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  • Dupree decries Favre comparison in fraud case

    Dupree decries Favre comparison in fraud case

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    Marcus Dupree, who rose to fame in Mississippi and beyond after a brief but impressive football career that became the subject of an ESPN documentary, is speaking out about his alleged role in a sprawling welfare fraud case that has also entangled Hall of Fame NFL quarterback Brett Favre and dozens of others.

    A lawsuit filed in May by the Mississippi Department of Human Services alleges Dupree was illegally paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal welfare money that was intended for the state’s neediest families. On Wednesday, Dupree denied wrongdoing in an interview with ESPN.

    “I don’t appreciate being lumped into something like I took money,” Dupree said. “I worked too hard on my reputation to do the right thing and be the right person, and I don’t like what’s going on.”

    Dupree, 58, grew up in Philadelphia, Mississippi, where his highlight-reel-worthy performances as a high school running back made him the most sought-after football recruit in the country. Dupree was a standout in his freshman season at the University of Oklahoma in 1982, but his career was ultimately hampered by injuries. His football journey was profiled in a 2010 ESPN 30 for 30 documentary, “The Best That Never Was.”

    During his post-playing days, Dupree maintained local-celebrity status within his home state, frequently appearing at public functions or events staged through his foundation.

    But his name didn’t appear with any frequency in the national media until the results of a state audit in Mississippi became public and a lawsuit was then filed by the state in May against Dupree, his foundation and dozens of other defendants.

    According to the lawsuit, from August 2017 to September 2019 Dupree was paid $371,000 from Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) funds.

    A Mississippi Department of Human Services initiative called Families First for Mississippi, run by two nonprofits, illegally funneled the federal welfare money to Dupree, the lawsuit states, in exchange for his work as a “celebrity endorser” and “motivational speaker.”

    An investigation by Mississippi Today was the first to reveal that the nonprofits that paid Dupree and others either misspent or stole at least $77 million in welfare funds in what’s considered the worst public corruption case in state history.

    Dupree told ESPN he “was shocked” when he learned that Nancy New, the head of one of the nonprofits, the Mississippi Community Education Center, had pleaded guilty to 13 felony counts of bribery, fraud and racketeering. Dupree said he was not aware the money New had used to pay him had come from misappropriated welfare funds.

    According to a 2019 state audit, Dupree was paid, in part, for “equine assisted learning,” which Mississippi’s state auditor, Shad White, told ESPN meant “teaching people how to ride horses.”

    White said his office found “limited evidence” Dupree or anyone else ever delivered those sorts of services to the needy.

    But Dupree insists he did mentor teens at his 15-acre horse farm in Flora, Mississippi.

    “I mentored the kids through the horses by having responsibility, cleaning the stalls, and, if you got good with that, I’d let you ride a horse. Most of the parents just wanted them to be around me. I’m passionate about what we did, and for the state to be talking about ‘Oh, none of that happened,’ yes it did,” Dupree said.

    Dupree said he couldn’t quantify how many times he mentored teens at his horse farm, but he says over the roughly two-year period he was paid by the state he also made 20 to 30 appearances working as a liaison for Families First, traveling Mississippi to speak in prisons and schools and recording radio commercials.

    “I was all over the state. I signed a contract and I did my job,” Dupree said.

    “I’m getting lumped in with whatever Brett Favre and the Governor had going on. I didn’t even know about that, nothing. I was shocked when I heard it. I can’t wait until we go to court. I don’t know what Brett did. I can only speak for Marcus.”

    Marcus Dupree on fraud allegations

    Dupree provided ESPN several photos of what appear to be teenage boys, whom he says he mentored at his stables in Flora, as well as photos from numerous public appearances.

    “If Mr. Dupree would like to argue that the amounts he was paid were reasonably justified for the number of speeches given and can show proof of the speeches, he will be able to make that argument in a court,” White said.

    On April 13, 2018, Dupree’s foundation purchased the horse farm and residence in Flora where Dupree lives for $855,000. The five-bedroom, 4,100-square-foot home is valued at just over $1 million, according to the real estate website Zillow.

    According to an audit conducted by White’s office, $171,000 in TANF money was used as the down payment toward Dupree’s home and surrounding property.

    White told ESPN such purchases “would be unallowable because of the prohibition against purchasing real property with TANF funds.” He also noted the “unreasonableness” of using federal welfare money, intended for job training and assistance for needy families, to help purchase a five-bedroom home and a horse farm for a state-contracted employee.

    The nonprofit that funneled the money to Dupree went as far as to “guarantee the residence through the bank with a six-year lease from April 1, 2018 through March 31, 2024,” according to the state audit. The monthly lease payments for the property totaled $9,500, the audit states.

    Dupree said he has no intention of paying the state back, as White’s office has demanded. “I have a lawyer, and I’m just waiting to see how it all pans out,” Dupree said.

    In October 2021, Dupree’s lawyer, J. Matthew Eichelberger, sent a sharply worded letter to White.

    “Neither Mr. Dupree, nor his foundation, will be making any payment in response to your demand. Make no mistake: Mr. Dupree earned the money he was paid, and he never had any reason to believe the money was being improperly spent by state officials,” Eichelberger wrote.

    To date, six people have been indicted in the pending welfare fraud case. Five have pleaded guilty.

    Brett Favre is not among those facing criminal charges, but, like Dupree, he remains a defendant in the ongoing civil lawsuit filed by the state of Mississippi in May. Text messages show he pressured Phil Bryant, a former Mississippi governor, to obtain $5 million in funds to help build a new volleyball center at his alma mater, the University of Southern Mississippi, where his daughter played the sport. Favre has denied wrongdoing.

    Dupree said negative press involving Favre in recent months has damaged his own reputation.

    “I’m getting lumped in with whatever Brett Favre and the governor had going on. I didn’t even know about that, nothing. I was shocked when I heard it. I can’t wait until we go to court. I don’t know what Brett did. I can only speak for Marcus.”

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  • Muskett leads Monmouth to 35-7 victory over Lehigh

    Muskett leads Monmouth to 35-7 victory over Lehigh

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    BETHLEHEM, Pa. — Tony Muskett threw three touchdown passes, Dymere Miller had 125 receiving yards and Monmouth defeated Lehigh 35-7 on Saturday.

    Muskett threw touchdown passes of 39 yards to Miller and 52 yards to Assanti Kearney en route to a 21-0 halftime lead. The Hawks’ advantage was 35-0 before Lehigh’s Gaige Garcia scored on a 1-yard run with 45 seconds remaining in the third quarter.

    Muskett completed 20 of 27 passes for 261 yards with the three touchdowns and one interception. He also scored on a 1-yard run. Monmouth (3-2) had 229 yards on the ground for 490 total yards. Jaden Shirden had 108 yards rushing on 20 carries.

    Lehigh’s Brayten Silbor was 10-of-22 passing for 139 yards. Garcia had 71 yards rushing on eight carries for the Mountain Hawks (1-4).

    —-

    More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/ap—top25. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://tinyurl.com/mrxhe6f2

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  • ‘I’m trying to catch Tom Brady’: How Terrance Gore’s unusual career got him three rings … and counting

    ‘I’m trying to catch Tom Brady’: How Terrance Gore’s unusual career got him three rings … and counting

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    IN HIS EIGHT seasons in the big leagues, New York Mets outfielder Terrance Gore has never hit a home run. He has just one career RBI. But he does lead baseball in one very important category: World Series rings.

    With three, Gore is tied with Madison Bumgarner for the most rings among active players in the majors, and has more than the entire Mets clubhouse combined. With his team among the National League favorites heading into the 2022 postseason, the journeyman pinch-running specialist is looking to add to his collection — with a lofty goal in mind.

    “I’m trying to catch Tom Brady,” Gore says. “I like my odds.”

    Brady, of course, owns seven rings as a future Hall of Fame quarterback for the New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but Gore — a 31-year-old speedster known only to the most die-hard baseball fans — finds himself nearly halfway there.

    “I wish I had that many World Series rings,” All-Star Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor says. “I’m a little envious.”

    There’s a catch: Gore has never actually played in a World Series game. Since the Kansas City Royals drafted him in the 20th round in 2011, Gore has put together one of the most unique careers in sports history, a playoff base stealer for hire, often added to rosters in late September or October as one of the game’s fastest runners, deployed in the late innings of close games. He’s been a key contributor along the way, but has yet to appear in the Fall Classic.

    In June, Gore joined the Mets, his fourth team. In eight games, Gore does not have a hit in three at-bats, but has stolen three bases and has not been caught once. The Mets hope, come October, that Gore can help the team create runs on the basepaths while providing some of the luck he’s brought the past two seasons to the Los Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta Braves, plus the Royals in 2015, all of whom won the World Series with Gore on their playoff rosters.

    “Everyone knows when I go out there what I’m doing,” Gore says. “It’s like cat and mouse. Here we go. There’s no hiding.”


    BEFORE GORE BECAME an October good luck charm, he almost quit baseball.

    In 2014, Gore was frustrated with his progress. As a kid, Gore had envisioned a career like Ichiro Suzuki’s or Juan Pierre’s. But in his fourth year in the Royals organization, he wasn’t making much of a mark as an everyday player at High-A Wilmington, hitting .218/.284/.258 with no home runs and 36 stolen bases in 89 games. As he struggled in professional baseball, his ambitions shrunk, and he found himself dreaming not of MLB success, but of simply making a living, in the minors.

    With a child on the way, though, Gore also considered hanging up his spikes altogether.

    “I didn’t have a plan,” Gore says. “I knew I needed to do whatever it took to provide for the family.”

    Gore didn’t see a path to the big leagues. He wasn’t developing as an all-around player and as his teammates got younger and younger, it felt like his window was closing. Gore routinely talked to his agent, Jay Witasik, who had pitched 12 years in the major leagues, about leaving the sport.

    As he wavered, Gore grabbed dinner with former Royals slugger Mike Sweeney, who was working with the team as a special assistant. Sweeney pushed back on Gore’s plans to leave baseball, imploring Gore to stick with it for another year — an opportunity might be coming soon.

    That opportunity came a few months later in early August when Gore got the call to join the Triple-A Omaha Chasers, where the Royals wanted him to pinch run and steal bases against a higher level of competition. The plan was for Gore to come up to the big leagues and be a pinch runner for the team’s postseason run.

    “I had zero idea,” Gore says. “I stole bases down there, but I just did it because it was something I was good at.”

    Just a month later, Gore made his major league debut against Cleveland, pinch running for the Royals just 26 days after his last game in Single-A.

    “It was like he was shot out of a cannon every time he took off,” says ex-major leaguer Rusty Kuntz, then the Royals’ first base coach. “I grew up with Vince Coleman, Rickey Henderson, Tim Raines, the guys in the Hall of Fame with that kind of speed, and this guy is right there.”

    Players like Salvador Perez, Jarrod Dyson, Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas took Gore under their wing, a 23-year old who nearly quit baseball now playing high-pressure games in October.

    “I was just hoping and praying to God, do not fall on your face in the middle of the base path,” Gore says. “I am notorious for tripping and I’ve come really close to stumbling, so I was like, do not do this on TV.”

    While the Royals did not win the World Series in 2014, they raised the trophy in 2015. That year, Gore stole a base in Game 4 of the ALDS against the Houston Astros after spending the majority of the season in Double-A. Gore says he does not remember much of his first two postseasons because he blacked out from the pressure. Still, the thrill of success in the majors got him hooked.

    “There was no turning back. Once you get a taste of it, it’s almost like a shark,” Gore says. “You get the taste of that blood and you’re like oh man, I want to keep going.”


    SINCE THEN, GORE has accepted his role as a premier pinch runner and shifted his training strategy accordingly, de-emphasizing hitting to focus on improving his speed through sprints and flexibility while working on reading pitchers on the mound. Perhaps the only comparable career in MLB history is that of Herb Washington, a four-time All-American sprinter at Michigan State who played two years for the Oakland Athletics, stealing 31 bases without a single at-bat and winning a championship in 1974. Gore’s legs alone got him his first World Series ring, and leaning all the way in like Washington seemed his best course forward.

    “I’m just going to ride this wave,” Gore says. “Be really freaking good at it and see where it takes me.”

    In 2018, the Royals shipped Gore to the Chicago Cubs, who put him on the postseason roster for the wild-card game, where Gore stole a base and scored a run in a Cubs loss to the Colorado Rockies. He returned to the Royals in 2019, getting his most extended time in the majors to date, playing 37 games while hitting .275/.362/.353 and stealing 13 bases before being sent to the New York Yankees and finding himself back in the minor leagues.

    Ahead of the 2020 season, Gore signed with the Dodgers, for whom he appeared in two regular-season games before being added to the 28-man roster for the wild-card game and the NLDS. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said it would “be pretty costly” to not have Gore on the playoff roster, despite the outfielder not appearing in any games. And when the Dodgers won the World Series, Gore got his second championship ring.

    Gore next signed with the Braves, who did not call him up during the 2021 regular season. But when Atlanta reached the NLDS, Gore joined the roster, making one appearance as a pinch runner. And when the Braves won the World Series, Gore got his third championship ring, his second in a row.

    Noticing a trend in how teams used him, Gore and Witasik came up with a different free agent strategy for 2022, deciding not to sign with a team until halfway through the season. The approach allowed Gore to gauge which interested teams had a shot at making the postseason and where he could maximize his impact. They knew the same teams interested in his speed in February would be just as interested in June ahead of a postseason run.

    “For 99.9 percent of how things work, you get the player the deal and they develop throughout the season. But with Terrance, he’s not that guy,” Witasik says. “He’s a once-in-a-generation type guy with his speed and skill set.”

    Gore feels the pressure every time he takes the field, knowing he’ll be called onto the basepaths in key situations. To prepare for these moments, he reads scouting reports that break down the pickoff moves and windup timing for each pitcher on the opposing team, studying video of how each of them holds runners on base, examining everything from their feet to their eyes.

    “I’ve embraced it now. It’s got me three World Series rings so why not just keep on chugging along and see how far I can go.”

    He might never win as many rings as Tom Brady, but with another on the line this October, he’s feeling pretty ambitious. If he wins a fourth ring, and his third straight?

    “Put me in the Hall of Fame,” Gore says with a laugh.

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  • Wheelchair Super League Grand Final: Halifax Panthers win thriller final 52-48 vs Leeds Rhinos

    Wheelchair Super League Grand Final: Halifax Panthers win thriller final 52-48 vs Leeds Rhinos

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    Halifax Panthers beat Leeds Rhinos in the Wheelchair Super League Grand Final on Saturday, live on Sky Sports; Rob Hawkins scored five tries for Halifax in victory; Nathan Collins also scored five tries, for Leeds in a losing effort

    Last Updated: 01/10/22 6:44pm

    Halifax Panthers’ Rob Hawkins scored five tries as his side beat Leeds Rhinos to the Super League Grand Final title

    Halifax Panthers claimed Wheelchair Grand Final glory on Saturday, winning their first Super League title since 2019 after a thrilling 52-48 success against Leeds Rhinos.

    A packed house in Manchester saw Leeds make the stronger start, and despite the concession of the first score to Halifax’s Nathan Holmes, they hit back with tries from James Simpson and Nathan Collins – the latter finishing after a superb Tom Halliwell pass – to lead 10-6 15 minutes into the final.

    Halifax replied with some inspired play, however, and proved dominant in the second quarter, scoring five tries without response.

    Rob Hawkins and Jeremy Bourson were among the try scorers, and five minutes from the half-time break, the Panthers had turned things around to lead 36-10.

    In the final play of the first half, Leeds got themselves back into the contest, though, as Collins registered his second try close to the posts.

    The Rhinos, much like the first period, re-emerged to start the stronger, as Jodie Boyd-Ward and Collins scored quick-fire tires to narrow the deficit, before Halifax hit back through a Seb Bechara try.

    Collins would soon notch his fourth and fifth tries of the final for Leeds, however, cutting the Halifax lead to just two points at 42-40 with 12 minutes left.

    Two minutes later, the Rhinos were level as Collins punished a Halifax push with a penalty goal, after the Leeds man himself had been fouled.

    The final wasn’t level for long, however, as Hawkins grabbed his fourth try – with a salute to the fans en route – before scoring his fifth to seemingly seal victory for Halifax.

    Leeds had one final say and push, though, as England international Josh Butler finished off a flowing move, and once Collins added the conversion, the gap was narrowed to four points with a minute to go.

    A penalty against Halifax for a double tag gave Leeds one final set, and though they pushed hard, they just fell short in the Grand Final.

    The Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup begins on Thursday November 3, with England competing in a group against Australia, Spain and Ireland on home soil.

    The final is being held at Manchester Central on Friday November 18.

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  • McDaniel stands by how Tua has been handled

    McDaniel stands by how Tua has been handled

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    MIAMI — Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel has combed through the events leading up to Tua Tagovailoa‘s injury Thursday night several times — right down to his own play call.

    But he’s not second-guessing how the team handled Tagovailoa throughout the week.

    Tagovailoa was taken to a hospital Thursday after hitting his head on the turf while being sacked by Cincinnati Bengals nose tackle Josh Tupou in the second quarter. He remained on the turf for roughly 12 minutes before he was carted off the field on a stretcher and eventually taken to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center with a concussion and neck injury.

    He was diagnosed with a concussion and is in the protocol with no timetable for a return, according to the Dolphins.

    Tagovailoa took to Twitter to thank everyone for their support and said he’s “feeling much better.”

    The injury occurred four days after a similar incident during Miami’s game Sunday against the Buffalo Bills, in which Tagovailoa hit the back of his head on the ground and was evaluated for a concussion. The Dolphins faced widespread criticism on social media for allowing Tagovailoa to return to the game, as well as skepticism from the NFL Players Association — which after Sunday’s game, initiated its right to request a review of the NFL’s concussion protocol.

    NFLPA president JC Tretter tweeted Friday that he is “outraged” by what has happened to Tagovailoa.

    “We are all outraged by what we have seen the last several days and scared for the safety of one of our brothers,” Tretter said. “What everyone saw both Sunday and last night were ‘no-go’ symptoms within our concussion protocols. The protocols exist to protect the player and that is why we initiated an investigation.

    “Our job as the NFLPA is to take every possible measure to get the facts and hold those responsible accountable. We need to figure out how and why the decisions were made last Sunday to allow a player with a ‘no-go’ symptom back on the field.”

    But the Dolphins say Tagovailoa passed multiple concussion evaluations — including one at halftime of the Bills game and each day leading up to Thursday’s game, according to NFL chief medical officer Allen Sills.

    “I have 100 percent conviction in our process regarding our players,” McDaniel said. “This is a player-friendly organization, and I make it very clear from the onset that my job here is for the players. I take that very seriously. No one in the building strays from that. … If there would have been anything lingering with his head, I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself if I prematurely put someone out there and put them in harm’s way.

    “This is a relationship that I have with this human being. I take that serious. I wouldn’t have put him out there if there was any inclination given to me whatsoever that he was endangering himself from that previous game.”

    Contrary to Miami’s previous game when Tagovailoa was taken directly to the locker room from the field, McDaniel had a chance to interact with his quarterback before he was stretchered off the field.

    He said he knew essentially right away that Tagovailoa had a concussion and hoped that it wasn’t anything more.

    “Obviously, I was very worried about his head, but you’re wanting to make sure that all things with relation to the spine and back and all that stuff, you want to make sure that’s OK,” McDaniel said. “It was very clear to me from the onset that he had, I didn’t really the know the degree of, but I knew he had a concussion.

    “He was asking for me and then when he saw me, I could just tell it wasn’t the same guy that I’m used to seeing.”

    After the game, McDaniel told the team Tagovailoa would be traveling back to Miami with them. It was galvanizing news to a locker room that was somber beyond the scope of a normal loss.

    “All of his teammates were so elated. I mean this was a scary, scary situation for all of us,” McDaniel said. “I’m sure you could tell by his teammates’ body language and everyone that was on the field. It was something that did not just go away once the game restarted. All of his teammates were absolutely elated to see him on the plane. He was elated. It brought him some joy, which was good to see. It’s one of the reasons you get into team sports.”

    The Dolphins continue to face criticism for their handling of the 24-year-old, but McDaniel insists every step of the NFL’s concussion protocol was followed.

    “This is a relationship that I have with this human being. I take that serious. I wouldn’t have put him out there if there was any inclination given to me whatsoever that he was endangering himself from that previous game.”

    Mike McDaniel, Dolphins coach

    He said he understands the optics of the entire situation but can speak with “100 percent conviction” that every person in the Dolphins’ building adhered to a process that is “clear, contrite and not something that is negotiable in any way, shape or form.”

    “I had no worries whatsoever. I’m in steady communication with this guy day-in and day-out,” McDaniel said Friday. “We’re talking about high-level football conversations about progressions and defenses and recalling stuff from two weeks previous and then him having to reiterate a 15-word play call. All things, absolutely no signs. There was no medical indication, from all resources, that there was anything regarding the head.

    “Beyond an eyeball test, which I know for a fact you guys would not be very comfortable if I was just relying on that — I mean, it’s the reason why we have tests. He did not have a head injury. So, guys hit their heads all the time, and that’s why I was adamant [that] he was evaluated for having a head injury and he did not have one. And when I tell you he was in complete mental concert, talking to us through it, and then he played the whole game and then he did a press conference and then he did media all week.

    “If I were to sit someone for a medical issue going against medical people abstractly, then when do I play him again?”

    In an interview with ESPN’s Stephania Bell on SportsCenter on Saturday, Sills said Tagovailoa’s case remains in “active review.” That review will include interviews with the Dolphins’ team doctors, the league’s independent doctors and Tagovailoa, Sills said.

    “These are reviews that we conduct normally several times each season,” Sills told Bell. “Any time that there’s questions or concerns raised about the concussion protocol and how it’s applied, then the league and the union, our medical physicians, get together and we go back and review these situations.”

    Veteran quarterback Teddy Bridgewater finished the game in Tagovailoa’s place, and McDaniel confirmed Bridgewater will be the starter moving forward while Tagovailoa is out.

    Seeing Tagovailoa leave Thursday’s game was a tough sight for many around the league.

    Coach John Harbaugh, whose Baltimore Ravens lost to the Dolphins in Week 2, said the whole situation was unbelievable.

    “Like probably most people, I couldn’t believe what I saw last night. I couldn’t believe what I saw last Sunday. It was just something that was astonishing to see,” Harbaugh said Friday. “I’ve been coaching for 40 years now, college in the NFL, almost 40, and I’ve never seen anything like it before. I just couldn’t believe what I was seeing.

    “A lot of times players want to play and sometimes you just have to tell them ‘No. No has to be the answer.’”

    Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts expressed concern for his former college teammate.

    “I think it’s a scary moment for anybody to be in that type of disposition,” Hurts said Friday.

    McDaniel reiterated multiple times that he has not considered any sort of timetable when it comes to Tagovailoa’s return. He said Tagovailoa underwent an MRI on Friday and that the team would take it day-by-day as far as what will be asked of him while in concussion protocol; if there is any indication that traveling to and from the facility isn’t what’s best for him, the Dolphins will not ask him to do so until it is.

    “I literally have no timetable or even thought to it. That’s where I would feel irresponsible is even thinking about it,” he said. “I want him to get all the evaluations possible. I want him to do all the things recommended from all of the medical counterparts. And I want him to get on the road to recovery from that as a human being and then we’ll cross that bridge. But in terms of a timeline of crossing that bridge, I have zero idea.”

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  • US women win fourth straight gold at World Cup, top China

    US women win fourth straight gold at World Cup, top China

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    SYDNEY — The names on the U.S. team have changed, the Americans’ dominance has not.

    A’ja Wilson scored 19 points, Kelsey Plum added 17 and the United States beat China 83-61 on Saturday to win its fourth consecutive gold medal at the women’s basketball World Cup.

    “It feels great,” said Wilson, who was selected as the tournament’s MVP. “We came here on a mission, we got it. We got gold. Now we’re going home with some hardware. It feels great to us. Australia was great to us. I didn’t see any kangaroos, but it’s OK because we are leaving with a gold.”

    This was one of the most dominant teams in the Americans’ storied history in the World Cup that now has won 11 gold medals. They now have won four straight gold medals for the first-time ever. This was also the biggest win in a gold-medal game, surpassing the 20-point wins that the Americans had done twice.

    “Everybody wants to beat us. Everybody wants what we have and that’s gold medals and victories,” Breanna Stewart said.

    What started with Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi has now been passed down to Wilson and Stewart. With Alyssa Thomas the oldest player at 30, the domination could continue for years to come.

    “It’s been an incredible journey just to continue to lay that foundation down like so many of the greats in front of us have,” Wilson said. “Now it’s our turn to step up and be in that situation.”

    As they’ve done all tournament, the Americans did it on both ends of the court, playing stellar defense as well as using a high-powered offense.

    The U.S. (8-0) finished the World Cup averaging 98.8 points — just short of the mark held by the 1994 team that averaged 99.1. They won by an average of 40.8 points, topping the mark held by the 2010 team.

    The game was a sellout with nearly 16,000 fans — the biggest crowd to attend a women’s World Cup game since the inaugural tournament in 1953 in Chile.

    Led by Li Yueru and Wu Tongtong, China hung around. The Chinese team trailed 33-28 late in the second quarter before the U.S. went on a 10-2 run highlighted by fast-break layups by Stewart and Wilson to extend the advantage to double-digits.

    Jin Weina hit a 3-pointer just before the halftime buzzer to get China back to within 10.

    The U.S. was just too good to let the upset happen, outscoring China 25-14 in the third. The Americans did have one scary moment when Thomas went down after a collision with Li in the lane. She was helped off the court, but returned a few minutes later.

    “It was a tough game as we expected,” Thomas said. “By no means is this game easy. We stuck to it and pulled out a win.”

    China won its first medal since the 1994 World Cup when the team also took the silver and are a rising power in women’s basketball. After the game, the team posed for a photo with their flag and men’s great Yao Ming, who is the president of the Chinese Basketball Association.

    Li finished with 19 points and Wu added 13 before leaving the game in the fourth quarter after her knee gave out driving to the basket. She had to be carried off the court.

    The victory was the 30th in a row in World Cup play for the Americans, who haven’t lost since the 2006 semifinals against Russia. The Soviet Union holds the World Cup record with 56 straight wins from 1959-86. This is only the second time in the Americans’ storied history they’ve reached four consecutive gold medal contests. They also did it from 1979-90, winning three times.

    This U.S. team, which has so many new faces on it, also continued to dominate the paint even without 6-foot-8 Brittney Griner, outscoring its opponents by an average of 55-24.

    These two teams met in pool play and China gave the U.S. its toughest game, losing by 14 points.

    CHAMPIONSHIP PEDIGREE

    Wilson, Chelsea Gray and Plum are part of an incredible group that won a World Cup and WNBA title in the same year. There have been 14 total now.

    WOMEN’S WORLD

    FIBA Secretary General Andreas Zagklis was pleased that half of the officials in the tournament were female and five of the 12 head coaches were women. Both China and the U.S. had women in charge of their teams, marking the second straight time that two female coaches made it to the gold medal game.

    MISSING IN ACTION

    The U.S. was without Kahleah Copper for the second straight game after injuring her left hip in the win over Serbia in the quarterfinals. Copper landed hard on her hip driving to the basket and had to be helped off the court. China was missing its star guard Li Meng, who sat out a second consecutive game with what Chinese media reported as having a fever due to body fatigue.

    ———

    More AP women’s basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • Raleigh’s walk-off HR sends Mariners to playoffs

    Raleigh’s walk-off HR sends Mariners to playoffs

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    SEATTLE — More than an hour after Cal Raleigh ended the longest playoff drought in baseball, he was back on the field with his teammates, circling the perimeter of the field to acknowledge the tens of thousands of fans who still stuck around.

    The celebration was more akin to winning something big in October, rather than a victory on the last day of September. But after 21 years, the Seattle Mariners could be excused for going a little over the top upon their return to the playoffs.

    “It’s better than maybe what you could dream it to be,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said.

    Raleigh hit a game-winning home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, and the Mariners clinched a wild-card berth in the American League with a 2-1 victory over the Oakland Athletics on Friday night.

    Raleigh, pinch-hitting for Luis Torrens, hit a 3-2 pitch from Domingo Acevedo (3-4) just inside the right-field foul pole for a solo homer that sent the Mariners to the postseason for the first time since 2001.

    “I remember the moment when I knew it was fair and looking at the team and everybody’s jumping. It was just crazy,” Raleigh said.

    Seattle’s celebration on the field lasted more than 10 minutes as fans and players lifted themselves from the burden of two decades without seeing playoffs from their baseball team.

    That was just the start.

    Nearly an hour later, and with the stands still mostly full, Servais and his team were back on the field after a wild clubhouse celebration. He grabbed the microphone and reminded the crowd, colorfully, that when he arrived along with president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto seven years ago, the mission was to end the “drought.”

    “We did it. These players behind me are special. They care. They care about winning the right way. They care about representing the city of Seattle,” Servais told the crowd.

    It indeed had been a long wait — the last time the Mariners advanced to the postseason, the team was led by rookie Ichiro Suzuki and Edgar Martinez and managed by Lou Piniella.

    As has been the case for most of this season with the Mariners, their 86th win and the one that sent them back to the playoffs happened in the most stressful way possible. Seattle was unable to solve Oakland starter Ken Waldichuk and an assembly line of relievers for eight innings, held only to Ty France‘s RBI double that scored Dylan Moore two batters into the game.

    Acevedo struck out Mitch Haniger and Carlos Santana to open the ninth, but Raleigh came through with his 26th home run of the season, the most ever by a Seattle catcher.

    “It’s not really a pressure moment,” Raleigh said. “We’re having fun. We’re playing baseball. That’s the way I look at it. And I think that’s the mentality you got to have.”

    Aside from the clinching a spot in the postseason, Seattle stayed 1½ games behind the Toronto Blue Jays for the top wild-card spot and one half-game ahead of the Tampa Bay Rays as the three continue to jockey for seeding.

    But the place in the standings didn’t matter on this night. It was all about punching the final AL ticket and ending two decades without the guarantee of playoff baseball.

    Seattle’s berth ended the longest active playoff drought in any of the four major professional sports, a dubious honor that now falls to the Sacramento Kings, who have not made the NBA playoffs since the 2005-06 season. The Mariners are still the only current team never to have played in the World Series.

    The last time the Mariners reached the postseason they tied a major league record by winning 116 games in the regular season, but lost to the New York Yankees 3-1 in the AL Championship Series.

    Seattle’s Logan Gilbert threw a career-high eight innings, allowing three hits. His only mistake was a home run by Shea Langeliers in the second inning.

    Gilbert retired 18 of the final 20 batters he faced and set down the A’s in order in each of his final four innings. Seth Brown walked leading of the seventh but was retired on a double play.

    Gilbert struck out four and walked off the mound after the eighth to a standing ovation and the plea from fans for a run.

    Matt Brash (4-4) struck out a pair in the ninth and set the stage for Raleigh.

    “It was crazy. I mean, I haven’t been in Seattle but a few years but I feel like I’m one of the fans that have waited for 21 years,” Gilbert said. “It was just a culmination of a lot of waiting.”

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  • Yaya Toure on his quest for legendary status at Manchester City and more

    Yaya Toure on his quest for legendary status at Manchester City and more

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    Three Premier Leagues titles. Two La Ligas. The Champions League. The Africa Cup of Nations. Over 100 international caps. Four-time African Footballer of the Year.

    Yaya Toure boasts quite the footballing CV and yet this doesn’t even begin to do justice to a career which spanned 19 years, saw him play for seven clubs in seven countries, and culminated in helping spark a new Premier League dynasty into life in Manchester.

    Two years have passed since Toure brought his illustrious playing career to an end and still the scale of his achievements in the game, rising out of the Ivory Coast to international acclaim, remain difficult for him to comprehend.

    “My face can tell you; I would be happy. I would be amazed,” Toure exclusively told Sky Sports when asked what he would have made of his career as a 10-year-old. “At Barcelona in Messi times, playing against Cristiano Ronaldo at his best, all these things, I have been in a good place.

    “In the end I think you could say it was top, that it has been a brilliant career full of success and trophies as an individual and collective. I could not have asked for more.

    “When players retire from football, some think they should carry on more but for me I was relieved and happy. The pathway through my career was incredible, the journey was impressive and full of hard work, dedication and sacrifice. I really enjoyed it.”

    Image:
    Yaya Toure and his brother Kolo Toure pictured ahead of a friendly between Belgian club Beveren and Arsenal in 2002

    Toure came to attention rising through the ranks of ASEC Mimosas, a club with a rich history based in the capital of the Ivory Coast, Abidjan, but it was his birthplace, Bouake, where his love affair with football truly began.

    “I started to love football in Bouake when I was younger,” he explained. “My oldest brother, he loves football, and he was playing for a team on the street close to the community. After that, my other brother Kolo started playing and I followed his path.

    “When I was in Ivory Coast, unfortunately we didn’t have any choice [to play football] because I was one of nine kids. At that time there were so many boys, seven boys, I started to be dedicated because, for me, the ball was my breathing time.”

    Belgian club Beveren were the first in Europe to spot Toure’s talent, signing him as an 18-year-old in 2001, before moves to Metalurh Donetsk in Ukraine, Olympiakos in Greece and Monaco in France took the precocious talent across the continent.

    And it was during these formative years where the midfielder realised he was in the right environment to make his footballing dreams a reality, and that adaptation was needed to achieve his goals.

    “In the beginning it was tough because of the culture, the food, the acclimatisation – I needed to adapt,” Toure added.

    “When I was there, I realised Europe was where I would realise my dream, playing with the best players, winning important trophies, being around the best players. Since I arrived there my head just clicked, I knew I needed to adapt. It took me six or seven months, but I do it.”

    Yaya Toure was part of the Barcelona team which beat Man Utd in the 2009 Champions League final in Rome
    Image:
    Yaya Toure was part of the Barcelona team which beat Man Utd in the 2009 Champions League final in Rome

    It wasn’t long before Barcelona came knocking, with Toure further enhancing his reputation during a trophy-laden three seasons under Pep Guardiola in Catalonia.

    After scooping seven major honours, including a La Liga, Copa del Rey and Champions League treble in the 2008/09 season, Toure took on a new challenge, a quest for legendary status at Manchester City and the rest was history.

    “I wanted to be something unique,” Toure recalled. “I wanted to be a legend. That was the plan, to go to a club, make a big impact and maybe be a legend one day.”

    The term ‘legend’ is used far too frequently in football but, in the case of Toure, who made over 300 appearances and won every domestic honour during eight remarkable seasons at the Etihad Stadium, it arguably doesn’t go far enough.

    His winning goals against Manchester United and Stoke in the 2011 FA Cup semi-final and final brought Manchester City’s 34-year wait for a trophy to an end, changing the course of the club’s history and laying the foundations for the success he enjoyed and which continues to this day.

    Yaya Toure wheels away after scoring Man City's winner in the 2011 FA Cup final at Wembley
    Image:
    Yaya Toure wheels away after scoring Man City’s winner in the 2011 FA Cup final at Wembley

    “The goal against United was in a really important derby, but it made a real difference when we won the trophy because after that everything changed,” he said.

    “If you remember after that, the following years was when the players started to come in easy, like they were joining Barcelona, because they knew something was going on there, something was changing, and the fans and players started believing.”

    Having given so much on the pitch, now Toure has turned his hand to giving back. After coaching spells at Olimpik Donetsk in Ukraine and Akhmat Grozny in Russia, he took up a coaching role at Tottenham’s academy, where he oversees the U16s.

    “As a coach I am really proud to work for Spurs because the path they are giving to the African and Asian coaches, they have been doing it for ages, and it’s brilliant. I respect that and I am fully grateful for that,” Toure said.

    “When I was a football player, I was able to play with Asian guys, European, eastern European, South American because in football when it comes to players you can see the diversity is there. If this diversity can happen with coaches, it will be brilliant because football is for everyone, everybody has to be involved.”

    Celebrate the Premier League’s African Heroes throughout Black History Month and beyond across Sky Sports and the Sky Sports Football YouTube channel.

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  • College football Week 5: Scott Van Pelt’s Winners

    College football Week 5: Scott Van Pelt’s Winners

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    A 7-2 week moves us to 19-11. I’ve given out three straight winners in the NFL as well in our Wednesday Head-to-Head segment, but adding that on to the official record, would be tacky. I’m many things — tacky ain’t one of them. So, we are officially 19-11. You want nine more? That’s convenient — that’s how many are on the card.


    Friday

    No. 15 Washington (-3, 64.5) at UCLA
    10:30 p.m. ET on ESPN, Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California

    Van Pelt’s pick: UCLA (+3)

    If you are familiar with the segment, you can guess certain teams in certain spots that are given. UCLA at home on Friday against red hot and unbeaten Washington is one of those teams. Bruins at home to get us soaring into Saturday off a late-night Friday cover. We are buying it to 3.

    SVP: 5-2 ALL-TIME PICKING AGAINST WASHINGTON WITH UNRANKED TEAM


    Saturday

    Purdue at No. 21 Minnesota (-12, 53.5)
    12 p.m. ET on ESPN2, Huntington Bank Stadium, Minneapolis

    Van Pelt’s pick: Purdue (+12)

    We are active in the noon window. Watch Gameday, settle in and fire, right? Why wouldn’t ya? Minnesota has been dump-trucking people. The Gophers outscored four opponents by 159 points. But we can’t yell “Bang that big drum!” if we take them — can we? We cannot. So, gimme double digits and the Boilers.

    SVP: 5-2 ALL-TIME PICKING PURDUE


    No. 7 Kentucky at No. 14 Ole Miss (-7, 54.5)
    12 p.m. ET on ESPN, Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Oxford, Mississippi

    Van Pelt’s pick: Ole Miss (-7)

    Question for the Grove? Are … You … Ready? Well, I am ready to lay points with the Rebs with Kentucky in town. Meet you at The Library to celebrate.

    SVP: 10-4 ALL-TIME PICKING SEC FAVORITES


    No. 18 Oklahoma (-7, 46) at TCU
    12 p.m. ET on ABC, Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, Texas

    Van Pelt’s pick: TCU (+7)

    Feels like we’re late to back the Horned Frogs this year — well, yeah. Went against them last week and paid the price, we will buy it up to 7 and hope for the best with OU visiting the stockyards.

    SVP: 8-5 ALL-TIME PICKING AGAINST OKLAHOMA


    Iowa State (-3, 59) at Kansas
    3:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2, David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium, Lawrence, Kansas

    Van Pelt’s pick: Iowa State (-3)

    This hurts me to do. I love Lawrence and the Jayhawks story. But with Kansas rolling and unbeaten, why are the Jayhawks underdogs at home to Iowa State? Makes no sense to you, does it? Does to me. If you know — you know. Gotta lay the number here. Sorry, Kansas — I know you’re furious.

    SVP: 7-4-1 ALL-TIME PICKING IOWA STATE


    Virginia Tech at North Carolina (-9, 54.5)
    3:30 p.m. ET on ACC Network, Kenan Stadium, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

    Van Pelt’s pick: Virginia Tech (+9)

    This one was a late add. Not sure on what kind of weather we are looking at in Chapel Hill, but if they play as normal on the field or if you have to ride around in boats, your defense isn’t slowing many people down. We will take the generous candy and the road team from Blacksburg.

    SVP: 6-3 ALL-TIME PICKING VIRGINIA TECH


    California at Washington State (-4, 53.5)
    5:30 p.m. ET, Martin Stadium, Pullman, Washington

    Van Pelt’s pick: California (+4)

    Coogs, we love ya for getting the late score to help us get a cover for Winners last week. I’m afraid that might have taken a chunk out of the psyche. We are on Cal plus the small number on the Paloose.

    SVP: 7-3 ALL-TIME PICKING CALIFORNIA


    Virginia at Duke (-3, 52)
    7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN3, Wallace Wade Stadium, Durham, North Carolina

    Van Pelt’s pick: Virginia (+3)

    The last two are concerning. Virginia, you got us to the window last week in a weird one at Syracuse. The number in Durham seems a bit light. Lots of extra juice this week — so be it — we are buying this to 3 and scratching our heads curious if UVa is the right side here.

    SVP: 6-2 ALL-TIME PICKING VIRGINIA


    No. 1 Georgia (-29, 54.5) at Missouri
    7:30 p.m. ET on SEC Network, Memorial Stadium/Faurot Field, Columbia, Missouri

    Van Pelt’s pick: Mizzou (+29)

    Last one — HOTYBS. What’s a HOTYBS? A Hold On To Your Butt Special. Mizzou, you covered for us on the plains last Saturday. But going against Georgia is terrifying even when you get 29. Looking for a show of hands out there — who’s with me? Not one human. Hell with it — it’s fine — we’ll do it. We’ll take the Tigers.

    SVP: 1-4 ALL-TIME PICKING UNRANKED TEAMS vs NO. 1 TEAM

    OK. There’s your 9-er. Birdcage — reverse — no tease.

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  • Australia wins bronze, Lauren Jackson scores 30 in finale

    Australia wins bronze, Lauren Jackson scores 30 in finale

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    SYDNEY — Lauren Jackson admitted she couldn’t have imagined a better ending to her Hall of Fame career.

    Jackson willed Australia to a win in the bronze medal game at basketball‘s World Cup, scoring 30 points to lead the Opals to a 95-65 win over Canada on Saturday.

    “I could have never dreamed of this,” Jackson said. “I can’t imagine it. I can’t actually articulate how I feel right now. It’s a dream come true. The fact that it’s over, there’s nothing bittersweet. It’s so, so special and I’ve the pleasure doing it here. It’s been perfect.”

    It was a throwback performance for the 41-year-old mom, who came back to the Opals after retiring in 2016 because of injuries. Jackson said on social media Saturday that this would be her final game for Australia and that she was “lucky to have this opportunity to represent Australia and also say goodbye. I didn’t get that chance all those years ago.”

    “To say goodbye this way is just magnificent,” Jackson said. “I couldn’t imagine that.”

    She played in 43 World Cup games in her career, matching Brazil’s Janeth Arcain for most all-time. Jackson won three bronze medals and led the Opals to their lone gold in 2006.

    The U.S. won its fourth straight World Cup gold medal, defeating China 83-61.

    Australia (6-2) was coming off a disappointing last-minute loss to China in the medal round. After a sluggish start, Jackson got the team going scoring nine points in the opening 20 minutes as Australia led 51-43 at the break. Kia Nurse kept Canada in the game with 19 points in the first half. She didn’t score in the second half.

    Jackson then took over scoring 12 of her points in the third quarter when Australia extended the lead to 71-54. Jackson, who had been used sparingly throughout most of the tournament, broke out an array of post moves that were reminiscent of her dominant MVP seasons in the WNBA playing for Seattle.

    Her three-point play with 1:07 left in the third gave Australia a 17-point advantage — its biggest lead of the game to that point.

    Australia coach Sandy Brondello, who played with Jackson on the national team, put Jackson back in with just under 6 minutes left and took her out to a rousing ovation with 2:22 remaining as she hit two free throws to end her night. Jackson received hugs from her teammates, who then lifted her up after the final buzzer.

    “It was a fairytale ending and I couldn’t be more happy for her,” Brondello said.

    Canada (4-3) was looking for its first medal since 1986 when the North American country won the bronze. Even with the loss, the Canadians advanced further than they had in any World Cup in 36 years.

    The teams met in pool play with Australia coming away with a 75-72 win that helped them earn the top seed in the group.

    TIP-INS:

    Jackson became the all-time leading scorer in World Cup medal-round games, surpassing her friend Diana Taurasi’s mark of 63. Jackson finished with 81. … Jackson has now scored over 30 points in a medal game twice — the only player to do it. She had 31 against South Korea in 2002.

    ———

    More AP women’s basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • Rivals.com  –  Fact or Fiction: Duce Robinson will sign with Georgia

    Rivals.com – Fact or Fiction: Duce Robinson will sign with Georgia

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    Rivals national recruiting director Adam Gorney and national recruiting analyst Clint Cosgrove along with Jed May of UGASports.com and Dave Lackford from CardinalSports.com tackle three topics and determine whether they believe each statement is FACT or FICTION.

    1. Louisville should be very concerned that Deandre Moore is scheduling other official visits.

    Deandre Moore (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)

    Gorney’s take: FICTION. I’m not in the “very concerned” camp – yet. Things could quickly change after the four-star receiver visits Texas and Georgia and he could schedule other trips as well. But Deandre Moore committed to Louisville for numerous reasons and one was to play with other top California prospects including Bellflower (Calif.) St. John Bosco QB Pierce Clarkson. That kind of chemistry cannot always be found elsewhere so while these visits are huge, I still think Louisville has a good shot to keep him.

    Lackford’s take: FACT. Louisville already beat Texas once for Moore’s commitment but it appears the Horns sweetened the NIL pot and he’s scheduled an official there. Georgia also just put its bid for Moore and he’s taking an official visit there, too.

    How much is a 5-foot-11 wide receiver worth? Louisville is about to find out. How ample is Georgia’s war chest? I’m willing to bet it overflows and Texas has evidently upped the ante as well. It’s very possible that Louisville is about be priced out of the market.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH LOUISVILLE FANS AT CARDINALSPORTS.COM

    *****

    2. Duce Robinson will end up in Georgia’s recruiting class after a great visit to Athens last weekend.

    Duce Robinson

    Duce Robinson (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)

    Gorney’s take: FICTION. I still think Duce Robinson ends up at USC. He worked out with current QB Caleb Williams and five-star commit Malachi Nelson at the Elite 11 this summer and it looked like a natural fit and I just cannot get over that at the moment. Plus, Georgia has already loaded up with tight ends and I think Pearce Spurlin is a phenomenal talent who has special qualities and Lawson Luckie should not be overlooked at all, either. If Georgia loses one of those two – which is unlikely – then maybe Robinson takes a much closer look because he can play an outside receiver role as well but I’d still give USC the edge here.

    May’s take: FICTION. Georgia has done an impressive job just remaining a presence in Robinson’s recruitment. He is the top tight end in the country for a reason, with powers from coast to coast in pursuit. Georgia, meanwhile, already has two tight ends committed in Pearce Spurlin and Lawson Luckie. At this point, it appears both Spurlin and Luckie will end up signing with Georgia. Should that change, I’d expect the Bulldogs to turn up the heat even more on Robinson as they look to add an elite offensive talent. But right now, with two players at the position already in the fold, I’d have to project Robinson to end up elsewhere.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH GEORGIA FANS AT UGASPORTS.COM

    *****

    3.

    Malachi Coleman has scheduled a visit to Miami and it should be very concerning to Nebraska.

    Malachi Coleman

    Malachi Coleman (Casey Fritton)

    Gorney’s take: FICTION. Miami coach Mario Cristobal and his staff have a way of intriguing top recruits once they get to campus so that is something that should be watched with Malachi Coleman but at this point I doubt the Hurricanes are a very serious threat to the Huskers. I highly doubt Mickey Joseph will be retained full-time as Nebraska’s coach especially after getting blown out the way the Huskers did against Oklahoma but he will have the rest of the season to prove his case. Either way, the new head coach would be wise to keep him on staff and that will play a big role for Coleman, who I think wants to stay and play in Lincoln but just needs to see a reason why.

    Cosgrove’s take: FICTION. Nebraska shouldn’t be overly concerned with Coleman’s visit to Miami as he seems locked-in to his previously released top seven of Nebraska, Oklahoma, USC, Georgia, Michigan, Oregon and Ole Miss. Unless something magical enough to change the entire course of Coleman’s recruitment were to happen over the weekend, the Huskers should be more concerned about winning and retaining Mickey Joseph if they want to land their No. 1 target. This visit appears to have come out of nowhere and seems like a great opportunity to enjoy a weekend out of the Lincoln limelight more than anything else.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH MIAMI FANS AT CANESCOUNTY.COM

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH NEBRASKA FANS AT INSIDENEBRASKA.COM

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    Adam Gorney, National Recruiting Director

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  • Brumfield TD run sparks UNLV over New Mexico 31-20

    Brumfield TD run sparks UNLV over New Mexico 31-20

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    LAS VEGAS — Doug Brumfield threw for 233 yards and ran for a second-half touchdown as UNLV scored 24 unanswered points and beat New Mexico 31-20 on Friday night.

    Brumfield rolled to his left before diving over a defender and into the end zone from six yards out to tie the game 17-17 midway through the third quarter. Aidan Robbins added a 3-yard TD run that gave UNLV (4-1, 2-0 Mountain West Conference) the lead for good early in the fourth.

    Geordon Porter made a one-handed, 39-yard catch that led to a George Steinkamp 36-yard field goal to pull the Lobos to 24-20 with 12:43 remaining.

    Marshall Nichols’ 35-yard punt pinned the Lobos at their 10 with 53 seconds left before the Rebels added a 12-yard pick-6 four plays later.

    After the Lobos jumped out to a 17-0 lead, Daniel Gutierrez made field goals from 41, 50 and 47 yards to get UNLV within 17-9 at halftime.

    Miles Kendrick ran for a pair of 8-yard touchdowns in the first quarter for New Mexico (2-3, 0-2). Kendrick completed 13 of 25 passes for 163 yards with two interceptions and added 61 yards on the ground.

    ———

    More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/ap—top25. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://tinyurl.com/mrxhe6f2

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  • Arch Manning breaks Eli, Peyton’s HS records

    Arch Manning breaks Eli, Peyton’s HS records

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    Quarterback Arch Manning broke his high school’s records for career passing yards and touchdowns on Friday, marks previously held by his uncles, Eli and Peyton Manning.

    Coming into Friday’s game, Arch Manning was 110 yards away from breaking Eli’s career passing record at Isidore Newman School in New Orleans. Arch broke that mark, along with Peyton’s record of 93 career touchdowns after tossing five in the first half.

    Manning is the No. 2 prospect in the 2023 class and the No. 2 quarterback behind Malachi Nelson, a USC commit. He’s a 6-foot-3, 204-pound recruit who is the son of Cooper Manning and the grandson of Archie Manning.

    His recruitment was widely covered and highly anticipated given his lineage. After taking visits and considering schools, including Georgia, Clemson, Ole Miss and others, Manning committed to Texas.

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  • JPP ‘definitely’ suiting up Sunday for Ravens

    JPP ‘definitely’ suiting up Sunday for Ravens

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    OWINGS MILLS, Md. — The Baltimore Ravens will have Jason Pierre-Paul to go after Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen after all.

    Shortly after Ravens coach John Harbaugh declined to talk about Pierre-Paul’s availability, the three-time Pro Bowl pass-rusher said Friday that he will be suiting up against Buffalo. Pierre-Paul signed a one-year deal with the Ravens on Monday and has practiced all three days.

    “I’ll be ready this Sunday,” Pierre-Paul said. “I will definitely be ready.”

    The Ravens have placed three outside linebackers on injured reserve and likely will be without Justin Houston (groin injury) against the Bills, as he is listed as doubtful to play. Pierre-Paul and Odafe Oweh are the only healthy outside linebackers on Baltimore’s 53-man roster.

    Ravens running back J.K. Dobbins was removed from the injury report Friday after full participation in the past two practices. He had been listed as limited Wednesday with a chest injury.

    This past Sunday, Dobbins played in his first game in 20 months, rushing for 23 yards on seven carries in the Ravens’ win over the New England Patriots. But Dobbins played only eight of Baltimore’s 30 offensive snaps in the second half.

    From 2016 to 2020, Pierre-Paul recorded 45.5 sacks, but he finished with 2.5 sacks last season, his fewest in six years, because he was playing with one healthy shoulder.

    Pierre-Paul said he tore his rotator cuff, biceps and a small muscle in his upper back last year, which limited him for the final 15 weeks of the season. He underwent shoulder surgery during the offseason.

    “I basically got a whole new shoulder,” Pierre-Paul said. “I feel way totally better. I did what I could do for the team [last year]. But not having two shoulders is a big thing. Can’t push. Can’t grab. Can’t snatch. But I can do all of that now.”

    Pierre-Paul missed the final three games of last season and the first three of this season. Sunday will mark his first game since Dec. 19, 2021.

    “My energy is going to say it all, especially when it comes to game day,” he said. “My energy is going to take over and you’re going to see the reason why everybody loves me and would like to have me on their team. I’m pretty sure everybody knows that by now. But we’ll see. It’s only a matter of time.”

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  • Boxer Quinones, 25, dies 5 days after KO loss

    Boxer Quinones, 25, dies 5 days after KO loss

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    Junior welterweight Luis Quinones died Thursday night, five days after being hospitalized following a knockout loss to Jose Munoz at Coliseo Elias Chegwin in Barranquilla, Colombia. He was 25.

    Quinones’ brother, Leonardo Quinones, confirmed his passing on Facebook.

    “You went ahead of us my loving brother, now you are with your heavenly father, whom you adored and served, I love you my brother Luis Quinones, forever and ever in our hearts,” Leonardo Quinones wrote.

    Cuadrilatero Boxing, the fight promoter, released a statement on social media saying: “Cuadrilatero Boxing is deeply saddened by the death of Luis Quinones, an exceptional and disciplined human being, who always showed the greatest commitment to this sport. Luis was passionate about boxing, so much so that he left his hometown of Barrancabermeja to continue his career in Barranquilla and become a national athlete. His idol was Julio Cesar Chavez.”

    Quinones was declared brain-dead on Thursday, but he was still connected to a respirator until his passing was announced at midnight.

    Quinones and Munoz engaged in a back-and-forth fight. In the eighth round, Munoz lost his mouthguard, and referee Leonel Mercado sent Quinones to a neutral corner while Munoz was getting his mouthguard back. Quinones was on wobbly legs in the ring at that point, and when the fight continued, after a punch, Quinones was knocked down. He was put on a stretcher and taken to the hospital.

    Quinones, who was unbeaten before the fight, was taken to the North General Clinic in Barranquilla, where he underwent surgery for what was diagnosed as “neurological deterioration as a result of head trauma due to traumatic contusions.” Doctors also detected a subdural hematoma, for which a craniectomy was performed.

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  • Dolphins’ Tagovailoa has concussion, no timetable for return

    Dolphins’ Tagovailoa has concussion, no timetable for return

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    MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said Friday there is no timetable for the return of quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who suffered a concussion when he hit his head against the turf a day earlier against the Cincinnati Bengals.

    McDaniel also defended the team’s handling of Tagovailoa’s injury last Sunday in a win over the Buffalo Bills, when the QB took a hit from linebacker Matt Milano late in the first half and appeared to hit his head on the turf. Tagovailoa stumbled when he got up and was taken to the locker room to be evaluated for a concussion, then returned to the game at the start of the third quarter.

    McDaniel reiterated Friday that Tagovailoa was cleared by several layers of medical professionals during last Sunday’s game and said the QB did not have a head injury.

    “My job as a coach is here for the players. I take that very serious,” the first-year coach said. “And no one else in the building strays from that.”

    Many observers questioned why Tagovailoa was allowed to return to the field against the Bills. He was not in the concussion protocol leading up to Thursday’s game.

    “There was no medical indication from all resources that there was anything regarding the head,” McDaniel said Friday. “If there would have been, of course, I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself if I prematurely put someone out there.”

    Tagovailoa had an MRI on Friday in addition to the X-rays and CT scans that were taken the night before at a hospital in Cincinnati. He had a headache Thursday night and Friday morning, McDaniel said.

    “I’m not even really thinking about timetables or anything regarding him as a player right now,” McDaniel said. “It’s all about Tua the person.”

    Tagovailoa was sacked by Bengals defensive tackle Josh Topou late in the first half of Thursday night’s loss to the Bengals. On the play, he spun awkwardly and was thrown to the turf. While on the ground, Tagovailoa appeared to display the fencing response, with his fingers frozen in front of his face.

    He remained down for more than seven minutes before being loaded onto a backboard and stretchered off the field.

    The Dolphins later said he was conscious and had movement in all of his extremities. He was discharged from the hospital Thursday night and flew back to Miami with the team.

    McDaniel said Tagovailoa was interacting with teammates on the flight home. He sat next to McDaniel and talked to him about the game.

    “His personality was normal Tua,” McDaniel said.

    Before the injury, Tagovailoa was having a breakout season, highlighted by throwing a career-high six touchdown passes in a Week 2 win over Baltimore.

    Now the former Alabama star faces another obstacle in what has been an up-and-down career.

    The Dolphins, amid a rebuild in 2020, drafted Tagovailoa No. 1 overall to be a franchise-altering player following a college career that included a 2018 national championship.

    But when that didn’t happen as quickly as Miami anticipated, questions arose about whether to stick with the young quarterback or go in another direction.

    Tagovailoa seemed to be answering those questions through the first three weeks of the season, efficiently utilizing the weapons that Miami surrounded him with during the offseason, including star receiver Tyreek Hill, to lead the Dolphins to a 3-0 record heading into Thursday’s game.

    Including his 110 passing yards before leaving Thursday’s game, Tagovailoa is second in the league in passing yards (1,035) and he has thrown 10 touchdowns with three interceptions.

    Tagovailoa has dealt with several injuries, including a dislocated right hip in 2019 at Alabama.

    ———

    More AP NFL coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP—NFL

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  • Bills’ Von Miller to Ravens: Pay quarterback Lamar Jackson

    Bills’ Von Miller to Ravens: Pay quarterback Lamar Jackson

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    BALTIMORE — Von Miller wants to beat Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson on Sunday, but the Buffalo Bills pass-rusher says Jackson deserves a big victory off the field.

    Miller said Jackson has earned a record-setting contract extension because he does whatever it takes to win games.

    “And that’s why he should be the highest-paid player in the NFL, and that’s why he should have the biggest contract out of all the quarterbacks,” Miller said. “He’s done everything he can possibly do to put himself in a great situation for that.”

    Miller and Jackson collide at M&T Bank Stadium on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, CBS) in one of the biggest games of Week 4.

    Jackson is playing under his fifth-year option after he turned down the Ravens’ offers for an extension before the start of the regular season. The sides have suspended contract negotiations until after the season.

    Betting on himself, Jackson is off to a historic start. He is the first player since the NFL/AFL merger in 1970 to rank in the top five in both touchdown passes and rushing yards through the first three weeks of a season, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. Jackson leads the league with 10 touchdown passes and ranks fifth with 243 rushing yards.

    “Lamar is as dynamic as it gets,” Miller said. “Early on in his career, they tried to say he was just a runner. He has done nothing but prove that he’s the total package.”

    Jackson turned down what league sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter was an offer worth about $250 million. Sources told ESPN’s Chris Mortensen that Baltimore proposed a six-year contract believed to pay Jackson a higher average salary and more guaranteed money than deals signed this summer by Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray ($46.1 million per season, $189.5 million guaranteed) and Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson ($48.5 million per season, $161 million guaranteed).

    But Jackson’s wish was for a fully guaranteed deal, similar to Deshaun Watson’s record-setting $230 million, fully guaranteed contract, sources told Schefter.

    Without an extension, Jackson doesn’t have any guaranteed money beyond his $23.016 million base salary for this season.

    “Trust me, it’s a tough situation to be in [and] to not have anything promised and you go out there and you’re one of the fastest and most dynamic players in the world and everybody’s gunning for you,” Miller said. “Hats off to him. He’s handled it with respect. He’s really put it off to the side and not make it a distraction with his teammates. He’s done everything the right way. He’s not holding out and letting it bleed all to the media.”

    Jackson became the first player in NFL history to record back-to-back games with at least three touchdown passes and 100 yards rushing. He is first in the league in passer rating (119) and rushing average (9.35 yards per carry).

    Asked if he’s ever played better than what he’s doing now, Jackson said, “I don’t know. It’s too early right now. It’s only three games in.”

    Jackson said he appreciates the outside praise but tries to block it out.

    “I play ball — that’s all,” Jackson said. “I don’t feed into it, because they were just saying what they were saying. I’m still hungry about that, since the beginning of the season.”

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  • Bayern Munich 4-0  Bayer Leverkusen | Bundesliga highlights

    Bayern Munich 4-0 Bayer Leverkusen | Bundesliga highlights

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    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Highlights of the Bundesliga match between Bayern Munich and Bayer  Leverkusen at the Allianz Arena.

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  • Sources: Crude remark factored into Udoka ban

    Sources: Crude remark factored into Udoka ban

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    The independent law firm probe into Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka found that he used crude language in his dialogue with a female subordinate prior to the start of an improper workplace relationship with the woman, an element that significantly factored into the severity of his one-year suspension, sources told ESPN.

    Those investigative findings — which described verbiage on Udoka’s part that was deemed especially concerning coming from a workplace superior — contribute to what is likely a difficult pathway back to his reinstatement as Celtics coach in 2023, sources told ESPN.

    The power dynamic associated with a superior’s improper relationship with a staff member was the primary finding and policy violation cited in the law firm’s report, which was commissioned by the Celtics and completed early last week, sources said.

    At a news conference last week, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck said the suspension — which extends through June 30, 2023 — was a product of multiple violations of team policies, and sources told ESPN the Celtics won’t stand in Udoka’s way should he have the chance to become a coaching candidate elsewhere. There are teams that have tried to gather a preliminary understanding of the full explanation for Udoka’s suspension in preparation for possibly evaluating him for future coaching employment, sources told ESPN.

    Grousbeck also said Udoka would be receiving a cut in his salary during the suspension.

    In his first season, Udoka, 45, led the Celtics to an Eastern Conference championship and NBA Finals berth, where Boston lost in six games to the Golden State Warriors. The Celtics return a team expected again to be a championship favorite, and Udoka had appeared destined for a long runway as the franchise’s coach after replacing Brad Stevens, who moved into the front-office role previously occupied by Danny Ainge during the 2021 offseason.

    Grousbeck said during the news conference that no one else within the organization faced discipline as a result of the investigation. The Celtics wouldn’t confirm the nature of the violations, but Stevens, the team’s president of basketball operations, became emotional when describing the number of women employed by the Celtics who were targeted by unfounded social media rumors and allegations.

    The Celtics promoted assistant coach Joe Mazzulla to interim coach for the upcoming season. Mazzulla, 34, is well-regarded inside and outside of the Celtics organization and counts Stevens among his most significant supporters. Mazzulla was a finalist for the Utah Jazz head-coaching job over the summer that went to top Celtics assistant Will Hardy.

    Grousbeck and Stevens would not elaborate on the criteria Udoka would need to meet to return to coaching the Celtics following his suspension.

    Grousbeck defended the Celtics’ decision to suspend Udoka for the entire season, insisting it was the proper response based on the probe’s findings.

    “This felt right, but there’s no clear guidelines for any of this,” he said. “It’s conscience and gut feel. … We collectively came to this and got there but it was not clear what to do but it was clear something substantial needed to be done, and it was.”

    ESPN’s Tim Bontemps contributed to this report.

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  • Man Utd forward Marcus Rashford was on Kylian Mbappe’s PSG wishlist – Paper Talk

    Man Utd forward Marcus Rashford was on Kylian Mbappe’s PSG wishlist – Paper Talk

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    All the top stories and transfer rumours from Saturday’s newspapers…

    DAILY MIRROR

    Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford was one of the players on Kylian Mbappe’s transfer wishlist after he secured his future with Paris Saint-Germain over the summer.

    THE GUARDIAN

    Chelsea are looking to land RB Leipzig forward Christopher Nkunku next summer amid reports that he underwent “secret” medical checks overseen by Blues staff before the most recent deadline.

    Chelsea’s president of business Tom Glick initially brushed off complaints from agent Catalina Kim which eventually led to the dismissal of newly-appointed commercial director Damian Willoughby.

    THE SUN

    Barcelona have only paid Manchester City £2.6m of the £48.4m fee they agreed for forward Ferran Torres since the deal was concluded in January and there are other clubs still owed money for deals done more than two years ago.

    Gareth Bale’s beer brands “Bale Ale” and “Bale Lager” are set to hit supermarket shelves in Wales next week as part of the country’s celebrations of reaching November’s World Cup finals.

    DAILY EXPRESS

    Lucas Moura will consider a move away from Tottenham in January and has admitted a move to Sevilla intrigues him.

    Barcelona could face the prospect of having to fork out £53m to get their hands on teen sensation Alberto Moleiro if his club Las Palmas secure promotion to La Liga this season, circumstances which would see his release clause double.

    Liverpool are plotting a summer 2023 move for exciting Norwegian talent Andreas Schjelderup, who has played a starring role for Nordsjaelland and earned him comparisons to Erling Haaland.

    DAILY MAIL

    Formula One’s rulers are coming under pressure to hand the 2021 title to Lewis Hamilton if Red Bull are found guilty of breaking the spending cap during Max Verstappen’s maiden success.

    Human rights group Open Stadiums has demanded that FIFA kick Iran out of the World Cup because of the country’s oppression of women.

    Hulk has threatened to quit Atletico Mineiro after receiving “unacceptable” criticism from the Brazilian club’s supporters.

    John Fury says his son Tyson will not fight Anthony Joshua until 2023 because a defeat would be “financial suicide” for his team, and their proposed December date will be filled with a bout against Luis Ortiz, Andy Ruiz or Filip Hrgovic.

    Conor Benn’s trainer Tony Sims has admitted the team will consider pulling out of next weekend’s clash with Chris Eubank Jr if their rival weighs in at over 158.5lbs.

    DAILY TELEGRAPH

    Marcus Smith is determined that Harlequins continue to excite in the Gallagher Premiership to try and provide supporters with some kind of distraction from Britain’s financial crisis.

    THE TIMES

    Fans who become drunk and disorderly at the Qatar World Cup will be put into “sobering tents” until they have recovered from the after-effects of alcohol as officials look to take a “softly-softly” approach rather than come down heavy.

    THE SCOTTISH SUN

    Rangers fear injury-plagued defender John Souttar will not be available for a first-team return until 2023 after surgery on his Achilles.

    Celtic are facing a defensive injury crisis ahead of the Champions League date with RB Leipzig with both of their first-choice centre-backs – Cameron Carter-Vickers and Carl Starfelt – struggling to be fit in time for midweek.

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