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  • Sharks takeaways: Stepping up after Bordeleau’s injury, Smith gets a taste and Vanecek returns

    Sharks takeaways: Stepping up after Bordeleau’s injury, Smith gets a taste and Vanecek returns

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    SAN JOSE – Thomas Bordeleau’s lower-body injury could have a ripple effect throughout the San Jose Sharks’ lineup, particularly in the competition for one of the team’s final few roster spots.

    Bordeleau was injured in a Sharks’ practice over the weekend and was, or is, competing to start the season in the NHL, perhaps as a third-line winger. Now he’s considered week-to-week, with the Sharks unsure if he can start the regular season on time.

    Who jumps into Bordeleau’s spot, should he have to miss the next couple of weeks, might become one of the bigger storylines in training camp as the Sharks’ preseason continues with Thursday’s 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.

    “We’re 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,” Sharks coach Ryan Warosfsky said. “There’s guys in there that have won Stanley Cups and have won a lot of hockey games in this league, and I’m going to rely on those guys quite a bit to drive that home.”

    Can Gushchin make a roster push? His offensive talents have never been in question. But can he be responsible on the defensive end?

    “Good first period, and just like everyone else, not a good second period,” Warsofsky said of Gushchin. “I 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.”

    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. Anaheim’s lineup Tuesday mainly featured players who will start the season in the AHL.

    Here are three takeaways from Tuesday’s game.

    SMITH’S 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.

    “I thought he was pretty good,” Warsofsky said. “He handled some things, he got inside ice, played with some pace. Obviously, there’s some things he needs to work on, but I liked his game tonight.”

    Smith’s 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.

    “We 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,” Smith said before Tuesday’s game. “But he said whenever I want to reach out, it’ll be good.”

    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 it’ll be a work in progress as he starts to compete against some of the best centers in the world, particularly in the Pacific Division.

    “(Bergeron) touched on there’s going to be ups and downs — everyone has said that to me — and it’s a tough league for a reason, the best one in the world,” Smith said, “so you’ve got to be there for the ups and the downs.”

    IDENTITY PLAY: After Sunday’s 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.

    “We want to be on top of the opponent,” Warsofsky said. “We had two or three guys doing it. We didn’t 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.”

    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 Sharks’ defensive breakdowns that bit them Sunday cropped up again Tuesday.

    “My biggest takeaway is probably a lot of guys trying to get used to each other and getting used to a new system,” Sharks defenseman Jake Walman said. “It was scrambly at times, but (we’re) trying to kind of set the standard of working hard and skating.”

    MAKING A STATEMENT: Just like during Sunday’s 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.

    That’s a non-negotiable for the Sharks this year. If opposing teams take liberties with the Sharks’ best young players, there has to be a response. No questions asked.

    “I think we’ve touched on being connected, and obviously, those guys have my back there,” Smith said. “Feels nice when you’re going out there knowing your two linemates are going to be there for you.”

    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.

    “He was outstanding,” Warosfsky said. “I 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.”

    Vanecek said he’ll take as much game action as the Sharks coaches give him to help him prepare for the season.

    “February was the last game,” he said, “so it’s a long time.”

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • New-look Sharks want ‘to start writing their own history’

    New-look Sharks want ‘to start writing their own history’

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    SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks prospect Will Smith had lunch this week with veteran forwards Logan Couture and Barclay Goodrow, two central players in the team’s 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.

    “I actually watch it back on YouTube a lot, and seeing the Shark Tank like that is pretty crazy,” Smith said. “They were telling me how it was so loud, it was just ringing the entire time.

    “It’s our goal to get it back to that.”

    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 team’s 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.

    “I think last year was rock bottom for us as an organization, and now it’s time to start moving forward and pushing things forward,” Sharks general manager Mike Grier said. “Not only myself, but I think the players and everyone’s excited to get going, turn the page and see what this year brings.”

    San Jose Sharks’ 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) 

    Celebrini, who became the first player drafted No. 1 overall by the Sharks in June, already looked right at home during Thursday’s 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.

    “It’s pretty simple. Just get him the puck,” forward Tyler Toffoli said of Celebrini. “Yeah, he was pretty good out there.”

    “The more you enjoy something, the more comfortable you are,” Celebrini said. “So enjoy it.”

    Celebrini might start the season as the Sharks’ No. 1 center as captain Logan Couture will likely be on injured reserve to begin the year.

    Couture, entering his sixth season as the Sharks’ captain, continues to deal with osteitis pubis — inflammation in the joint between the left and right pubic bones.

    After missing all of training camp and the Sharks’ first 45 games, Couture last season returned and played in six straight games from Jan. 20-31 before being shelved again. But he hasn’t 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.

    “I’ve played hockey for 30-plus years, and when it just ends abruptly, it’s difficult, especially when you don’t really have a choice. The body just breaks down,” Couture said Thursday. “But that’s the way professional sports, or sports in general, normally work, not always injuries, sometimes other reasons. But that’s the situation I’m in.”

    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)
    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) 

    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 Couture’s 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 Sharks’ 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 Sharks’ 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.

    “It’s about compete and earning your opportunities that maybe somewhat in the past, (there were) guys in the lineup or on the roster that maybe shouldn’t have been,” Grier said. “Now there’s legitimate competition throughout, and there’s no one where we don’t feel like we have to force someone onto the lineup.

    “That was kind of the message to the guys, young and old. If you want a spot and you want to earn something, you’ve got to go out there and take it. No one’s going to give it to you anymore.”

    San Jose Sharks' Nico Sturm takes a shot during the team's first day of training camp, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
    San Jose Sharks’ Nico Sturm takes a shot during the team’s first day of training camp, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

    The Sharks were in a downward spiral for three years before Grier’s 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, that’s the hope.

    “I think we’re all trying to look forward,” Grier said. “We 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 it’s our turn and the group’s turn to start writing their own history.”

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Bay Bridge Series finale: Oakland A’s, SF Giants fans lament end of Bay-based rivalry

    Bay Bridge Series finale: Oakland A’s, SF Giants fans lament end of Bay-based rivalry

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    OAKLAND – With two hours remaining until first pitch Sunday, the Oakland Coliseum parking lot featured the familiar sights and sounds of a party in the East Bay. 

    In one corner of the parking lot was a mariachi band, and booming audio systems around the lot further filled the air with 808s and synths. 

    A parking lot attendant screamed at one group to make room for cars looking for space in a well-populated area that is often vacant on game days. 

    “I came here early and there’s actually a great amount of people here already,” said Jesse Aiwaz after he made the drive from Modesto to East Oakland. “It’s actually really sick seeing all of these people, all the A‘s and Giants fans.”

    Smoke of various kinds filled the air with a haze that smelled mostly of hot dogs and hamburgers. 

    Baseball fans walk to the main gate as they arrive during the second inning of their MLB game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. Hundreds of baseball fans had no choice but to park in the overflow lots and walk after the main parking lots were closed due to full capacity. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    There were neon green jerseys, “SELL” paraphernalia and vibrant orange as far as the eye could see as fans filled their time before the last Bay Bridge Series between host Oakland and visiting San Francisco. 

    The A’s will play in Sacramento next season, a fact that caused some mild confusion in the parking lot. 

    “Let’s go Oakland,” a man with a makeshift DJ setup yelled into the microphone, before pausing and quipping, “Or is it Sacramento?”

    He quickly went back to playing beats, not wanting to kill the vibe. 

    “This is the greatest place to tailgate ever, especially when it comes to the Battle of the Bay. Everyone comes together,” Lani Nawahine told the Bay Area News Group, before adding, “In the beginning at least.”

    Baseball fans line up at security as they arrive during the second inning of their MLB game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. Hundreds of baseball fans had no choice but to park in the overflow lots and walk after the main parking lots were closed due to full capacity. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Baseball fans line up at security as they arrive during the second inning of their MLB game at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. Hundreds of baseball fans had no choice but to park in the overflow lots and walk after the main parking lots were closed due to full capacity. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    After the Raiders left town in 2020, the Bay Bridge Series was the last cross-bay rivalry left in major sports. 

    “It was good for the ecosystem, and it gave everybody something to talk about, something everybody looked forward to. They got rid of football, so we just had baseball.”

    Antonio Sanchez, who was born in Oakland and grew up in Castro Valley, thought of going to Giants-A’s games as “being with my family and my 35,000 closest friends.”

    He grew up going to the Coliseum as a child, taking on his fandom from his father, who gave up the Say Hey Kid for the East Bay’s new team.

    “My father is from Martinez and grew up in the Bay Area and was a Willie Mays fan at first,” Sanchez said. “But when the A’s came here in 1968, he became an A’s fan. It’s been great being able to share that time with him.”

    A throng of 37,551 fans attended the first of the two-game series on Saturday, a 2-0 A’s victory that saw Oakland’s Osvaldo Bido take a no-hitter into the sixth inning of the 147th matchup between the teams. 

    Among those in town for the encore was lifelong Giants supporter Timothy Cravalho, a man with the Giants logo tattooed on his left bicep. A fan of Oakland’s rival for over five decades, Cravalho still expressed sadness at the end of the series. 

    “My heart is broken for them, our rival across the bridge. It’s sad for Oakland, and it’s sad for everyone who is a baseball fan,” he said.

    San Francisco Giants fan Timothy Cravalho, of Fremont, shows off his team spirit before the start of their MLB game against the San Francisco Giants at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    San Francisco Giants fan Timothy Cravalho, of Fremont, shows off his team spirit before the start of their MLB game against the San Francisco Giants at the Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

    The diehard Giants fan actually spent his formative years attending A’s games in the 1970s, when Reggie Jackson and Vida Blue headlined the biggest show in baseball. 

    The Bay’s two teams famously met in the 1989 World Series, and Cravalho opined that Game 3 was perhaps the series’ greatest moment, even if his team lost. 

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Burford’s broken hand could flip Dominick Puni into 49ers’ rookie starter

    Burford’s broken hand could flip Dominick Puni into 49ers’ rookie starter

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    SANTA CLARA — Rookie Dominick Puni might be fast-tracked into a starting spot on the Super Bowl-contending 49ers’ offensive line.

    His potential aside, Puni played right guard on the first-string unit both Friday and Saturday because injuries sidelined his top competition, Jon Feliciano and Spencer Burford.

    Burford might undergo surgery on a fractured right hand, after taking all first-team snaps through two practices as he tries avenging a Super Bowl blocking gaffe.

    Feliciano, who supplanted Burford as the starting right guard midway through last season, is believed to be dealing with a knee issue ahead of his 10th NFL season.

    That opens the door for Puni. That doesn’t freak out the 49ers, who might need his versatile services either in Week 1 at right guard or later in his rookie season elsewhere on the line.

    “He’s done a real good job,” coach Kyle Shanahan said. “We haven’t had pads on yet, which is always a challenge for guys in protection. He’s stepped in, gotten more reps, and I’m excited about him.”

    The 49ers, after Sunday’s day off, will suit up in pads Monday for the first time of camp, which is honestly when the judging begins for such high-contact spots among linemen. The pass protection thus far hasn’t been ideal, as expected behind a patchwork unit.

    Missing from camp’s opening, four-practice block were left tackle Trent Williams and wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, both of whom are embroiled in contract disputes. While Williams draws a $50,000 daily fine as a holdout, Aiyuk is attending meetings and participating in all but practices, and he stoically watched Saturday’s warmups from a cart near the weight room.

    Presuming Williams and Aiyuk get their business resolved, the 49ers’ high-producing offense returns intact from last season’s NFC-winning effort, led by Brock Purdy’s franchise-record passing total (4,280 yards) and Christian McCaffrey’s NFL-leading rushing output.

    The offense could improve as it welcomes the NFL Draft additions of Puni, a third-round choice out of Kansas, as well as wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, a first-round pick who could make his camp debut Monday if his hamstring strain allows.

    When Puni reported to rookie camp in May, he spoke like a true lineman: “Physicality, hard-nose football, run the ball — it is what I like to do.” He also knew who he’d be protecting: “I love Brock Purdy. The fact he was the last pick, that’s storybook.”

    Puni has made a positive first impression adapting to the NFL and a complex scheme. Three summers ago, he was at the University of Central Missouri, before transferring to Kansas and finishing his collegiate career as a sack-denying offensive tackle.

    Chris Foerster, the 49ers’ offensive line coach and run-game coordinator, called Puni a “special guy,” commending his strong frame (6-foot-5, 313 pounds) and intelligence as he learns not just a new scheme but a new position. He played left tackle, left guard and right tackle in college.

    “Even if Puni is the best player, is that the guy?” Foerster rhetorically asked Friday. “Do you want him out there opening game, Monday Night Football against the Jets? If he’s the best player, you do, but those are bright lights.”

    Two years ago, Burford started the 49ers’ season-opening loss at Chicago, and he remained the starter into last season before Feliciano took over at the midseason bye. Foerster stopped short of calling it an open competition and instead referred to it as a “fluid situation.”

    “Everyone in the room can play. That’s why they’re here,” center Jake Brendel said. “The coaching staff wants the best players to be out there, and we do, too. We’re definitely seeing a few different bodies at right guard with injuries. One thing is for sure: Foerster’s going to have the best guy out there for us.”

    Burford participated in position warmups then retreated to individual conditioning on a side field during 11-on-11 action.

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    Cam Inman

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  • Newsom signs first-in-nation bill banning schools’ transgender notification policies

    Newsom signs first-in-nation bill banning schools’ transgender notification policies

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation Monday that will make California the first U.S. state to stop school districts from notifying parents if their child starts using different pronouns or identifies as a different gender than what’s on their school record.

    The governor’s office announced his signing of AB 1955 without comment among dozens of other bills signed and two he vetoed.

    California Legislative LGBTQ Caucus Chair Susan Eggman said Monday, “Today is a great day for California.”

    “The Governor’s signature on AB 1955, a first-in-the-nation policy, reaffirms California’s position as a leader and safe haven for LGBTQ+ youth everywhere,” Eggman said.

    The bill makes California the first state to explicitly prohibit what critics called “forced outing” policies that some school districts adopted, requiring that they notify parents when students request to use a different name or pronoun than what’s on their birth certificate or school records — regardless of the student’s consent.

    Critics decried the law as an infringement of parents’ rights.

    “To our governor & the CA LGBTQ Caucus: you don’t have the authority to strip parents of their rights,” Gays Against Groomers California, which opposed the law, posted Monday on X.

    According to the Movement Advancement Project, a nonprofit think tank and equality advocate, there are currently eight states — Idaho, North Dakota, Iowa, Indiana, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina and Alabama — that have passed laws requiring school staff to forcibly “out” transgender students. Five other states — Montana, Utah, Arizona, Kentucky and Florida — have passed legislation promoting forced outing policies in schools.

    In January, California Attorney General Rob Bonta issued a legal alert to all California school districts warning them against such policies, which he said violate the California Constitution and state laws safeguarding students’ civil rights.

    Assembly member Chris Ward introduced AB 1955 — the “SAFETY Act” — at the beginning of this year. It prohibits school districts from implementing policies requiring teachers to disclose any information on a student’s gender identity, sexual orientation or gender expression to their parent or guardian without that student’s permission.

    “While some school districts have adopted policies to forcibly out students, the SAFETY Act ensures that discussions about gender identity remain a private matter within the family,” Ward said in a statement Monday.

    The bill will also provide additional resources for parents and students to discuss gender and identity and will protect teachers and school staff from retaliation for refusing to share a student’s gender and identity.

    Legislators sent bill AB 1955 to Newsom earlier this month after an intense, emotional hearing in the Assembly that saw several members lose their cool over the proposed bill.

    The bill has a range of supporters and opponents. Notable supporters include State Superintendent of Instruction Tony Thurmond, the LGBTQ+ advocacy nonprofit The Trevor Project, the California School Employees Association and the California Teachers Association.

    “This historic legislation will strengthen existing protections against forced outing and allow educators to continue to create a safe learning environment where all students feel accepted, nurtured, and encouraged to pursue their dreams,” CTA President David Goldberg said.

    Opponents include Moms for Liberty Santa Clara County, Chino Valley Unified School District — which Bonta sued last year over its notification policies — and 16 Republican assembly members, including Bill Essayli, R-Corona, who proposed a bill last year that would have done the opposite of the SAFETY Act and required schools to notify parents if their child identifies as transgender.

    Following Ward’s announcement of the bill earlier this year, the Liberty Justice Center — which represented Chino Valley Unified School District in the Attorney General’s lawsuit — issued a statement condemning the bill.

    “Parents have a right to know what their own minor children are doing at school — and school officials have no right to keep secrets from parents,” the center’s president, Jacob Huebert, said in the statement. “That’s true now, and it will still be true if the state passes this bill. We will continue to stand with parents and the school districts that want to respect their rights — and we’ll continue to represent them free of charge, at no cost to taxpayers.”

    In the Bay Area, the bill won’t have much of an impact. San Francisco Unified School District already has a policy in place that prohibits teachers and school staff from disclosing a student’s gender or sexual identity without the student’s written consent.

    But across California, several school boards have discussed or voted on policies that would require schools to disclose students’ gender identity to their parents or guardians, regardless of the student’s consent.

    Along with Chino Valley Unified School District in San Bernardino County, Rocklin Unified School District in Placer County also faced backlash from the state over its parental notification policy, which passed in 2023.

    Temecula Valley Unified, Murrieta Valley Unified, Anderson Union High School District and Orange Unified School District all passed similar policies as well.

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    Molly Gibbs

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  • Woman fatally shot in Oakland’s Uptown district

    Woman fatally shot in Oakland’s Uptown district

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    OAKLAND — A 29-year-old San Francisco woman was fatally shot Friday night in the Uptown district, authorities said.

    The  shooting happened about 10:47 p.m. Friday in the 1900 block of Telegraph Avenue, near William Street, and the assailant fled the scene before officers arrived. The wounded woman was taken to a hospital where she later died. Her name has not yet been released, pending notification of her family.

    Police have not released a motive or suspect information.

    The killing is the 50th homicide investigated by Oakland police this year. Last year at this time, police had investigated 53 homicides in the city.

    Police and Crime Stoppers of Oakland are offering up to $10,000 in reward money for information leading to the arrest of the killer.  Anyone with information may call police at 510-238-3821 or 510-238-7950 or Crime Stoppers at 510-777-8572.

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    Harry Harris

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  • The Sharks’ free agency signings were big — for multiple reasons

    The Sharks’ free agency signings were big — for multiple reasons

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    SAN JOSE – The Sharks’ 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.

    “Sometimes it takes some time to do things, and there’s still a lot of work to be done,” Grier, now in his third season, said Monday, the first day of NHL free agency. “But I think now we’re starting to at least head towards being the type of team I would like us to be.”

    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 Sharks’ prospect pool, led by Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith, Toffoli was interested in coming to San Jose.

    “It seems like the team is going in the right direction here,”Toffoli said. “Just excited to be part of the process.”

    “Tyler was at the top of our list,” 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 hockey’s 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 team’s other veterans.

    Toffoli and Wennberg, perhaps not coincidentally, have the same representative as Celebrini in Pat Brisson.

    “You can just see how skilled he is and how hard he works,” Toffoli said of Celebrini. “I’ve heard nothing but great things about him, being part of the same agency. It’s an exciting time, and I think that’s also another major reason for me wanting to come here, which was to be able to play with him.”

    Celebrini, 18, still hasn’t officially declared whether he’ll 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 Warriors’ 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.

    “I think for myself, it’s just coming to the rink every day and trying to teach him how to be a pro,” Toffoli said of Celebrini. “It’s 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, he’s going to be a special player. He already is a special player.”

    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.

    “I think that went into the thinking a little bit, but we’re very hopeful that (Couture) will be able to play and contribute,” Grier said. “It’s a little insurance, sure, but hopefully (Couture) can play.”

    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.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • San Jose Sharks re-sign two forwards to one-year deals

    San Jose Sharks re-sign two forwards to one-year deals

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    SAN JOSE – 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,  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 they’re set to bring into the lineup this upcoming season.

    “He helps drive the culture,” Sharks general manager Mike Grier said of Kunin on Friday. “Kunin shows up every night. He’s a good example for our young players; he plays hard, competes, plays hurt, all the things you’re 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.”

    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 year’s 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?

    “We talked about it,” Grier said. “It’s 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 we’ll revisit as the season goes on.”

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  • Could a $20 billion bond measure help solve the Bay Area’s affordable housing crisis?

    Could a $20 billion bond measure help solve the Bay Area’s affordable housing crisis?

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    This November, Bay Area voters could decide on an unprecedented bond measure to raise up to $20 billion for as many as 90,000 desperately needed affordable homes across the nine-county region.

    Ahead of a crucial vote by a regional agency next week to put the measure on the ballot, the mayors of three of the Bay Area’s largest cities gathered in San Francisco on Thursday to rally support for the proposal.

    “If you’re concerned about homelessness, this is the measure to support,” San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said. “If you’re concerned about the high cost of housing and the high cost of living, this is the measure to support.”

    San Francisco Mayor London Breed and Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín were also at the event, held at an affordable housing complex near the Chase Center arena in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighborhood.

    Absent was Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao, who was a no-show after the FBI raided her home early Thursday morning.

    Across the Bay Area, some 1.4 million residents — 23% of all renters — spend more than half their income on rent, according to regional officials. Meanwhile, an estimated 37,000 people in the region are homeless on any given night — more than the entire population of Menlo Park.

    To alleviate the region’s chronic affordable housing shortage, the Bay Area Housing Finance Authority, established by the state legislature in 2019, has worked for years to put the bond measure on the ballot. The measure now needs approval from the finance authority’s board — made up of local elected and appointed officials — on June 26 before going to voters.

    While the board is expected to approve the measure, there remains some uncertainty about the final bond amount. The financing authority has proposed either $10 billion or $20 billion.

    The bond would be funded by a new tax on businesses and homes. For a $20 billion bond, the tax would come to $19 per $100,000, or about $190 a year for a home with an assessed value of $1 million.

    The vote comes as the state is pushing Bay Area cities and counties to approve more than 441,000 new homes by 2031, a roughly 15% increase in the region’s total housing stock. More than half of the new homes must be affordable to low- and middle-income residents.

    On Thursday, Breed said that soaring interest rates and other economic headwinds currently holding back construction underscore the need for more affordable-housing funding.

    “How are we going to get the much-needed affordable housing units done without the financial support?” she asked.

    Some mayors also pointed to the shrinking role the federal government has played in subsidizing affordable housing in recent decades as a reason the measure is needed.

    “Local mayors are right to complain,” U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna, a Democrat representing the South Bay, said in an interview.

    Khanna said he supports the bond measure, adding that if President Joe Biden is reelected, he plans to push the administration to make housing a high priority.

    If approved, a $20 billion bond measure would allocate $4 billion to creating a regional fund to finance affordable projects. The rest would be split among the Bay Area’s nine counties and five of its largest cities to determine how to boost affordable housing.

    Santa Clara County would receive $2.4 billion, San Mateo County $2.1 billion, Alameda County $2 billion and Contra Costa County $1.9 billion. San Francisco would see $2.4 billion, San Jose $2.1 billion and Oakland $765 million.

    A recent report by researchers with the housing nonprofit Enterprise Community Partners found the bond could help build 433 already-approved affordable projects totaling more than 40,000 units, many of which lack enough funding to complete. That includes more than 10,000 units in both Santa Clara and Alameda counties. Officials estimate the bond would also help build tens of thousands more new units.

    Affordable housing is reserved for those earning less than a specified amount, generally a percentage of an area’s median income. That can be as much as 120% of the median income or as low as 15% or 30%. In Santa Clara County, 30% of the median income is $38,750 for a single person, according to the state housing department. Residents typically spend about 30% of their income on housing costs, though the amount can vary.

    Local officials could also use the bond money to help build homeless shelters, including tiny homes, motel conversions, group shelters and managed-encampment sites.

    Earlier this year, San Jose, which under Mahan has made building new shelters the centerpiece of its homelessness response, agreed to spend about 28% of its potential bond money on shelter options. In an interview, Mahan said affordable housing is too expensive and takes too long to build to be the primary strategy to fight homelessness.

    “I’m not going to support an approach that’s only going to support one strategy, especially one that’s the slowest to get people off the streets,” Mahan, a voting member of the finance authority board, said in an interview.

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    Ethan Varian

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  • San Jose homeless encampments face Shigella outbreak, public health department says

    San Jose homeless encampments face Shigella outbreak, public health department says

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    An outbreak of the gastrointestinal illness Shigella has been identified in encampments of people experiencing homelessness in San Jose since June 3, according to Santa Clara County’s public health department.

    There have been three confirmed cases of Shigella related to the outbreak, as well as four cases under evaluation and at least 19 suspected cases, said Dr. Monika Roy, assistant health officer and communicable disease controller for Santa Clara County. Two of the cases have resulted in hospitalization, which is how officials learned of the outbreak, she added at a Tuesday news conference.

    Shigella is a gastrointestinal illness that causes nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramping, Roy said. It primarily spreads through contact with infected stool or eating or drinking contaminated food, according to the county’s Shigella fact sheet. While most individuals will resolve the disease on their own, some cases require antibiotics, Roy added, and it is only fatal in “rare cases.”

    Shigella is an “extremely infectious disease,” Roy explained. It takes only a small amount of bacteria to cause the illness, and it spreads quickly in areas with limited access to sanitation and hygiene, making encampments particularly prone to spread.

    “What’s concerning about this outbreak isn’t the absolute number. We do regularly see Shigella cases,” Roy said. “What’s concerning more is the number that are related to each other.”

    The cases have primarily affected encampments in the Columbus Park area, Roy said, but other encampments in San Jose have also experienced cases or suspected cases.

    “We are working aggressively to get testing out to all these individuals and get those test kits back, but it is a challenge,” Roy said. “It will be difficult to identify every single person that may be infected.”

    The public health department is focusing primarily on two areas to address the outbreak, Roy said: identifying cases to provide testing and treatment, and preventing further spread of the disease. The department sent out field teams to encampments of concern to provide hygiene and test kits, then returned later to collect completed tests. Disease investigators, physicians and nurses have also been working with the effort.

    “The best way to address this outbreak or contain it is really by improving sanitation, hygiene and offering clean water to residents who may be ill or at risk,” Roy said.

    This outbreak is particularly challenging to address because the county suspects more individuals contracted the illness but were not sick enough to seek treatment, Roy said. “That is why we have a large number of suspect cases,” she added.

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  • Sharks’ Grier says he’s not interested in trading his captain. Here’s why

    Sharks’ Grier says he’s not interested in trading his captain. Here’s why

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    SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks general manager Mike Grier emphasized Monday that he’s not interested in trading his captain, Logan Couture, who he feels will be a major part of the team’s rebuild as it enters its next critical phase.

    “(If) stuff’s out there that I’m looking at trading Logan Couture or anything like that, that is absolutely false,” Grier said at the end of Ryan Warsofsky’s introductory press conference. “If you look at us bringing in young players here and having a young team, he is exactly the type of person you want to have around the young players.

    “He’s our captain, he’s our leader, he had a tough year. But we love him as a person, most importantly. He’s still a heck of a hockey player, so you guys can put any of those thoughts about me looking to trade our captain, you can put to bed.”

    The Sharks could have a handful of rookies on their roster next season, including recently signed forward Will Smith and soon-to-be No. 1 overall draft pick Macklin Celebrini. Having the 35-year-old Couture, who was drafted by the Sharks in 2007 and is entering his 16th NHL season, around to be an example for those first-year pros is vital in Grier’s eyes.

    But trading Couture right now, even if Grier wanted to, might be next to impossible.

    Couture still has three years left on his eight-year, $64 million contract, which carries a cap hit of $8 million, a figure likely too large for most contending NHL teams to swallow whole. The Sharks do not have any salary retention spots left for the upcoming season, having used all three in the Brent Burns, Erik Karlsson, and Tomas Hertl trades.

    Couture is also coming off a season in which he played just six of 82 games as he dealt with an often painful and debilitating condition called osteitis pubis, described as inflammation in the joint between a person’s left and right pubic bones.

    “I’m realistic. I’m not sure who’s going to trade for a guy who’s 35, makes $8 million, and plays six games in a season,” Couture said in March after close friend Tomas Hertl was traded by the Sharks to the Vegas Golden Knights. “You’re not going to find any takers out there.

    “I’m trying to get healthy. I’m trying to live a normal life away from hockey, and then once I start to feel better and get back to playing the game, we’ll go from there.”

    Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky has spoken to Couture “a few times” since he was hired last week but said the health topic did not come up.

    “Really good conversations, nothing hockey,” Warsofsky said. “Just checking in to see how his family’s doing, see how he’s doing. He’s been great, and like Mike said, he is a great, great captain, and first and foremost, he’s a great person. He’s a big part of this franchise.”

    When he met with reporters in April, Couture said he wanted to begin skating in July and was optimistic that he could start training camp in September as a full participant.

    “That’s my plan right now,” Couture said. “I met with the doctor just 20 minutes ago, and that’s their belief. That’s what I’m hoping for. I miss playing hockey so much, so I hope so.”

    Aside from Couture’s valued leadership, the Sharks were 4-1-1 this past season when he was in the lineup.

    Couture, in his NHL career, has 701 points in 933 games, including 67 points in 82 games during the 2022-2023 season.

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  • Homelessness in San Mateo County jumps 18% even as more people get shelter beds

    Homelessness in San Mateo County jumps 18% even as more people get shelter beds

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    San Mateo County’s homeless population spiked 18% over the last two years, according to the latest official estimate, even as local officials added around 300 shelter beds to help people get off the street.

    The tally released Wednesday identified 2,130 homeless people countywide. More than half lived outdoors, in vehicles or in other places not meant for habitation. The rest stayed in shelters.

    Despite the increase, local officials credited the opening of two shelters in Redwood City and San Mateo with boosting the number of homeless people with a roof over their heads. The county found 985 people were staying in shelters, a 38% jump from 2022.

    “This means fewer individuals in less safe situations such as on the street or in tents,” Claire Cunningham, director of the county’s Human Services Agency, said in a statement. “And shelters provide case management and supportive services to help residents move toward permanent housing.”

    The new numbers stem from the county’s latest biennial “Point-In-Time” homelessness census, taken by a team of volunteers and service providers on a single night in January.

    Across the Bay Area, Alameda, Contra Costa and San Francisco counties also conducted counts early this year. Alameda County recently reported its homeless population had dipped by 3% to 9,450 people, though Oakland’s population swelled by 9%. San Francisco, meanwhile, saw its number of homeless residents rise 7% to more than 8,300.

    Contra Costa County’s numbers are expected soon, while Santa Clara County, which took its tally last year, will not count again until 2025.

    The estimates, despite widely seen as an undercount, are crucial to helping cities and counties plan their homelessness response and determine how much state and federal funding they can expect receive.

    Despite unprecedented billions of public dollars spent in recent years to combat homelessness, getting people off the streets remains a grave challenge as rising housing costs, job losses, and mental health and addiction issues force others out.

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    Ethan Varian

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  • Steph and Ayesha Curry announce arrival of fourth child

    Steph and Ayesha Curry announce arrival of fourth child

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    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.

    “Our sweet baby boy decided to make an early arrival!!” the couple wrote on Instagram. “He’s doing great and we are finally settling in at home as a family of 6! So grateful!”

    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.

    “For so many years, Stephen and I thought we were done,” Ayesha wrote. “We said, “Three, that’s it, we’re not doing this again.” 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, “Oh, I forgot something.” But nobody was forgotten.

    “It 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.”

    Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry and his wife Ayesha Curry lead cheers for Oakland Marathon runners.(Desmond Gribben for Eat. Learn. Play.) 

    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 “Vol. 4” of their family.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • A’s starting pitcher reveals injury after loss to Seattle Mariners

    A’s starting pitcher reveals injury after loss to Seattle Mariners

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    SEATTLE — The Oakland A’s 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.

    It’s been a bit of a struggle for the A’s 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 A’s 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 A’s (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.

    A’s starting pitcher Alex Wood allowed four hits, including a two-run home run to Julio Rodríguez, in two innings before he left the game with a shoulder injury, which he said had been bothering him for a while. A’s manager Mark Kotsay said the team would likely have an announcement on Wood on Monday.

    “He’s been grinding,” Kotsay said of Wood. “He hasn’t felt great. He’s been able to make every start, but today, you saw his velo dropping; his slider wasn’t as sharp. He gave us everything he had for two innings. Obviously, he’s disappointed that he had to come out of the game.”

    Asked if he might have to land on the injured list, Wood said, “We’ll see how the next few days go. I’ve been throwing with it for a little bit now. Just getting treatment and managing the workload.”

    For the Mariners, Julio Rodríguez and Mitch Garver both hit two-run home runs, and Luis Castillo allowed two runs over six strong innings.

    “Our offense showed up today. Put good pressure on them early, got some big hits, home runs,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said.

    Rodríguez’s homer was just his second of the season and his first at T-Mobile Park in Seattle’s 22nd home game. Rodríguez 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.

    “You’ve got to stay patient and let the results come and I feel like today was the day and I’m really happy about that, that I was able to help the team win,” Rodríguez said.

    Rodríguez 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.

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  • Workers displaced by shooting priority for new Half Moon Bay housing project

    Workers displaced by shooting priority for new Half Moon Bay housing project

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    The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to provide nearly $6 million for much-needed affordable housing for farm laborers, which would prioritize families displaced by a mass shooting last year that killed seven people.

    The money will be used to purchase manufactured homes for farmworkers. At least 19 families who were displaced by the shooting in Half Moon Bay will be given priority.

    A total of 28 of the 45 to 50 units at Stone Pine Cove, a 22-acre property zoned for multiple affordable housing buildings, will be set aside for agricultural workers.

    “Every family deserves a safe and healthy place to live,” said Supervisor Ray Mueller, who represents District 3, where a majority of the county’s farmland is located. “We must absolutely create opportunities for farmworkers to live in San Mateo County, as well as invest resources in stabilizing the agricultural economy that provides for farmworking jobs.”

    The money is coming from the state-funded Joe Serna Jr. Farmworker Housing Grant.

    Last month, San Mateo County resubmitted its housing plan, officially known as the “housing element,” with updates emphasizing farmworker housing as one of its top priorities.

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    Ryan Macasero

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  • David Quinn fired as Sharks’ head coach after two seasons

    David Quinn fired as Sharks’ head coach after two seasons

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    SAN JOSE — Following one of the worst seasons in franchise history, David Quinn on Wednesday was fired as coach of the San Jose Sharks.

    “After 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,” Sharks general manager Mike Grier said in a statement.

    “David 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.”

    The status of the Sharks’ 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 Sharks’ 19-54-9 record this season was the worst in the NHL.

    Grier also announced that Ray Tufts, the Sharks’ longtime head athletic trainer, will not return to the team.

    “Ray spent more than two decades overseeing the care and well-being of our players,” said Grier.  “We thank him for his service to the organization and our players and wish him and his family the best in the future.”

    Please check back for updates to this story. 

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • A’s lose to Yankees; Kotsay not happy with umpire’s wide strike zone

    A’s lose to Yankees; Kotsay not happy with umpire’s wide strike zone

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    NEW YORK — 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 A’s 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 A’s 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 — 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 A’s 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 A’s, with Holmes striking out two in a perfect ninth for his ninth save in 10 chances.

    A’s 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.

    A’s manager Mark Kotsay didn’t always appreciate Tumpane’s 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 Tuesday’s game, after a wide pitch was called a strike, Tumpane shouted toward the A’s dugout after someone voiced their displeasure toward him.

    “I get that it’s really difficult to call balls and strikes,” Kotsay told reporters in New York. “When 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 batter’s box on those getting pitches out there, it’s challenging.

    “It’s challenging to cover that, it’s challenging to know that outside edge, which guys work really hard at. … We had our chances. It’s tough when the strike zone’s that wide.”

    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.

    “We did have our chances to get a big hit and Paul’s job tonight after the first inning — he put up zeroes and gave us a chance to get back in it,” Kotsay said. “Nice night after that first for Paul.”

    Yankees manager Aaron Boone, ejected by plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt five pitches into Monday’s 2-0 loss to Oakland over a remark he and his players maintained was yelled by a fan behind the dugout, said he didn’t expect to be fined following multiple conversations with MLB senior vice president of on-field operations Michael Hill.

    “I feel good about where the league is on it,” Boone said,

    TRAINER’S 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 A’s righty Joe Boyle (1-3, 7.23 ERA).

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  • High profile for-profit Bay Area coding school BloomTech hit by feds for allegedly tricking students

    High profile for-profit Bay Area coding school BloomTech hit by feds for allegedly tricking students

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    High-profile Bay Area coding school BloomTech, which touts “dream” technology jobs at companies such as Google and Amazon, has been sanctioned by federal authorities for allegedly deceiving students about loan costs and making false claims about graduates’ hiring rates.

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in an order banned the school’s co-founder and CEO Austen Allred from student-loan activities for 10 years, and permanently banned the for-profit vocational institute, formerly called the Lambda School and also known as Bloom Institute of Technology, from all consumer lending.

    The CFPB targeted the income-based repayment scheme used by nearly all BloomTech students that required payment of a percentage of income once graduates started earning at least $50,000 a year.

    “BloomTech falsely claimed its ‘income share’ agreements were not loans, did not create debt, did not carry a finance charge, and were ‘risk free,’” the CFPB said in a news release Wednesday. “In fact, the agreements are loans with an average finance charge of $4,000. The loans carry substantial risk, as a single missed payment triggers a default and the remainder of the $30,000 ‘cap’ becomes due immediately.”

    The school issued thousands of the income-share loans, but stopped offering them this year, according to the bureau’s order against the school.

    BloomTech’s six- to nine-month training programs in subjects including web development, data science, and computer engineering typically cost $20,000 to $30,000 in tuition.

    BloomTech, and Allred, enticed prospective students with job-placement rates as high as 86%, when internal metrics showed placement rates closer to 50% and sometimes as low as 30%, the news release said. “Allred tweeted that the school achieved a 100% job-placement rate in one of its cohorts, and later acknowledged in a private message that the sample size was just one student,” the news release said.

    BloomTech, backed by Silicon Valley venture capital firms, advertised that top tech companies and Fortune 100 firms employed many of its graduates. But the school knew as early as 2018 that large corporations “rarely hired its graduates into high-paying, program-related jobs,” the CFPB’s order said.

    Allred and the school violated the federal Consumer Financial Protection Act and Truth in Lending Act, the CFPB alleged.

    Allred and the school agreed to sanctions without accepting wrongdoing, according to the order. The CEO and the school did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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    Ethan Baron

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  • Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

    Kings relish taking revenge on Warriors, pushing Golden State dynasty into uncertainty

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    SACRAMENTO – Sacramento Kings coach Mike Brown wasn’t in a sentimental mood after his team routed Golden State 118-94 in a do-or-die play-in game on Tuesday night. 

    Sure, he spent six years as an assistant from 2016 to 2022 under Steve Kerr and helped the Warriors win three titles. 

    And yes, his former team faces a franchise-defining offseason as the dynastic trio of Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson is in jeopardy of dissolving once Thompson reaches free agency.

    And of course those familiar players, who already looked awfully old and slow in the blowout, will only get older and slower as they approach the back half of their 30s. Even if they do come back, making the playoffs wouldn’t be easy. 

    So what did Brown think of his team possibly dealing the lethal blow to what was left of the famed “Death Lineup” he once coached?

    He had more important things to worry about.

    “The reality of it is, is that it’s not my problem, and it’s not my concern,” Brown said, more focused on planning for the Pelicans and the Kings’ second play-in game on Friday. “We’re getting ready for New Orleans.”

    He added that he thinks that the trio is still capable of playing great basketball: “Those three guys in my opinion are special, and I was a part of many championships and good memories with them. Whatever they decide to do at the end of the day, that’s what they decide to do.”

    The Kings players were happy with, but not overly celebratory, after dispatching the team that eliminated them in the first round last season. Keegan Murray scored a game-high 32 and hit a Splash Bros.-esque eight 3-pointers. 

    He said that the win wouldn’t take away the sting of last year’s gutting Game 7 defeat at home, but admitted that getting revenge didn’t hurt either.

    “It kind of peels the band-aid off a little bit,” Murray said. “They got us last year, and we got them this year under a different circumstance.”

    Brown, Murray and guard De’Aaron Fox all credited the team’s dedication to physicality as a key to their success on Tuesday. 

    One player they raved about was defensive savant Keon Ellis, who went from a fringe rotation player on a two-way contract to the defender who helped hold Thompson to zero points in what could be his Warriors finale. 

    Brown couldn’t help but compare the stellar stopper to Golden State’s own Draymond Green, a scrappy but unheralded defender who carved out an incredible career on high-flying offenses.  

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    Joseph Dycus

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  • Penguins’ Crosby is at his best right now. That’s bad news for the Sharks

    Penguins’ Crosby is at his best right now. That’s bad news for the Sharks

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    SAN JOSE – 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 hasn’t 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 August’s Erik Karlsson trade, the Sharks hold Pittsburgh’s 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 league’s 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 Karlsson’s overtime goal, giving him a goal and two assists for the game. That moved him into 10th place in the league’s all-time scoring list with 591 goals and 1,000 assists.

    “He plays his best when the stakes are high like all of the all-time greats that have played the game,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said of Crosby. “He’s one of those guys.”

    The Penguins (37-30-12) are now 17th in the overall standings but can still finish as low as 21st. That’s only if they cool off over their last three games and the teams immediately below them – Washington, Detroit, Philadelphia, and Minnesota – 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.

    “He’s a big part of our game and he’s a big reason that we are in the situation we’re in,” Karlsson said of Crosby. “We’re going to need him playing like this down the stretch here to have a chance.”

    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 NHL’s overall standings. That’s 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 – now 16-19-4 at home – 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.

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    Curtis Pashelka

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