Peter Schrager said turbulence is on the horizon for the Buffalo Bills’ coaching staff, but he doesn’t expect coach Sean McDermott to be on the chopping block. Ad Schrager, an analyst for NFL Network, discussed the Bills’ situation during an appearance on “UNSPORTSMANLIKE Radio” on Friday after Buffalo’s 23-19 loss to Houston. Thanks for the submission! “I think Sean McDermott, I would imagine it gets more than just one year if like this thing falls off a cliff right now. And if anything, I would think that he and Brandon [Beane] being together have a long relationship going back to their Carolina days that he’s not gonna be the fall guy. I would think it might be one of the coordinators or there might be changes with personnel,” Schrager said. Ad Trending 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) Unlock Free tips from our Experts Get Picks Now UNSPORTSMANLIKE Radio @UnSportsESPN What is the status of Sean McDermott’s job if the Buffalo Bills’ season goes sideways? We asked @PSchrags | @ChrisCanty99 Ad Looking to predict NFL playoff Scenarios? Try our NFL Playoff Predictor for real-time simulations and stay ahead of the game! Sean McDermott has led the Bills since 2017, guiding them to multiple playoff runs. But with a 7-4 record and an offense struggling to find rhythm, criticism has intensified. Concerns over offensive identity and missing playmakers escalate pressure for Sean McDermott Peter Schrager highlighted a broader issue plaguing Buffalo’s playoff push: a lack of reliable receiving threats outside of running back James Cook. Ad “I think the truth of the matter is who’s gonna beat anybody on the outside for the Buffalo Bills . That was a problem against the Patriots that day where they lost, there’s a problem against the Falcons when they lost that game and it was a problem last night and Gabe Davis makes a great catch steps outta bounds and it’s like that was our opportunity,” Schrager said. Ad “The truth of the matter is they’re not scared of anybody on the wide receiver group and outside of James Cook, there’s no one that keeps you up at night. So it’s all on Josh. They have to make some changes. They have to be able to, you know, offer more than that, but I wouldn’t imagine Sean McDermott is gonna be in danger of losing his job.” Ad Josh Allen was caught on broadcast cameras shouting at the sideline after a stalled fourth-and-one attempt and later slammed his helmet while speaking with backup Mitch Trubisky. The quarterback finished the game without a passing touchdown, was intercepted twice and sacked a career-high eight times. Afterward, Allen expressed dissatisfaction with the late play-call sequence, saying the team should have taken a timeout to avoid confusion. McDermott backed offensive coordinator Joe Brady in his postgame media session, calling him a strong leader and insisting the offensive staff remains aligned. He also stressed the need to better protect Josh Allen, noting the 12 hits absorbed in the loss as unsustainable. × Feedback Why did you not like this content? Clickbait / Misleading Factually Incorrect Hateful or Abusive Baseless Opinion Too Many Ads Other Was this article helpful? Thank You for feedback Buffalo Bills Nation! Check out the latest Buffalo Bills Schedule and dive into the latest Bills Depth Chart for NFL Season 2024-25. Edited by Aman Kashyap.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/nfl/news-nfl-insider-spells-doom-bills-coaches-amid-questions-around-sean-mcdermott-s-future
Tag Archives: dissatisfaction
Trump-backed American Bitcoin received $100M investment from political critic
The Scaramuccis have revealed that they committed a $100 million investment to American Bitcoin, a Trump family-linked mining company, despite their sour relationship with President Donald Trump. American Bitcoin is a mining company backed by the Trump family and has big ambitions in the crypto industry, specifically focusing its business on Bitcoin.
Fortune reported that the $220 million funding round was led by Solari Capital. Other notable backers include Tony Robbins, Charles Hoskinson (the co-founder of Cardano), Grant Cardone, and Peter Diamandis.
Solari Capital, an investment firm led by AJ and Anthony Scaramucci, reportedly contributed more than $100 million in the July funding round for American Bitcoin. This is significant due to the Bitcoin mining company’s ties to Donald Trump’s sons.
Anthony Scaramucci, AJ’s father and the founder of SkyBridge Capital, also made a smaller personal investment, though he did not disclose the exact amount. Anthony is well-known for his brief tenure as White House Communications Director under Donald Trump and for being openly critical of the former president afterward. However, both he and his son have invested in American Bitcoin, citing their belief in Bitcoin’s power despite their dissatisfaction with Trump.
AJ Scaramucci has even closer ties with American Bitcoin’s president, Matt Prusak, who was his roommate at Stanford Business School. According to Fortune, Prusak informed AJ that American Bitcoin was being spun off from Hut 8, prompting AJ to seize the opportunity.
### American Bitcoin’s Operations
American Bitcoin was launched by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., in partnership with Hut 8. Under the deal, Hut 8 contributed “substantially all” of its Bitcoin mining equipment in exchange for 80% of the company’s shares, while the Trump family reportedly holds the remaining stake.
Following a reverse merger in September, American Bitcoin began trading on the Nasdaq. According to its filings, the company operates mining facilities in locations such as Niagara Falls, Canada, and Texas, housing tens of thousands of mining rigs.
As of mid-November 2025, American Bitcoin reported holding 4,004 BTC, worth roughly $415 million at that time.
### Funding Details and Future Plans
A regulatory filing cited by Cryptopolitan revealed that American Bitcoin raised the full $220 million through a private share placement. Approximately $10 million of that amount was paid in Bitcoin instead of cash. The reported average “cost” per share was about $104,000 per Bitcoin equivalent, according to the same filing.
American Bitcoin stated that it plans to use a portion of the capital to acquire additional mining equipment and to build up its Bitcoin treasury. Eric Trump described American Bitcoin as a means to profit from Bitcoin without purchasing it directly, calling it a “proxy play.” This strategy is similar to that of Michael Saylor’s company, which buys massive amounts of Bitcoin and allows investors to gain exposure by owning the company’s stock.
Additionally, the Trump family’s publicly traded media business has announced plans to raise $2.5 billion to build a Bitcoin treasury.
—
*Join a premium crypto trading community free for 30 days (normally $100/month).*
https://bitcoinethereumnews.com/bitcoin/trump-backed-american-bitcoin-received-100m-investment-from-political-critic/
Brownstein: Election Day sent an unmistakable warning to Republicans
With resounding wins in Tuesday’s Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races, Democrats substantially repaired the most important cracks that President Donald Trump made in their coalition in the 2024 election. That gives Democrats reason for optimism, though not yet certainty, that they are on track for a solid recovery in the 2026 midterm election.
Democrats Mikie Sherrill in New Jersey and Abigail Spanberger in Virginia regained significant ground among two groups where Trump made noteworthy advances last year: working-class people of color and young people, according to both media exit polls and county-by-county election results. The two Democrats also improved among college-educated voters, essentially matching the party’s 2024 showing with White voters and improving among non-White voters with a four-year degree, according to the Voter Poll conducted by SRSS for a consortium of media organizations.
All those groups also provided huge margins for Proposition 50, the redistricting ballot initiative backed by Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, which passed convincingly in California.
Even the most optimistic Democrats don’t contend that Tuesday’s results prove the party has solved its problems with those voting blocs. Since the 1970s, New Jersey and Virginia have almost always elected governors from the party that lost the presidential race the previous year. And Trump’s 2024 gains among blue-collar minority voters were concentrated among irregular voters who are the least likely to show up for an odd-year election.
### Undurable Realignment
But the Democratic wins do signal that exuberant Republican predictions after 2024—that Trump had engineered a durable realignment, particularly among working-class Hispanic, Black, and Asian American voters—were premature. Instead, Tuesday’s results signal that many voters in all the constituencies that moved toward Trump in 2024 remain within reach for both parties.
Moreover, the same economic frustrations that boosted Trump among those groups last year are buffeting him, and other Republicans, now.
The convincing Democratic wins reinforced the core truth that attitudes about the incumbent president are now the driving force in off-year elections. Analysts in both parties have wondered for months whether the public dissatisfaction with Democrats that is evident in poll after poll might offset the mounting doubts about Trump’s performance.
On Tuesday, the answer was clear: In the Voter Poll, more voters in both New Jersey and Virginia expressed a negative view than a positive view of the Democratic Party, even as they convincingly elected Democrats. Voters’ discontent with the incumbent president clearly outweighed their doubts about the party out of the White House—continuing a pattern that has become consistent (though rarely discussed) in off-year elections.
### Shifts at the County Level
In Tuesday’s major contests, Republicans lost ground with each group where Trump established a key beachhead last year. In Virginia, the shift was most visible in the four big, well-educated, and racially diverse suburban counties outside Washington (Fairfax, Arlington, Prince William, and Loudoun).
The Democratic margin in those counties had sagged in 2021, when Republican Glenn Youngkin won the governor’s race, and in 2024, when Kamala Harris eked out a surprisingly narrow win. Spanberger far exceeded the Democrats’ vote share in either of those elections across all four counties. (Almost unimaginably, Spanberger won those counties by an even larger combined vote total than Harris did in 2024, when far more people voted statewide.)
Compared to 2024, Democrats also rebuilt their margins in such heavily Black Virginia communities as Petersburg, Portsmouth, and Norfolk. Exit polls showed Spanberger holding Republican nominee Winsome Earle-Sears to 34% of Hispanic voters, well below the 40% Trump carried there last year.
In New Jersey, Republican Jack Ciattarelli, who narrowly lost the governorship in 2021, saw several of the counties with the highest share of college graduates—including Monmouth, Morris, Somerset, and especially Bergen—tilt back toward the Democrats, compared to Trump’s performance in 2024.
Even more important, Sherrill rebuilt the Democratic margins compared to 2024 in counties with large Hispanic and/or Black populations, including Camden, Middlesex, Mercer (Trenton), Hudson (Jersey City), and Essex (Newark).
Big gains among Hispanics allowed Trump in 2024 to become the first GOP presidential nominee in the 21st century to carry Passaic County. Sherrill was winning 55% there with about three-fourths of the vote counted. In the Voter Poll, only 32% of Hispanics supported Ciattarelli, way down from Trump’s 43% in 2024.
### Whither White Voters?
In both states, Democrats ran much better than Harris among all non-White voters without a college degree—the group whose movement toward Trump was Exhibit A in the putative GOP case for realignment.
For Democrats, the most reassuring aspect of Tuesday’s results may have been Trump’s role in the outcome. Spanberger and Sherrill both bound Earle-Sears and Ciattarelli tightly to Trump, insisting that each would place fealty to the president over loyalty to the state.
The Republican candidates helped this charge stick, refusing to criticize Trump even for actions that directly hurt their states, such as the federal government layoffs in Virginia or the cancellation of federal funding for a major transit tunnel in New Jersey.
In California, supporters of Proposition 50 portrayed the measure, above all, as an opportunity to push back against the president. Jay Jones, the Democratic Attorney General candidate in Virginia, who was facing a ferocious scandal over deeply offensive texts fantasizing about political violence, recovered enough to win by centering his campaign on promises to fight Trump in court.
Those arguments helped Democrats surf a backlash against Trump across these blue-leaning states.
### Voter Disapproval of Trump Drives Democratic Success
In both Virginia and New Jersey, about 55% of voters said they disapproved of Trump’s job performance as president, and over 9-in-10 of those disapprovers voted Democratic in the governor’s race, according to the Voter Poll. (Even the scandal-scarred Jones carried 87% of voters who disapproved of Trump.)
In California, 64% disapproved and over 9-in-10 of them supported Proposition 50. Zohran Mamdani, too, relied almost entirely on voters who disapproved of Trump in his comfortable win in the New York City mayoral race.
Those results closely tracked the trend in off-year elections over roughly the past 15 years, when around 85% to 90% of people who disapproved of the incumbent president usually voted for the other party’s candidates in House, Senate, and gubernatorial elections, according to exit polls and other Election Day surveys.
For instance, in Virginia, Democrat Ralph Northam won 87% of those who disapproved of Trump when he captured the governorship in 2017, while Youngkin carried 90% of those who disapproved of President Joe Biden when he flipped the office in 2021.
### Implications for 2026 and Beyond
Tuesday’s outcome suggests that despite the public’s clear concerns about Democrats, attitudes about Trump will likely remain the most important factor in next year’s midterm election. That will help Republicans in reliably red states where Trump is popular.
But it also means the GOP will face a tough environment everywhere else unless Trump can rebuild his approval rating, which has skidded to the lowest point of his second term on persistent frustration over prices and growing concern about his deportation agenda and threats to democratic safeguards.
Trump’s grip on the GOP is so tight that these sweeping Democratic wins aren’t likely to stir much questioning within his party. But the recoil from Trump’s belligerent second term was forceful on Tuesday—not only among partisan Democrats, but among many swing voters.
The results sent Republicans an unmistakable warning signal about 2026, whether or not they are willing to listen.
—
*Ronald Brownstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy.*
© 2025 Bloomberg.
https://www.mercurynews.com/2025/11/06/brownstein-election-day-sent-an-unmistakable-warning-to-republicans/
