
Three NFL games moved due to COVID-19 outbreaks
The Las Vegas, Cleveland, Seattle, Los Angeles, Washington and Philadelphia teams were all affected.
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The Las Vegas, Cleveland, Seattle, Los Angeles, Washington and Philadelphia teams were all affected.
An autopsy on former NFL player Phillips Adams reveals he suffered from unusually severe brain disease. Police say the former NFL player killed a prominent physician and five other people in a South Carolina home. Nikki Battiste has the details.
The NFL, NBA and NHL are all affected. More and more players are sidelined after testing positive for the virus and some games are being postponed.
Authorities say former NFL player Phillip Adams fatally shot six people in South Carolina before killing himself in April.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady breaks a record for career completions. Jacksonville Jaguars coach Urban Meyer shuts down team rumors. And the Arizona Cardinals and the Los Angeles Rams face off in a game that could have playoff consequences. CBS Sports senior NFL reporter Jonathan Jones breaks down some of football's top headlines.
Authorities announced that former NFL star Demaryius Thomas was found dead in his Roswell, Georgia, Thursday evening. Thomas was a five-time Pro Bowler selection and a Super Bowl champion with the Denver Broncos. He was 33.
He finished his 10-year career as one of the most productive wide receivers of his time, a five-time Pro Bowler and the top pass-catcher for the Denver Broncos' 2015 Super Bowl championship team.
Relatives of passengers aboard missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were overcome with emotion, and some were carried out of Beijing's Lido hotel on stretchers, upon hearing the news that no one aboard the doomed flight had survived; and, The NFL announced it is spending $45 million to support youth football and protect kids from concussions.
President Barack Obama made his first public comments in more than two weeks on the growing scandal in the Department of Veterans Affairs. Obama conceded some veterans may have died waiting for medical care but said he needs more information before deciding whether VA Secretary Eric Shinseki should step down ;and, for three decades, Jim Cummins took the portraits of some of the music world's biggest names. Along the way, he collected a museum's worth of iconic images, which he is now working to restore.
A group of former NFL players, including Hall of Famer Richard Dent and quarterback Jim McMahon, filed suit against the league claiming they were supplied with narcotics and other painkillers; and, the wide open spaces of central Nebraska have become an unlikely battlefield in the fight over the Keystone XL pipeline.
New video from the scene of the Asiana Airlines flight 214 crash in San Francisco shows firefighters were aware that a 16-year-old girl was laying on the ground near the plane before a fire department big rig ran her over; and, In the months following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, his wife, the first lady, Jackie Kennedy received nearly 800,000 letters from people around the world expressing their sympathy and their own grief.
Investigators have determined that a Metro-North train was traveling 82 miles per hour -- 52 mph over the speed limit -- before it jumped the track and crashed, killing four people; and, Penn State's John Urschel graduated with a degree in mathematics and a perfect 4.0 GPA in just three years. He's also a 300-pound offensive guard for the school's football team with a chance to play in the NFL -- if he doesn't decide to get a Ph.D. first.
President Trump undergoes aggressive and experimental coronavirus treatment; Patriots-Chiefs game postponed after Cam Newton tests positive for coronavirus
Traffic was frozen overnight on all three of Atlanta's main highways after a rare winter storm brought snow and ice to the South; and, after Pope Francis received the rock star treatment with a Rolling Stone cover story, a giant mural of the pontiff appeared on a building near the Vatican.
The NFL completed Week 12 of the season as Tom Brady's Tampa Bay Buccaneers defeated the Indianapolis Colts in the final minute of the game Sunday and Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers overcame a toe injury to clinch Green Bay's victory over the Los Angeles Rams. CBS Sports senior NFL reporter Jonathan Jones joins CBSN to break down the latest across the league.
Lawmakers in Washington are concerned that the limited actions of the U.S. won't be enough to defeat the militant group ISIS; and, with a string of casinos closing in the coming weeks, what will become of Atlantic City?
Multiple sources report that Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson has been indicted in Texas on charges of child abuse involving his own son; and, questions are being raised about the decision of Atlantic County prosecutor Jim McClain to sign off on an agreement which allowed Ray Rice to enter a pre-trial intervention program instead of facing jail time for assault
The U.S. military has begun a new campaign targeting all ISIS forces across northern and western Iraq, gearing up for more aggressive attacks on ISIS as the military carries out the plan laid out by President Obama in his speech Wednesday; and, Secretary of State John Kerry stresses that while the U.S. is not at "war" with ISIS, it is engaged in a heightened level of counter terrorist activity.
In an address to the nation, President Obama called for a multi-front campaign to "degrade and ultimately destroy" ISIS; and, the U.S. airstrikes in Iraq that began a month ago saved thousands of refugees trapped by ISIS on Mount Sinjar -- and stopped the ISIS advance on the Kurdish capital of Erbil.
President Obama ordered the first airstrikes against ISIS targets inside Syria Monday; and, A 74-year-old retired EMS captain in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn has helped to train more than 1,000 neighborhood kids to become Emergency Medical Technicians
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell says the NFL "assumed" there was more to the Ray Rice tape, but he had not seen it before Monday; and, according to the CDC, 20 people are victims of violence by a partner or spouse every minute.
Republican tensions reach new heights; NFL player says Irish dance is the secret to his football success
Arrest could come Monday in Russia investigation; James Madison's Montpelier explores its history of slaves
New details about ambush in Niger that killed Green Berets; Living Stronger: Women race on the water with more at stake than finishing first
Ex-USA Gymnastics doctor pleads guilty to sexual assault; North Korean soldier makes a daring break for freedom.
President Trump has claimed the authority to bypass Congress and impose sweeping tariffs, but a new ruling throws that in doubt.
Jerry Nadler, 78, who was first elected to Congress in 1992, told The New York Times in an interview that he plans to retire in 2026.
A landslide wiped out a village in Sudan 's Darfur region, killing an estimated 1,000 people, a rebel group controlling the area said.
The number of immigrant workers has declined from January through the end of July, preliminary Census data shows.
When Congress decided this summer to eliminate $1.1 billion allocated to public broadcasting, it left some 330 PBS and 246 NPR stations to figure out what that means.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Monday claimed eight U.S. military vessels "with 1,200 missiles" were targeting his country.
An investigation found the undisclosed romantic relationship with a direct subordinate violated Nestlé's code of conduct.
The House Oversight Committee has withdrawn a request for testimony from Robert Mueller about the case of late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein due to new information on the former special counsel's health.
Two adults were killed and seven children were injured, including one as young as 1 year old, in an accident at an off-roading park in Alabama.