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  • Jonathan India’s grand slam, Spencer Steer’s 3-run HR power Reds to 9-6 win

    Jonathan India’s grand slam, Spencer Steer’s 3-run HR power Reds to 9-6 win

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    CINCINNATI — Jonathan India hit a grand slam in Cincinnati’s six-run fifth inning, Spencer Steer had a three-run homer and the Reds took advantage of some sloppy pitching to beat the Dodgers 9-6 on Friday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Jonathan India hit a grand slam in Cincinnati’s six-run fifth inning, Spencer Steer had a three-run homer and the Reds took advantage of some sloppy pitching to beat the Dodgers 9-6
    • Stuart Fairchild also homered for the Reds, and the center fielder robbed Will Smith of a home run with a leaping catch in the deepest part of the park in the seventh inning
    • In the sixth, Fairchild ran down a long ball from Mookie Betts at the wall that certainly would have been extra bases

    Stuart Fairchild also homered for the Reds, and the center fielder robbed Will Smith of a home run with a leaping catch in the deepest part of the park in the seventh inning. In the sixth, Fairchild ran down a long ball from Mookie Betts at the wall that certainly would have been extra bases.

    “It’s amazing,” Reds manager David Bell said. “If it’s possible to make those plays look easy, he does it.”

    Slumping Cincinnati was outhit by the Dodgers 11-6 but capitalized on walks and being hit by pitches to set the table both for Steer’s three-run homer in the first and India’s fifth-inning slam.

    India broke out of a 0-for-16 slump with three hits.

    “Oh yeah, you could say this is a relief for sure,” the 2021 National League Rookie of the Year said. “I feel a turn coming. We’ve just got to keep the pedal to the metal and just play hard.”

    Reds starter Graham Ashcraft (4-3) went 5 1/3 innings, allowing five runs and eight hits and striking out three.

    Chris Taylor and Betts had RBI doubles in a four-run Los Angeles second. Will Smith added a solo homer to right in the fifth.

    After Los Angeles starter James Paxton gave up the homer to Fairchild and issued a two-out walk to Steer in the fifth, reliever Yohan Ramirez (0-2) hit Tyler Stephenson and walked Santiago Espinal to load the bases, and then hit Nick Martini to force in the tying run.

    On came reliever Alex Vesia, who served up a 3-2 fastball that India hit into the seats just inside the left-field pole for the third grand slam of his career.

    Paxton was charged with five earned runs and five hits in 4 2/3 innings.

    “To start with, I don’t think James had his best stuff,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “He was trying to find it all night long, with the four walks in four-plus innings and the pitch count getting up.”

    Shohei Ohtani was 0 for 5 but picked up an RBI on a groundout in the second inning. Teoscar Hernández led off the ninth with a solo homer, but reliever Brett Suter finished off the Dodgers in order to seal it.

    “We end up winning by a few runs, but there were a lot of little things, plays that guys came through on, that made all the difference and really (made it) a closer game than it seemed,” Bell said.

    Trainer’s Room

    Dodgers: Roberts said Max Muncy, out since May 17 with a strained oblique, is hitting off a tee. Muncy is eligible to return from the injured list on Sunday.

    Reds: OF Jake Fraley, who was hit by a pitch on his right hand Thursday, was not in the lineup but was available to play. LHP Nick Lodolo (left groin strain) is on track to start Monday’s game against St. Louis.

    Up Next

    The Reds send right-hander Hunter Greene (2-2, 3.22 ERA) against Dodgers right-hander Walker Buehler (1-1, 4.05) as the series continues Saturday night.

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    Associated Press

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  • Veteran and NASCAR crew member shares what Coca-Cola 600 means

    Veteran and NASCAR crew member shares what Coca-Cola 600 means

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    LINWOOD, N.C. — The Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway is NASCAR’s longest race and honors military members and families this holiday weekend. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Coca-Cola 600 honors military service members on Memorial Day weekend
    • Race cars will display a patriotic design and carry the name of a fallen military service member
    • Carl Garcia is a veteran and crew member for Legacy Motor Club driver 43, Erik Jones
    • Jones’ car at the Coca-Cola 600 will honor Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Thomas Butler, who died in 1967

    Ricky “Carl” Garcia had always dreamed of wearing a green beret. 

    “I was raised with a lot of uncles that were in Vietnam in that area, and most of my dad’s side of family served,” Garcia said. “So I grew up around listening to stories about Green Berets and the Rangers and the Delta Force and all that stuff. So I wanted to wear a beret.” 

    After discovering he would need to jump out of planes to get the coveted beret, his fate was sealed. Garcia became a specialist in the 3rd Battalion in the 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment. 

    Carl Garcia’s favorite photo of him parachuting in Panama. (Spectrum News 1/Sydney McCoy)

    “I specialized in urban warfare, which would be like a hostile takeover of a city, going in and clearing out a city if there were a hostile in a city,” Garcia said. 

    He says a favorite memory in service was going to Panama for jungle training. 

    “Spending three months down there and getting to jump and see the culture and be actually in a jungle, which is an eye-opening experience that you would not know unless you’re actually there,” he said. 

    He traveled around the world, including spending time at Fort Bragg. Garcia’s dream was to serve for decades and move into specialized units, but a physical limitation ended his service. 

    “I am glad I did at least get the opportunity to serve,” Garcia said. 

    After his service, he began a career as a plumber and did construction jobs. 

    “I’ve always wondered how things work. I love taking things apart,” he said. “Obviously, if you’re going to take them apart, you need to learn how to put them back together.” 

    He came into his next line of work by chance. 

    “I met a guy at the grocery store one day that was going to cook for a race team, and I had just started watching NASCAR probably a couple of months earlier and got into it. He asked me if I wanted to go, and I said, ‘Sure. I’ve never been to a race,’ so I got to go with him and help cook for a race team,” Garcia said. “I did that for two weeks and was so interested that the owner of the race team offered me a job learning how to change tires.” 

    From changing tires to working in the shop, Garcia became a full-time mechanic, using his size and knowledge of electrical work to specialize in the interior of the car. 

    Carl Garcia working on a four-wheeler at his home.

    Carl Garcia works on a four-wheeler at his home. (Spectrum News 1/Sydney McCoy)

    “I have transitioned over to the last couple of years to the front-end mechanic as well, as personnel has changed, but I pretty much do anything on the race car that needs to be done that’s mechanic-related, whether it’s hanging the suspension, helping put motors in some fabrication stuff, welding that we don’t really do much of anymore. But anything that needs to be done,” Garcia said. 

    Although he didn’t come from the grassroots of racing fans like many other crew members, Garcia landed a spot with Legacy Motor Club, on driver 43 Erik Jones’ crew. 

    “For this week in Charlotte, we’ve spent the last few days getting the car together, safety-checking everything, making sure nothing’s going to fall off, making sure that the car was properly put together, the way the engineers wanted it put together,” he said. 

    Garcia has an important role in making sure his driver is safe and comfortable. 

    “I do think sometimes that the interior gets overlooked for the aspect and only gets reminded when something happens [that’s] bad,” he said. “The most important part of our entire job is to make sure that at the end of the day, everybody’s going home the same way they started the day out with, whether we win a race or we lose a race.”

    “That’s more important than anything else that’s going on with our job,” Garcia said. 

    Garcia travels to different race tracks, and each experience is different. He says the most special part of every race is the national anthem. 

    Erik Jones' car design for the Coca-Cola 600. (Legacy Motor Club)

    Erik Jones’ car design for the Coca-Cola 600. (Legacy Motor Club)

    “Sometimes when we’re not on the track, we’re in the garage working. If the other series is starting to race and then do the national anthem, the entire garage stops, as respect. It’s just something that everybody does because they want to, you know, and that and all the sports that I’ve ever watched. I think the appreciation for the military is probably the greatest in NASCAR out of any of them,” Garcia said. 

    The Coca-Cola 600 is a special weekend in racing, as it is geared toward honoring military service members. 

    The NASCAR Salutes Together with the Coca-Cola Program will recognize fallen military members in a special way this Memorial Day weekend. 

    “It’s really cool because usually all the branches of service are represented this weekend and then all the different cars with all the different people on there and their family gets to have some sort of enjoyment, you know, for the sacrifice that their loved one made,” Garcia said.  

    Image of Charles Thomas Butler, who will be honored on Erik Jones' car. (LEGACY MOTOR CLUB via Charles Thomas Butler's family)

    Charles Thomas Butler will be honored on Erik Jones’ car at the Coca-Cola 600. (Legacy Motor Club via Charles Thomas Butler’s family)

    Besides special events at the track, for the 10th year of the program each car will be carrying a patriotic design as well as the name of a fallen military service member on the car for the 600 Miles of Remembrance.

    “I think that’s probably the highest form of respect you can repay is to show your appreciation not only to him, but to his family for the sacrifices that he made for our country,” Garcia said. 

    Jones’ car will honor Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Thomas Butler, who was 38 when he died and had received numerous awards for his service on Reconnaissance Attack Squadrons Five and Three. Butler died in 1967 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. 

    Garcia is excited to see what surprises are in store for the weekend, and of course eager to pull out a win.  

    “I love the races, the start of the day, and then the night. Erik does extremely well with those…  I think we’ll be super fast this weekend and I think it’ll be a great day and it’ll be good for our organization to have all three cars on the track. I think they’ll do extremely well and put on a good show for everybody for Memorial Day and they can have some fun along with them — a remembrance of what it actually means,” Garcia said. 

    To learn more about each of the fallen military service members who will be honored this weekend, visit NASCAR’s website.

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    Sydney McCoy

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  • Florida softball beats Baylor 4-2 to begin Gainesville Super Regional

    Florida softball beats Baylor 4-2 to begin Gainesville Super Regional

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    GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Senior Katie Kistler hit a two-run double in the first inning, Korbe Otis smashed her ninth home run of the season in the fifth, and fourth-seeded Florida defeated Baylor 4-2 on Friday in Game 1 of the best-of-three Gainesville Super Regional.

    Florida (50-12), which extended its winning streak to 12 games, has a chance to sweep Baylor (35-22) on Saturday to advance to the Women’s College World Series. The Gators are playing their first super regional at home since 2021, when they were swept by rival Georgia with a pair of shutouts. Florida’s last super regional title at home came in 2019 against Tennessee.

    Jocelyn Erickson, the Southeastern Conference player of the year, tied it a 1-all in the first inning with a two-out RBI double down the left-field line. Kistler sent a shot into the gap in left-center field that rolled to the wall, and Skylar Wallace scored from first for a 3-1 lead.

    Wallace set a Division I record for most career runs with 303.

    Florida freshman Keagan Rothrock (29-6) retired 9 of 10 batters over the final three innings and closed with her fifth strikeout.

    Baylor pitcher Aliyah Binford (13-12) helped herself out with an RBI single in the first and a homer in the third.

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    Associated Press

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  • Cavaliers embark on search for next coach

    Cavaliers embark on search for next coach

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    INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) — J.B. Bickerstaff didn’t do anything wrong to deserve being fired. The Cavaliers just feel like they reached their limit with him.


    What You Need To Know

    • Altman said he and his staff will use the holiday weekend to decompress before reconvening and beginning their first search for a new coach in five years
    • Altman intimated he doesn’t have a list of candidates yet, adding the new coach will have to fit “very highly specific” criteria
    • Bickerstaff was fired one week after the Cavs’ playoff run — the team’s deepest since 2018 and longest without LeBron James on the roster since 1993 

    A day after Bickerstaff was let go despite winning 99 games the past two seasons and taking the Cavs into the second round of the NBA playoffs despite numerous injuries in 2024, president of basketball operations Koby Altman tried to explain the rationale behind the somewhat shocking dismissal.

    Altman praised Bickerstaff’s many successes in his four-plus seasons, but feels the Cavs need a new leader.

    “Someone with a new approach, someone with a different voice, a fresh set of eyes to help us move forward,” Altman said Friday. “We’ve accomplished a lot in the last few years, getting to a conference semifinal and we don’t want to be complacent.

    “We feel we’re not far off.”

    Altman said he and his staff will use the holiday weekend to decompress before reconvening and beginning their first search for a new coach in five years.

    Altman intimated he doesn’t have a list of candidates yet, adding the new coach will have to fit “very highly specific” criteria.

    Bickerstaff was fired one week after the Cavs’ playoff run — the team’s deepest since 2018 and longest without LeBron James on the roster since 1993 — ended with a second-round loss to the Boston Celtics. Cleveland played the final two games of that series without All-Star guard Donovan Mitchell due to a calf injury.

    Mitchell can sign a four-year, $200 million contract extension with the Cavs this summer, and Altman believes the 27-year-old is committed to chasing a title in Cleveland.

    “This is a player that has had two of the best years of his career here, has had a lot of success here, understands the infrastructure,” Altman said. “I think he has a lot of trust in what we’re doing and understands that our goal is to win a championship.”

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    Associated Press

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  • NCAA settlement sets stage for current, former athletes to be paid

    NCAA settlement sets stage for current, former athletes to be paid

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    The NCAA and the nation’s five biggest conferences have agreed to pay nearly $2.8 billion to settle a host of antitrust claims, a monumental decision that sets the stage for a groundbreaking revenue-sharing model that could start directing millions of dollars directly to athletes as soon as the 2025 fall semester.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Pac-12 was the final conference to sign off when university leaders voted Thursday to approve the plan, according to a person with direct knowledge of the decision
    • The deal still must be approved by the federal judge overseeing the case and challenges could arise
    • The details in the plan signal the end of the NCAA’s bedrock amateurism model that dates to its founding in 1906
    • The agreement calls for the NCAA and the conferences to pay $2.77 billion over 10 years to more than 14,000 former and current college athletes who say now-defunct rules prevented them from earning money from endorsement and sponsorship deals dating to 2016
    • Athletes in all sports would be eligible for payments and schools would be given the freedom to decide how that money is divvied up among sports programs

    The deal still must be approved by the federal judge overseeing the case and challenges could arise, but if the agreement stands, it will mark the beginning of a new era in college sports where athletes are compensated more like professionals and schools can compete for talent using direct payments.

    “There’s no question about it. It’s a huge quantum leap,” said Tom McMillen, the former Maryland basketball player and congressman who led a group of collegiate athletic directors the past year years.

    The Pac-12 was the final conference to sign off when university leaders voted Thursday to approve the plan, according to a person with direct knowledge of the decision. Southeastern Conference school leaders unanimously approved the deal a few hours earlier, a second person with knowledge of that decision said. Both spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because a coordinated announcement among the Pac-12, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Atlantic Coast Conference and NCAA was still being prepared. All met a Thursday deadline set by plaintiffs’ attorneys.

    The details in the plan signal the end of the NCAA’s bedrock amateurism model that dates to its founding in 1906. Indeed, the days of NCAA punishments for athletes driving booster-provided cars started vanishing three years ago when the organization lifted restrictions on endorsement deals backed by so-called name, image and likeness money.

    Now it is not far-fetched to look ahead to seasons where a star quarterback or top prospect on a college basketball team are not only cashing in big-money NIL deals but have a $100,000 school payment in the bank to play.

    There are a host of details still to be determined, but the agreement calls for the NCAA and the conferences to pay $2.77 billion over 10 years to more than 14,000 former and current college athletes who say now-defunct rules prevented them from earning money from endorsement and sponsorship deals dating to 2016.

    “Even though it was only because of the overwhelming legal pressure, the NCAA, conferences and schools are agreeing that college athletes should be paid,” said Ramogi Huma, a former UCLA football player and longtime advocate for college athletes. “And there’s no going back from there. That’s truly groundbreaking.”

    Some of the money will come from NCAA reserve funds and insurance but even though the lawsuit specifically targeted five conferences that are comprised of 69 schools (including Notre Dame), dozens of other NCAA member schools will see smaller distributions from the NCAA to cover the mammoth payout.

    Schools in the Big Ten, Big 12, Atlantic Coast and Southeastern conferences will end up bearing the brunt of the settlement at a cost of about $300 million each over 10 years, the majority of which will be paid to athletes going forward.

    The Pac-12 is also part of the settlement, with all 12 sharing responsibility even though Washington State and Oregon State will be the only league members left by this fall after the other 10 schools leave.

    Paying Athletes

    In the new compensation model, each school will be permitted, but not required, to set aside up to $21 million in revenue to share with athletes per year, though as revenues rise so could the cap.

    Athletes in all sports would be eligible for payments and schools would be given the freedom to decide how that money is divvied up among sports programs. Scholarship limits by sport will be replaced by roster restrictions.

    Whether the new compensation model is subject to the Title IX gender equity law is unknown along with whether schools will be able to bring NIL activities in-house as they hope and squeeze out the booster-run collectives that have sprouted up in the last few years to pay athletes. Both topics could lead to more lawsuits.

    The case

    The class-action federal lawsuit at the center of the settlement, House v. the NCAA, was set to go to trial in January. The complaint, brought by former Arizona State swimmer Grant House and Sedona Prince, a former Oregon and current TCU basketball player, said the NCAA, along with the five wealthiest conferences, improperly barred athletes from earning endorsement money.

    The suit also made the case that athletes were entitled to a piece of the billions of dollars the NCAA and those conferences earn from media rights agreements with television networks.

    Amid political and public pressure, and facing the prospect of another court loss that some in college sports claimed could reach $20 billion in damages, NCAA and conference officials conceded on what has long been a core principal of the enterprise: That schools don’t directly pay the athletes to play beyond a scholarship.

    That principle had already been dented numerous times over the last decade.

    Notably, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled against the NCAA in 2021 in a case related to education-related benefits. The narrow focus of the Alston case didn’t collapse the collegiate sports system, but the strong rebuke of the NCAA’s model of amateurism flung the door open to more lawsuits. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a former Yale athlete, put it bluntly: “The bottom line is that the NCAA and its member colleges are suppressing the pay of student athletes who collectively generate billions of dollars in revenues for colleges every year.”

    The other cases

    The settlement is expected to cover two other antitrust cases facing the NCAA and major conferences that challenge athlete compensation rules. Hubbard vs. the NCAA and Carter vs. the NCAA are also currently in front of judges in the Northern District of California.

    A fourth case, Fontenot vs, NCAA, creates a potential complication as it remains in a Colorado court after a judge denied a request to combine it with Carter. Whether Fontenot becomes part of the settlement is unknown and it matters because the NCAA and its conferences don’t want to be on the hook for more damages should they lose in court.

    “We’re going to continue to litigate our case in Colorado and look forward to hearing about the terms of a settlement proposal once they’re actually released and put in front of a court,” said George Zelcs, a plaintiffs’ attorney in Fontenot.

    College athletics overhaul

    The solution agreed to in the settlement is landmark, but not surprising. College sports has been trending in this direction for years, with athletes receiving more and more monetary benefits and rights they say were long overdue.

    In December, NCAA President Charlie Baker, the former Massachusetts governor who has been on the job for 14 months, proposed creating a new tier of Division I athletics where the schools with the most resources would be required to pay at least half their athletes $30,000 per year. That suggestion, along with many other possibilities, remain under discussion.

    The settlement does not make every issue facing college sports go away. There is still a question of whether athletes should be deemed employees of their schools, something Baker and other college sports leaders are fighting against.

    Some type of federal legislation or antitrust exemption is likely still needed to codify the terms of the settlement, protect the NCAA from future litigation and pre-empt state laws that attempt to neuter the organization’s authority. As it is, the NCAA is still facing lawsuits that challenge its ability to govern itself, including setting rules limiting multiple-time transfers.

    Federal lawmakers have indicated they would like to get something done, but while several bills have been introduced none have gone anywhere.

    Despite the unanswered questions, one thing is clear: Major college athletics is about to become more like professional sports than ever before.

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    Associated Press

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  • Pittsburgh and the Steelers will be hosting the 2026 NFL draft

    Pittsburgh and the Steelers will be hosting the 2026 NFL draft

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    NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The NFL has awarded the 2026 draft to Pittsburgh with the Steelers ready to tap Pennsylvania’s deep football tradition trying to meet the new standard for host cities.


    What You Need To Know

    • The NFL has awarded the 2026 draft to Pittsburgh with the Steelers ready to tap Pennsylvania’s deep football tradition trying to meet the new standard for host cities
    • League officials announced the decision Wednesday as part of the NFL spring meetings
    • Owners chose Pittsburgh after reviewing the bid along with the advisory committee
    • The NFL set a record with 775,000 fans attending the 2024 draft in April in Detroit

    League officials announced the decision Wednesday as part of the NFL spring meetings. Owners chose Pittsburgh after reviewing the bid along with the advisory committee. The three-day draft will be held at Point State Park and the Steelers’ home at Acrisure Stadium.

    The NFL set a record with more than 775,000 fans attending the 2024 draft in April in Detroit, and Green Bay will be hosting the 2025 draft at Lambeau Field on April 24-26.

    Pittsburgh owner Art Rooney II said Detroit and Kansas City helped set a very high bar for hosting one of the NFL’s premier events. He said the Steelers look forward to following that tradition tapping into the roots of pro football in a state that sent the likes of Mike Ditka, Dan Marino and Joe Montana to the NFL.

    “We think it’ll be the largest visitor event in the history of Pittsburgh hosting hundreds of thousands of people and really football fans from all over the country,” Rooney said. “Certainly, the Steelers nation from all over the country we think will come for a visit. So we just look forward to hosting that.”

    The NFL began rotating its annual draft around the country in 2015 starting in Chicago after holding the event in New York between 1965 and 2014. Philadelphia hosted in 2018 followed by Nashville, Cleveland in 2021, Las Vegas in 2022 and Kansas City in 2023.

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    Associated Press

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  • Former Florida signee Rashada sues Napier, others over failed NIL deal

    Former Florida signee Rashada sues Napier, others over failed NIL deal

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    GAINESVILLE, Fla.  — Former Florida recruit and current Georgia quarterback Jaden Rashada is suing Gators coach Billy Napier and the program’s top booster over a failed name, image and likeness deal worth nearly $14 million.


    What You Need To Know

    • Quarterback Jaden Rashada on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against Florida football coach Billy Napier and a top Gators booster
    • The lawsuit alleges fraudulent misrepresentation and inducement and other claims
    • The complaint follows a failed name, image and likeness deal reportedly worth nearly $14 million
    • Rashada is seeking a jury trial and at least $10 million in damages
    • The quarterback later signed at Arizona State and has since transferred to Georgia, Florida’s biggest rival

    The lawsuit filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Pensacola alleges Napier and booster and automotive technology businessman Hugh Hathcock made fraudulent misrepresentation and inducement, aiding and abetting fraud, civil conspiracy to commit fraud, negligent misrepresentations, tortious inference with a business relationship or contract, aiding and abetting tortious interference and vicarious liability. The complaint seeks a jury trial and damages of at least $10 million.

    “Sadly, this type of fraud is becoming more commonplace in the Wild West that is today’s college NIL landscape,” said attorney Rusty Hardin, who is representing Rashada. “Wealthy alumni, consumed by their schools’ athletic programs, are taking advantage of young people by offering them life-changing sums of money, only to renege on their commitments.

    “As the first scholar-athlete to take a stand against this egregious behavior, Jaden seeks to hold these defendants accountable for their actions and to expose their as-yet unchecked abuse of power.”

    Florida had been under NCAA investigation since last June regarding Rashada’s recruitment. The NCAA asked the school not to conduct its own investigation and said it would notify the institution “soon regarding the projected timeline of the investigation.”

    But in March, the NCAA halted investigations into booster-backed collectives or other third parties making NIL compensation deals with Division I athletes.

    The Gators may have thought they were off the hook. But Rashada’s lawsuit puts them back in the spotlight.

    Rashada, who threw for 5,275 yards and 59 touchdowns at Pittsburg (Calif.) High School, initially agreed to play for Miami in the fall of 2022. According to the lawsuit, the Hurricanes promised Rashada a $9.5 million NIL deal.

    Napier and Hathcock lured Rashada from his Miami commitment with an NIL deal worth $13.85 million, which violated NCAA bylaws, the lawsuit said. According to the complaint, Napier vouched for the collective and said Rashada would receive $1 million on signing day.

    “But before Rashada could arrive on Florida’s campus, the … contract was terminated — suddenly and without warning,” according to the lawsuit.

    Rashada was granted his release a month later after his NIL deal fell through. The Athletic reported that then-Gator Collective Chief Executive Officer Eddie Rojas sent a termination letter to Rashada and his reps on Dec. 7. He later signed with father’s alma mater, Arizona State. He spent one season in Tempe before landing at Florida’s biggest rival, Georgia.

    Rashada bailed on Florida after the Gator Collective — an independent fundraising group that was loosely tied to the university and paid student-athletes for use of their NIL — failed to honor a multiyear deal that was signed by both sides.

    The bombshell came a little more than two months after Rashada switched his verbal commitment from Miami to Florida. Rashada, his representatives and the Gator Collective had presumably agreed to terms on the lucrative deal at the time of his flip.

    The Gator Collective has since been disbanded.

    Other defendants include Marcus Castro-Walker, the school’s former director of player engagement and NIL, and Velocity Automotive Solutions LLC, which was owned by Hathcock and was slated to provide most of the funding for Rashada’s deal.

    The complaint includes text messages that allegedly document fraudulent promises and inducements, including several telling Rashada’s agent “we look forward to setting him (Rashada) up for life.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Florida, Florida State softball advance to NCAA Super Regionals

    Florida, Florida State softball advance to NCAA Super Regionals

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    FLORIDA — Florida State and Florida are headed to the NCAA Super Regionals later this week after winning their Regional tournaments over the weekend.

    FSU, seeded No. 15, will head to the Norman (Okla.) Super Regional, where it will take on No. 2 Oklahoma at 7 p.m. Thursday in a best-of-three rematch of last year’s national championship. Fourth-ranked Florida will face Baylor at noon Friday to start the best-of-three Gainesville Super Regional.

    The Seminoles advanced to their 10th super regional round in 11 years by going 3-0 at the Tallahassee Regional. To wrap up the Tallahassee title, they pounded Auburn 10-4 at the Seminole Softball Complex. Earlier in the tournament, FSU edged Chattanooga 3-2 on Friday and then outslugged UCF 5-1 on Saturday.

    The Gators pounded South Alabama 9-1 on Sunday to wrap up its undefeated run in the Gainesville Regional. Florida also had defeated South Alabama 9-1 on Saturday and shut out Florida Gulf Coast 6-0 on Friday.

    Florida universities were well-represented at the Regionals, with UCF, Florida Atlantic and Florida Gulf Coast University also competing. But they all were in the same two regionals, and only one team could advance out of each. 

    UCF rallied past Auburn 11-6 in Game 1 but then fell to Auburn 2-1 Saturday night after its loss to FSU earlier in the day. FAU lost to South Alabama 1-0 on Friday and to FGCU 3-2 on Saturday. FGCU fell to South Alabama 5-1 later Saturday.

     

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Local chef talks working at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse during Cavs semifinals

    Local chef talks working at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse during Cavs semifinals

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    CLEVELAND — The success of the Cleveland Cavaliers and Monsters this season isn’t just good for fans. It’s also good for the restaurants that call Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse home. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The success of the Cleveland Cavaliers and Monsters this season is providing an extra boost for businesses at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
    • Karen Small has been cooking in Ohio almost all her life and runs P Street Market at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
    • Small opened her business at the arena after being approached by Aramark, the vendor that provides food services at the facility

    The Cleveland Monsters led the league in attendance for the fourth time in the last five seasons, according to the American Hockey League, and the Cleveland Cavaliers are drawing huge crowds as they fight for survival in the semifinals.

    Karen Small has been cooking in northeast Ohio almost all of her life. She’s the chef of P Street Café at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse. 

    She’s worked as a chef at the arena when LeBron James came back to Cleveland in 2014. She’s been a chef in the city for about 30 years. Early on, she was exposed to the challenges of the food industry.

    “I had a restaurant called the Flying Fig that we closed down. When the new landlord came in, he raised our rent by $7,000 a month, so it made it impossible to continue any longer,” she said.

    Small had a new opportunity to look forward to.

    “At one point I was contacted by Aramark if I was interested in coming here and being that the Cavs were my favorite team of all time, I was like I’m in,” she said.

    Small was discovered by Aramark, the vendor that provides food services at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse. It all started when the district manager for Aramark stumbled upon her Flying Fig restaurant.

    Small isn’t just enjoying the added business that comes with the Cavs and Monsters having a longer season than expected. She said she’s also doing what she loves while getting to watch her favorite team compete in the semifinals.

     

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    Wiley Jawhary

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  • Hurricanes beat Rangers 4-3 in Game 4 to extend series

    Hurricanes beat Rangers 4-3 in Game 4 to extend series

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    The Carolina Hurricanes turned their last stand into a season-extending victory. Surprisingly, it was the struggling power play that got them there.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Carolina Hurricanes beat the New York Rangers 4-3 on Saturday night in Raleigh
    • Carolina’s win in Game 4 helped them avoid a sweep, setting up Game 5 on Monday night in New York
    • Brady Skjei scored the game-winner on a power play, which was Carolina’s first power-play goal in 17 tries in the series

    Brady Skjei scored on the power play with 3:11 left to help the Hurricanes beat the New York Rangers 4-3 on Saturday night, staving off a sweep by winning Game 4 of the second-round playoff series.

    Skjei’s shot from the point came off a feed from Tuevo Teravainen, with the puck zipping past Igor Shesterkin to catch the upper-right corner of the goal and bang into the net. That was Carolina’s first goal with the man advantage in 17 tries in the series, and it pushed Carolina ahead for good on a night when the Hurricanes squandered a two-goal lead.

    No matter, though. The Hurricanes survived to fight another day in the NHL playoffs.

    “I don’t care,” coach Rod Brind’Amour said of whether there was extra significance to getting the winner with the man advantage. “Not tonight. We’ve just got to get Ws at this time of year.”

    The Rangers get another closeout chance Monday night with the 3-1 lead when the series returns to Madison Square Garden for Game 5.

    Evgeny Kuznetsov, Stefan Noesen and Sebastian Aho each scored for Carolina, while Frederik Andersen finished with 22 saves as the Hurricanes try to become the fifth team to rally from a 3-0 deficit to win a playoff series and first since 2014.

    Everything started with Carolina showing potential in the first period, running out to 2-0 and 3-1 leads to build momentum.

    “Obviously we played a lot of aggression,” said Aho, who finished a feed from Jake Guentzel from near the slot for the 3-1 lead with 4:31 left in the first period. “We kind of did what we needed to do. That was a strong start. We want to do that again (in Game 5).”

    The Hurricanes tweaked their power-play unit to put Skjei on the top group. And roughly 30 seconds after a tripping penalty by Ryan Lindgren, Skjei converted the winner to send Teravainen and Aho rushing over to hug him and have a tense home crowd roaring in gleeful relief, even if Skjei felt “definitely celebration” instead.

    “I feel like going into every game, you try to feel confident and feel you can be the guy to do it,” Skjei said. “Obviously it doesn’t happen every night or that often. But that’s kind of our mindset going forward here, just win the day.”

    Will Cuylle, Barclay Goodrow and Alexis Lafreniere scored for the Rangers, while Shesterkin finished with 27 saves.

    “It’s tough, we dug ourselves a hole early,” Rangers coach Peter Laviolette said. “I don’t think it was because we weren’t ready to play. … We’ve got to come out a little bit sharper than that.

    “We were competing, we were working, we were trying to do our job offensively. But there’s some things defensively that I thought we could’ve been a little bit better in the first period.”

    New York had won its first seven playoff games after sweeping Washington in Round 1 and taking the first three of this series, and had a chance to become the first team to reach 8-0 in a postseason since Edmonton won its first nine games on the way to claiming the Stanley Cup in 1985.

    Lafreniere had the Rangers within reach of that when he capitalized on a mistake by Andersen, who let his left skate extend past the post as Lafreniere skated in on the right side. As he skated toward the boards, Lafreniere bounced the puck off Andersen’s left hip, then into the net for the 3-3 tie at 2:04 of the third period that deflated the home crowd.

    The series began with the potential for heavy drama considering the Metropolitan Division-winning Rangers also won the Presidents’ Trophy as the league’s top regular-season team, while the Hurricanes — in the playoffs for the sixth straight season — finished three points behind and entered the NHL playoffs as the favorite to win the Stanley Cup, according to Bet MGM Sportsbook.

    The tight finishes have been there, with the Rangers winning 4-3 in both Game 1 and 2 — the latter in double overtime — and then taking Game 3 in Raleigh on Artemi Panarin’s OT score for the 3-2 win. But the Rangers had been winning the special-teams battle in a landslide, outscoring the Hurricanes 5-0 with four power-play goals and a shorthanded score while Carolina’s No. 2-ranked regular-season power play entered Saturday at 0 for 15 in the series.

    Carolina came up empty on its first power play, but Skjei finally gave the Hurricanes a desperately needed breakthrough.

    “I thought the penalty kill was still good,” Laviolette said. “They took a shot from the point, he hammered it, it had eyes. It was a tough corner shot, traffic in front of the net. There was a lot going on there.”

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    Associated Press

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  • NCAA waives cap on official recruiting visits in basketball

    NCAA waives cap on official recruiting visits in basketball

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    The NCAA has approved a waiver that will allow men’s and women’s basketball programs to pay for unlimited official recruiting visits to help teams deal with roster depletion caused by transfers, according to a memo obtained Thursday by The Associated Press.


    What You Need To Know

    • An NCAA waiver will allow college basketball programs unlimited official recruiting visits, according to a memo obtained by AP 
    • Currently, men’s programs are allowed 28 official visits and women’s 24 over a two-year rolling period
    • The waiver covers the period from Aug. 1, 2023 through July 31, 2025 
    • The NCAA Division I Council in June will consider proposed legislation that would make the change permanent
    • The move is being made as unlimited transfers are depleting the programs at some schools

    The Athletic first reported the approval of a blanket waiver by the men’s and women’s basketball oversight committees.

    Currently, men’s basketball programs are allowed 28 official visits over a rolling two-year period. The number for women’s programs is 24.

    The waiver will cover a two-year period, starting Aug. 1, 2023, and run through July 31, 2025. The NCAA Division I Council in June will consider proposed legislation that would lift the limit on official visits in men’s and women’s basketball permanently.

    Last month, the NCAA changed its rules to allow all athletes to be immediately eligible to play no matter how many times they transfer — as long as they meet academic requirements. The move came after the association fast-tracked legislation to fall in line with a recent court order.

    Several states, including West Virginia, sued the NCAA late last year, challenging rules requiring undergraduate athletes to sit out for a season if they transferred more than once.

    With what amounts to unlimited and unrestricted transfers, player movement in basketball has increased and forced programs into a bind created by unusually high levels of roster turnover.

    In some cases, coaches are replacing almost an entire team. The scholarship limit in Division I for men’s basketball is 13 and 15 for women’s teams.

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    Associated Press

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  • Hornets hire Charles Lee as head coach

    Hornets hire Charles Lee as head coach

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    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Charles Lee will be the next head coach for the Charlotte Hornets, the team announced Thursday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Charles Lee becomes the 12th coach in Hornets’ franchise history
    • Lee currently serves as the top assistant on the Boston Celtics
    • A welcome news conference will be held after Boston’s playoff run

    Lee is currently with the Boston Celtics, serving as the primary assistant. His 10 years of experience also features time with the Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks, reaching the playoffs nine times.

    In his latest season with Boston, Lee helped take the team to a 64-18 record, the best in the NBA and fourth most wins in franchise history.

    Before the NBA, he started his career at his home university of Bucknell. The Washington, D.C. native also played for the Bison for four years before playing four seasons professionally overseas.

    “The Hornets have a talented young core of players and I’m excited about our future and what we can build here,” Lee said. “There are few places as passionate about basketball as the Carolinas, and I look forward to coming to Charlotte and getting to work.”

    The hire comes after former Hornets head coach Steve Clifford stepped down in early April. Clifford went 48-116 in his two seasons of his second stint as coach of the Hornets and just 21-61 this season, and 340-461 in parts of 10 seasons as a head coach, most of them in Charlotte. 

    “I can’t wait for our Hornets community to meet Charles, his wife Lindsey and his beautiful daughters, and feel Charles’ passion for the game and the intensity of his desire to win,” Executive Vice President of Basketball Operations Jeff Peterson said Thursday. “He shares our vision for this organization, and I look forward to partnering with him in building something special here in the Carolinas.”

    The Hornets will hold a news conference after Boston’s playoff run ends, according to their social media post Thursday.

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    Daniel Gray

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  • Guardians to place Kwan on injured list AP source says

    Guardians to place Kwan on injured list AP source says

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    CLEVELAND (AP) — Guardians leadoff hitter Steven Kwan is headed to the injured list with a hamstring strain and Cleveland will call up top prospect Kyle Manzardo, a person familiar with the move told the Associated Press on Sunday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Steven Kwan is headed to the injured list with a hamstring strain
    • Kwan, who entered the weekend leading the AL in batting, underwent an MRI after leaving Saturday’s game with tightness
    • The team has the results and intends to place Kwan on the 10-day IL, said the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity
    • Manzardo will likely be used primarily as the team’s designated hitter, but can spell Josh Naylor at first base

    Kwan, who entered the weekend leading the AL in batting, underwent an MRI after leaving Saturday’s game with tightness.

    The team has the results and intends to place Kwan on the 10-day IL, said the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the Guardians won’t make the roster moves until Monday before opening a three-game series with Detroit.

    Kwan’s injury is giving the Guardians a chance to add the hard-hitting Manzardo, who was acquired last year from Tampa Bay at the trade deadline for pitcher Aaron Civale.

    Manzardo is a middle-of-the-lineup slugger who might be able to bolster Cleveland’s light-hitting offensive attack.

    The Guardians didn’t want to rush Manzardo, so they had him open the season at Triple-A Columbus. But the 23-year-old has been on a tear with the Clippers, hitting eight homers and driving in 14 runs in the last 14 games.

    The Guardians believe he’s ready to take on major league pitchers.

    “He’s been good against left-handed pitching, his approach against lefties has improved,” president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti said before the Guardians beat the Los Angeles Angels 4-1 in their series finale on Sunday.

    “He’s worked really hard at his defense, both his footwork around the bag and his throwing and he continues to put up and manage really good at-bats.”

    Manzardo will likely be used primarily as the team’s designated hitter, but can spell Josh Naylor at first base.

    Kwan’s injury is a blow to the Guardians and the two-time Gold Glove winner, who has been among baseball’s best hitters this season.

    Before getting hurt while running down a fly ball, the 26-year-old Kwan was batting .353 with a league-leading 47 hits and 28 runs. He has gone 74 straight plate appearances before his last strikeout.

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    Associated Press

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  • Mystik Dan wins the historic 150th Kentucky Derby

    Mystik Dan wins the historic 150th Kentucky Derby

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    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A photo finish for Mystik Dan and jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. in the 150th running of the Kentucky Derby.

    Trained by Lexington native Kenny McPeek, Mystik Dan edged out Sierra Leone and Forever Young from Japan. According to NBC, the last time a race was this close was in 1996 when Grindstone and jockey Jerry Bailey won.

    Hernandez and McPeek also won the Kentucky Oaks on Friday with Thorpedo Anna. They become the first trainer-jockey duo to win both races in the same year since 1952.

    This was the fifth Derby mount for Hernandez and his first ever win. This was McPeek’s tenth Derby and his first Derby victory.

    Sent off at 18-1 odds, Mystik Dan rode the rail down the stretch with a short lead. Forever Young and Sierra Leone pressured the leader in front of a crowd of 156,710.

    Mystik Dan ran 1 1/4 miles in 2:03.34 and paid $39.22 to win. 

    Fierceness, the 3-1 favorite, finished 15th in the field of 20 3-year-olds. This was the sixth year the Derby favorite did not win the race. 

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Florida joins antitrust lawsuit challenging NCAA’s NIL rules

    Florida joins antitrust lawsuit challenging NCAA’s NIL rules

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida on Wednesday joined an antitrust lawsuit filed by the states of Tennessee and New York, the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Virginia that challenges the NCAA’s rules restricting how athletes can commercially use their name, image, and likeness and prohibiting compensation for recruits.


    What You Need To Know

    • The state of Florida on Wednesday joined an antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA
    • The lawsuit challenges the name, image and likeness restrictions of the college sports governing body
    • The original lawsuit was filed Jan. 31 by Tennessee, New York, Virginia and the District of Columbia
    • The legal case said the rules hurts the states’ economies and the welfare of their athletes

    The lawsuit says the restrictions are anticompetitive and violate the Sherman Act. It says enforcement of the rules harms “the states’ economies and the welfare of their athletes, and should be declared unlawful and enjoined.”

    Florida is joining the lawsuit, originally filed on Jan. 31, after reports in January that the NCAA was investigating Florida over its recruitment of class of 2023 quarterback Jaden Rashada, who signed with Florida in December 2022 but never enrolled and later enrolled at Arizona State. The NCAA also announced Level II sanctions against Florida State during the same month, accusing its athletic program of using NIL payments to entice recruits. The NCAA said it sanctioned Seminoles assistant coach Alex Atkins and an unnamed booster for impermissible recruiting activity and facilitating impermissible contact with a NIL-related booster.

    The lawsuit says the NCAA changed its rules to permit college athletes to earn certain types of compensation from their NIL. “But, after allowing NIL licensing to emerge nationwide, the NCAA tried to stop that market from functioning” by allowing NIL compensation for current athletes but enforcing its rules for prospective athletes, including those in the transfer portal.

    In a statement, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody said, “It appears no one could ever comply with these ever-changing and unfair regulations that limit the ability of student athletes to negotiate in good faith. I am taking legal action to reverse the unlawful restrictions the NCAA has placed on Florida universities and our collegiate athletes.”

    The NCAA restrictions prohibit prospective student-athletes from discussing NIL opportunities with schools and collectives prior to enrollment, including: 

    • Negotiating with collectives, 
    • Reviewing NIL offers prior to making enrollment decisions,
    • Learning about the full scope of NIL-related services schools might offer upon enrollment. 

    In late February, U.S. District Judge Clifton Corker in the Eastern District of Tennessee issued a preliminary injunction that bars the organization from enforcing its rules prohibiting NIL compensation for recruits, but that ruling covered one district. If the NCAA appeals, the case would go to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overseeing Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Michigan. Florida is part of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

    Corker’s ruling undercut what has been a fundamental principle of the NCAA’s model of amateurism for decades: Third parties cannot pay recruits to attend a particular school.

    The judge wrote the NCAA’s stance likely violates antitrust law because Congress so far has been unwilling to give the association an antitrust exemption. The judge said athletes with a limited recruiting window are hurt by not being able to know their true value before committing to a school.

    The NCAA said it would review the ruling and talk with its member schools about possible policy changes. But the NCAA said turning rules supported by its members “upside down” will only make an already chaotic situation worse and lessen protections keeping athletes from being exploited.

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    Associated Press

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  • Oregon’s Sports Bra, a pub for women’s sports fans, plans national expansion

    Oregon’s Sports Bra, a pub for women’s sports fans, plans national expansion

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    PORTLAND, Oregon — On a recent weeknight at this bar in northeast Portland, fans downed pints and burgers as college women’s lacrosse and beach volleyball matches played on big-screen TVs. Memorabilia autographed by female athletes covered the walls, with a painting of U.S. soccer legend Abby Wambach mounted above the chalkboard beer menu.

    The Sports Bra is a pub where women’s sports are celebrated — and the only thing on TV.


    What You Need To Know

    • An Oregon sports bar focusing on and showing only women’s athletics has plans to expand across the country through a franchise model
    • The Sports Bra opened two years ago in Portland, the state’s largest city, and its founder and CEO says she already has fielded hundreds of inquiries from potential partners
    • The move comes as interest in women’s sports is at an all-time high, embodied most recently by the frenzy over University of Iowa and now Indiana Fever basketball star Caitlin Clark
    • As the fan base and engagement grow, so too does the appetite for changing a sports bar culture that has traditionally catered to men’s athletics

    Packed and buzzing with activity, the bar has successfully tapped into a meteoric rise of interest in women’s sports, embodied most recently by the frenzy over University of Iowa basketball phenomenon Caitlin Clark’s records-smashing feats.

    Just two years after opening, the bar announced plans this week to go nationwide through a franchise model.

    “Things have happened at light speed compared to what my forecast was,” founder and CEO Jenny Nguyen told The Associated Press. “This tiny spot that I built for my friends and I to watch games and give female athletes their flowers means so much more. And not just to me, but to a lot of people.”

    Under the plan, bars and entrepreneurs elsewhere will be able to apply to use The Sports Bra brand for their franchises. Nguyen is open to working with people who already have a physical space, as well as those who may only have a business plan. What matters, she said, is that the potential future partners share The Sports Bra’s values.

    One aspiring partner is Jackie Reau, who hopes to open a franchise in Cincinnati, where she works as the CEO of a media and marketing agency. During an interview at The Sports Bra, where she happily watched her college women’s lacrosse team on one of the TV sets, she said such establishments “celebrate women’s sports and the champions and the athletes behind the story.”

    “It’s exciting to see it grow and gain such popularity,” Reau said of the bar. “It’s just such a moment right now for women’s sports.”

    The Sports Bra founder and CEO Jenny Nguyen poses for a photo at the sports bar on Thursday, April 25, 2024, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)

    The expansion will be boosted by funding from a foundation created by Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, who is married to tennis legend Serena Williams. Nguyen said she already has received hundreds of inquiries.

    Interest in women’s sports is at an all-time high, helped by Clark’s exploits this year, when she shattered all-time NCAA scoring records for women and men. The championship game between Iowa and South Carolina on April 7 drew 18.9 million viewers on average, surpassing the audience for the men’s title match for the first time.

    A week later a record 2.45 million viewers on average tuned in to the WNBA draft to watch as Clark went to the Indiana Fever as the No. 1 pick. This week it was reported that she was set to sign a $28 million deal with Nike that would be the richest sponsorship contract for a women’s basketball player.

    The rise in interest is not just for women’s basketball, but other sports as well. The 2023 Women’s World Cup reported record attendance with nearly 2 million fans. A University of Nebraska volleyball game played in a football stadium drew more than 92,000 people last August, a world record for largest attendance at a women’s sporting event.

    “It’s sort of in this pinnacle moment where eyeballs are plentiful,” said Lauren Anderson, director of the Warsaw Sports Business Center at the University of Oregon. “It’s just been an alignment of many things that has created this incredible moment for women’s sports that seems to be more than just a flash in the pan.”

    As the fan base and engagement grow, so too does the appetite for changing a sports bar culture that has traditionally catered to men’s athletics. Other establishments like The Sports Bra have recently opened elsewhere: A Bar of Their Own began operating in Minneapolis earlier this year, and Seattle’s Rough & Tumble launched in late 2022.

    Sports bars have not always been welcome spaces for women, Nguyen said. A fan since childhood, she would gather groups of friends to go because she didn’t feel safe going by herself. She recalled encountering macho environments that made her uncomfortable, and bartenders who refused to change the channel to a women’s game.

    “That was just what we settled with,” she said. “When I wanted to push back and kind of flip the status quo, that’s when I really started to dig in on how The Sports Bra could matter and change the narrative on sports bars.”

    One memory in particular stands out for Nguyen from her time as proprietor: Serena Williams’ last match, in 2022. A massive crowd showed up to watch, spilling over onto the the sidewalk. People outside cupped their eyes with their hands as they peered through the windows to see the screens.

    “When Serena would score a point, I swear to God, I thought the glass was going to shatter. My eyeballs were rattling inside my head,” Nguyen said. “And then when they were volleying, I feel like you could hear a burger flip in the kitchen.”

    Toward the end, she felt tears welling up. She passed two tissue boxes around for similarly weepy customers as everyone reveled in Williams’ last minutes on the court.

    “I remember taking a deep breath and thinking, ‘I don’t know if there’s a single place on the face of the planet that is having this exact moment,’” Nguyen said. “It was amazing.”

    Fans can still find it challenging to watch women’s sports games, because many are not broadcast on TV and require different streaming subscriptions, said Tarlan Chahardovali, an assistant professor in the University of South Carolina’s Department of Sport and Entertainment Management.

    Women’s sports bars can be a reliable go-to for many events by having those subscriptions. But more broadly, Chahardovali said, much work remains to be done to ensure the media market doesn’t undervalue women’s sports.

    “Today’s numbers are hard to ignore, and I think it’s a very exciting time,” she said. “But it’s a moment that needs to be maintained and sustained, and it needs continuous investment.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Rays place closer Pete Fairbanks on injured list with nerve-related issues

    Rays place closer Pete Fairbanks on injured list with nerve-related issues

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.  — The Tampa Bay Rays placed struggling closer Pete Fairbanks on the 15-day injured list with nerve-related issues before Monday night’s game against the Detroit Tigers.


    What You Need To Know

    • Tampa Bay closer Pete Fairbanks has periodically been experiencing numbness in his fingers
    • The Rays have added him to their 15-day injured list
    • Fairbanks has gone 0-2 with a 9.00 ERA in eight games
    • Tampa Bay recalled reliever Kevin Kelly from Class AAA Durham to fill Fairbanks’ spot

    Fairbanks has experienced numbness in his fingers at times over the past few years, and the problem flared up again on Saturday and Sunday.

    “Felt like he had a little bit of a zinger in his hand just playing catch,” Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash said. “Got treatment the entire day on Saturday. We were still optimistic that he was going to be good to go on Sunday, but it repeated itself Sunday before the game.”

    Fairbanks has had tests on his shoulder and arm, with additional testing to be done.

    “We’ll continue to kind of check boxes to see if we can narrow it down,” Cash said. “Not sure where it’s going to go, but felt like it was time to rest and run some imaging from his neck to shoulder all the way down to the fingers to see if we can see anything.”

    Fairbanks has had a frustrating season, going 0-2 with a 9.00 earned run average in eight games. The right-hander has allowed eight runs — seven earned — over seven innings.

    The Rays recalled reliever Kevin Kelly from Class AAA Durham to take Fairbanks’ spot on the roster.

    Cash plans to fill the closer role by looking at matchups, with Colin Poche, Jason Adam, Shawn Armstrong and Garrett Cleavinger all expected to get chances.

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

    Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Leon County judge is pumping the brakes on Florida State University’s lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference, ruling that the university must amend its lawsuit within a week before the case moves forward in court, if at all.


    What You Need To Know

    • A judge on Monday ordered the pair into mediation and gave FSU a week to refile its lawsuit
    • FSU is suing to exit the ACC without fees, though the court must first determine its jurisdiction
    • The ACC believe it’s home state of North Carolina is the proper forum
    • The judge reminded attendees the case is “not over”

    Second Judicial Circuit Judge John Cooper made the bench ruling Monday in Tallahassee while weighing the conference’s effort to dismiss the lawsuit. 

    The judge’s order will require the two parties to attend a mediation within 120 days. The order also stipulates that FSU must refile its complaint with “clear language” in seven days, excluding weekends and holidays.

    “I want to make sure everyone understands this case is still going on,” said Cooper. “It’s not over.”

    Hanging in the balance is a multi-million-dollar media rights deal between FSU and ACC, plus $130 million in exit fees the university may owe the ACC if they split. 

    The total exit price, per FSU: roughly $572 million. FSU sued the conference in January, calling the fees “draconian” and the existing media deal “weak.” 

    “The ACC has negotiated itself into a self-described ‘existential crisis,’ rendered itself fiscally unstable and substantially undermined its members’ capacity to compete at the elite level,” the lawsuit reads. “In doing so, the ACC violated the contractual, fiduciary and legal duties it owed its members.”

    They’re accusing the ACC of breach of contract, trade restraint and failure to perform, accusations that underscore the university’s frustrations over their media earnings through the ACC.

    “It wasn’t until Florida State read that other conferences may be getting more money for media rights agreements… that they started to complain,” said Amber Nunnally, an attorney representing the ACC. 

    The judge’s refile request comes as the court is trying to determine whether it’s got jurisdiction over the case, as the ACC is based in North Carolina. North Carolina is also where the conference preemptively filed a lawsuit against FSU, just a day after the university’s board voted to sue the ACC.

    Lawyers for FSU, however, argue otherwise. Peter Rush, an attorney representing FSU, described Florida State University and University of Miami as “citizens” of Florida. He also accused the ACC of drawing “daggers.”

    “That’s hardly the harbinger of happy future family gatherings,” Rush told the judge.

    The ACC, meanwhile, maintains that North Carolina is the proper forum. They’re accusing FSU of trying to score an “advisory opinion” through the lawsuit, given that they’ve yet to exit the conference and that a ruling in the case would likely impact their decision to stay or go.

    “Florida State is now asking you to invalidate the contract they believe no longer serves them,” said an ACC attorney. 

    There are no scheduled hearings between FSU and the ACC as of Monday. The ACC is contracted to hold FSU’s media rights till 2036.

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    Jason Delgado

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  • Lou Groza Award winner Graham Nicholson transferring to Alabama

    Lou Groza Award winner Graham Nicholson transferring to Alabama

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    Lou Groza Award winner Graham Nicholson plans to transfer to Alabama.

    The former Miami of Ohio All-American, who won the award as the nation’s top placekicker last season, announced his commitment Sunday on social media.

    Crimson Tide coach Kalen DeBoer is looking for a replacement for Will Reichard, the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer.

    Nicholson made 27 of 28 field goals last season for the RedHawks and all but one of his 36 extra-point attempts. He’s the first Lou Groza Award winner from the Mid-American Conference.

    Nicholson made a career-long 52-yarder against Bowling Green and scored 113 points last season, fourth-most in program history. The three-year starter made a Miami career record 84.5% of his field goal attempts.

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    Associated Press

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  • Browns pleased with QB Watson’s progress after surgery

    Browns pleased with QB Watson’s progress after surgery

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    BEREA, Ohio (AP) — While Deshaun Watson’s rehab from right shoulder surgery is on a conservative track, the Cleveland Browns are expecting the quarterback to be ready for their season opener.


    What You Need To Know

    • Watson suffered a fracture to the glenoid bone in his throwing shoulder and had his second season with Cleveland end after just six starts
    • The 28-year-old Watson has played in 12 games since the Browns acquired him in a 2022 trade from Houston and signed him to a fully guaranteed $230 million contract
    • Watson, who was in and out of the lineup for several weeks with shoulder issues before an MRI revealed the fracture, said he’s been able to throw at full speed but didn’t provide many other specifics about his physical limitations

    “We feel really good about it,” general manager Andrew Berry said Thursday at his annual pre-draft news conference. “I’m not going to make any predictions, just because you just never know. But that’s certainly our expectation.”

    Watson suffered a fracture to the glenoid bone in his throwing shoulder and had his second season with Cleveland end after just six starts.

    The 28-year-old Watson has played in 12 games since the Browns acquired him in a 2022 trade from Houston and signed him to a fully guaranteed $230 million contract.

    Earlier this week, Watson said his recovery is going well. He’s following a rehab regimen prescribed by his surgeon, Dr. Neal ElAttrache, who repaired his glenoid socket and a partially torn labrum on Nov. 21.

    Watson, who was in and out of the lineup for several weeks with shoulder issues before an MRI revealed the fracture, said he’s been able to throw at full speed but didn’t provide many other specifics about his physical limitations.

    Berry said Watson threw 40-yard passes this week as the Browns began their voluntary offseason conditioning program.

    “He’s in a pretty good spot,” Berry said. “I don’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, but he’s progressing as appropriate. We’re really, really pleased with the work that he’s put in and really pleased with how the shoulder’s responding.”

    “But we’re still in the middle of a rehab process, so we know that it can take different left and right turns, but we’re pretty optimistic in terms of what we’ve seen so far,” he said.

    Watson said a decision about whether he participates in OTAs next month hasn’t been made. He also indicated there’s a chance he won’t play in preseason games.

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    Associated Press

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