA Conference in San Francisco from April 28 to May 1. Visit us at Booth #2349 to see how you can take a continuous, proactive approach to threat exposure management. To request a demo at the event, please register at About PlexTrac PlexTrac is the leading AI-powered platform for pentest reporting and threat exposure management, trusted by Fortune 500 companies and top security providers including Expedia, Mandiant, Deloitte, and KPMG. Built to help cybersecurity teams continuously manage and reduce threat exposure, PlexTrac centralizes security data, streamlines reporting, prioritizes risk, and automates remediation workflows—empowering teams to drive measurable risk reduction. View source version on CONTACT: Patricia Tantow CMO PlexTrac [email protected] +1 (208) 274-5322 KEYWORD: UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA CALIFORNIA IDAHO INDUSTRY KEYWORD: SECURITY DATA MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE SOFTWARE SOURCE: PlexTrac Copyright Business Wire 2025. PUB: 04/15/2025 08:30 AM/DISC: 04/15/2025 08:31 AM

Top pass rusher falls to Jaguars in CBS Sports 2025 NFL mock draft
Top pass rusher falls to Jaguars in CBS Sports 2025 NFL mock draft

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Top pass rusher falls to Jaguars in CBS Sports 2025 NFL mock draft

A potential No. 1 pick and the top pass rusher in the 2025 NFL draft class fell to the Jacksonville Jaguars in a recent mock draft from CBS Sports. Recently, on the 'With the First Pick' podcast, a year-round draft podcast over at CBS Sports, draft analysts Ryan Wilson and Mike Renner alternated picks and put together a first-round mock draft. And somehow, Penn State's Abdul Carter fell to the Jaguars at pick No. 5. Below is how the first four picks ahead of Jacksonville played out, pushing Carter down several spots: (trade with Titans): QB Cam Ward Cleveland: IDL Mason Graham Giants: CB/WR Travis Hunter Patriots: OT Will Campbell The Jaguars already have Josh Hines-Allen and Travon Walker on the edge, but this would be an easy pick to make for Jacksonville, and you figure out playing time and the rotations afterward. Listed at 6-3 - 252 pounds, Carter had a huge 2024 season, totaling 66 pressures and 13 sacks. He also graded out well against the run by PFF's metrics. Compared to the rest of his position group, Carter was second in pressures, fifth in sacks, and fourth in pass rush win rate. He also had the ninth-mos run stops as well. This article originally appeared on Jaguars Wire: Top pass rusher falls to Jaguars in CBS Sports 2025 NFL mock draft

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