Boo! Itâs an informal Halloween get-together. Who said that kids get to have all the fun? OK, they can come, too.
This year the big day falls on a Thursday, an almost-end-of-the-work-week date that calls for a one-bowl entrĂŠe style gathering. A delicious soup can be a festive main course that stands on its own without a side dish.
In two of the soup recipes that follow, the preparation can be done in advance; they can be prepared a day or two ahead, cooled and refrigerated airtight. Keep them warm in a slow cooker if you like. The Italian Savoy Cabbage Soup is an exception. The components for that dish can be prepped the day before, but it requires some last-minute assembly followed by four minutes under the broiler to achieve an appealing brown spotted surface atop a layer of shredded cheese.
Serve in individual soup bowls or coffee mugs. For more generous servings, use large cappuccino cups with large loop handles. No need to set a formal table â this dinner can be portable.
These are soups that would happily warm any mummyâs tummy.
Chipotle, shrimp and hominy tortilla soup can be made with varying degrees of spiciness, based on how many chipotles are used. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)Â
Chipotle, Shrimp and Hominy Tortilla Soup
Tortilla soup becomes party food when augmented with shrimp. This one flavor spikes the broth with a mixture made by pan-toasting spices (cumin seed, whole clove and whole allspice) and then pureeing them with onion, chipotle and a little broth. And of course, the toppings bring delicious flavor to the party: crisp tortilla strips, avocado slices and chopped cilantro. As for the chipotles, adding one makes a broth that is mild; adding two makes a broth that is spicy.
Yield: 10 servings
INGREDIENTS
8 to 10 corn tortillas, cut in half, then cut into 1/4-inch wide strips
2 to 3 tablespoons canola oil or vegetable oil for tortillas, plus 2 tablespoons for soup
Coarse salt, such as kosher salt
2 tablespoons canola oil
1 1/2 large yellow onions, finely chopped, divided use
7 3/4 cups canned, low-salt chicken broth, divided use
1 to 2 canned chipotle chili plus about 1 tablespoon of adobo sauce
2 teaspoons salt
2 (29-ounces each) cans golden hominy, drained
1/3 cup canned crushed tomatoes with added puree
Salt and/or pepper, if needed
1 pound uncooked small shrimp (51 to 60 per pound size), peeled and deveined
Garnish: 1/2 cup chopped cilantro
2 ripe avocadoes, sliced
For passing: lime wedges
Cookâs notes: Chipotles are ripe jalapeĂąos that have been slowly dried over wood smoke. They may be purchased in many supermarkets in small cans; canned chipotles are surrounded with adobo, a tomato-based sauce.
DIRECTIONS
1. Adjust oven racks to bottom third and top third positions. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a medium bowl, toss tortilla strips with 2 to 3 tablespoons oil. Scatter strips on 2 rimmed baking sheets. Season with coarse salt. Bake, stirring every 5 minutes or so, until crisp and golden, about 15 to 20 minutes. Set aside.
2. In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, heat 2 tablespoons oil on medium heat. Add half of the onion, plus the carrot, celery, garlic and oregano. Cook until vegetables are tender-crisp, about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
3. Meanwhile, in a small skillet toast the allspice, clove, and cumin seeds. To toast, place skillet on medium-high heat and shake handle frequently. They are toasted when they smell fragrant and the cumin is a shade darker.
4. Place remaining onion in a blender. Add 3/4 cup broth. Add toasted spices, chipotle, adobo sauce (sauce from the can), and salt. Cover and whirl until very finely ground, about two minutes.
5. Add contents of blender to pot with the vegetables. Add remaining broth, hominy and tomatoes. Bring to a simmer on high heat. Reduce heat to medium-low, partially cover and simmer 30 minutes.
6. Taste and add salt and/or pepper if needed. Add shrimp and simmer until just barely cooked through and opaque in center, about 3 minutes, stirring occasionally. Divide soup among 10 bowls. Top with cilantro, tortilla chips and avocado slices. Pass lime wedges for optional squeezing.
Gingered Carrot Soup is a Thai-style concoction that is perfect for a cool fall evening. (Photo by Nick Koon, The Orange County Register/SCNG)Â
Gingered Carrot Soup
Only a modest amount of dried red pepper flakes is used in this version of a Thai-style carrot soup. Be sure to taste it after it is pureed and adjust the spice level to suit your taste. I like to use Frankâs RedHot because it is a hot sauce that is both spicy and tart.
1. In large pot or Dutch oven, heat oil over medium-high heat. Add onion, celery, garlic, ginger and carrots; cook 5-6 minutes, stirring occasionally, until onions are translucent. Add broth, pepper flakes, coriander, turmeric, fish sauce (if using), lime juice, vinegar, peanut butter, brown sugar, sesame oil, and milks; bring to simmer. Cover, reduce heat and simmer 25-30 minutes. Remove from heat, uncover and allow to cool slightly.
2. Process in batches in either food processor fitted with metal blade or blender until smooth. Taste and season with salt and pepper as needed.
3. If making ahead, cool the soup and store, airtight in refrigerator until ready to gently reheat.
4. Heat on low until simmering gently. Remove from heat and ladle into soup bowls or cups. Garnish soup with chopped fresh cilantro and pinch of toasted sesame seeds.
Source: âThe Wine Loverâs Cookbookââ by Sid Goldstein (Chronicle, $22.95)
Italian Savoy Cabbage Soup, a cold-weather dish from the Italian Alps, looks more like a casserole than a soup. (Photo by Cathy Thomas)Â
Italian Savoy Cabbage Soup (Zuppa alla Valpellinentze)
This cold-weather dish hails from Valle dâAosta in the Italian Alps. Arranged in a 9-by-13-inch broiler-proof pan, it looks more like a casserole than a soup. Much of the hot broth, flavored with Savoy cabbage and pancetta, is absorbed by large chunks of dry bread. Bite into the Fontina cheese topped bread and your mouth fills with delectable broth.
Yield: 6 to 8 servings
INGREDIENTS
10 to 12 ounces whole hearty rye bread, cut into 1 1/2-inch cubes, see cookâs notes
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon butter
4 ounces pancetta, cut into small dice
1 onion, halved, thinly sliced
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 head Savoy cabbage, about 1 1/2 pounds, cored, cut into 1-inch pieces
4 cups beef broth
2 bay leaves
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
5 ounces fontina cheese, shredded, about 1 cup
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
Cookâs notes: This dish requires an uncut loaf of bread. I find it difficult to track down whole loaves of rye bread. I substitute sturdy La Brea Bakery Italian Round, or La Brea Bakery Whole Grain, or La Brea Bakery Country White that are sold at my local Albertsonâs market.
DIRECTIONS
1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 250 degrees. Spread bread in a single layer on rimmed baking sheet and bake, stirring occasionally, until dried and crisp throughout, about 45 minutes; let croutons cool completely.
2. Heat oil and butter in a Dutch oven over medium-low heat until butter melts. Add pancetta and cook until browned and fat is rendered, about 8 minutes. Stir in onion and salt; cook over medium heat until softened and lightly browned, 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in garlic and cook 30 seconds.
3. Stir in cabbage, broth and bay leaves; bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer until cabbage is tender, about 45 minutes. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground pepper. If you want to make the soup a day ahead, you can cool the soup and refrigerate it airtight. Store the dried bread cubes airtight at room temperature. Reheat the soup before proceeding to Step 4.
4. Adjust oven rack to 6 inches from broiler element and heat broiler. Discard bay leaves from the hot soup. Spread half of the cabbage mixture evenly in bottom of a 9-by-13-inch broiler-safe baking dish, then top with half of the bread cubes. Repeat with remaining cabbage mixture and remaining bread cubes. Gently press down on croutons with rubber spatula until thoroughly saturated. Sprinkle with cheese over top and broil until melted and spotty brown, about 4 minutes. Sprinkle with parsley and serve.
Source: Adapted from Americaâs Test Kitchen
Award-winning food writer Cathy Thomas has written three cookbooks, including â50 Best Plants on the Planet.â Follow her at @CathyThomas Cooks.com.
The worldâs richest man stood steps away from the US-Mexico border, adjusting the brim of his black cowboy hat.
âAs an immigrant to the United States, I am extremely pro-immigrant,â Elon Musk said, âand I believe that we need a greatly expanded legal immigration system, and that we should let anyone in the country who is hardworking and honest and will be a contributor to the United States.â
But in the September 2023 video from Eagle Pass, Texas, Musk said limits are needed, too.
âBy the same token, we should also not be allowing people in the country if theyâre breaking the law,â he said. âThat doesnât make sense. The lawâs there for a reason.â
Since that border visit a year ago, Muskâs critiques of illegal immigration have become a prominent part of his online presence. And heâs an increasingly powerful force shaping and amplifying conversations around the issue â especially since his 2022 takeover of Twitter, now known as X, and given his huge audience on the platform.
Immigration is a top topic on votersâ minds heading into the 2024 presidential election, and it was a major focal point of the August 12 conversation Musk hosted on X with former President Donald Trump.
The tech magnateâs more than 195 million followers on X frequently see him sharing posts endorsing conspiracy theories that claim the Biden administration has deliberately allowed undocumented immigrants to cross the border to gain political advantage. Itâs also common to see posts referring to his own background as an immigrant and advocating for increased legal immigration to the US.
But itâs far less common to hear Musk talking about a chapter of his familyâs immigration story thatâs been described by his younger brother in several interviews â an anecdote that raises questions about the billionaire tech tycoonâs own immigration status when he was starting his first company in the United States.
Kimbal Musk: âWe were illegal immigrantsâ
Elon Musk, 53, was born in Pretoria, South Africa, and moved to Canada shortly before his 18th birthday, acquiring citizenship there through his mother, a Canadian citizen. According to numerous biographies and profiles of him published in recent years, he had an enterprising spirit from a young age and his sights set on immigrating to the United States.
Itâs been more than three decades since Musk came to the US in 1992 for his junior year as a transfer student at the University of Pennsylvania. Since then, heâs founded several high-profile Silicon Valley startups. And today heâs the CEO of Tesla Motors, the CEO of SpaceX and the chairman and chief technology officer of X. Forbes estimates his net worth at nearly $270 billion, placing him atop the magazineâs real-time billionaires list.
But his first companyâs origins were humble.
Heâs described its early days in numerous speeches and interviews â as has his younger brother, Kimbal Musk, a cofounder of the startup that set them both on a path to success in the United States.
In 1995, Musk moved to Palo Alto, California, where he planned to begin a Ph.D. program at Stanford. But shortly after the school year started, according to Walter Isaacsonâs 2023 biography, Musk decided heâd rather capitalize on the emerging dotcom market and focus on founding a company with Kimbal.
During 2013 remarks at the Milken Institute Global Conference, an annual gathering of business executives and thought leaders, the brothers described details theyâve often shared about how they kept living expenses low by eating at Jack in the Box â and by living at their office.
âIt was cheaper to rent the office than to rent an apartment. So we just rented the office, and slept in the office, and showered at the YMCA,â Elon Musk recalled, drawing laughs from the crowd.
At the 2013 event, the brothers also touched on a topic theyâve discussed less frequently in public: their immigration status during the companyâs founding.
In early 1996, their startup, an early online city guide and mapping tool, got a $3 million infusion from venture capitalists. The investors soon found themselves surprised, according to Kimbal Muskâs account captured in a video of the 2013 event posted on the Milken Instituteâs YouTube page.
âWhen they did fund us,â Kimbal Musk recalled, âthey realized that we were illegal immigrants.â
âWellâŚâ Elon Musk interjected.
âYes, we were,â Kimbal Musk pushed back.
Video of the remarks shows Elon Musk laughing as he jumped in with a different interpretation: âIâd say it was a gray area.â
He didnât elaborate, and itâs unclear what Elon Musk meant by that characterization. The Musk brothers havenât responded to CNNâs requests for comment on the exchange, nor to reports earlier this year quoting it on the tech website Gizmodo and in The Los Angeles Times.
Other accounts theyâve shared in public, and descriptions in biographies of the billionaire entrepreneur, donât specify what kind of visas they had when founding the company or at later points â key details that would reveal what requirements they would have needed to meet to maintain a legal status in the US.
Two biographies of Musk, Isaacsonâs eponymous tome and Ashlee Vanceâs 2015 âElon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX and the Quest for a Fantastic Future,â state that investors in the startup went on to help both brothers obtain visas.
Itâs unclear what kind of visa Elon Musk had when the brothers and their friend Greg Kouri started the company eventually dubbed Zip2, and what path he went on to take to become a legal resident and citizen of the United States.
How experts interpret Elon Muskâs âgray areaâ description
According to Isaacsonâs biography and an Esquire magazine profile of Musk, he became a US citizen in 2002 â 10 years after he arrived in the country â in a ceremony at the Los Angeles County fairgrounds.
But exactly what steps he took to reach that point after his years as a student are unclear.
In response to questions from CNN, US Citizenship and Immigration Services says the agency canât âshare, confirm, or deny immigration information about specific individualsâ due to privacy considerations.
Elon Musk has not responded to CNNâs questions about his immigration journey, but heâs referenced it in multiple online posts.
But why did he describe his prior immigration status as a âgray areaâ back in 2013?
A 2016 Snopes article found âlittle evidence that he was ever in the U.S. without documentation,â citing previous articles about the tech tycoon and a 2007 PBS interview where he described himself as a legal immigrant.
But immigration experts who spoke with CNN said the way Elon Musk responded when the issue was brought up publicly in 2013 suggests another possibility.
âActually, there are no gray areas in immigration,â says Charles Kuck, an Atlanta immigration attorney. Instead, Kuck says, there are people who get caught for violations, and people who donât.
Jennifer Minear, an immigration attorney who focuses on employment issues, points out that given that Musk is now a US citizen, âobviously he did something to regularize his status.â
âBut that doesnât mean that there wasnât a period of time that he was without (legal) status. ⌠It sounds like there was a little bit of wonkiness in his past with immigration,â says Minear, a past president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.
Thatâs not uncommon, Kuck says.
âOur immigration laws are so strict that, regardless of how perfect you try to be, many people would find themselves in this same gray area, in the context of, you probably did something that would make you deportable at some point during your immigration journey,â he says.
That assessment, he says, is based on the law at the time and the law today.
âI will tell you, as somebody whoâs done immigration law for 35 years, that a lot of immigrants leave their immigration history behind, right? They want to move on to their new life,â Kuck says. âBut when you speak out against other peopleâs immigration journey, then yours becomes subject to scrutiny. ⌠If you live in a glass house, you shouldnât throw stones.â
Student visas come with strict requirements about work
The 2013 Milken Institute event isnât the only time the brothersâ early immigration status in the US has come up.
âAmerica forces you to be illegal if you want to start a company as an immigrant. I know. Thatâs how I did it,â Kimbal Musk wrote on Twitter, now X, in 2017.
In addition to that post, the younger Musk, whoâs now a SpaceX and Tesla board member and also an entrepreneur behind a number of restaurants and food-related ventures, also brought up the issue during a 2020 appearance on Third Row Tesla, a podcast created by fans of the electric vehicle company.
In the interview, Kimbal Musk again recalled the early days of their startup.
âI donât know if you were, but I was not legally in America. So I was illegally there,â he said, looking across the table at his brother.
âI was legally there,â Elon Musk responded, âbut I was meant to be doing student work.â
A few moments later, describing early conversations with the venture capitalists who helped fund Zip2, Kimbal Musk reiterated details heâd shared in his 2013 remarks:  âWe had to break the news to them that ⌠we donât have a car, and we donât have an apartment, and we are illegal.â
This time, Elon Musk denied the description applied to him.
âYouâre illegal,â he said, eliciting laughs from the Tesla fans sitting beside him. âI was legal, but my visa was going to run out in two years.â
During the interview, Elon Musk said that at the time he had a âstudent work visa.â He also noted that he had decided to defer his Stanford enrollment that year âa couple days into the semester.â
The Musk brothers havenât responded to CNNâs requests for comment on this exchange either.
Experts who spoke with CNN say these descriptions of what occurred also raise questions about what kind of work authorization Elon Musk had and which institution helped him get it. The description âstudent work visaâ could be referring to various programs, they said, but itâs not an official term. Student visas are generally strict about how much off-campus work is permitted, and that work authorization is directly tied to the academic institution where a student is enrolled.
The complexities are something todayâs international students, and the administrators who advise them, follow closely, according to Hunter Swanson, associate director of the Center for International Education at Washington and Lee University in Virginia.
A work permit for optional practical training connected to a studentâs areas of academic focus can be granted after graduation, or possibly before graduation if the student is maintaining a full course of study. Itâs also possible during an academic program to get permission to work for course credit. Grace periods after graduation allow someone to stay in the United States for a period of time, but no work is allowed in that window.
A foreign student failing to follow these rules today runs the risk of jeopardizing their future in the United States, Swanson says.
âMost international students are very conscientious. They ask people in my position a lot of questions before they do things like accept a jobâŚor even an unpaid internship,â he says. âTheyâre scared to death of losing their visa status.â
Swanson, who also helps with training as an e-learning dean for an association that represents international educators, says itâs likely regulations werenât enforced as strictly during Elon Muskâs time as a student. Enforcement of student visa restrictions, and the systems officials use to monitor compliance, intensified dramatically after the September 11 terror attacks, Swanson says. That was years after Elon Muskâs college graduation.
Without more information about what visas and work authorization he had â and when he had them â itâs impossible to draw conclusions about Elon Muskâs immigration journey, Swanson says. âItâs very unclear.â
âIt does raise questions,â Swanson says, âbut it doesnât mean what he did wasnât legal.â
Minear, the former American Immigration Lawyers Association president, also says itâs impossible to know Elon Muskâs immigration path without access to the paper trail in his government file. Itâs possible he followed the requirements of his student visa, or that he was granted an exception allowing him to work.
Which institution was connected to his student visa, and when, are key details we donât know, she said.
If his student visa was tied to a graduate program at Stanford, Minear said, he would have to be actively studying there to remain in status.
And if his work authorization was a form of optional practical training tied to his undergraduate studies at Penn, Minear says that typically would have required him to have graduated â something that Vanceâs biography indicates Elon Musk did not do until 1997, well after Zip2 had been established. It would also require Musk to work in a field connected with his degrees, according to Minear.
University of Pennsylvania spokesman Ron Ozio confirmed to CNN that Musk officially graduated in 1997 with degrees in economics and physics.
In Vanceâs biography, Musk is quoted stating he didnât graduate in 1995 due to English and History coursework requirements he hadnât completed. His degrees, he told Vance, were ultimately granted in 1997 because the requirements had changed.
Asked about reports that Musk deferred his Stanford enrollment days into the fall 1995 semester or dropped out of the school, an official at the university told CNN thereâs no record he ever enrolled.
âWe can confirm that Mr. Musk applied and was accepted to Stanfordâs Materials Science and Engineering graduate program,â Stanford Engineering Associate Dean of Communications and Alumni Affairs Julie Greicius wrote in an email, âbut we donât have any record of him enrolling.â
âWhat if Elon Musk had to go through the regular channel?â
Looking at the bigger picture, experts who spoke with CNN also noted that Elon Muskâs story is a telling example of the value immigrants bring to the country.
âThe fact that he had any difficulty at all in getting to where he is because of immigration barriers, or (the possibility) that he was out of status at any time and unable to pursue his entrepreneurial goalsâŚis a poor reflection on our current system and speaks to the need for it to be updated and changed,â Minear says.
Itâs common for foreign students who dream of becoming entrepreneurs to face immigration hurdles, according to Rajshree Agarwal, director of the Ed Snider Center for Enterprise and Markets at the University of Maryland. Many are forced to pursue paths that require them to continue their studies or work in a lower-level position rather than striking out early on their own, she says.
Muskâs investors reportedly helping him obtain a visa âmade him unconstrained from immigration much earlier than is the norm,â Agarwal says. His swift success shows how valuable such support can be, she says, and raises questions about what might have happened if he hadnât gotten it.
Agarwal says based on her research and observations during her 30-year career as a professor, itâs typical for foreign students to face delays of up to 10 years between when they graduate and when they get a green card, the legal step that allows them to start a new venture. Exactly how much time the process can take varies depending on factors like caps on the number of visas issued and country of origin, she says.
âWhat if Elon Musk had to go through the regular channel and wait the average of 8 to 10 years ⌠as opposed to being a founder thatâs able to make decisions and get right to stakeholders already? Zip2 would not have been created. âŚÂ What would have been the loss to this country?â she says.
Or, Agarwal asks, what would have happened if Musk had been deported or forced to return to Canada or South Africa?
He wasnât, and in 1999, Compaq purchased Zip2 for more than $300 million in cash â a deal that provided Elon Musk with more than $20 million and a launch pad for his next entrepreneurial venture. Later that year, he became a cofounder of the online banking system that eventually became PayPal.
How Elon Muskâs views on immigration are shaping the conversation
His business successes since then are well documented â as are his increasingly pointed opinions about immigration.
A CNN analysis of Elon Muskâs posts on X found a marked increase in the number and frequency of his immigration-related posts starting around the time of his border visit last year. This year alone, heâs authored at least 150 immigration-related posts.
That tally, based on a search of immigration-related terms, doesnât reflect times when Musk has simply shared othersâ immigration-related posts or responded to them without directly mentioning words related to the topic â a common approach for Musk, according to Mert Can Bayar, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Washington who studies conspiracy theories and misinformation.
Immigration-related posts from Musk in the past month include a question about whether Arizona is refusing to remove undocumented voters from its rolls, a message slamming unchecked illegal immigration as âcivilizational suicideâ and multiple posts arguing Democrats are deliberately importing migrants and pushing to legalize their status in order to secure political control.
But that hasnât stopped Musk from focusing on the issue. And his posts have a particularly wide reach, Bayar says.
âHeâs the most followed account on X. Every post he does gets millions of views. ⌠When he points out something, itâs a disproportionate number of views, and a disproportionate amount of attention,â says Bayar, whoâs traced Elon Muskâs role in spreading a resurgent rumor and a misleading video about non-citizens voting in US elections.
Zachary Mueller, senior research director for the immigrant advocacy organization Americaâs Voice, says Muskâs posts frequently echo the âgreat replacement theory,â which argues that elites are intentionally facilitating an invasion of non-White migrants to replace the power of White people.
âHeâs amplifying it to a new level, and he becomes part of the problem,â Mueller says.
Musk has denied that heâs pushing the racist theory with his posts.
âI donât subscribe to that. Iâm simply saying there is an incentive here. ⌠The more that come into the country, the more theyâre likely to vote in that direction. It is, in my view, a simple incentive to increase Democratic voters,â he told Don Lemon earlier this year after the former CNN anchor pointed out that only US citizens can vote in federal elections.
But Mueller says thereâs a dehumanizing and racist undertone to many of Muskâs immigration-related posts that shouldnât be overlooked.
He called Muskâs recent remarks during a live conversation on X with Trump âquite disgustingly notable,â pointing out that Musk compared migrants at the border to a âWorld War Z zombie apocalypse.â
While some have downplayed the significance of Muskâs intensified focus on immigration, the entrepreneurâs frequent posts about the issue have caught the attention of policy experts like David Bier, director of immigration studies at the libertarian CATO Institute.
When Musk shared a post earlier this year stating that Democrats would not deport migrants because âevery illegal is a highly likely vote at some point,â Bier responded with links to numerous articles refuting the claim. âThis couldnât be more wrong,â he wrote, pointing out not only the federal law establishing that only US citizens can vote in federal elections, but that most naturalized citizens donât vote and that most formerly undocumented immigrants who received amnesty in the 1980s didnât become citizens for decades, even though they were eligible.
Bier told CNN he felt like he had to chime in. Muskâs inaccurate political framing of the issue, he argues, overlooks the clear reality that economic forces are driving most migration.
âYou canât just totally ignore what heâs saying, because so many people are going to see everything he says,â Bier says. âAnd heâs a world-renowned entrepreneur. He does have some more clout, I think, than just a politician, who people are kind of more skeptical of.â
Beyond social media, there are signs Muskâs views on immigration and other issues are becoming more influential in the halls of power, too.
Trump has said that if heâs reelected, Musk could play a role in his next administration, as an advisor or in a Cabinet position helping improve government efficiency.
Rep. Joe Wilson, R-South Carolina, cited Musk in March remarks on the House floor.
âYesterday Elon Musk shocked America,â Wilson began. He went on to quote one of Muskâs posts on X, which warned âit is highly probable that the groundwork is being laid for something far worse than 9/11. Just a matter of time.â The post included a link to an article describing flights of migrants into the US. Neither the article nor Muskâs post mentioned the flights were part of a government program that aims to create more pathways for migrants to enter the US legally and reduce pressure at the border.
Recent posts focus on pioneering space exploration â and more earthly concerns
A SpaceX rocket successfully launched into orbit for the first time on September 28, 2008 â the first time a privately funded rocket had done so. That achievement, and the intense fact-based research and development process at the company, were documented in a glowing GQ profile of Musk that year. The magazine noted that Muskâs companies were trying to find solutions â with solar power, space travel and electric cars â to what he saw as the major challenges of our time.
But on the 15th anniversary of that rocket launch â a major milestone in Muskâs entrepreneurial life â the billionaire was a world away from the SpaceX conference room where GQ had marveled at his ambitions.
On September 28, 2023, Elon Muskâs focus was decidedly earthbound, as he stood beside officials at the US-Mexico border and held his phone in the air.
âWeâre just going to go around and talk to the major officials and law enforcement and whatnot that are here, and just kind of eyeball the situation, and get a sense of whatâs going on, so you can get kind of, like, the real story,â he said in the live video he shared on X.
Critics argued Muskâs September 2023 border visit, while billed as unfiltered reality, only showed one, slanted side of the issue. But officials who spoke with Musk that day praised him.
âAt least he showed up. ⌠Youâre talking about a person that can put out the truth and touch the world. I think thatâs what Elon did whenever he visited the border, and we appreciate that,â Medina County Sheriff Randy Brown told Fox News.
Elon Musk hasnât responded to questions from CNN about what he hopes others will see in his immigration story, or why heâs become increasingly focused on immigration.
A year later, thereâs no sign Muskâs gaze has shifted.
As SpaceXâs Polaris Dawn mission began earlier this month, he posted frequently on X, touting the companyâs space exploration efforts. But between posts about pioneering missions to the stars, heâs shared just as many messages about immigration and the US border.
Regardless of his motivations or the path he took to get here, itâs clear Elon Musk has added another item to his list of the worldâs biggest challenges.
The-CNN-Wire ⢠& Š 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.
SAN JOSE â Injured San Jose Sharks defensemen Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Shakir Mukhamadullin and goalie Yaroslav Askarov could all begin to skate again soon although questions remain whether any of the three will be ready for the start of the regular season.
Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky said Sunday that Vlasic (upper body), Mukhamadullin (lower body), and Askarov (lower body) are all getting closer to skating on their own but will not be practicing with the team right away.
Vlasic, Mukhamadullin and Askarov have been out since the start of training camp on Sept. 19 as the Sharks have tried to remain patient with each playerâs recovery.
Still, starting Monday, the Sharks will have just three practices and three games left before Oct. 7, when teams must submit cap-compliant rosters of no more than 23 players to the NHL.
The Sharksâ season-opener is Oct. 10 at home against the St. Louis Blues.
Mukhamadullin and Askarov, both waivers-exempt, could be assigned to the Barracuda once they are healthy. Askarovâs injury would seemingly ensure that the Sharks would start the season with two goalies, Mackenzie Blackwood and Vitek Vanecek.
But if Vlasic has to start the season on injured reserve, that would open up a roster spot for another defenseman.
The Sharksâ top six defensemen are Matt Benning, Cody Ceci, Mario-Ferraro, Jan Rutta, Henry Thrun, and Jake Walman. Jack Thompson, followed by Jimmy Schuldt, Jake Furlong, and Luca Cagnoni, lead the seventh spot competition.
Vlasic is entering his 19th NHL season, all with the Sharks. He was a healthy scratch for several games during the first half of last season but played every game for the team in March and April, scoring five points in 24 games and averaging 16:31 in average ice time.
âHe understands what it takes to win in this league,â Warsofsky said of Vlasic, who has played in 1,296 NHL games. âHe understands how to win at this league, and the little habits that you have to play with, and those winning habits that weâre trying to integrate with our team, and I think he understands that.â
Warsofsky said Forward Thomas Bordeleau, out for the past week with his own lower-body ailment, remains more week to week. Bordeleau is also waivers-exempt and can be reassigned to the AHL.
America is called a melting pot â and thatâs certainly true of its food.
The USAâs culinary history is that of reinvention. Waves of food influences â Native, African, British, continental European, Asian and Latin â have landed on our shores (and still do).
People take those classics, mix ânâ match âem and then slowly (or quickly) turn them into definitive American dishes. And then we oftentimes send the reformulated food back out into the wider world to complete the cycle.
From starters to desserts, here are CNN Travelâs 20 selections for the greatest American food dishes:
Barbecue
People enjoy barbecue around the world, but Americans have taken a collective passion for low ânâ slow cooked meat to the next level. Spanish conquistadors brought the cooking style practiced by indigenous Caribbean tribes north. Itâs arguably one of the most-argued about foods in the United States â and weâre well-aware of the grand pizza rivalry.
Four classic, regional BBQ rivalries and styles reign: Carolinas (where theyâve gone whole hog for pork); Texas (where beef is king); Memphis (where itâs all about ribs and rubs); and Kansas City (where a sweet, tomato-based sauce is a must). But thatâs just the beginning. Regional types have their own subsets of disputes.
For instance, head to the South and youâll discover a South Carolina / North Carolina split on sauces. Then in just North Carolina, thereâs the epic division of Eastern (whole hog, vinegar sauce) and Western (pork shoulder, tomato-and-vinegar sauce). In parts of South Carolina, a mustard-based sauce from German immigrants is preferred, and in even more select spots, a relatively secret âbarbecue hashâ is beloved. Meanwhile, âTexas big city barbecueâ is sweeping the whole nation.
The first is how Americans came to embrace various foods and cuisines from Africa that were brought over during the era of the brutal transatlantic slave trade. Okra, which thrives in heat and humidity, became a regular feature in the South on tables of all races and classes.
Then comes in a second tradition: the American love of deep-frying. (We are the nation of the deep-fried Twinkie, after all.)
Okra can be found swimming in gumbos, succotashes and such. Hard-core fans might enjoy the slimy green pods simply steamed or boiled. Theyâre even pickled. But breaded and fried is often the entry point for reluctant first-timers, who can be quickly won over with the crunch and distinctive âgrassyâ flavor.
Itâs still wildly popular in the South. Irmo, a small town in South Carolina, holds a yearly Okra Strut to celebrate the fuzzy-skinned, cylindrical veggie. Fried okra makes a great snack, a proper side dish or one part of another concoction such as the Fried Shrimp and Okra Poâboy a la the Williamsburg Inn in Virginia.
Cobb salad
Californiaâs trendy tendencies go back for decades. After all, this is the state that introduced the pleasing Cobb salad to the rest of the United States.
Credit for the Cobb salad generally goes to Bob Cobb, owner of the now-defunct Brown Derby chain in Los Angeles. Back in 1937, he whipped up and then chopped up a late-night salad at the North Vine location for Sid Grauman of Graumanâs Theater with what he had on hand.
Grauman loved it. Then LA loved it. Then America followed suit. And why not?
The combination of crispy bacon, blue cheese, cold chicken breast, avocado, hard-boiled eggs, tomatoes and lettuce is hard to resist. Of course, Americans love to tinker, and salads can withstand a lot of messinâ around. So there are all kinds of variations, such as a tropical Cobb with spiced chicken and mangoes.
Peanut butter and jelly sandwich
A satisfying and often humble economic mainstay of the masses, the peanut butter and jelly sandwich was once a decidedly fancy treat for elites in the early 20th century.
According to the National Peanut Board, peanut butter was first introduced at the 1893 Worldâs Columbian Exposition in Chicago and became popular in upscale tea rooms. Peanut butter and watercress, anyone?
The first known PB&J sandwich recipe was published in 1901 in the Boston Cooking School Magazine of Culinary Science and used currant or crab-apple jelly. Eventually, mass production techniques in the early 1900s and the introduction of the sandwich as a ration for US military personnel in World War II helped spread the appeal. Parents did the rest, packing the easy-to-assemble, irresistible combo into their kidsâ lunch boxes â or sneaking it into their own brown bags.
The sandwich continues to have a dedicated and sometimes upper-crust following.
Fry bread
Flour, salt, baking powder and maybe sugar combined and cooked in lard or oil. What could be more simple? Or more complicated?
This Native American fare was born of brutal necessity in the mid-1800s when tribes were forced off their lands and relocated to whatâs now New Mexico on âThe Long Walk.â With their native fresh foods unavailable, they made do with government-provided processed staples to keep from starving to death.
Since then, fry bread has become a ubiquitous staple passed down through generations and sometimes sold to tourists visiting native lands. Itâs quite delicious but not particularly nutritious. Itâs a symbol of repression and resilience.
As Kevin Noble Maillard puts it in 2019âs âFry Bread: A Native American Family Storyâ: Fry bread is us.It is a celebration of old and new, traditional and modern, similarity and difference.
Red beans and rice
Talk about a successful food partnership.
Rice has been a vital US crop going back to colonial America, namely in the Carolinas and Georgia where tidal flows and weather made for ideal growing conditions. It was grueling work, conducted by slaves. In the 1800s, Louisiana joined the rice-growing game as mechanization allowed for profitable production there.
Meanwhile, red beans were a staple in Haiti. After its revolution against France, refugees fleeing to New Orleans brought the red bean tradition with them. The two foods made for a natural pairing and became an integral part of the New Orleans and Louisiana culinary identity.
Traditionally enjoyed on Mondays (but hardly limited to that day), red beans and rice is often made with cayenne pepper, smoked andouille sausage along with onions, celery and bell pepper.
The allure isnât just in the rich, smoky, belly-filling taste. The dish is easy on the budget, and red beans are part of the nutritionally powerful legume family.
Hamburger
With the possible exception of apple pie, nothing says âAmerican foodâ quite like a hamburger.
Its super-compressed origin story could be fancifully called âFrom the Golden Horde to the Golden Arches.â Burger expert George Motz traces the modern burgerâs ancestry back to 13th-century Mongolia. The raw mutton concoction from the remnants of the Mongol Empire eventually made its way over centuries to Hamburg, Germany, and shifted in make-up to cooked chopped beef. German immigrants brought it over to the United States, where it eventually made its way onto a bun.
The Founding Fathers werenât scarfing burgers down on the regular while crafting breakaway documents in Philly in the late 1700s, but by the start of the 20th century, hamburgers were quickly ascending as a dominant food in the United States. And in post-World War II America, hamburgers were the foundation of a vast Fast Food Empire.
Thereâs no misunderstanding the hamburgerâs juicy, versatile appeal. Itâs the perfect food for meat-loving, on-the-go, super-size-me, bargain-hunting, cheese-eating, condiment-craving, make-it-my-way Americans.
Apple pie
The fruit itself originally hailed from Asia. The centuries-old penchant for pie came over with colonists from England. But somehow the United States did it again â turning imports into a thoroughly American-identified product.
In the case of apple pie, it hit peak patriotism during World War II as the US soldier fought âfor mom and apple pie.â Itâs now American down to the core.
Geography and climate also helped it claim fruit pie ascendancy. Good-sized chunks of the US mainland â all with four distinct seasons and sloping terrain â proved ideal for growing apples. The top 10 states for apple production cover a lot of territory: Washington, New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, California, Virginia, North Carolina, Oregon, Ohio and Idaho.
Attesting to its enduring popularity: Food & Wine published 22 of its most popular pie recipes in 2022. Three of them were apple pie varieties. As a bonus, warm apple pie pairs well with another American obsession: Ice cream.
Poke
The last state to join the union launched one of Americaâs more recent food trends: the poke bowl. The dish â which today usually consists of cubes of raw ahi tuna or sometimes other cuts of raw seafood such as shrimp or octopus â goes back centuries in Hawaiâi, well before contact with Westerners.
Chef Sam Choy, one of the early drivers of the Hawaiâi regional cuisine movement in the 1990s, helped expand its popularity well beyond the island chainâs shores.
Like many vaunted American dishes, poke (pronounced poh-kay) is an amalgamation of multiple influences. Japanese and Chinese immigrants added the use of shoyu (a type of soy sauce) and sesame oil.
Variations of poke abound. It can be served atop rice, seaweed or in a salad of greens. You might even find it in tacos for a Hawaiian-Latin fusion.
Chili
As with so many foods, the further back you go on ancestry of the modern bowl of chili, the murkier things get. But at least within the United States, the loose consensus is chili was popularized in Texas first. In the 1880s, San Antonioâs downtown was known for its Hispanic outdoor vendors called âchili queens.â At the 1893 Worldâs Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Texas-style chili was a hit. It spread and morphed from there.
Today, many questions still surround chili: Beans or no beans? Beef or turkey? Red chili peppers or green? Oyster crackers or cornbread? Super Bowl or any olâ day?
Many Texans might throw a fit if a bean gets anywhere near their chili. Red-meat purists are unlikely to gobble up the turkey variety. New Mexicans would probably give green peppers the go-ahead. Southerners will likely insist on a side of cornbread.
As for a chili-and-Super Bowl combo, weâll toss that one to Jason Kelce, who lost his Super Bowl ring in a pool filled with Cincinnati-style Skyline chili.
Clam chowder
Some say potato. Some say tomato. Some same chow-dah. Some say chow-der. But weâre all talkinâ âbout clams here, whether itâs the New England variety or the Manhattan variety.
The Encyclopedia Britannica says the word âchowderâ derives from the French chaudière, or âcauldron,â and that it might have originated among Bretons who brought the custom to Newfoundland, where it eventually spread to New England and then beyond.
Clam chowder perfectly illustrates how Americans can be adaptive and divisive at the same time. Certainly, the two clam chowder camps can be very loyal to their type. New England fans swear by their rich, milk- or-creamed-based formula with potatoes, onions, salt pork or bacon along with those divine clams. Manhattan mavens prefer their soupier, tomato-based bowl that might feature onion, garlic, celery and carrots along with potatoes.
Down in the Florida Keys, these debates and preferences are just background noise as they devour bowls of conch chowder. (Conch, a type of sea snail, was a staple of the early settlers).
General Tsoâs chicken
Americans have a special knack for modifying a dish so thoroughly that people in the point of inspiration might not even recognize it. Case in point: General Tsoâs chicken.
Itâs named after a 19th-century general from Hunan province in southeast China, but it was invented by chef Peng Chang-kuei in Taiwan in the 1950s. (He fled to the island with the Nationalist government after the Communist takeover of the mainland in the late 1940s.) The dish first became popular in Taiwan and reflected mainland Hunan tastes â salty, hot and sour. No sugar or sweetness was added.
Eventually, New York City chefs visiting Taiwan in the early 1970s got hip to the dish. But their version â delicious, lightly battered chunks of dark chicken fried in a sweet-and-sour sauce â appealed to that American penchant for anything fried and sweet.
So like egg foo yung, this beloved âChineseâ favorite has taken on a life of its own in the USA.
Reuben sandwich
Corned beef, the key ingredient of a classic Reuben, was developed hundreds of years ago in the British Isles. That âprototypeâ of the salted meat we know today was often produced in Ireland but sent to England for consumption because the Irish of that time were too poor to afford it themselves. The modern corned beef we enjoy comes from the Irish diaspora in America, who turned to Jewish butchers and their kosher brisket cut as a food source.
As for origin story of the sandwich itself, there are competing creator stories. Nebraska and New York City both lay claim to the Reuben (this is one food fight the South and West Coast have managed to avoid).
What we know for sure: As the 20th century rolled on, the deli sandwich became more and more of an American darling. And itâs still quite popular in the Cornhusker State and the Big Apple to this day.
Whatâs not to love? The classic Reuben layers sliced corned beef, Swiss cheese, sauerkraut and Russian or Thousand Island-style dressing on rye bread. Messy and magnificent.
You can also find protein variations across the land: Smoked salmon, turkey and a âTexas Reubenâ that has smoked pastrami brisket.
Grits
This creamy dish has its roots in the culinary culture of Native Americans, who pounded dried corn to make a coarse cornmeal. Theyâd then cook it down into a soup or porridge. Like tomatoes, corn was completely new to European colonizers, who quickly took to the concoction.
Itâs most popular in the âGrits Beltâ stretching roughly from parts of Texas to the Washington, DC, area, and theyâre often eaten as a side at breakfast. But grits can be more than simple, cheap, filling morning fare, as evidenced by the rise of shrimp-and-grits, a popular lunch and dinner option in the fanciest of Charleston, South Carolina, restaurants and beyond.
Grits often are an acquired taste â puzzling to newcomers who might find them a bowl of blandness. The key: Avoid quick-cook varieties and go for stone-ground grits cooked low and slow. Add butter, salt and pepper to taste. Then cut your imagination loose. Grits can host cheese, runny fried eggs, bacon pieces, finely chopped tomatoes, sauteed onions, okra and even venison.
Chocolate chip cookie
Warm-from-the-oven chocolate chip cookies and a cold glass of milk â heaven. Americans have an inventive Massachusetts inn owner back in the late 1930s to thank for this yummy treat.
The story goes that Ruth Wakefield, who ran the Toll House Inn in Whitman, added chopped-up bits from a Nestle semi-sweet chocolate bar to a batch of Butter Drop Do cookies. Things didnât turn out as she had planned. She thought the chips would melt entirely. But what she got â soft, gooey, distinctive bits â was delicious.
Wakefield sold her recipe rights and the Toll House name to the Nestle company in 1939. Soon enough, they were an American classic. You can get the original recipe here.
Besides being delicious, itâs no wonder they became so popular. Americans love a bargain, simplicity and food they can eat on the go. And in those regards, the relatively inexpensive, easy-to-make, imminently portable chocolate chip cookie scores a tasty trifecta.
Gumbo
Itâs hard to overstate Louisianaâs contribution to the American food scene, and itâs equally hard to overstate gumboâs role in the stateâs culinary heritage.
The roots of the dish â found in the humblest of eateries to the finest restaurants â are from West Africa with invaluable contributions from Native American and French cuisines. The hearty stew is traditionally served with rice. As for whatâs in it, that can vary from town to town and cook to cook.
Liâl Dizzyâs CafĂŠ in the Treme neighborhood of New Orleans makes a huge pot of gumbo for lunch every day. That allows for about 60 to 70 servings and takes about two hours to prepare. Their Creole filĂŠ gumbo starts with a roux (a flour and fat mixture for thickness). Then shrimp, crabs, ham, smoked sausage, homemade hot sausage are added along with onion, bell peppers and a little celery.
What would happen if Liâl Dizzyâs pulled it off the menu? âOh, I donât know if Iâd survive it,â owner Wayne Baquet Jr. told CNN Travel. âIt may be the most popular item we have on our menu. Itâs part of our identity.â
Mission burrito
Rice-A-Roni, a traditional parting gift on classic TV game shows, became famous as âthe San Francisco treat.â But the city has rewarded a hungry nation with another food where rice is just one part of the package: the Mission burrito.
This stomach-filling, soul-satisfying burrito is named after the Mission District, the Latino neighborhood that got the trend started (locally at first) in the 1960s. Itâs a much heftier, jampacked take on the slim, flour-tortilla wrapped burritos born in northern Mexico.
A classic Mission burrito typically features a large, steamed flour tortilla; a meat option; black or pinto beans; a choice of condiments such as pico de gallo, guacamole, sour cream and various salsas â and the rice (long-grain, Mexican-style). Itâs rolled up tight and wrapped in foil. Provide your own antacid.
How important is the Mission burrito to the cityâs food legacy? In 2003, humorist and food writer Calvin Trillin wrote: âIn San Francisco the burrito has been refined and embellished in much the same way that the pizza has been refined and embellished in Chicago.â
Banana pudding
By the way that Americans, most particularly those in the South, have taken to banana pudding, youâd think the fruit was grown here in abundance (such as the case with apples). However, the US mainland is just not banana-growing territory.
But since the late 1800s when tropical trade routes opened up, the imported, easy-to-peel fruit has been a star player on the dessert scene.
Like with so many other US faves, variations abound. But a traditional creamy trifle will feature layers of bananas, a vanilla pudding or custard, Nilla wafers (daring heretics might use sponge cake) and then whipped cream or even a meringue. Crushed nuts might go on top.
Banana pudding is a utility player for pretty much any occasion, equally at home at wedding receptions or post-funeral gatherings; church potlucks or backyard beer bashes; fancy restaurants or basic barbecue huts.
Also helping banana puddingâs popularity: Itâs simple to make, can feed an army and the next-day leftovers usually taste better than the first batch.
Spaghetti and meatballs
Ever dreamed of going to Italy and enjoying some authentic meatballs and spaghetti after a long day on the canals of Venice or in the museums of Florence? Well, keep dreaming unless you go to a restaurant catering to US tourists. For this is a dish whose domain is New World Atlantic, not Old World Mediterranean.
We do have Italian immigrants to America â the vast majority from southern Italy in the late 1800s to early 1900s â to thank for the comforting combo of meatballs and tomato sauce over pasta.
These people left an impoverished land where tomato sauce was a cooking staple, but meat was a rare luxury. Back in Italy, meatballs were often served sauceless. They were smaller, might be composed of 50% stale bread and made from beef, lamb, turkey or even fish.
In America, they had more money and cheaper meat. They developed their own style of meatballs, making them larger than those in the home country and with more meat and less bread. To bulk up their meals even more, they added a heaping helping of pasta and a tomato sauce.
An English muffin. Canadian bacon. Does this sound like a beloved American classic?
Well, thatâs what the internationally sourced creation becomes when you add the poached egg and drizzle it all with Hollandaise sauce (a creamy mixture of egg yolks, butter and lemon juice or vinegar).
Various origin stories from the late 1800s abound. The most reported ones all involve a well-to-do man with the last name of Benedict and the special request made by said man of chefs in New York City restaurants. But which exact Benedict and the particulars of when and where the order was made remain disputed to this day.
Eggs Benedict been a staple at brunches across the country for decades. They were even the favorite touring food of rocker Eddie Van Halen.
The breakfast favorite is subject to all types of divine departures â sliced ham or bacon strips might replace the Canadian bacon. Corned beef or smoked salmon are also used. Substitute spinach for the meat, and youâve got Eggs Florentine.
The-CNN-Wire ⢠& Š 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.
SAN JOSE â Thomas Bordeleauâs lower-body injury could have a ripple effect throughout the San Jose Sharksâ lineup, particularly in the competition for one of the teamâs final few roster spots.
Bordeleau was injured in a Sharksâ practice over the weekend and was, or is, competing to start the season in the NHL, perhaps as a third-line winger. Now heâs considered week-to-week, with the Sharks unsure if he can start the regular season on time.
Who jumps into Bordeleauâs spot, should he have to miss the next couple of weeks, might become one of the bigger storylines in training camp as the Sharksâ preseason continues with Thursdayâs game in Anaheim against the Ducks.
On Tuesday, some NHL hopefuls tried to make a case for themselves in what became a 4-3 loss to Anaheim before an announced crowd of 9,462 at SAP Center.
Forward Danil Gushchin scored and added an assist, and veterans Jake Walman and Alexander Wennberg also scored. But the Sharks fell to 0-2-0 in the preseason, thanks mainly to a sloppy second period when San Jose allowed four unanswered goals.
âWeâre going to have to peel some scabs back from the last couple of years and understand that to win in this league, you have to do it shift after shift after shift after shift,â Sharks coach Ryan Warosfsky said. âThereâs guys in there that have won Stanley Cups and have won a lot of hockey games in this league, and Iâm going to rely on those guys quite a bit to drive that home.â
âGood first period, and just like everyone else, not a good second period,â Warsofsky said of Gushchin. âI thought he bounced back in the third and showed some moments. Another young guy who needs to find his way a little bit, and he has a lot to work on.â
Things figure to get a little tougher from here for all players competing for a spot on the Sharks roster as opposing teams start to dress more NHL regulars in games. Anaheimâs lineup Tuesday mainly featured players who will start the season in the AHL.
Here are three takeaways from Tuesdayâs game.
SMITHâS PLAY: Top prospect Will Smith displayed his vision and playmaking ability in the first period, as he set up winger Tyler Toffoli for a quality scoring chance on the power play. Smith finished with over 21 minutes of ice time, had two shots on goal, and won 4 of 8 faceoffs.
âI thought he was pretty good,â Warsofsky said. âHe handled some things, he got inside ice, played with some pace. Obviously, thereâs some things he needs to work on, but I liked his game tonight.â
Smithâs spot on the 23-man roster seems assured, and his offensive skills figure to land him on the scoresheet at some point here. However, his biggest growth area as an NHL centerman will be in the defensive zone.
Being a Massachusetts native, Smith watched former Boston Bruins captain Patrice Bergeron, one of the best two-way centers in NHL history, play regularly. Being a part of the same agency as Bergeron, the two have also gotten to know each other off the ice.
âWe were supposed to get out and golf before I left (the Boston area), but it got a little busy, having to go to the (NHLPA) rookie orientation,â Smith said before Tuesdayâs game. âBut he said whenever I want to reach out, itâll be good.â
Having a six-time Selke Trophy winner a phone call away is a pretty valuable resource for an offensive wizard like Smith, who faced questions about his two-way game in his draft year. He also knows itâll be a work in progress as he starts to compete against some of the best centers in the world, particularly in the Pacific Division.
â(Bergeron) touched on thereâs going to be ups and downs â everyone has said that to me â and itâs a tough league for a reason, the best one in the world,â Smith said, âso youâve got to be there for the ups and the downs.â
IDENTITY PLAY: After Sundayâs 4-2 loss to the Golden Knights, Warsofsky said the team needed to start playing closer to its desired identity: playing with pace and having numbers around the puck all game.
âWe want to be on top of the opponent,â Warsofsky said. âWe had two or three guys doing it. We didnât have four or five guys doing it. And we want to play a little bit quicker, coming out of own end a little bit cleaner.â
The Sharks started off well with goals from Gushchin and Wennberg in the first 11:59 of the opening period. Anaheim, though, controlled things in the second period, and some of the Sharksâ defensive breakdowns that bit them Sunday cropped up again Tuesday.
âMy biggest takeaway is probably a lot of guys trying to get used to each other and getting used to a new system,â Sharks defenseman Jake Walman said. âIt was scrambly at times, but (weâre) trying to kind of set the standard of working hard and skating.â
MAKING A STATEMENT: Just like during Sundayâs game when Givani Smith went after Kaedan Korczak after the Golden Knights defensemen hit Macklin Celebrini, a host of Sharks went at Ducks forward Jansen Harkins, including Barclay Goodrow and Fabian Zetterlund, after he and Smith exchanged cross-checks. Harkins received a penalty, and Smith did not.
Thatâs a non-negotiable for the Sharks this year. If opposing teams take liberties with the Sharksâ best young players, there has to be a response. No questions asked.
âI think weâve touched on being connected, and obviously, those guys have my back there,â Smith said. âFeels nice when youâre going out there knowing your two linemates are going to be there for you.â
FIRST ACTION: Goalie Vitek Vanecek played the first half of Tuesday game and stopped 11 of 12 shots. It was a step in the right direction for Vanecek, who had his 2023-24 season end prematurely with a groin injury in February.
âHe was outstanding,â Warosfsky said. âI thought he was really good. You could tell he was dialed in from the start, made some big saves. But he looked comfortable, confident. He was good tonight.â
Vanecek said heâll take as much game action as the Sharks coaches give him to help him prepare for the season.
âFebruary was the last game,â he said, âso itâs a long time.â
SAN JOSE â San Jose Sharks prospect Will Smith had lunch this week with veteran forwards Logan Couture and Barclay Goodrow, two central players in the teamâs last playoff run in 2019.
Smith, naturally, wanted to know what it was like inside SAP Center more than five-plus years ago on the night Goodrow scored a series-clinching overtime goal in Game 7 against the Vegas Golden Knights, capping arguably the wildest game in team history.
âI actually watch it back on YouTube a lot, and seeing the Shark Tank like that is pretty crazy,â Smith said. âThey were telling me how it was so loud, it was just ringing the entire time.
âItâs our goal to get it back to that.â
With plenty of renewed enthusiasm following a rather transformative summer, the on-ice part of that long process for the Sharks began Thursday with the first day of the teamâs training camp.
New head coach Ryan Warsofsky directed several new players, including top prospects Smith and Macklin Celebrini, through hour-long practices featuring several up-tempo drills.
The overhauled Sharks hope to be a vastly different team than the one that finished last season with an NHL-worst 19-54-9 record, giving them the best chance to draft a potential future franchise cornerstone in Celebrini.
Now, with some more pieces in place, the Sharks feel ready to take a step forward. Certainly, their record could not get much worse.
âI think last year was rock bottom for us as an organization, and now itâs time to start moving forward and pushing things forward,â Sharks general manager Mike Grier said. âNot only myself, but I think the players and everyoneâs excited to get going, turn the page and see what this year brings.â
San Jose Sharksâ first-round draft pick Macklin Celebrini #71 (left), Klim Kostin #10 and Tyler Toffoli #73 take a breather during the first day of training camp, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)Â
Celebrini, who became the first player drafted No. 1 overall by the Sharks in June, already looked right at home during Thursdayâs practice and intrasquad scrimmage, where he scored a couple of pretty goals and was all over the ice.
In one sequence, Celebrini buzzed around the offensive zone before he found a sliver of space in front of the opposing net. A split-second after he took the centering pass from defenseman Gannon Laroque, Celebrini ripped the puck past the glove hand of goalie Georgi Romanov.
âItâs pretty simple. Just get him the puck,â forward Tyler Toffoli said of Celebrini. âYeah, he was pretty good out there.â
âThe more you enjoy something, the more comfortable you are,â Celebrini said. âSo enjoy it.â
Celebrini might start the season as the Sharksâ No. 1 center as captain Logan Couture will likely be on injured reserve to begin the year.
Couture, entering his sixth season as the Sharksâ captain, continues to deal with osteitis pubis â inflammation in the joint between the left and right pubic bones.
After missing all of training camp and the Sharksâ first 45 games, Couture last season returned and played in six straight games from Jan. 20-31 before being shelved again. But he hasnât skated since that Jan. 31 game in Anaheim and still has no timeline for getting back onto the ice.
The Sharks open the season on Oct. 10 at home against the St. Louis Blues.
âIâve played hockey for 30-plus years, and when it just ends abruptly, itâs difficult, especially when you donât really have a choice. The body just breaks down,â Couture said Thursday. âBut thatâs the way professional sports, or sports in general, normally work, not always injuries, sometimes other reasons. But thatâs the situation Iâm in.â
The San Jose Sharks new coach Coach Ryan Warsofsky gives instructions during the first day of training camp, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)Â
Couture was one of four injured Sharks players unable to skate Thursday.
Goalie prospect Yaroslav Askarov and defenseman Shakir Mukhamadullin are both out with lower-body injuries, and veteran defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic has an upper-body injury that Warsofsky said occurred during captains skates earlier this month. Warsofsky said those three are considered day-to-day.
The Sharks would appear to be better positioned to absorb Coutureâs absence than they were last season.
Celebrini and Smith played center during their standout freshman seasons at Boston University and Boston College, respectively. The Sharks also added Goodrow and Alexander Wennberg this summer and have Mikael Granlund and Nico Sturm back from last season.
The Sharksâ forward group could have as many as seven or eight new players this season, and the defense corps added some needed experience with the acquisitions of Jake Walman and Cody Ceci. Askarov, the Sharksâ hope, will be the goalie of the future.
It all adds up to what the Sharks hope will be the most competitive camp in years, a message Grier relayed to the players on Wednesday.
âItâs about compete and earning your opportunities that maybe somewhat in the past, (there were) guys in the lineup or on the roster that maybe shouldnât have been,â Grier said. âNow thereâs legitimate competition throughout, and thereâs no one where we donât feel like we have to force someone onto the lineup.
âThat was kind of the message to the guys, young and old. If you want a spot and you want to earn something, youâve got to go out there and take it. No oneâs going to give it to you anymore.â
San Jose Sharksâ Nico Sturm takes a shot during the teamâs first day of training camp, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)Â
The Sharks were in a downward spiral for three years before Grierâs arrival in the summer of 2022, yet the front office at the time was still unwilling to publicly state that they needed to rebuild after a decade and a half of success.
Then Grier arrived, ripped off the band-aid, stripped the roster down to the studs, and endured two of the most painful seasons in franchise history.
But now, with a restocked farm system led by Celebrini, is when all that heartache starts to pay off. Or at least, thatâs the hope.
âI think weâre all trying to look forward,â Grier said. âWe appreciate what was done here. I think (former Sharks GM) Doug (Wilson) did a great job, and it was something special to be so competitive for such a long time. But now I think itâs our turn and the groupâs turn to start writing their own history.â
Despite the additions, the Sharks are still expected to again finish near the bottom of the NHL standings. Few, if any, prognosticators believe the Sharks will make the playoffs this season, but thereâs also a feeling among the players that they might not be as far off as some think.
Goodrow said the atmosphere inside the Shark Tank during and after that Game 7 against Vegas, âwas the loudest building Iâve ever experienced. When weâre rolling here and the teamâs competitive, itâs a great place to play and a great building to play in.
âItâs on us as players to get that back and bring the standard to what it was.â
Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, Harvey Rosenfield, author of Prop. 103, Bruce Breslau and Gigi Bannister, whose policies were canceled and face large increases in insurance costs, listen to State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara present reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Bruce Breslau, whose HOA in Chatsworth had a 400 percent insurance increase confronts State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara after he spoke before state regulators outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara leaves an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Assembly members Avelino Valencia and David Alvarez listen to State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara present reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara reads a prepared speech outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara reads a prepared speech outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Bruce Breslau, whose HOA in Chatsworth had a 400 percent insurance increase and Gigi Bannister, who was forced into the FAIR plan for her Crestline home, confront State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara after he spoke before state regulators outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
1 of 7
Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, Harvey Rosenfield, author of Prop. 103, Bruce Breslau and Gigi Bannister, whose policies were canceled and face large increases in insurance costs, listen to State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara present reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Minutes before a top insurance regulator outlined reforms to stem an exodus of insurance companies from California, homeowners and consumer advocates assailed those plans as an attempt to undo the stateâs landmark insurance law, Proposition 103.
Speaking on the steps of Los Angeles City Hall, two Southern California residents described how the stateâs insurance crisis left them with reduced coverage and increased costs.
State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara âisnât doing his job,â said Crestline homeowner Gigi Bannister, 64. âHe needs to hold the insurance companiesâ feet to the fire.â
Jamie Court, pres. of Consumer Watchdog, speaks to state assembly members during an insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall after State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara presented reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies which Court sees as an attempt to undo the stateâs landmark insurance measure, Prop. 103. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)Â
In a city hall meeting room, Lara later defended those very reforms, saying that âby mid-2025 in California, we (will) have insurance companies running back in every corner of the state.â
In recent months, Lara has been crisscrossing the state advocating for what he called the stateâs biggest insurance reform in three decades. Climate change and massive wildfires kindled an urgent need to bring the stateâs rate-review system into the 21st century, he said.
âMassive wildfires are burning just miles from where we sit, fueled by record-breaking heat waves and continued dry winds,â Lara told committee members on the 10th floor of City Hall.
Before the hearing, however, consumer advocates argued that the proposed reforms will gut Prop. 103, the 1988 citizen reform designed to keep California insurance rates in check by forcing insurance companies to publicly justify rate-hike requests.
State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara reads a prepared speech outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies before an Assembly Committee on Insurance hearing on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Los Angeles City Hall. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)Â
Consumer Watchdog founder Harvey Rosenfield said the insurance industry spent 36 years trying to undercut Prop. 103, âand they finally found an insurance commissioner willing to do the dirty work for them.â
Rosenfield and others from Consumer Watchdog argued the reforms would allow insurance companies to keep their proprietary catastrophe modeling algorithms private. Another provision allowing for rate hikes to take effect 60 days after they are filed eliminates the ability of public âintervenorsâ to review the increases.
âOver the last 36 years, one elected commissioner after another (has held) the line,â Rosenfield said. âAnd now suddenly the dam has burst, and (insurers) are getting everything theyâve asked for.â
Increased risk from fire, floods and hurricanes sparked devastating insurance rate hikes across the country and around the world, Lara countered during the Assembly hearing.
Company filings for homeownersâ insurance rate hikes in California jumped from an average of 120-150 per year prior to 2019 to about 450 in 2022, state officials said.
Bruce Breslau, whose HOA in Chatsworth had a 400 percent insurance increase confronts State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara after he spoke before state regulators outlining reforms designed to rescue California property owners from an exodus of insurance companies on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)Â
During the past 2 ½ years, insurance providers including Allstate, Farmers, State Farm and Travelers announced plans to stop underwriting new policies in California and deny renewal to hundreds of thousands of policyholders in fire-prone areas of the state.
Residents started getting premium hikes as high as 1,000%. Others have been unable to get traditional coverage and have been forced to seek policies from the stateâs FAIR plan, which provides higher-cost coverage for customers unable to get traditional policies from private providers.
Lara noted that homeowners arenât the only ones affected. Condo associations have been struggling to replace fire and casualty coverage, as have homebuilders and affordable housing developers.
The insurance commissioner cited a recent California Association of Realtors survey showing that nearly 7% of home sales fell out of escrow because of insurance issues.
âInsurance touches absolutely every aspect of our life,â he said.
Laraâs proposed reforms would streamline the process for insurance rate reviews and allow insurance companies to take into account cost increases for purchasing âre-insuranceâ from back-up insurance providers.
The reforms also would allow insurance companies to base rate hikes in part on computer-generated risk projections known as âcatastrophe modeling.â
Lara argued that California is the only U.S. state to not use catastrophe modeling in rate-setting decisions.
Insurance companies applauded the proposed reforms, vowing to expand coverage in California if theyâre adopted by the end of the year, as planned.
âCaliforniaâs outdated regulatory environment is in need of some fixing,â said Laura Curtis of the American Property and Casualty Insurance Association. âWe support urgent action to streamline the rate-making process.â
Homeowners speaking before and during the hearing only know that they are suffering in todayâs market.
Bruce Breslau, a resident of the Iverson Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, said his 290-unit homeowners association faced a 400% insurance hike for reduced coverage after Farmers Insurance terminated its coverage. The association had to levy a $4,700 special assessment on every property owner to pay for the new $1.7 million policy from various providers.
âWeâve got a diverse community, old, young, all persuasions, and weâve got many people who are on fixed incomes,â Breslau said. â ⌠We need a law bringing these regulated insurers back into our marketplace for premiums that are reasonable.â
PARIS â Natalia Grossman may be one of the only athletes who credits her confidence in competition to not making an Olympic team.
The year was 2021. The world was just emerging from the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, Grossman was just emerging, at age 19, as one of the worldâs best climbers. She won her first World Cup bouldering event in Salt Lake City that May. The following week, she repeated the feat, this time handing Slovenian legend Janja Gambret, who missed the previous Utah contest, her first loss in three years.
Yet, when roll call was taken for climbingâs Olympic debut a few months later, Grossman wasnât there. The Santa Cruz native hadnât had enough success during the qualification window, which closed about six months prior to the Games, to warrant her inclusion.
Team USA climber Natalia Grossman, a Santa Cruz native, reacts during the Womenâs Boulder & Lead semifinals at the 2024 Summer Olympics on Tuesday in Paris. (Michael Reaves â Getty Images)Â
Rather than being salty over a lost opportunity, Grossman said sheâs appreciative of it. Focusing on World Cups when much of the world was consumed with the Olympics, she said, built her confidence. Since then sheâs worked her way through the world ranks almost as fast as she can work her way around boulder problems.
This Olympics, there was no way she wouldnât be competing for Team USA.
âIt hadnât even been a goal of mine to go to the Olympics,â Grossman said of the Tokyo Games. âSo I was kind of chillinâ, and it was fun.
âI think because a lot of people werenât doing World Cups, especially in the summer, that gave me a time to kind of get used to it without all the field being there and just have that confidence of, âI can podium. I can win. I can do well.â And then once they came back, once everyone was there, I had that belief in myself already.â
Grossman, 22, has lassoed that belief and her talents to the top of the sport with no top-out in sight.
First she rode the momentum of that hot start in Salt Lake City to the womenâs boulder overall World Cup title in 2021. Then, she won it again in 2022 and 2023. In the overall lead standings, she wrapped up 2021 in second and 2022 in third. The two disciplines have been combined for the Paris Olympics competition.
After finding her fingerhold in the sport too late to make the Tokyo Olympics, this time Grossman reserved her spot early. Really early. She nabbed it by taking the gold medal at the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, last October. Her qualification dovetailed with another accomplishment â graduating from the University of Colorado â as well as a move to Salt Lake City, the site of USA Climbingâs headquarters. All that meant she had plenty of time to train.
Maybe too much time.
Team USA climber Natalia Grossman, a Santa Cruz native, competes during the Womenâs Boulder & Lead semifinals at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris on Tuesday. (Al Bello â Getty Images)Â
âThat was kind of a challenge at first,â Grossman said, âbecause I went a little ham last year and overtrained a bit.â
She also had plenty to work on, though. USA Climbing coach Josh Larson said despite Grossmanâs fledgling success on the World Cup circuit, her training regime was completely revamped to prepare her for Paris. The focus, Larson said, has been on finesse and precision, rather than the power climbing favored in the United States.
âAs soon as she moved to Salt Lake, thatâs where we focused all of our training was on World Cup prep,â Larson said. âAthletes were exposed to that pretty quickly. (And the reaction usually was) âWow, this is very different and very hard, not forgiving at all.â â
The change doesnât seem to have affected the confidence Grossman built during that Tokyo Olympics year. She showed immaculate precision in taking down a boulder during Tuesdayâs Olympic semifinals.
âThat was a demonstration of accuracy,â two-time World Cup winner Shauna Coxsey remarked on the NBC broadcast.
Grossman enters Thursdayâs lead semifinals in fifth, just below leader Garnbret. Sheâs also on the heels of Brooke Raboutou, a 2021 Olympian and Grossmanâs good friend (and the daughter of Grossmanâs personal coach), who wrapped up the round in third with Franceâs Oriane Bertund in second and Australiaâs Oceania Mackenzie in fourth.
After Thursdayâs lead results are factored into the scores, the top eight climbers will advance to Saturdayâs combined boulder-and-lead medal round.
So far, the immense attention and sold-out crowds climbing has drawn in Paris hasnât seemed to rattle Grossman. Then again, sheâs been building toward her Olympic moment for seven years now.
âSheâs very dialed,â Larson said. âShe knows herself really well.â
The Dominican Sisters of San Rafael have sold their retreat center, Santa Sabina, to a not-for-profit organization for $11.5 million.
The buyer is the Hoffman Institute, which, according to its website, is âdedicated to transformative adult education, spiritual growth, and the personal dimensions of leadership.â
The organization will use the San Rafael center, built in 1939 to house young women preparing to enter the Dominican order, to conduct its seven-day residential courses.
The institute, which has its administrative offices on Fourth Street in San Rafael, has been conducting its classes at 101 San Antonio Road in northern Novato. It purchased the property from the Institute of Noetic Sciences for $16 million in 2021.
The Hoffman Institute sold the 193-acre property to Marin Creek, a Delaware-based limited liability company, for $20 million in May. Representatives of Marin Creek could not be reached for comment.
âWe had owned a place called White Sulfur Springs in St. Helena, California, which had been our home for 25 years,â said Matthew Brannigan, the Hoffman Instituteâs vice president and director of faculty. âThat burned in the Glass Fire, so we really needed to find a home quickly.â
However, the Novato property included more land than the institute needed, Brannigan said.
âA lot of our time and attention was needing to be spent beyond our core program,â he said. âItâs been challenging for us to sustain that.â
âThe new buyers have expressed to us a vision for that site that extends beyond what we had intended for it,â he said. âThey helped us discover Santa Sabina, and it appears to be a win-win-win for three organizations.â
The Dominican nuns have used Santa Sabina as a retreat open to spiritual seekers of various traditions since 1970. They put it up for sale in September 2023 at an asking price of $11.5 million, citing the orderâs dwindling numbers and the increasing costs of maintaining the center.
âWe had several different groups to dialogue with, but Hoffman came in on all the measures that we were looking for,â said Margaret Diener, director of the center and a member of the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael. âIt turned out to be a very positive fit. We feel lucky that we have found someone who wants to continue using the center as a retreat site.â
The Hoffman Institute charges $5,350 for its weeklong retreats that feature its trademarked methodology, the âHoffman Quadrinity Process.â
The process was created in 1967 by Bob Hoffman, an Oakland tailor with no formal training in psychology, psychiatry or psychotherapy. Hoffman claimed to have had a vision of his deceased psychiatrist, Siegfried Fischer, telling him that the key to emotional healing is for people to reconcile themselves with the emotional trauma caused by their parents.
In its initial form, the process involved engaging a spirit guide to establish psychic contact with oneâs parents when they were children. People undergoing the process were encouraged to discharge their pent-up resentment toward their parents by crying, screaming and beating pillows.
Brannigan, who has undergone the process and works as one of the instituteâs 40 certified instructors, said that Hoffman, like developmental psychologists, attributed many emotional problems to parenting in early childhood.
âWe do invite people to look at their own parentsâ childhood,â Brannigan said, âto find a place of compassionate understanding for what their parents must have experienced in their own childhood.â
âTo that extent, yes, we are inviting people to form a kind of connection to their mother and father through their own imagery and understanding,â he said, âbut I wouldnât say itâs necessarily a psychic connection.â
As for beating pillows, Brannigan said, âWe do expressive, cathartic work that helps people discharge held energy. It doesnât necessarily require screaming.â
Diener said, âTheir work has to do with holistic integration of the self, as far as I understand it. Many of the groups that currently use Santa Sabina have similar kinds of programming, so they fit in.â
Celebrities such as Katy Perry and Justin Bieber have undergone the process, and stories about the Hoffman Institute have appeared in such magazines as British GQ and Cosmopolitan.
The Hoffman Institute began offering its multi-day retreat in 1985. Brannigan estimates that 120,000 people worldwide have undergone the process. He said the instruction is being provided in 13 or 14 countries.
The organizations offering the retreats in other countries are separate financial entities. Brannigan said that Hoffman Institute International, an umbrella organization, ensures that best practices are being maintained across the different locations.
Brannigan said he has a masterâs degree in psychology from Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, but a bachelorâs degree in any subject is the only academic requirement to work as a Hoffman Institute instructor.
âBecause weâre not doing therapy, we donât require credentialed therapists,â Brannigan said. âWe look for people with really great empathy.â
Brannigan said there will be some refurbishment at Santa Sabina but no major changes.
âWeâre not doing any kind of teardown or anything like that,â he said. âWe do see some renovation of the classrooms, adding air conditioning, some things like that.â
The buildingâs Tudor-Gothic architecture was inspired by the Dominican Monastery at Stoke-on-Trent in England. The center includes a chapel that accommodates 40 to 60 people, a prayer room suitable for a gathering of a similar size, a conference room that seats 100 people, a dining room that seats 60 people, 38 bedrooms, a library, a pillow room adjacent to the library with a wood-burning fireplace, a smaller meeting room that fits about a dozen people, three staff offices, an inner courtyard garden, a straw bale hermitage and a yurt.
Diener said the money from the sale will help cover the ongoing cost of caring for members of the order and maintaining its remaining property. Diener and a few staff members who live at the center will be forced to relocate.
âThis is a hard place for us to let go of,â Diener said. âItâs deep in our history. Itâs a place we love dearly. Many sisters who are still active in the order made their novitiate here, so it holds a special place in their hearts.â
SAN JOSE â The Sharksâ extreme offseason makeover continued Monday as they signed free agent veteran forwards Tyler Toffoli and Alexander Wennberg to multiyear contracts, adding to an already sizeable group of new players that general manager Mike Grier hopes will make the team more competitive.
âSometimes it takes some time to do things, and thereâs still a lot of work to be done,â Grier, now in his third season, said Monday, the first day of NHL free agency. âBut I think now weâre starting to at least head towards being the type of team I would like us to be.â
Toffoli, a winger who has played for seven different teams over the past five seasons, was signed to a four-year, $24 million contract with a full no-movement clause. Considering the Sharksâ prospect pool, led by Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith, Toffoli was interested in coming to San Jose.
âIt seems like the team is going in the right direction here,âToffoli said. âJust excited to be part of the process.â
âTyler was at the top of our list,â Grier said.
The Sharks then added center Wennberg, 29, to a two-year, $10 million deal that contains a full no-trade clause for the first season.
The 32-year-old Toffoli, a 2014 Stanley Cup champion with the Los Angeles Kings, has scored 260 goals in his 12-year career, including 87 in the last three seasons, despite moving from Calgary to New Jersey to Winnipeg.
Wennberg has 335 points in 712 NHL games and has spent most of his career as a middle-six forward in stints with Columbus, Florida, Seattle, and the New York Rangers.
Both players figure to not only add some badly needed scoring punch to the Sharks, who had the second-fewest goals in the NHL last season with 181, but also provide some insulation to Smith, the fourth-overall selection in 2023, and Celebrini, the top pick this year.
Smith, 19, led all NCAA Division I players in scoring last season with 71 points in 41 games for Boston College and signed with the Sharks in May. Celebrini of Boston University was the Hobey Baker Award winner as college hockeyâs top player with 64 points in 38 games.
Those players needed some support after the Sharks finished last season with a 19-54-9 record, missing the playoffs for a fifth straight year. Toffoli and Wennberg, the Sharks envision, should provide some, along with the teamâs other veterans.
Toffoli and Wennberg, perhaps not coincidentally, have the same representative as Celebrini in Pat Brisson.
âYou can just see how skilled he is and how hard he works,â Toffoli said of Celebrini. âIâve heard nothing but great things about him, being part of the same agency. Itâs an exciting time, and I think thatâs also another major reason for me wanting to come here, which was to be able to play with him.â
Celebrini, 18, still hasnât officially declared whether heâll turn pro or return to school for a second season. However, the addition of forwards Toffoli and Wennberg would seem to provide the kind of insulation his dad, Dr. Rick Celebrini, a Warriorsâ vice president, wanted for his son before he started his NHL career.
Toffoli had a leadership role with the rebuilding Montreal Canadiens three years ago and spent the first three-quarters of this past season with the New Jersey Devils around Luke and Jack Hughes.
âI think for myself, itâs just coming to the rink every day and trying to teach him how to be a pro,â Toffoli said of Celebrini. âItâs not easy coming out of college or junior, turning pro and playing in the NHL. Just working hard every day, and if he sees those habits and he continues to progress, heâs going to be a special player. He already is a special player.â
Often used as a second-line center by Seattle. Wennberg can be seen as an insurance policy for the Sharks if captain Logan Couture cannot return to the lineup full-time next season.
Couture missed the first 55 games of last season as he dealt with a sometimes debilitating groin injury called osteitis pubis. He played in six straight games at the end of January, but his injury returned, and he did not play the rest of the season after the all-star break.
âI think that went into the thinking a little bit, but weâre very hopeful that (Couture) will be able to play and contribute,â Grier said. âItâs a little insurance, sure, but hopefully (Couture) can play.â
The Sharks have made some massive roster changes this week, probably for the better.
Forwards Filip Zadina, Jack Studnicka, Mike Hoffman, Alexander Barabanov, Kevin Labanc, and Ryan Carpenter, defensemen Calen Addison, Jacob MacDonald, Kyle Burroughs, and Nikolai Knyzhov, and goalie Devin Cooley are gone.
Toffoli, Wennberg, Smith, Barclay Goodrow, Ty Dellandrea, Carl Grundstrom, and defenseman Jake Walman are new additions.
With Wennberg, Couture, Granlund, Goodrow, and Nico Sturm, the Sharks have five centers with significant NHL experience. Luke Kunin, Thomas Bordeleau, and William Eklund can also play the position.
With the Wennberg contract, the Sharksâ projected cap hit for this upcoming season is just over $71 million, a number bound to grow after the Sharks get a large group of RFAs under contract.
Grier said heâs done most of the heavy lifting in shaping the 2024-25 season roster, although some minor additions could still be made.
âIâm excited for the organization and the guys in the room,â Grier said. âWhen you get into the office this morning, you never know how (free agencyâs) going to go. You just hope youâre going to be able to get a guy you really like.â
In honor of July 4, Six Flags Discovery Kingdom will celebrate with patriotic festivities that includes an all-new nightly drone show.
Each of the four nights, the sky above Discovery Kingdom will come to life through the use of 200 drones illuminating the night with animated figures. The new drone display will recreate patriotic and iconic Six Flags imagery up to 400 feet in the sky.
âWeâre thrilled to be hosting four days of Six Flags 4th of July Celebration, our favorite summer event, with festivities for the entire family, including an exciting new drone show,â said Park General Manager Kirk Smith. âWe are proud to present this event to celebrate our countryâs Independence Day, to display patriotism, and bring families and friends together for what we do best, which is fun!â he added.
Six Flags Discovery Kingdom is proud to present park-wide entertainment each day including:
A nightly, spectacular drone show beautifully choreographed to feature iconic patriotic and Six Flags imagery from up to 400 feet in the sky at 9:15 p.m.
Premium drone show viewing by Lake Chabot in the parkâs Chabot Stadium; Live entertainment featuring music, dancing and more.
Kids Activity Zone with games and prizes; and Special festive limited-time food and drink offerings at several park locations.
For additional information on Six Flags visit sixflags.com/discoverykingdom/events.
SAN JOSE â The San Jose Sharks have officially re-signed two forwards, bringing back Luke Kunin and Justin Bailey on one-year contracts.
Kunin, who turns 27 in December, will be an unrestricted free agent at the end of his contract. He scored 18 points in 77 games this season, his first since he had surgery to repair a torn right anterior cruciate ligament in Dec. 2022. As was previously reported, his deal is worth $2.75 million.
The Sharks signed Bailey, a pending UFA, Â to a two-way deal worth $800,000 at the NHL level, a source confirmed.
Kunin, with his blue-collar work ethic, versatility, and willingness to stick up for teammates, is the type of player the Sharks want around to help provide an example to the younger players theyâre set to bring into the lineup this upcoming season.
âHe helps drive the culture,â Sharks general manager Mike Grier said of Kunin on Friday. âKunin shows up every night. Heâs a good example for our young players; he plays hard, competes, plays hurt, all the things youâre looking for in players to help show our younger players that this is what it takes to be in the NHL and be a professional.â
The Sharks have also brought in Barclay Goodrow, Carl Grundstrom, and Ty Dellandrea to help provide a bit of insulation. NHL free agency starts Monday and the Sharks will likely be in the market for more additions.
With Kunin, the real possibility exists that if the Sharks, as expected, are out of the postseason picture by next yearâs NHL trade deadline, he could be shipped out to contending teams for future assets.
Did Grier want to go with a longer term for Kunin?
âWe talked about it,â Grier said. âItâs always a fine line with term and money and trying to find common ground. So I think both sides felt one year was good, and weâll revisit as the season goes on.â
Bailey, 28, had 14 points in 59 games for the Sharks this past season, averaging just over 11 minutes of ice time per game. He also spent time with the Barracuda â after he initially joined the organization on a PTO â and had 11 points in 16 AHL games before signing with the Sharks on Nov. 27, 2023.
The San Jose chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association named Bailey the Sharksâ Masterton Trophy nominee. The award is given annually to the NHL player who best exemplifies perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to hockey.
When Bill Cheney led the National Trade Association, policymakers often asked him, âIf credit unions are as good a deal as you say, why isnât everyone a member of a credit union?â
His response was always, âExactly!â
âIf I were the CEO of a bank, my job would be to maximize the value of that bank for the shareholders,â said Cheney, who is now the CEO of SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union, the largest credit in California for school employees and their families. âWe donât pay dividends to shareholders because we donât have shareholders; we pay dividends to our members. Our job is to put members first. Itâs really an amazing business model.â
As a member-owned, not-for-profit financial cooperative, SchoolsFirst is part of a unique and trusted banking experience 90 years in the making.
Founded on June 12, 1934 during the Great Depression, what was then the Orange County Teachers Credit Union began when 126 school employees pooled $1,200 to establish it. The credit union has grown steadily since.
A 2020 merger with Sacramento-based Schools Financial Credit Union made the stateâs largest credit union even bigger. Originally serving Orange County, it now covers the entire state, offering a variety of products and services such as checking and savings, credit cards, home and car loans and retirement planning.
With this expansion, SchoolsFirstâs big challenge is educating younger generations about credit unions while safeguarding its membersâ finances against cyberattacks and effectively integrating new technologies.
Southern California News Group spoke to Cheney about SchoolsFirstâs 90 years of serving school employees and their families and what the future might hold. The interview has been edited for space:
Q: Do all credit unions focus on a specific community?
A:Â Credit unions have whatâs called a field of membership. Our field of membership is the educational community and has changed only in the sense that weâve expanded geographically.
Q: Did that expansion coincide with your recent merger?
A:Â No, we actually expanded our charter before that.
Schools Financial became part of SchoolsFirst on January 1, 2020, but our systems were integrated toward the end of the year. When we planned the merger, we didnât plan to send everybody home in the middle of March â hats off to our team for pulling it off.
Q: What impact did the pandemic have on your day-to-day business?
A: Weâre an essential business, so we kept all our branches open except those serving colleges, universities and school districts. For example, we closed a small branch at Cal State Fullerton, but our biggest, oldest and busiest branch in Santa Ana stayed open.
We had to move quickly to protect the employees at our branches. But we also sent hundreds of team members home, so we had to make arrangements for them to work from home.
That first week, I reassured our team â and the rest of our leadership team did as well â that everybodyâs job was protected regardless of their role in the organization and that our members needed us now more than ever.
Q: And how did you reassure your members?
A: We have an emergency loan program for use if, for example, thereâs a state government shutdown and peopleâs pay is delayed. It hasnât happened for a while, but it has happened. And so, we had this program in place (during Covid-19).
The government stepped in and provided stimulus payments, so we didnât have to utilize (the program) too much. But some of our members did lose their jobs and that emergency loan program helped them through that interim period until the government stimulus kicked in.
But the big challenge credit unions face is educating younger generations about their value, mission, and purpose because itâs not always clear. Even some of our members refer to us as their bank. We are in the banking business, but we are not a bank. Weâre a credit union; weâre a mutual.
We have board members like a bank, but our board members are elected by our members to serve as volunteers to run this $30 billion financial institution. They represent our membersâ interests, and that builds trust.
Q: Can we talk about services? For example, there is immense pressure in California to own and finance a home. How is SchoolsFirst working to make these loans happen for your members, and how much of the business does it represent?
A:Â People are challenged by higher interest rates and higher prices. Higher interest rates are good for our members who save, but if youâre a borrower, itâs challenging. You used to be able to get a mortgage for 3%, and now theyâre close to 7% and higher. Thatâs a big difference on a home payment in a high-priced market like California.
Real estate is a huge part of our businessânot as much as it was when rates were lower, but we do make a lot of mortgage loans and home equity loans. Most of our real estate team is in Tustin, although we also have operation centers in Riverside and Sacramento.
With first mortgage lending, we do have some flexibility, but the rates are pretty much set by the secondary market. Our rates are competitive, but the difference may not be as much on the real estate side, just because of the way the market works.
Whatâs different are the fees and the terms of the loans. For instance, we have a special school employee mortgage with a low down payment and no private mortgage insurance requirement. By not requiring them to have that, weâre able to lower their monthly cost quite dramatically.
Q: Do you ever bundle and sell loans?
A:Â It does happen occasionally, but when we sell a loan, we retain the servicing. The member still comes through us for everything.
Q: Why do you think SchoolsFirst has managed to grow when smaller credit unions have folded or been absorbed?
A:Â Weâve expanded geographically, and weâve certainly changed a lot in the products and services that we offer over the 90 years. I actually started on the 80th year of the credit union, coincidentally, and weâve seen a lot of growth in that time period. But really, since our beginning, weâve stayed focused on school employees and their families with, as we say in our mission statement, world-class personal service.
Q: What does the future look like for SchoolsFirst?
A: Things are now changing faster than ever, and our memberâs needs are changing. Cybersecurity is a huge deal. We have a great team here that protects our system and our servers. And, of course, you canât open a newspaper or turn on a program without hearing about AI.
In some respects, weâve been using artificial intelligence in our business for a long time, but it isnât the same as people. If a member calls with a question, for example, we have an internal pilot that uses AI to help our team quickly find the answer by going through thousands of pages of standard operating procedures. But a person always answers the memberâs question.
Continuing to focus on our members and anticipate their needs and look out for their financial wellbeingâitâs what got us to this point. And thatâs what is going to make us successful in the future.
Q: Will you continue to expand geographically?
A: Yes. We are expanding geographically in several ways. We provide a wholly-owned subsidiary organization that provides third-party administration services to more than 300 school districts and county offices. Thatâs expanding statewide as far north as Nevada County.Â
We also work with a third party to help us understand where our members are and where thereâs potential for growth in terms of our future expansion. We typically add two or three branches a year, so itâs not rapid growth; itâs controlled. Even if people never go into a branch, they like to know that there is one convenient to them in case they need it.
Bill Cheney is the CEO of SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Bill Cheney is the CEO of SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Bill Cheney is the CEO of SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Bill Cheney
Title:Â CEO
Organization: SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union has more than 30 billion in assets and serves 1.4 million school employees and their families. It has 69 branches and more than 300 ATMs statewide. Members can also access a cooperative of thousands of free ATMs there and nationwide.
When he first joined a credit union:Â âMy initial introduction to credit unions was (at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin),â he said. âI worked for the State Property Tax Board and joined the Public Employees Credit Union in Austin, Texas, in the early â80s.â
How he ended up working for credit unions: After graduating from college, Cheney spent five years at what was then Andersen Consulting.
âOne of my clients was the Security Service Federal Credit Union in San Antonio, Texas,â he said. âI worked there off and on different consulting assignments, mostly having to do with technology. In 1987, I was offered an opportunity to work for the Security Service. That was my first credit union job.â
Moving around the credit union world: Cheney moved his family to California in 1997, where he spent nine years as CEO of what was then Xerox Federal Credit Union in El Segundo and another four years as CEO of the California and Nevada Credit Union Leagues. He also spent four years as CEO of the Credit Union National Association in Washington, D.C.
In 2014, Cheney returned to California and settled in Orange County as CEO of SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union.
Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry and his wife, Ayesha Curry, have welcomed their fourth child.
The couple announced on social media Sunday that Ayesha gave birth to a baby boy named Caius Chai on May 11.
âOur sweet baby boy decided to make an early arrival!!â the couple wrote on Instagram. âHeâs doing great and we are finally settling in at home as a family of 6! So grateful!â
The couple now has two girls and two boys: daughters Riley, 11, and Ryan, 8, and son Canon, 5.
Ayesha Curry, 35, revealed in March in the magazine she founded, Sweet July, that the couple was expecting her fourth child after the two initially believed that they would not have any more children.
âFor so many years, Stephen and I thought we were done,â Ayesha wrote. âWe said, âThree, thatâs it, weâre not doing this again.â And then, last year, we looked at each other and agreed we wanted to do this again. For me, the decision came from always finding myself looking around and feeling like somebody was missing. I would load up the car and think, âOh, I forgot something.â But nobody was forgotten.
âIt started to turn my brain a little bit. Maybe somebody was missing. So we set out on this journey, knowing that this would complete our family.â
Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry and his wife Ayesha Curry lead cheers for Oakland Marathon runners.(Desmond Gribben for Eat. Learn. Play.)Â
Steph Curry posted a photo of his pregnant wife wearing white high heels and a white bra under a brown blazer on March 1, saying they were getting ready to welcome âVol. 4â of their family.
Steph met Ayesha when they were both teenagers. On March 23, Ayeshaâs birthday, Curry wrote on Instagram, âMy woman!!!! @ayeshacurry Taking this moment to shout you from the roof tops and say Happy Birthday đđĽłđ. You are everything to me and our beautiful family.
âThe smile and the goofiness that lights up the room. But always count on you to keep it real and keep our family pushing forward. I LOVE YOU đđ˝ more life!â
SEATTLE â The Oakland Aâs became one of the bigger surprises in baseball last weekend when, after six straight wins, they improved to .500 for the season and moved to within 1 1/2 games of first place in the American League West.
Itâs been a bit of a struggle for the Aâs ever since. Sunday, they lost 8-4 to the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park, marking their sixth loss in the last eight games.
The Aâs trailed 5-0 after two innings, but a Max Schuemann error paved the way to a four-run second for the division-leading Mariners, who took two of three in the series.
After losing three of four to the Texas Rangers early last week, the Aâs (19-23) are now 3 1/2 games back of first place in the division going into their four-game series against the Houston Astros. The series starts Monday.
Aâs starting pitcher Alex Wood allowed four hits, including a two-run home run to Julio RodrĂguez, in two innings before he left the game with a shoulder injury, which he said had been bothering him for a while. Aâs manager Mark Kotsay said the team would likely have an announcement on Wood on Monday.
âHeâs been grinding,â Kotsay said of Wood. âHe hasnât felt great. Heâs been able to make every start, but today, you saw his velo dropping; his slider wasnât as sharp. He gave us everything he had for two innings. Obviously, heâs disappointed that he had to come out of the game.â
Asked if he might have to land on the injured list, Wood said, âWeâll see how the next few days go. Iâve been throwing with it for a little bit now. Just getting treatment and managing the workload.â
For the Mariners, Julio RodrĂguez and Mitch Garver both hit two-run home runs, and Luis Castillo allowed two runs over six strong innings.
âOur offense showed up today. Put good pressure on them early, got some big hits, home runs,â Seattle manager Scott Servais said.
RodrĂguezâs homer was just his second of the season and his first at T-Mobile Park in Seattleâs 22nd home game. RodrĂguez hit a 2-2 pitch from Wood out to straightaway center field in the second inning for a two-run shot that gave Seattle a 5-0 lead.
The homer had an exit velocity of 109 mph and traveled an estimated 409 feet.
âYouâve got to stay patient and let the results come and I feel like today was the day and Iâm really happy about that, that I was able to help the team win,â RodrĂguez said.
RodrĂguez nearly homered in his next at-bat in the fifth inning, doubling off the top of the wall, but jogged home when Garver hit his fifth of the season to give Seattle a 7-1 lead. Garver also had a two-out RBI single in the first inning.
Seby Zavala added his first home run of the season for the Mariners, a solo shot in the sixth.
Following a sluggish start to the season, Luis Castillo (4-5) has now gone six straight starts allowing two earned runs or fewer each time. Castillo needed 100 pitches to get through six innings, but closed his outing with strikeouts of Shea Langeliers and J.D. Davis with runners on base.
Castillo allowed seven hits and struck out eight. Schuemann and Abraham Toro both hit solo home runs to account for the scoring off Castillo.
Brent Rooker hit his 10th homer of the season in the eighth inning off reliever Cody Bolton. It was a two-run shot.
âThese guys battled back. Every time we scored, they ended up scoring. As much as weâve been able to lock it down in games that weâve trailed in â and we actually have come back in a few of them â today we just werenât able to do that in the bullpen,â Kotsay said.
UP NEXT: Ross Stripling (1-6, 5.14) will open a three-game series at Houston on Monday. Stripling gave up 10 hits and 11 runs â but only five earned runs â over 1 2/3 innings in his previous start against Texas.
Bay FCâs opening-season struggles continued Wednesday as it fell behind by two early in the first half and then gave up the winning goal in the 78th minute in a 3-2 loss to the Portland Thorns before an announced crowd of 10,611 at PayPal Park in San Jose.
With the game tied 2-2, Portlandâs Sophia Smith scored her second goal of the game on a dazzling individual effort in the 78th minute.
With defender Alyssa Malonson in front of her just inside the penalty area, Smith darted to her left and then rifled a left-footed shot that Bay FC goalie Lysianne Proulx got a hand on but couldnât fully stop as the Thorns (3-3-1) took the lead for good.
Smith also scored in the seventh minute, converting a breakaway chance and giving Portland a 2-0 lead. Her teammate, Payton Linnehan, scored 90 seconds into the game.
The two-goal game was Smithâs third of the season. She is the NWSLâs leading scorer with seven goals and three assists in seven games and also leads the league with 26 shots.
In March, Smith signed a contract extension with Portland that gave her, per the team, the National Womenâs Soccer Leagueâs highest annual salary at the time.
Another goal for Soph which marks her THIRD brace of the 2024 season! đ¤Ż
â National Womenâs Soccer League (@NWSL) May 2, 2024
The loss was Bay FCâs fifth in the last six games since its season-opening 1-0 win over Angel City FC. Four of those losses were by one goal.
Bay FC (2-5-0) is alone in 10th place in the 14-team league and it has allowed a league-high 17 goals.
After the opening minutes, Bay FC recovered and tied the game in the second half. After Racheal Kundananji scored in the 41st minute, Deyna Castellanos scored in the 60th minute off a highlight-reel assist from Rachael Kundananji.
Kundananji, acquired in February from Spanish club Madrid CFF in exchange for a transfer fee of $788,000, dribbled the ball halfway up the field and into the box before she sent a crossing pass to Castellanos for the tap-in goal.
Bay FC hosts the Chicago Red Stars on Sunday at 5 p.m.
SAN JOSE â Following one of the worst seasons in franchise history, David Quinn on Wednesday was fired as coach of the San Jose Sharks.
âAfter going through our end-of-the-season process of internal meetings and evaluating where our team is at and where we want our group to go, we have made the difficult decision to make a change at the head coach position,â Sharks general manager Mike Grier said in a statement.
âDavid is a good coach and an even better person. I would like to personally thank him for his hard work over these past two seasons. He and his staff did an admirable job under some difficult circumstances, and I sincerely appreciate how they handled the situation.â
The status of the Sharksâ assistant coaches,
Scott Gordon, Brian Wiseman, Ryan Warsofsky and goaltending coach Thomas Speer, was not immediately clear.
Quinn, who had one year left on his contract, posted a 41-98-25 record in two seasons. The Sharksâ 19-54-9 record this season was the worst in the NHL.
Grier also announced that Ray Tufts, the Sharksâ longtime head athletic trainer, will not return to the team.
âRay spent more than two decades overseeing the care and well-being of our players,â said Grier. âWe thank him for his service to the organization and our players and wish him and his family the best in the future.â
NEW YORK â Right-hander Paul Blackburn and the Athletics could not overcome a tough first inning on Tuesday in a 4-3 loss to the New York Yankees.
Blackburn struggled early on as he gave up a two-run home run to Anthony Rizzo that capped a four-run first inning for the Yankees, who held on and handed the Aâs their fourth loss in the last five games.
Seth Brown hit an RBI double in the first off Marcus Stroman (2-1) to give the Aâs a 1-0 lead. Giancarlo Stanton had a go-ahead double against Blackburn (2-1) in the bottom half before Rizzo hit his second homer of the season and his first since April 7.
Rizzo had just one extra-base hit in 54 at-bats between homers.
Blackburn had not allowed a home run in four previous starts this season. Stroman (2-1) struck out nine â his most since he fanned nine for the New York Mets against the Giants on Aug. 17, 2021.
Shea Langeliers homered in the second and Lawrence Butler in the fourth. But the Aâs also went 0-for-3 with runners in scoring position and left six on base.
Yankees relievers Ron Marinaccio, Caleb Ferguson, Dennis Santana, and Clay Holmes combined for 3 2/3 hitless innings against the Aâs, with Holmes striking out two in a perfect ninth for his ninth save in 10 chances.
Aâs batters struck out a combined 13 times in the game, including twice in the top of the ninth when both Lawrence Butler and Max Schuemann were called out looking by home plate umpire John Tumpane.
“John Tumpane â was that a Hunter Wendelstedt impression?âŚWas it any of them or was it someone actually in the A’s dugout?”
Aâs manager Mark Kotsay didnât always appreciate Tumpaneâs wide zone, especially with Yankees catcher Austin Wells noticeably setting up on the outside part of the plate.
Monday, Yankees manager Aaron Boone was ejected by home plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt in the top of the first inning. Boone did not say anything to Wendelstedt, but the veteran umpire said he heard someone from the Yankees dugout chirp him after Boone had already been warned.
In the fourth inning of Tuesdayâs game, after a wide pitch was called a strike, Tumpane shouted toward the Aâs dugout after someone voiced their displeasure toward him.
âI get that itâs really difficult to call balls and strikes,â Kotsay told reporters in New York. âWhen you have a catcher that sets up with his left shin guard on the outside corner of the plate, with half his body into the batterâs box on those getting pitches out there, itâs challenging.
âItâs challenging to cover that, itâs challenging to know that outside edge, which guys work really hard at. ⌠We had our chances. Itâs tough when the strike zoneâs that wide.â
Blackburn, too, benefitted from the wide zone in an otherwise solid outing, as he gave up five hits in six innings, retiring 17 of his last 18 batters, including the last 13.
âWe did have our chances to get a big hit and Paulâs job tonight after the first inning â he put up zeroes and gave us a chance to get back in it,â Kotsay said. âNice night after that first for Paul.â
Yankees manager Aaron Boone, ejected by plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt five pitches into Mondayâs 2-0 loss to Oakland over a remark he and his players maintained was yelled by a fan behind the dugout, said he didnât expect to be fined following multiple conversations with MLB senior vice president of on-field operations Michael Hill.
âI feel good about where the league is on it,â Boone said,
TRAINERâS ROOM: Athletics left-hander Scott Alexander (left rib), right-hander Luis Medina (right knee) and lefty Ken Waldichuk (elbow) all had successful bullpen sessions Tuesday. Infielder J.D. Davis (right adductor) and OF Miguel Andujar (right knee surgery) both began running.
For the Yankees, third baseman DJ LeMahieu (right foot) was removed in the second inning of his first rehab game Tuesday for Double-A Somerset due to foot soreness. Right-hander Gerrit Cole (right elbow), the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, said he felt good after throwing 50 times from 120 feet.
UP NEXT: The four-game series continues today when Yankees righty Clarke Schmidt (1-0, 3.15 ERA) opposes Aâs righty Joe Boyle (1-3, 7.23 ERA).
SAN JOSE â The San Jose Sharks have gained some ground on the Chicago Blackhawks in the NHL standings in recent days but are still on the verge of finishing last overall and clinching a 25.5 percent chance of winning the upcoming NHL Draft Lottery.
On the other hand, this month hasnât brought much good news to the Sharks (19-51-9) in terms of their two conditional draft picks, with Sidney Crosby making sure that at least one is diminishing in value.
As part of last Augustâs Erik Karlsson trade, the Sharks hold Pittsburghâs top-10 protected first-round draft pick this year. It looked like a Sharks coup on March 28, as the Penguins were seven points out of a playoff spot and in 22nd place in the leagueâs overall standings, or just outside the bottom 10.
But since then, the Penguins have gone 5-0-2, and with their 6-5 overtime win over the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday, have moved into the second and final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.
Starting on March 24, Crosby has led the NHL with 20 points in 10 games.
Thursday, Crosby assisted on Karlssonâs overtime goal, giving him a goal and two assists for the game. That moved him into 10th place in the leagueâs all-time scoring list with 591 goals and 1,000 assists.
âHe plays his best when the stakes are high like all of the all-time greats that have played the game,â Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said of Crosby. âHeâs one of those guys.â
The Penguins (37-30-12) are now 17th in the overall standings but can still finish as low as 21st. Thatâs only if they cool off over their last three games and the teams immediately below them â Washington, Detroit, Philadelphia, and Minnesota â string together some wins. Three points separate those five teams.
Ideally, from a Sharks perspective, the Penguins would now land somewhere between 12th and 16th in the draft order. If the Penguins make the playoffs, that first-round pick the Sharks own could be anywhere from 17th to 32nd overall.
That would be less than ideal for a Sharks team that wants to have as much choice and flexibility as possible with that second first-round pick.
Per moneypuck.com, the Penguins now have a 57.2% chance of making the playoffs. They have games remaining against Boston, Nashville, and the New York Islanders.
âHeâs a big part of our game and heâs a big reason that we are in the situation weâre in,â Karlsson said of Crosby. âWeâre going to need him playing like this down the stretch here to have a chance.â
After their 3-1 win over the Seattle Kraken on Thursday, the Sharks moved to within four points of the Blackhawks for 31st place in the NHLâs overall standings. Thatâs down from being seven points back just four days ago. San Jose has three games left, and Chicago has four.
On Friday, if the Blackhawks â now 16-19-4 at home â beat the Nashville Predators at United Center, then San Jose will be locked into 32nd place in the league standings, giving it a 25.5 percent chance of winning the draft lottery, a date for which has not been set.
The Sharks, even if they win their last three games, would also finish 32nd If the Blackhawks collect two of a possible eight points in their final four games
As part of the Timo Meier trade in Feb. 2023, the Sharks owned a conditional second-round pick from the New Jersey Devils. The condition was if the Devils reached the Eastern Conference final this year, that second-round selection would turn into a first-rounder.
But the Devils have been eliminated from playoff contention, and enter Friday in 22nd place in the overall standings. If they stay in that spot, that second-round pick the Sharks own will be 42nd overall.
SAN FRANCISCO â Rescuers were searching Wednesday for a gray whale last spotted off Northern Californiaâs coast with its tail entangled in a massive gill net.
The 30-foot (9-meter) whale was spotted Tuesday near San Francisco swimming north as part of gray whalesâ annual migration from Mexico to Alaska. It was dragging the net with two bright red buoys that rescuers attached to it on March 22, when the animal was first spotted off Laguna Beach in Southern California.
In this aerial photo provided by Tony Corso Images, a 30-foot-long gray whale with its tail entangled in a massive gill net is seen off the coast of Pacifica, Calif., Tuesday, April 9, 2024. A team with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries is working on a rescue effort Wednesday with the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito. (Tony Corso Images via AP)Â
Justin Viezbicke, coordinator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheriesâ California marine mammal stranding response, said the rescue team pulled up behind the animal on Tuesday but could not cut the net because it became aggressive.
âThe team went out there yesterday and made some attempts but as the team approached, the animal became very reactive,â Viezbicke said.
NOAAâs team, which is working on the rescue effort with the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, California, was searching Wednesday for the whale north of San Francisco.
Kathi George, director of cetacean conservation biology at the Marine Mammal Center, said a rescue crew in Southern California couldnât disentangle the whale last month but the team was able to attach a satellite tag to the net to track it and two buoys to make it easier to spot the animal. But the tracker is no longer attached, she said.
George said that if the rescue team spots the whale on Wednesday they will attempt to cut the net or at least attach another satellite tag.
âOur goal is to retrieve the gear thatâs on the whale, so we can learn more about the entanglement and how it happened so, we could use that to inform risk reduction efforts,â she said.
Every spring, Gray whales migrate 5,000 miles (8,000 kilometers) from birthing waters off Baja California, Mexico to feeding grounds in the Arctic.