CBS News
What happens to the puppies after the Puppy Bowl? Adopters share stories ahead of the 2024 game
He stunned on Team Ruff as a young gun, then came back to coach a Puppy Bowl player — now Maddux is one of four players set to be inducted into the Puppy Bowl Hall of Fame on Sunday.
Maddux, whose name was Bubba when he played in Puppy Bowl XI, found his forever home the day Puppy Bowl 2015 was being filmed. This year’s Puppy Bowl will feature 131 adoptable puppies from 73 shelters and rescues.
From a shelter to the Puppy Bowl
Maddux/Bubba had originally been found abandoned in an apartment along with his brothers and sisters, owner Michelle Maskaly said. She met him when she volunteered to help Florida Little Dog Rescue during the taping of 2015’s Puppy Bowl.
“I pulled this one dog, which ended up being Bubba, out of his crate that morning and I was like ‘oh my gosh – this dog is just adorable. I love him,'” Maskaly said.
He shined on the Puppy Bowl field, scoring several touchdowns. He was also great as a defensive player, Maskaly said. She adopted him on the day of the Puppy Bowl and renamed him Maddux, after baseball Hall of Famer Greg Maddux. The chihuahua-terrier mix, now 9, is still active — he loves to run and play on agility equipment.
“He’s a wonderful snuggler,” Maskaly said. “He’s very empathetic and he’s very intuitive.”
Maddux is looking forward to eating football shaped pupcakes on the day of the Puppy Bowl.
Preparing for the Puppy Bowl
Florida Little Dog Rescue, where Maddux is from, has participated in the Puppy Bowl for years, rescue director Laurie Johnson said. Ahead of the big game, a trainer works with puppies from the rescue to make sure they’re comfortable with lights and sounds.
“We want the puppies to have a great time when they go, so we work hard with them in advance to make sure that they’re desensitized to that,” Johnson said.
While they’re not focusing on how to score touchdowns, which happens when puppies bring toys into the end zone, one pup from Florida Little Dog Rescue has learned a football trick. Taylor, a Shih Tzu in her Puppy Bowl era, has learned to ring a bell when she hears “touchdown!”
The pup, one of seven from Florida Little Dog Rescue participating in this year’s game, is named for Taylor Swift. She even has a Chiefs jersey.
What you should know about the 2024 Puppy Bowl
This year’s Puppy Bowl, airing Feb. 11 at 2 p.m., is Puppy Bowl XX. The puppies are split into two teams: Team Fluff and Team Ruff. “Fur-ocious” players in this year’s game range in size from Sweetpea, at 1.7 pounds, up to Levi, a 70-pound Great Dane.
Players compete to win the “Lombarky” trophy and, each year, a pup is crowned MVP — Most Valuable Puppy. Referee Dan Schachner will be joined by puppy assistant Whistle, a “ruff-eree” who will help Schachner bark the plays and fumbles.
The show airs on Animal Planet, Discovery, TBS, truTV, Max and discovery+ before the Super Bowl. Some names might seem familiar to fans of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy and Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes; Chihuahua mix Bark Purdy will be playing on Team Ruff this year while Patrick Mabones, a hound mix, plays for Team Fluff.
Penalties can be called for “unnecessary rrruff-ness” and “paws interference.” Johnson recalled one pup, Mr. Wigglesworth, got a penalty for excessive slumber on the field.
It’s a day of adorable viewing for fans and fun for the dogs.
“They view it as ‘oh my gosh, it’s a huge playgroup, we’re going to have so much fun,'” Johnson said. “It’s kind of like taking your kid to Chuck E. Cheese.”
Adoption and the Puppy Bowl
Viewers are able to learn more about puppies at shelters and rescues across the country, all while seeing “pup-tastic” plays. Animal rescue workers say the event exposes potential adopters to the wide variety of dogs looking for forever homes.
“They try to show you can get a golden retriever, you can get a corgi, you can find a chihuahua mix, you can find a lab mix, you can find a beagle, you can find a Great Dane,” Johnson said. “You can find all sorts of dog breeds — purebred, mix, designer — in rescue. You just have to be patient.”
Johnson’s corgi, Clara, played in Puppy Bowl XV, during which she had an “excessive amount of fun with the water bowl,” Johnson said. She was fostering Clara, but ended up adopting her. Clara is also set to be inducted into the Puppy Bowl Hall of Fame this year.
Maskaly views Maddux as an ambassador. She said people often stop her to ask about Maddux and are surprised to hear he’s a rescue. Maskaly has continued to volunteer helping out at the Puppy Bowl. It mostly involves picking up dog poop on the day of the game, but Maskaly said she loves being able to bring attention to dogs in need of homes.
“Being able to play a tiny little part in that, to help bring attention to them, is what I like best about it,” she said.
CBS News
2 sisters, 7 years apart in age, also receive heart transplants 7 years apart in Chicago
CHICAGO (CBS) — Two sisters have grateful hearts after they both received heart transplants at the same age—seven years apart.
Younger sister Meredith Everhart and older sister Abbey Cannon are now bonded by a genetic condition and a second chance at life.
“What’s ironic is that when she needed a heart transplant, was exactly the same age I needed a heart transplant,” said Cannon. “Seven years apart in age, seven years apart within 30 days of transplant, and our birthdays are within 30 days.”
The sisters share a special bond of getting a second chance at life, which they both received at the age of 38 years old.
Both sisters suffer from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy—otherwise known as HCM.
The genetic condition is a form of heart disease that causes the heart muscle to thicken.
In 2012, Cannon had chest pain. She was misdiagnosed in Nashville, Tennessee, and got a second opinion at Northwestern Medicine in 2016.
“Within six months, I was inpatient on an aortic balloon pump waiting for a heart,” Cannon said. “I ended up getting my heart 32 days later, So my date is February 27, 2017.”
Just months after Cannon’s transplant, Everhart was diagnosed with HCM too. She tried medication and participated in clinical trials, but her condition kept getting worse.”
“For me, it was, she’s right—I was in denial for a long time,” said Everhart, “and I didn’t want to be sick. I was in my 20s. I was in my early 30’s. I was like, this is not happening. I saw how bad she suffered.”
In May 2022, Everhart got COVID-19, and it sent her into heart failure.
She was added to the transplant list one year later.
“I got the call on January 29 of this year, 2024, and it’s been a journey,” Everhart said. “It’s been fantastic though. Northwestern has been great.”
Cannon said she can’t stress enough how important it is to become an organ donor.
“Had we not had someone that gave that most selfless gift, neither of us would be here,” she said.
CBS News
Congo says mystery disease behind dozens of deaths of women and children finally identified as severe malaria
Johannesburg — For weeks it was dubbed simply “Disease X.” But the mysterious flu-like disease that has killed more than 143 people — mainly women and young children — in the Democratic Republic of Congo has finally been identified.
“The mystery has finally been solved,” Congo’s health ministry declared in a statement on Tuesday. “It’s a case of severe malaria in the form of a respiratory illness.”
The health agency said malnutrition in the hardest-hit region had weakened the local population’s immunity, leaving them more vulnerable to the disease. People who contracted the malaria infection have exhibited symptoms including headache, fever, cough and body ache.
The Congo’s health minister had told journalists the country was on “maximum alert” over the spread of the previously unidentified disease, and health officials told CBS News in early December that the remoteness of the epicenter of the outbreak and lack of a diagnosis made it difficult to launch a concerted response.
At least 592 cases were reported after the alert was first raised by Congo’s health ministry on Oct. 29. The ministry said the disease had a fatality rate of 6.25%. More than half of the deaths recorded were children younger than five who were severely malnourished when they contracted the disease, according to the World Health Organization.
At a press briefing on Dec. 10, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said 10 out of 12 samples from patients suffering from the mysterious disease had tested positive for malaria, but he said they were still testing at the time for other diseases.
The Congolese government had sent a rapid intervention team to the Kwango province, 435 miles southeast of capital city Kinshasa, consisting of epidemiologists and other medical experts. Their objective was to identify the disease and mount a suitable response. Government officials had earlier warned locals to avoid touching people infected with the illness or the bodies of those who had died.
Congo has suffered from many disease outbreaks in recent years, including typhoid, malaria and anemia. The country has also grappled with an mpox outbreak, with more than 47,000 suspected cases and over 1,000 suspected deaths from the disease, according to the WHO.
Anti-malaria medicine provided by the WHO was being distributed at local health centers in Congo, and WHO officials said more medical supplies were due to arrive in the country Wednesday.
It’s the rainy season in Congo, which often sees a rise in malaria cases, and will certainly complicate treating those most at risk.
CBS News
Russia says suspect detained in killing of Gen. Igor Kirillov, head of Russian chemical weapons unit
Moscow — Russia’s security service said Wednesday that it had detained a suspect in the killing of a senior general in a Moscow bomb blast. The suspect was described as an Uzbek citizen whom the agency said had been recruited by Ukrainian intelligence services.
Ukrainian security sources told CBS News on Monday that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) was behind the explosion that killed Lt. General Igor Kirillov. The claim couldn’t be independently verified, but Russian officials quickly vowed to take revenge against Ukraine’s leaders.
Russia’s Federal Security Service didn’t name the suspect, but it said he was born in 1995. According to an FSB statement, the suspect said he was recruited by Ukrainian special services.
“Kirillov was a war criminal and an absolutely legitimate target, since he gave orders to use prohibited chemical weapons against the Ukrainian military,” an informed source in the SBU asserted to CBS News. “Such an inglorious end awaits everyone who kills Ukrainians. Retribution for war crimes is inevitable.”
Kirillov was killed by a bomb hidden in an electric scooter outside his apartment building in Moscow, a day after Ukraine’s security service leveled criminal charges against him. His assistant also died in the attack.
The FSB said the suspect had been promised a reward of $100,000 and permission to move to a European Union country in exchange for killing Kirillov. It said that, acting on instructions from Ukraine, the suspect traveled to Moscow, where he picked up a homemade explosive device. He then placed the device on an electric scooter and parked it at the entrance of the residential building where Kirillov lived.
The suspect then rented a car to monitor the location and set up a camera that livestreamed video from the scene to his handlers in the central Ukrainian city of Dnipro. When Kirillov was seen leaving the building, the suspect detonated the bomb.
According to the FSB’s statement, the suspect faces “a sentence of up to life imprisonment.”
Kirillov, 54, was the chief of the Russian military’s radiological, biological and chemical protection forces. Either Kirillov himself or his military unit were sanctioned by several countries, including the U.S., Britain and Canada, for the alleged use of chemical weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine. On Monday, Ukraine’s SBU had opened a criminal investigation against him, accusing him of directing the use of banned chemical weapons.
Ukraine’s SBU has said it recorded more than 4,800 occasions when Russia used chemical weapons on the battlefield since President Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion in February 2022. In May, the U.S. State Department announced sanctions against Kirillov’s unit, saying the U.S. had recorded the use of chloropicrin, a poison gas first deployed in World War I, against Ukrainian troops.
Russia has denied using any chemical weapons in Ukraine and, in turn, has accused Kyiv of using toxic agents in combat, and Kirillov was allegedly behind the spread of that propaganda.
Kirillov, who had been in his post since April 2017, was accused by the U.S. government of helping to spread disinformation about biological weapons and research.
In March 2023, about a year into Russia’s full-scale invasion, the U.S. State Department said Kirillov had “significantly increased his media engagement” to issue repeated, baseless claims that the U.S. government had been involved in creating both the mpox virus and COVID-19, and that the U.S. “is developing biological weapons able to selectively target ethnic groups.”
“The U.S. Government is concerned that this false narrative may be a prelude for a false-flag operation, where Russia itself uses biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons in Ukraine, and then attempts to blame it on Ukraine and/or the United States,” the State Department said at the time.
The bomb used in Tuesday’s attack was triggered remotely, according to Russian news reports. Images from the scene showed shattered windows and scorched brickwork.
Russia’s top state investigative agency said it’s looking into Kirillov’s death as a case of terrorism, and officials in Moscow vowed to punish Ukraine.