Marco Rubio, College Football Stars Petition Trump To Expand Playoff Bracket

NASHVILLE—Dealing with Vladimir Putin was just practice for President Donald Trump’s toughest tango yet: satisfying college football fans.

Vanderbilt Quarterback Diego Pavia on Tuesday asked Trump to sign an executive order expanding the college football playoffs from 12 to 16 teams. Pavia, a top NFL prospect, made his petition on X after Vanderbilt once again found themselves at number 14, despite a major win over in-state rival Tennessee.

Tagging Trump’s official account on X, Pavia said “MAKE THE EXECUTIVE ORDER PLEASE!”

@realDonaldTrump MAKE THE EXECUTIVE ORDER PLEASE‼️👀 https://t.co/R37y5YofAo

— Diego Pavia (@diegopavia02) December 3, 2025

Vanderbilt head coach Clark Lea co-signed his Heisman-contending quarterback’s request, calling the playoff system “flawed.”

“Let’s go,” Lea told The Daily Wire. “If they’re willing to listen, we will make our case. If we can have someone come in from over the top and say ‘this is what we are going to do,’ at least there’s clarity in that.”

Vanderbilt isn’t the only team left out of the playoff party. Miami is currently on the outside looking in, which was enough for Secretary of State and former Florida Senator Marco Rubio to phone the president for a favor.

“As a point of personal privilege … if the University of Miami gets screwed out of the College Football Playoff, after going 10-2 and beating Notre Dame, the whole thing should be scrapped and (Trump) is gonna have to take over next year,” Rubio said during this week’s cabinet meeting.

“That’s good,” Trump replied.

It’s unlikely that Trump will sign an order before Sunday, when the official playoff bracket will be set. Nor is it clear that an executive order could get the NCAA to expand the playoffs.

But the prospect of Trump attempting to influence collegiate athletics is not entirely far-fetched. The president began his second term signing an executive order to keep men out of women’s sports. He also signed an executive order to stabilize college athletics by preserving opportunities for non-revenue sports and prohibiting “pay-for-play” payments.

College football fans for years have wanted a playoff after having a system where only the top two teams had a shot at the title. In 2014, they got a four-team playoff, but most say that’s not good enough. Last season, the CFP expanded to 12 teams — but the committee still can’t get it right in the eyes of some coaches, players, and fans.

“We’ve tangled the wires too much. I am baffled by the process … the movement of teams up and down,” Lea said. “I wake up this morning and Utah is below us and now Texas is above us. What in the world is going on.”

The Nashville native is fighting for Vanderbilt’s historic season to continue.

“This team deserves to be in the playoff, they deserve to compete for a national championship.”

A Hail Mary from Trump may do the trick.

Amazon Plans To Cut Ties With U.S. Postal Service As It Builds Its Own Network

(Reuters) — Amazon is planning to end its long-standing tie-up with the U.S. Postal Service as the e-commerce giant prepares to expand its nationwide delivery network, the Washington Post reported on Thursday, citing three people with knowledge of the matter.

The online retailer has long been the top customer for USPS, providing more than $6 billion in annual revenue in 2025, the report said. Losing its business would be a major blow to the independent government agency that has been hit by an 80% decline in first-class mail volume since 1997.

For Amazon, building out its delivery network would bolster its standing in a parcel industry where it is already a major player thanks to its sprawling warehouse network and a largely non-union workforce that has allowed it to control costs.

Last year, Amazon Logistics handled 6.3 billion parcels, just behind the 6.9 billion handled by USPS, according to Pitney Bowes’ parcel shipping index. The company is expected to overtake USPS in parcels by 2028, the data showed, a milestone it could hit sooner if the tie-up ends.

The retailer plans to pull the billions of packages it sends through USPS by the end of 2026, although the plans are not final and could change, the Washington Post report said.

AMAZON’S DELIVERY NETWORK EXPANSION

The company has already pledged more than $4 billion in April to expand its U.S. rural delivery network by the end of next year.

“Amazon has been building its distribution capabilities for several years and now has minimal reliance on other logistics companies,” said D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria, adding that the company was in a position to be “almost entirely self-reliant.”

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Still, the expansion of the delivery network will require more resources at a time when Amazon is pouring tens of billions of dollars on data centers to stay competitive in the artificial intelligence race.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report. Amazon said it wants to reach an agreement with USPS, while the agency did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

TOUGH TALKS

The plans to end the tie-up follow talks between Amazon and USPS over “negotiated service agreements” — contracts that lock in rates and speed deliveries for the agency’s biggest customers — which largely ended without a new deal, the report said.

Those agreements have largely favored big companies over individual retailers and small businesses, but Postmaster General David Steiner, appointed earlier this year, has said he wants to democratize them by opening them up to smaller-scale customers, the report added.

He plans to run a reverse auction early next year, offering access to postal facilities to the highest bidder rather than directly to Amazon, a proposal that largely ended the talks that had been under way since February, the report said.

Steiner met virtually with Amazon CEO Andy Jassy on November 14, according to the report.

USPS, which posted a $9.5 billion loss last year as electronic communications erode mail volumes and private rivals expand their footprint, has also drawn the attention of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Trump said in February he was considering merging USPS — which he called “a tremendous loser for this country” — with the Commerce Department, a move Democrats said would violate federal law.

“USPS needs Amazon a lot more than Amazon needs USPS,” said New York-based ecommerce analyst Juozas Kaziukenas. “Amazon has all the cards in their hands in this case.”

(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru, additional reporting by Arnav Mishra, Helen Reid and Ruchika Khanna; Editing by Shailesh Kuber and Leroy Leo)

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