Sources told ESPN that Spurs agreed a fee of €40 million ($46.2m), including bonuses with Bayern for the forward.
The 20-year-old spent the second half of the 2024-25 campaign on loan at Spurs and was part of the team that ended the club’s 17-year trophy drought with success in the Europa League.
Tel scored two goals and registered one assist in 13 matches for the north London club.
The France under-21 international’s future was unclear after the coach who signed him at Spurs, Ange Postecoglou, was relieved of his duties 16 days after the Europa League final victory over Manchester United in Bilbao.
But Tel has become new boss Thomas Frank’s first signing since the former Brentford manager was named as Postecoglou’s successor.
Spurs have confirmed that he has signed a contract until 2031.
BBC/South Pacific Pictures & All3Media International / Getty Images
Are you missing the drama of The Traitors? Fear not because the New Zealand version drops on BBC Three and iPlayer on Monday.
But that’s not all the next seven days have in store.
Yungblud’s new album is out, 28 Years Later is released in UK cinemas, gaming fans have Date Everything to look forward to, and Benson Boone is also dropping a new album.
Read on for what’s coming up this week…
Your next Traitors fix
BBC/South Pacific Pictures & All3Media International
This Monday, we’re gearing up to watch 22 New Zealanders lie, cheat and betray their way to winning up to $100,000 (£44,000).
That’s right, it’s time for series two of The Traitors NZ, filmed at Claremont Manor at the foot of Mount Horrible (no, really).
As with the British version, the show is a study in human nature, as alliances form early on, and suspicions run rife.
But one thing it doesn’t have is Claudia Winkleman and her epic wardrobe.
Instead, it’s hosted by New Zealand broadcaster Paul Henry. Don’t worry, his outfits are just as fabulous.
Yungblud’s shackles are off
Yungblud, the chart-topping singer who set up his own festival,is dropping his new album Idols on Friday.
I was lucky enough to see him at a party in central London recently, where I got a sneak preview of the new album – a blend of his signature pop-punk and emotional depth.
The 27-year-old artist – whose real name is Dominic Richard Harrison – was there alongside Florence Pugh, who stars in the music video for one of his new songs, Zombie.
He said the new record, made in the north of England with his best mates, was his “most ambitious and exciting music to date”.
Yungblud is known for his committed young fanbase and, with his new album, he’s said he wants to make that community even bigger.
Harking back to the sounds of Queen and David Bowie, he told my colleague Mark Savage that it would “reclaim the good chords” (Asus4 and Em7, in case you’re wondering). “The shackles are off,” he said.
28 Years Later hits cinemas
By Alex Taylor, culture reporter
Getty Images
Jodie Comer and Aaron Taylor-Johnson star in 28 Years Later
Batten down the hatches and don’t make a sound – this week sees director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland unleash 28 Years Later.
It’s a long-awaited return for the UK-based zombie horror series that first infected audiences in 2002 with 28 Days Later.
The protagonist, 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), lives with his parents Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Isla (Jodie Comer). He’s only ever known life on an island connected to the quarantined British mainland by a single, heavily defended causeway.
I’ve seen a sneak preview, and while I can’t say much, the trademark realism and unrelenting tension persists. Fans of The Last of Us will love this.
As for those fan theories sparked by the trailer? Despite speculation that Cillian Murphy appears as a zombie, Boyle has confirmed to IGN that the Oscar-winner, who made his name in the original film, will only reprise his role as Jim in the next instalment – already shot and due for release next year.
Objects of affection
By Tom Richardson, Newsbeat reporter
It is perhaps not so surprising that a video game created by two veteran voice actors opens with the main character at risk of losing their job to AI.
But where Date Everything! goes next is somewhat more unexpected.
Players don a pair of high-tech glasses called “Dateviators” that turn household objects including fridges, doors and lamps into potential love interests.
Creators Robbie Daymond (Critical Role) and Ray Chase (X-Men ’97, Jujutsu Kaisen) obviously raided their contact books, as each item is brought to life in the form of a human cartoon avatar created by a star from the worlds of gaming and anime.
In a bit of fortuitous timing, this celebration of their craft arrives on consoles and PCs from Tuesday, just days after a months-long video game acting strike was suspended.
Flip out over Benson Boone’s new album
By Mark Savage, music correspondent
Getty Images
King of the backflip Benson Boone had the most-streamed track in the world last year with Beautiful Things – earning enough money to buy his first house – but now he’s ready to move on.
“I’m getting to the point where I just want people to know that there’s more than just that song,” he told Rolling Stone earlier this year.
The results have been mixed. His comeback single Sorry I’m Here For Someone Else, a propulsive new wave anthem, peaked at number 20 in the UK charts, while Beautiful Things still continued to remain stubbornly lodged in the top 10.
But his new album, American Heart, is worth your attention. The title track is a widescreen anthem about a near-fatal car accident he got into as a teenager; Mr Electric Blue is a spirited tribute to his dad (featuring the lyric, “Watch the way you talk to me/If you want to keep your two front teeth”); and the second single Mystical Magical features a falsetto so ridiculous its almost endearing.
Repackaging the sounds of Queen and Elton John for the TikTok generation, it’s efficient and catchy – though I’d avoid the saccharine Momma Song if you have an aversion to schmaltz.
Other highlights this week
Untold Legends: Hedy Lamarr drops on the BBC World Service on Monday
Gianni Versace Retrospective opens at Arches London Bridge on Monday
Supersonic, a documentary about Oasis, is re-released in a limited number of cinemas on Monday
Royal Academy Summer Exhibition opens on Tuesday
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, series two, drops on Netflix on Wednesday
Sheffield DocFest starts on Wednesday
Heston: My Life with Bipolar is released on BBC Two and iPlayer on Thursday
The Isle of Wight Festival starts on Thursday
Haim’s new album, I Quit, drops on Friday
Grenfell: Uncovered is released on Netflix on Friday
Israel has claimed it hit an Iranian airport amid conflict between the two Middle East rivals.
“The Israeli Air Force struck an Iranian aerial refueling aircraft at Mashhad Airport in eastern Iran, approximately 2,300 kilometers from Israel. This marks the longest-range strike conducted since the beginning of the operation,” IDF spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani said in a post on the social platform X on Sunday.
On Thursday overnight, Israel bombarded Iran, moving forward with its largest-ever military operation against its common Middle East rival and upending a push from President Trump for a nuclear deal with Iran.
The U.S. attempted to quickly distance itself from the strikes that targeted critical nuclear facilities and killed Iran’s top military leaders. However, Trump administration officials were reportedly briefed on plans prior to the strikes.
“Tonight, Israel took unilateral action against Iran. We are not involved in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces in the region,” Rubio said via a statement.
Top experts are sounding the alarm about a potential debt crisis, Goldman Sachs said.
The bank interviewed three economy pros about their outlook for the US fiscal situation.
The top insights from Ray Dalio, Ken Rogoff, and Niall Ferguson are detailed below.
Investor concerns over a swelling government debt load were soothed last week. But some experts say the US isn’t out of the woods yet.
Goldman Sachs spoke to three top economic experts — Ray Dalio, Ken Rogoff, and Niall Ferguson — about rising debt levels in the US. All three said they were worried about an impending debt crisis, particularly when considering the effects of President Donald Trump’s GOP tax and spending bill, which has been estimated to add trillions to the budget deficit over the next decade.
That reflects a slightly more pessimistic view than the market. After a scare last month, demand for long-dated government bonds was strong this week. It was a sign that investors are feeling more comfortable about the fiscal situation in the US, after showing nerves last month after Moody’s downgraded US debt and Trump’s tax bill began making its way through Congress.
Here are the top points each of the experts had to make:
Ray DalioJemal Countess/Getty Images for TIME
The billionaire hedge fund manager said he sees three factors determining the outlook for the US debt.
How much the government pays on debt interest relative to its revenue. If interest payments keep rising, it can “unacceptably” prevent the government from spending money on other things.
How much debt the government needs to sell relative to demand. If the government needs to sell more Treasurys than people are willing to buy, interest rates will have to rise. That provides a more attractive yield to investors to hold onto the US debt, but high rates also hurt markets and the economy.
How much money the central bank needs to print in other to purchase the remaining debt. If demand for US Treasurys is especially weak, the Fed can step in to purchase bonds to keep the government funded. If it has to print more money to do so, that can raise inflation and ding the value of the US dollar.
“One can easily measure these signs of deterioration and see movement toward an impending debt crisis,” Dalio, who has long warned of troubling debt dynamics in the US, said. “Such a crisis occurs when the constriction of debt-financed spending happens, like a debt-induced economic heart attack.”
To prevent a crisis, Dalio said he believed the government should reduce the budget deficit to 3% of GDP. Reducing the debt could cause interest rates to decline around 150 basis points, he estimated, reducing interest payments on the national debt and stimulating the economy.
Kenneth RogoffFaruk Pinjo/World Economic Forum
Given Trump’s current agenda, Rogoff thinks the US will likely enter a debt crisis within the next four to five years. That’s faster than the five- to seven-year timeline he predicted prior to Trump’s reelection.
“The notion that debt is a free lunch that had been pushed by many economy-watchers is absurd,” Rogoff said. “Today’s larger deficit on top of already-high debt levels is setting up for a crisis that will necessitate a significant adjustment.”
Rogoff thinks a debt crisis could play out in two ways:
Inflation spikes and results in an economic shock. “Exactly what that shock will look like is difficult to say, but it will likely be more painful than the Covid inflation shock that precipitated only relatively minor adjustments in bond markets,” Rogoff said.
The government could manage the debt by keeping interest rates artificially low and restricting capital flows. But those measures will hurt economic growth and essentially serve as a tax on savers in the economy, he said.
Investors have long been concerned about the US debt, but the outlook is especially worrying now because long-term interest rates are going through a “normalization” from low levels that stretched over the past decade, Rogoff said.
“People need to recognize that higher interest rates are here to stay and that a return to the low-rate era of the past might well prove wishful thinking,” he added.
Niall FergusonDavid Levenson/Getty Images
Ferguson thinks a crisis could be triggered by a military challenge that results in the US losing its position as a global power, as it goes deeper into debt.
The British-American financial historian said his favorite gauge to determine how unsustainable national debt was is when a country spends more on interest payments for its debt than on defense.
That rule, which he calls “Ferguson’s Law,” now applies to the US, which spent $1.1 trillion on interest payments on the national debt over the 2024 fiscal year, according to the Treasury Department. It was more than the $883.7 billion approved that year for total defense spending.
Nearly every nation that has violated Ferguson’s Law has lost its status as ” great power” in financial markets, he said.
“Any great power that pursues a reckless fiscal policy by allowing the cost of its debt to exceed the cost of its armed services is opening itself up to challenge,” Ferguson said. “The US is just the latest great power to find itself in this fiscal jam.”
The US has been able to borrow as much as it has through now with no issues, in part because the US dollar remains the world’s reserve currency and investors still see Treasurys as “risk-free,” Ferguson said, meaning they have faith in the US’s ability to make good on its interest payments.
The “Fortnight” singer stopped by Joe DiMaggio’s Children’s Hospital in Hollywood, Florida, June 12 to spend some time with the kids and staff—and she even surprised them with signed copies of her book and, of course, a few sweet selfies.
“You made this a day we’ll never shake off,” the hospital captioned a June 14 Instagram post alongside a series of photos from the superstar’s visit. “Thank you, @taylorswift for bringing your support and kindness to Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital. You turned hospital hallways into a place of joy, comfort, and connection.”
“Our patients and families felt the love,” the caption continued, “and the magic will stay, stay, stay with them long after today.”
In one video included in the post, Taylor could be seen surprising a patient named Zoe, who simply couldn’t believe her eyes.
“I’m Taylor, nice to meet you,” the Grammy winner said as she entered the room and sat beside Zoe’s bed. “When you’re going through so much, you’re so amazing to be so positive and so friendly to us.”
“I was wondering,” she added, “could I have a hug?”
Less than a month after making their debut, the WH-1000XM6 are on sale at Amazon in black, blue, and platinum with a $30 gift card for $448. It’s not a straight cash discount, sure, but if you were already debating picking up Sony’s latest pair of noise-canceling headphones, it makes the $50 price hike over the last-gen XM5 easier to stomach.
If you were to ignore the steep price hike, the new XM6 are a welcome improvement over the XM5 in every way. They’re outfitted with Sony’s latest noise-cancellation chip, which allows them to do a better job at drowning out the ambient noise you might encounter on the street, at your local coffee shop, or on your next cross-country flight. Their transparency mode is as natural-sounding as ever, too, and thanks to a new set of drivers, they deliver clearer vocals and the same dynamic, rich sound for which the XM series is known.
Design-wise, they also represent an excellent return to form, albeit with a few minor tweaks for added comfort and convenience. They sport a wider headband that’s designed to alleviate pressure during longer listening sessions, along with a redesigned power button that’s easier to distinguish from the onboard ANC button. More importantly, however, they once again collapse with the aid of a joint in each arm, allowing them to take up less room in the included carrying case. As someone who frequently travels with the XM5 — the only pair in the XM series that can’t fold down — I can say the change is greatly appreciated.
LAST OCTOBER, SEVEN months after a heart transplant saved his life, 11-year NBA veteran Scot Pollard was back in the hospital. But this time, the visit was not for him.
Ozzy Pollard, the third of his four children, was a senior and played tight end for the high school team. Midway through the season, he’d injured his ACL and meniscus and needed an operation to repair both.
The Pollards were well prepared to manage the stress of surgery; Scot had spent the past three years fighting genetic heart disease.
During his playing days at the University of Kansas, and his time in the NBA, Scot became something of a cult favorite across the league, gaining the adoration of fans for his one-of-a-kind personality, carousel of flamboyant hairstyles and dogged competitiveness.
More than a decade into retirement, though, Scot’s spirit slowly faded, his days taken up by doctor’s visits, tests and questions.
At 48 years old, a man who just a few years ago had been a public face of peak physical might and condition was in active heart failure.
“I do remember feeling like, ‘If this is it, I’m going to be OK,'” he said. “‘But if it’s not, I’ve got a lot to do.”
He paused.
“I’m really glad I have a lot to do.'”
Scot received a new heart on February 16, 2024.
Organ donation operates under a strict standard of anonymity. Neither donor family nor recipient is provided details about the other, unless the transplant patient chooses to initiate contact following the procedure.
Scot spent five months reflecting on his transplant experience before deciding to send a letter to his anonymous donor family.
In it, he called his donor a hero.
My name is Scot, he wrote. I live in Indiana and I’m writing this letter to express mine and my family’s unending appreciation for your loved one’s gift of life. My wife, myself, our four children, our extended family and friends are all forever grateful!
He continued.
We would love the opportunity to meet at some point if you’re amenable to that idea. We want to let you know that your loved one’s heart is going to be loved and cared for and will give love back.
We have already begun raising donor awareness in our community and are going nationwide. I’ve already connected with multiple donor networks in various communities to assist them in promoting becoming a donor.
Your loved one is our hero and he will live on forever through me and our efforts of getting more people to be selfless heroes like him.
If you don’t feel comfortable responding, I completely understand. I just wanted you to know my lifelong appreciation for him. He truly is my hero.
Scot passed the letter on to his hospital, which then passed it on to the donor’s hospital, which then passed it on to the donor’s family.
It was up to them to decide how they wanted to reply, or if they wanted to at all.
“I can very much understand how a lot of people would say, ‘I don’t want to know that person that got a kidney, or lungs, or eyes. It’s just too much,'” Scot said. “And so the transplant programs prep you for that, that most people do not respond.”
Days passed, then weeks. His hopes to hear back from the family who saved him dimmed.
Three months after he’d sent his letter, as his family sat in the hospital with Ozzy, Scot checked his email.
They’d written him back.
ON FEBRUARY 6, 2024, Scot Pollard was dying.
The day before, he and his wife, Dawn, had arrived at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, for a three-day heart transplant evaluation.
Scot had already been registered on transplant lists in Indianapolis and Chicago. He was aiming to get on the list in Nashville — 300 miles south of the Pollards’ Carmel, Indiana, home — hoping another transplant region meant a greater opportunity for a match.
Dr. Jonathan Menachem, a cardiologist at the hospital, placed his hands on Scot’s wrist.
“Your pulse is slow,” he told him. “Is it always pretty slow?”
Scot then laid down on a bed, where Menachem took his stethoscope and placed it on Scot’s chest.
“Do you get short of breath just laying like this?” he asked him.
Scot closed his eyes and nodded.
“Seeing someone lay down like that and getting so short of breath that quick is concerning,” Menachem said.
Scot was in end-stage heart failure. He was admitted to the intensive care unit, and an emergency search for a transplant began.
“He was filled with fluid and didn’t have enough blood flow going around his body,” Menachem said. “They thought they were going home to Indiana.
“We looked at each other,” Menachem said of him and his colleague as they reviewed Scot’s prognosis. “We were like, ‘This guy cannot go home.'”
Scot’s heart was failing. He’d been suffering from cardiomyopathy, a disease that makes it difficult for the heart muscle to pump. With more strain on the muscle, and more blood required for his large frame, he weakened by the day.
“I’m really attached to this heart,” he said in the hospital. “I feel like it’s the best one. That’s the one I was born with. And the biggest fear is that the next one isn’t going to be good enough.”
As he prepared for additional tests, various nodes were attached to his chest and fingers, a heart monitor’s looming beeps serving as a second-by-second reminder of what was to come.
“I’m not really scared of anything,” Scot said. “Now, when you’re sitting here, waiting for a new heart, the unknown can be terrifying.”
SCOT INHERITED HIS height from his father, Pearl, who stood at 6-foot-8. And when he was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, he realized that was inherited, too.
In 1952, Pearl’s father moved the family from Montana to Utah with the hope of making his son a boxer. But, as Scot tells it, the basketball coach got to Pearl first.
Pearl played center for Jordan High School, just south of Salt Lake City, and was quickly christened “Poison” Pollard for his deadly hook shot. He won back-to-back state high school championships with the Beetdiggers, setting the state tournament scoring record in 1955.
Earlier that year, he appeared alongside Wilt Chamberlain in a Life magazine spread featuring the tallest high school basketball players in the country.
Pearl went on to play for the University of Utah from 1956 through 1959 and was the team’s leading scorer for the 1958-59 season.
“He was a giant of a man in every single way possible,” Scot said.
When Scot was 12, the family moved from Utah to San Diego, where he first noticed his father’s health begin to decline. Three years later, Pearl was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, at the age of 53. He was put on the heart transplant list but needed an organ donor similar in size.
Given his towering height, finding one would be nearly impossible.
“We knew it was a death sentence,” Scot, who was the youngest of six children, said. “I was just thinking, ‘God, I’m going to grow up without a dad.'”
One morning in October 1991, Scot was making his way up from the beach after surfing in gym class. Pearl happened to drive by in his white, city-issued pickup truck and stopped for a quick chat with his son.
A few hours later, Scot received a phone call from a friend. He said Pearl’s truck had crashed into a country club parking lot and paramedics were on the scene.
Pearl had suffered a heart attack behind the wheel.
He died on the transplant list.
Scot was 16. He was the last of his family to see his father alive.
SCOT NEVER FORGOT his father’s fate. Following a healthy playing career, he continued to check his heart regularly.
In January 2021, he visited the doctor for an annual physical. This appointment, like all the others before it, went without concern.
One month later, though, Scot received a flu shot, and he says doctors believe it released a “genetic anomaly” that triggered his heart failure.
“A couple days later, I got the flu,” Scot said, “and it attacked my heart. I couldn’t walk across the room.”
“We’re never going to know for sure what happened,” Menachem said, “but he clearly was predisposed to having a heart that was not going to function well for his entire life.”
What came next was an increasingly frightening three-year stretch of appointments and treatments and hospital visits, culminating in the realization that he would need a heart transplant to survive.
Doubt that he’d find one, and guilt that he deserved one, overwhelmed him.
Someone would have to die to give me life.
Scot had experienced and lived more than most, he thought: a meaningful college basketball career that had led to an admirable NBA career, which had helped him build his beloved family and pursue their dreams. Surely there were stronger candidates for this chance at life-saving surgery.
Of the former, Dawn, too, was skeptical. But she needed to convince her husband of the fallacy of the latter, reminding him of his responsibilities as a husband and father, of how much they still had to live.
He listened — and eventually agreed.
“How dare I even think about doing the same thing to my kids that my dad unintentionally did to me?” Scot thought.
“He didn’t want me to grow up without a dad to be there and teach [me],” Ozzy said. “And I love him for that.”
The next step was finding a heart strong enough to support his body.
“You can’t put a Ford Festiva engine in an F-150 and think it’s going to work well,” Menachem said.
While Pearl died waiting for a same-sized donor, Scot had hope. Medical technology had advanced to allow for greater variation in size.
On Scot’s 49th birthday, his sixth day in the Vanderbilt Intensive Care Unit, he received word of a potential donor. He called family members to the hospital. He shaved his head and beard in preparation for the surgery.
But doctors determined the prospective heart wouldn’t be viable.
Another option arose soon after.
That, too, was declined.
PAMELA ANGELL AND Megan Tyra were sitting in a hospital in East Texas when they were told they had 14 days to make the most devastating decision of their lives.
Pamela’s husband, Casey, had been intubated, no longer able to breathe on his own.
Casey and Pamela had met in 2009 while working at Walmart. He was someone who could “talk a stranger’s ear off,” she says, and he often did.
When Pamela was pregnant with their son, William, Casey found a new position as a forklift operator. But exposure to elements on the job — in addition to a history of smoking — had taken a toll. In February 2024, a bout of pneumonia had sent the 45-year-old to the hospital, where he drifted in and out of consciousness.
Days went by. Then a week. Then more. Angell had failed to show any signs of improvement — or life. On day 11, Pamela and Megan, Casey’s sister, made the decision to let him go.
Shortly after, the hospital’s organ donation liaison approached them.
“He said, ‘Look, guys, Casey had a really big heart,'” Megan said.
“Yeah, we know,” Megan’s husband, Clint, responded.
“He said, ‘No, man, you don’t understand. He physically had a big heart.'” Megan said. “And I’m like, ‘Is that important?’
He’s like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s important.'”
Angell was a hearty 5-foot-11. In 1991, that would not have been large enough to save Pearl Pollard. But in 2024, it would be large enough to save Scot.
Pamela and Megan agreed to the anonymous process of organ donation — and watched Angell’s heart leave the hospital.
“You’re losing your best friend,” Pamela said, “but somebody else is gaining your best friend, in a way.”
On the morning of February 16, as Angell’s heart traveled from Texas to Tennessee, Vanderbilt staff began to prepare Scot for transplant surgery.
Physicians gathered the endless tubes and wires tethering him to his hospital room, and rearranged them for the short journey to the operating room.
Amid the steady heart-monitor beeps, Scot began his goodbyes.
“Who’s my favorite fourth kid?” Scot said, hugging his youngest child, Icean.
“Me?” Icean said.
Scot leaned in. “That’s right,” he said, putting the pair forehead to forehead. “You.”
Then Dawn took her husband’s head in her hands and bent over the bed for a kiss. “I love you,” she said, smiling through her tears.
“I love you forever,” Scot said, running his fingers through her long, dark hair. “I love youforever,” she told him.
Scot was pushed through the halls of the hospital, Dawn following as far as she was allowed. She squeezed her husband’s hand before he passed through a set of double doors, beyond her grasp.
“I was thinking, ‘OK, what if he doesn’t wake up?’ she said later. “That’s when it finally hit me.”
“I was thinking what life would possibly be like … without him.”
Just after 11 a.m., Scot was taken into surgery.
At 1:08 p.m., a black SUV pulled into the Adult Emergency Entrance at the hospital. In the trunk, doctors pulled out a white cooler and raced inside. Inside a smaller plastic container was Angell’s heart.
At 1:16, doctors removed Scot’s heart from his body.
“Now, there’s no heart in there,” said Dr. Ashish Shah, one of the heart surgeons who performed the operation. “There’s a giant, gaping hole, and when that old heart came out, you see an enormous, unhappy organ.”
Thirteen minutes later, his new heart was sewn in and blood was restored to it.
By 5 p.m., the procedure was complete.
“In some respects,” Shah said, “it was just the right heart for him.”
ONE MID-OCTOBER EVENING last year, Scot and Dawn stood on the sideline of the Carmel High School football field. It was senior night. As the sun set behind the stands, they waited to hear Ozzy’s name called.
It was just two weeks after his knee operation, so he couldn’t play, but Ozzy walked across the field in celebration, his dad by his side.
“It’s like I have my dad back from when I was younger,” Ozzy said.
Yet the Pollards are keenly aware that their relief, their joy, had come at an enormous expense.
On the day of Ozzy’s surgery, inside the hospital room, Scot checked his email. And there it was, the response he so hoped he’d get.
As soon as Pamela received Scot’s letter, she called Megan and they decided to write back, interested in learning more about the man carrying Casey’s heart — and sharing more about the man from whom it came.
Scot read the letter aloud.
Dear Scot, thank you so much for reaching out to us.
Scot, you warmed our hearts with your kind words concerning your donor, who was loved beyond measure. February 16, 2024, was an incredibly hard day for those of us that loved your donor, Casey.
When we knew that we were going to have to let him go, and were approached about organ donation, there was never a pause or a doubt that Casey would have wanted to help.
So the answer was simple, and it was a yes.
Scot’s voice began to break.
He continued to read.
Casey was a loving husband, dad, uncle, and the best baby brother anyone could ask for. Even though he was the baby, he towered over us all.
Thank you for caring for that big heart of his. And we are grateful to know he is loved and will continue to give love. It means the world to us. He has inspired people in his own family to donate and be a hero like him.
And we, as his family, though small, would love to meet you whenever you are ready to do so.
Megan wrote that Angell was a “gentle giant” who was always happy to help those in need. “We are blessed to know that even in our greatest tragedy we stayed true to who he was,” she wrote, “and we are so glad that because of our hero, you can continue to be a blessing to your family and others.”
The families first spoke on the phone on November 9, on what would have been Angell’s 46th birthday. After exchanging texts, they decided to meet in person.
On March 17, 2025, Scot and Dawn were in Lindale, Texas, a small town about 90 miles east of Dallas.
As the pair stepped out of their hotel room, Dawn took her husband’s hand.
“Ready?” she asked softly, smiling up at him. “Ready,” he responded.
Hand-in-hand, they walked down the hall toward the room where Angell’s family was waiting.
As they turned the final corner, they spotted the family through an open door, breaking into nervous laughter before exchanging hugs with Pamela, William, Megan and Clint.
“Hi, gang,” Scot said, before he and Dawn extended their arms.
Scot learned William was 12 when his father died, and that he was “the love of [his father’s] life.”
“We’re grateful that Scot’s here, with Casey’s heart,” Pamela said. “And William has another person to look up to, as a father figure.”
William told stories of their afternoons together fishing, or watching horror movies, describing his dad as gentle and a giant, too. Casey and Scot both had dragon tattoos, William’s Japanese zodiac sign.
“There was a connection there that I felt,” Scot said. “I know how that feels as a child, to lose your father.”
“You look like your dad,” Dawn told William.
“Copy and pasted, that’s how we put it,” Megan replied.
Pamela showed Dawn and Scot Casey’s wedding ring, which she wears on a chain around her neck, and shared the story of how they met. Megan explained that while she and Casey had other siblings, the two of them were the closest.
“He was my bubba,” she said.
Before leaving for lunch together, Pamela took out a stethoscope she’d brought.
Scot stood and unbuttoned his shirt while Pamela positioned it right on his chest.
As she listened to the beating heart inside of him, her eyes filled with tears.
Megan went next. “My turn,” she said.
She softly placed the stethoscope just to the right of a lengthy, vertical scar, a lasting reminder of what was given — and what was lost.
With Scot looking down at her, she bowed her head and listened.
“Hey, Bubba,” she said, weeping.
ON MEMORIAL DAY weekend, under sunny skies, the Pollards, Angells, and Tyras sailed through the streets of downtown Indianapolis, waving to an enthusiastic crowd.
A year after Scot’s transplant, he had been named grand marshal of the Indy 500 Festival Parade and invited his heart donor’s family to join him on the float.
It had been only a few months since their first in-person meeting, but Megan says getting to know the Pollards has helped her family heal. Today, at 50, Scot is doing well, but his future is fraught with unpredictability.
He’s the tallest transplant recipient in the history of Vanderbilt’s Medical Center, and doctors aren’t sure how his life will progress. Still, whatever doubt had coursed through Scot prior to the surgery has now diminished entirely.
“The fact that I get to be Dad for as long as I can was completely worth it,” he said.
While Scot says his doctors do not think the new heart will be affected by the genetic disorder, they do believe his children are at risk of heart disease.
But in the meantime, he will be there to support them on their own journeys. Ozzy, 17, will soon begin his freshman year at Marian University, a school just 30 minutes from home. Icean, 9, will enter fourth grade in the fall.
And in Texas, William, 13, plans to play for the junior high football team, just like his dad.
Fate fused the paths of the Pollards and the Angells — each, in their own way, helping the other mend.
“What we hope for moving forward,” Scot said, “is just that I can keep living a good life because of their gift.”
As Megan looked out at the cheering crowd, she thought of Casey.
“It’s an honor to let everyone know how proud we are of him, and who he was, and what a good man he was,” she said of her brother. “We miss him every day, but Scot helps with that.”
ESPN E60’s Jeremy Schaap, Dan Lindberg, and John Minton contributed to this story.
The company building the HS2 rail line between London and Birmingham has reported one of its subcontractors to the tax authorities over possible fraud.
Whistleblowers made allegations over the way pay was handled for some construction staff on the high-speed line.
HS2 Ltd said last month it was conducting its own investigation, looking into two firms who supplied it with workers. The company has now also referred the matter to HMRC.
The firms in question were providing workers to Balfour Beatty Vinci (BBV), a contractor for HS2.
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander is expected to raise the issue in Parliament this week. It is the latest difficulty to beset the troubled giant rail infrastructure project.
HS2 has faced myriad challenges and spiralling costs since it was first announced in 2009.
It was originally designed to boost capacity on the railways between the north and south of England but the last, Conservative, government decided to scrap the second phase of the project, which included building lines to Manchester and Leeds.
Earlier this year whistleblowers flagged concerns over the way some subcontracted staff were being paid. They said self-employed workers had been falsely declared as salaried staff, with “fake” payslips submitted at a higher payrate. The allegations were first published in the i newspaper in May.
One of the labour suppliers is understood to remain suspended from new contracts while inquiries continue.
An HS2 spokesperson said: “We treat all whistleblower allegations seriously and are continuing to conduct our own investigation.”
The firm said it encouraged anyone with relevant information to report it via confidential internal channels.
The Department for Transport said last month it had “a zero-tolerance attitude towards fraud, bribery, and corruption” and would ensure any claims of wrongdoing were thoroughly investigated.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s moves to upend decades of vaccine policy could hit patients hardest in their wallets, as shifting guidance over shots could make insurance coverage confusing and scattershot.
For decades, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) independent advisory panel recommended which shots Americans should get and when.
The Affordable Care Act requires all insurance companies to cover, for free, all vaccines the panel recommends. Those recommendations also help states decide which shots should be mandated for schoolchildren.
Kennedy’s most recent move to purge the entire advisory panel and replace them with his own handpicked members, including several vocal vaccine critics, is throwing that process into doubt.
“If we have a system that has been dismantled — one that allowed for open, evidence-based decisionmaking and that supported transparent and clear dialogue about vaccines — and then we replace it with a process that’s driven largely by one person’s beliefs, that creates a system that cannot be trusted,” Helen Chu, a newly ousted member of the panel and professor of infectious disease at the University of Washington School of Medicine, said during a press conference.
Vaccine prices vary, but without insurance, coronavirus vaccines can cost nearly $150, the MMR shot ranges from $95 to nearly $280, and the HPV vaccine can exceed $300, according to CDC data. Individual pharmacies could charge even more.
Candace DeMatteis, policy director at the Partnership to Fight Infectious Disease, said she worries about creating a two-tiered system.
“Out of pocket costs for vaccines become an issue where we could end up with a system where some people can afford vaccinating themselves and their families and others cannot,” DeMatteis said.
Prior to enactment of the Affordable Care Act, vaccine coverage varied significantly depending on the type of insurance a person had. If the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) changes recommendations for existing vaccines or doesn’t recommend new ones, maintaining access will be difficult.
“It’s a seismic shift, if you will, away from facilitating access by removing coverage and cost barriers, to one where there’s great uncertainty and coverage and cost issues become barriers,” DeMatteis said.
It’s not clear what the vetting process was for the eight people Kennedy appointed to the ACIP, or how prepared they will be for their first meeting, which is scheduled to occur in less than two weeks.
According to a Federal Register notice, the panel is scheduled to vote on recommendations for COVID-19 vaccines as well as meningococcal, HPV, influenza, and RSV vaccines for adults and maternal and pediatric populations.
Health experts said they have serious questions about what direction the new panel will take and whether Americans will still have access to free vaccines, including the coronavirus shot, in time for fall respiratory season.
If the ACIP is no longer a reliable, independent authority on vaccines, it “will be replaced by a patchwork of different policies by different states, and each state will have to make its own decisions,” Chu said.
“Washington state is a place where we have experts and scientists who work together. There are other states where this may not exist, or where they may not choose to recommend vaccines. So that is going to create a lot of chaos,” she added.
Some state health officials have already begun taking steps in that direction.
The Illinois Department of Health said on social media it will be convening its own vaccine advisory committee and national experts “to ensure we continue to provide clear, science-backed vaccine guidance for our residents.”
When Kennedy unilaterally changed the COVID-19 vaccine guidance earlier this month to remove recommendations for pregnant women and change the open recommendation for children, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services said it would continue to recommend the shots for every person at least 6 months old.
“The recent changes in CDC guidance were not made based on new data, evidence, or scientific or medical studies, nor was the guidance issued following normal processes,” the agency said in a statement.
Tina Tan, president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, said her organization as well as other major medical groups including the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics Academy have been speaking with insurance companies to urge them to continue paying for shots, even if the panel changes recommendations.
Tan mentioned an initiative launched in April by a group of public health experts called the Vaccine Integrity Project, which is working to create an alternative process to maintain vaccine access.
The initiative is funded by a foundation backed by Walmart heiress Christy Walton and led by Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy.
Federal law is specific that insurance provisions are tied to the ACIP. Specialty organizations may have expertise to make their own recommendations, but they will still require the cooperation of insurance companies. States are also more limited, and they don’t have the same power as the federal government to force coverage.
“I think it remains to be seen what the insurers are going to do,” Tan said. “However, hopefully, with the discussions going on, they can get the insurers to understand that vaccines are extraordinarily safe and effective and are the best tool that we have to protect persons of all ages against serious vaccine preventable diseases.”
While focusing on saving can seem safer than potentially losing money in mutual funds, stocks and bonds, finance expert Ramit Sethi believes that this approach could leave you broke.
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A 2024 report by Janus Henderson Investors found that 48% of Americans had no investments. While some people cited a lack of investment expertise, the need to pay off debt or limited financial means as the reason, 38% simply preferred putting cash in regular bank accounts.
While you might think you’re making progress by saving money, you’ll eventually find yourself off track from your retirement goal, even if you contribute a large sum each month.
First, a typical savings account usually earns a much lower rate than the average investment return, so your money grows much more slowly. Then, there are hidden factors you might forget, like taxes and inflation, that lead to being unable to buy as much with your savings.
Sethi gave an example of someone who spent 30 years stashing away $1,000 each month. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation data showed the national average savings account rate was 0.42% in May 2025, while Sethi said the historical average annual investment return (after inflation) was 7%.
According to Sethi, the person who saved would have around $383,000 after 30 years, compared to nearly $1.2 million for the investor. So, the saver would have missed out on about $817,000.
The annual inflation rate reported in April 2025 was 2.3%, which was 1.88% more than the 0.42% average savings account rate. So, while your savings balance looks like it’s growing each year, inflation is likely robbing you of some of your money’s value.
For example, if you had $1,000 in your savings account, you might earn $4.20 over the year, but lose $23.00 to inflation. So, your money’s purchasing power would have gone down by $18.80, meaning you’re not really getting ahead.
Sethi explained that many people mistakenly believe that saving is the safe and virtuous route, but as the example showed, it actually makes it harder to grow money efficiently.
He said, “In order to build wealth, you have to go way beyond saving, and you have to invest.”
While still saving cash for emergencies and upcoming purchases is smart, prioritizing investing is a better approach for preparing for retirement and building wealth. Sethi discussed how you can invest without making it complicated, and suggested ways to come up with more cash to contribute.
First, he recommended a three-step strategy of taking advantage of 401(k) matches, contributing to a Roth IRA and buying target-date funds. This combination gives you free money from your employer, tax advantages and simplicity.
To ensure you stay on track, Sethi suggested automatically transferring 5% of your pay to both your 401(k) and Roth IRA accounts. Then, you should set up automatic target-date fund purchases so you don’t forget them.
Finally, Sethi said you should take three steps to get more money rather than focus on cutting expenses, which will eventually come to a limit. These include asking for a higher salary, taking on a suitable side gig and focusing on gaining and improving valuable skills.
Sethi explained, “If you focus on earning more, you will give yourself a massive advantage in building your rich life.”