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High school football: Thursday’s Week 7 scores

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High school football: Thursday’s Week 7 scores


CITY SECTION
East Valley
Arleta 20, Fulton 6
Grant 56, Monroe 0
North Hollywood 45, Chavez 14
Eastern League
Bell 37, Legacy 13
Garfield 41, South Gate 30
South East 32, L.A. Roosevelt 28 (OT)
Northern League
Franklin 26, L.A. Wilson 23
West Valley League
Cleveland 20, Chatsworth 14
Granada Hills 40, Taft 21

SOUTHERN SECTION
Almont League
Schurr 70, Keppel 0
Big West Lower League
King 45, Corona 10
Big West Upper League
Corona Centennial 63, Vista Murrieta 0
Bravo League
Newport Harbor 21, Corona del Mar 14
Channel League
Buena 50, Royal 21
Oak Park 27, Oxnard 18
Citrus Belt League
Cajon 47, Redlands East Valley 0
Conejo Coast League
Newbury Park 48, Calabasas 20
Rio Mesa 41, Santa Barbara 28
Thousand Oaks 41, Westlake 14
Cottonwood League
Silver Valley 14, Webb 13
Del Rey League
St. Anthony 42, La Salle 20
Del Rio League
El Rancho 47, California 14
Delta League
El Modena 56, Western 27
Desert Empire League
Shadow Hills 45, Palm Springs 35
Desert Sky League
Granite Hills 14, Adelanto 0
Epsilon League
Santa Ana Foothill 28, Laguna Hills 14
Foothill League
Hart 61, Canyon Country Canyon 40
Valencia 56, Golden Valley 28
Castaic 42, West Ranch 27
Foxtrot League
Dana Hills 35, Orange 14
Golden League
Lancaster 41, Littlerock 6
Hacienda League
Covina 49, Diamond Bar 32
South Hills 20, Walnut 16
Inland Valley League
Perris 28, Citrus Hill 3
Iota League
Irvine 57, Anaheim Canyon 24
Ivy League
Orange Vista 35, Liberty 0
Rancho Verde 58, Vista del Lago 40
Kappa League
Segerstrom 49, Esperanza 29
Lambda League
Marina 49, Placentia Valencia 0
Marmonte League
Simi Valley 56, Camarillo 7
Mission Valley League
Arroyo 15, Gabrielino 0
Rosemead 31, Mountain View 23
Ocean League
El Segundo 65, Beverly Hills 7
Pioneer League
North Torrance 36, Redondo Union 29
Santa Monica 41, South Torrance 0
Rio Hondo League
La Canada 44, Pasadena Poly 7
Sigma League
Los Amigos 30, Rancho Alamitos 0
Skyline League
Carter 35, Bloomington 17
Colton 54, Arroyo Valley 33
Fontana 50, Riverside Notre Dame 0
Tango League
Anaheim 28, Costa Mesa 6
Bolsa Grande 49, Loara 14
Tri County League
Agoura 49, Dos Pueblos 27
Nonleague
Rim of the World 23, Eisenhower 21
Brentwood 48, Grace Brethren 41
Summit 40, Grand Terrace 14
Jurupa Hills 35, San Gorgonio 34
Miller 24, Cathedral City 14

INTERSECTIONAL
Lompoc Cabrillo 56, Carpinteria 7

8 MAN
Heritage League
Faith Baptist 54, Milken 0
Nonleague
Malibu 38, Blair 0
Public Safety 21, Victor Valley Christian 16
Sage Hill 58, Vista Meridian 30
Entrepreneur 38, Immanuel Christian 0
Flintridge Prep 84, Noli Indian 6



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Lakers’ JJ Redick says he and Doc Rivers have no bad feelings for one another

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Lakers’ JJ Redick says he and Doc Rivers have no bad feelings for one another


Despite past tensions and public criticisms, Bucks coach Doc Rivers and Lakers coach JJ Redick said there are no bad feelings between them.

“We’re fine,” Redick said pregame Thursday. “I don’t carry beef with people. And I’m not going to get into the history of Doc and I’s relationship right now. And I probably won’t ever. He’s fine in my book.”

Redick would go on to beat Rivers and the Bucks 107-102 for the Lakers’ first win of the preseason.

During a media appearance last season on ESPN, Redick pointedly questioned Rivers’ sense of accountability after Rivers talked about difficulties in taking the Milwaukee job midseason.

“I’ve seen the trend for years,” Redick said on “First Take.” “The trend is always making excuses. Doc, we get it. Taking over a team in the middle of a season is hard. It’s hard. We get it. It’s hard. … But it’s always an excuse. It’s always throwing your team under the bus.”

Redick said Thursday that he apologized for the tone of his comments, which ESPN posted on YouTube under the headline “JJ Redick goes SCORCHED EARTH on Doc Rivers for making excuses!”

“It’s never been really (an issue) for me,” Rivers said. “It’s been one way, and I’ve said this many times. And… take JJ off the board, coaches, they, pour into players. They really do. They pour in a ton of love to players. And oftentimes that love is rejected, it’s just the way it is.”

Rivers said he expected Redick’s Lakers to be strong when it came to “execution.”

Milwaukee Bucks coach Doc Rivers watches during a game against the Detroit Pistons on Sunday.

(Jose Juarez / Associated Press)

“I think probably execution stuff because that’s what we were known for when he played for me. Ran a lot of it,” Rivers said. “As a matter of fact, I watched the first two games and many of the sets we ran with the Clippers, the Lakers are running now. … I did the same thing as a player. You run what you know well and what you like. … My guess is that JJ will probably take from all the coaches he played for.”

Rivers said that he’s empathetic for his top assistant, former Lakers coach Darvin Ham, who has been viewed by some as receiving indirect criticism any time a player says something positive about the Lakers’ vibes or organization this preseason.

“There’s heartbreak for coaches. Darvin’s dealing with that a little bit,” Rivers said. “He sees guys make comments now that he poured into. It’s not right. But that’s just what happens in this part of our job. We know that going into it.”

Thursday, the Lakers were without Austin Reaves because of ankle soreness. Redick said the issue wasn’t a concern. The team also kept minute limits on Max Christie, Gabe Vincent and Cam Reddish.

LeBron James, like he did on Sunday in Palm Desert against Phoenix, played only the first half. He scored 11 points to go with six rebounds and four assists. Anthony Davis, who played into the third quarter, had 11 points and eight rebounds to go with three blocks.

The Lakers trailed by as many as 15 in the fourth quarter before a 20-0 run by rookie Dalton Knecht and the Lakers’ deep bench pushed them to the win.



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Why is Chargers’ attack running off-kilter? ‘It’s a tough offense. We’re gonna get it’

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Why is Chargers’ attack running off-kilter? ‘It’s a tough offense. We’re gonna get it’


Chargers players dressed and equipment managers tidied up the locker room after the team’s loss to the Kansas City Chiefs at SoFi Stadium. J.K. Dobbins sat motionless in his locker. The running back covered his head with a towel.

“I haven’t been in a place where I lost a lot, so I’m not used to it, yet,” Dobbins said later. “And I won’t get used to it.”

The Chargers offense that emerged early as one of the most punishing running attacks in the NFL has faded into a two-game losing streak. Hampered by injuries and haunted by mistakes, the Chargers have scored just two touchdowns in their last 25 offensive drives entering Sunday’s game against the Denver Broncos.

“We gotta play cleaner football, that’s all, and we will,” offensive coordinator Greg Roman said. “You go through these little stretches sometime, and you just want to make them a little stretch, you don’t want to let that extend.”

Known for his wizardry in the run game, Roman had the offense humming behind 395 rushing yards in the first two games. He and head coach Jim Harbaugh preached the importance of a balanced offense that could be quarterback Justin Herbert’s “best friend,” but the Chargers have averaged just 2.6 yards per rush attempt in the last two games.

Injuries and self-inflicted wounds have hamstrung the offense, Roman said. The Chargers (2-2) haven’t shown everything they’ve worked on in practice because of in-game blunders, including seven offensive penalties against the Kansas City Chiefs and two against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Saddled with negative plays, the Chargers have faced third down with 10 or more yards to go 17 times in four games. Roman said he’s never been associated with an offense that has dealt with so many third-and-long situations.

The Chargers are 21st in the NFL in third-down conversions (36.4%) and just seven-for-24 (29.2%) on third-down opportunities during the two losses.

“We haven’t played the way we want to, but there’s never a time to panic,” Herbert said. “Panicking doesn’t help. … We got the right guys out there. It’s a new offense. It’s a tough offense. We’re gonna get it picked up.”

With the running game’s struggles, Harbaugh is sensing the questions that will persist as the offense crawls along. The head coach cut off a reporter Wednesday before he could finish asking whether the team would try to throw more with Herbert.

Chargers running back Gus Edwards (4) is upended and tackled by his face mask by Chiefs linebacker Nick Bolton (32) in the first half. Edwards is averaging 3.0 yards per carry.

(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The former Pro Bowler has yet to pass for 180 yards in a game this season and is averaging 22.8 pass attempts after throwing nearly 40 times a game during his first four seasons.

“If we throw it 500 times or 50 times, we just have to be executing as an offense,” Herbert said. “Selfishly, I’d love to throw the football, but I want to get this offense to be as best as we can. And what that looks like, it changes week to week.”

The passing plan started to reveal itself against Pittsburgh, Roman said. Herbert threw 16 times during the first half for 125 yards and one touchdown as the Chargers led 10-7. But an injury to left tackle Rashawn Slater left a gaping hole in pass protection and led to Herbert reinjuring his right ankle. The plan went out the window.

Although Herbert returned to start against the Chiefs, the lingering injury affected the game plan, Roman said. With the benefit of the off week, Herbert has returned to some team drills during practice for the first time since the initial injury, and Slater (pectoral) also returned in a limited fashion.

Right tackle Joe Alt was a full participant in practice Thursday for the first time since he injured his knee against the Steelers, potentially giving Herbert much-needed protection to jump-start the offense.

“I love it when Justin Herbert‘s back there and is able to throw the football. We all do. It’s a thing of beauty,” Roman said. “But we’re trying to build something here that’s sustainable, that can win in a lot of different conditions under different circumstances. … But there are definitely going to be some days where we’re able to let Justin go to work, throwing the football. Those days are coming.”

Etc.

Linebacker Junior Colson (hamstring) and right tackle Joe Alt (knee) were full participants in practice Thursday. Colson practiced fully for the first time since being injured against the Carolina Panthers. … Linebacker Joey Bosa (hip), running back Gus Edwards (ankle) and cornerback Ja’Sir Taylor (fibula) did not practice Thursday. … Defensive back Deane Leonard (hamstring) was limited.



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Obama blasts men for finding ‘all kinds of excuses’ to avoid voting for a female president

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Obama blasts men for finding ‘all kinds of excuses’ to avoid voting for a female president


Former President Obama joined the campaign trail for the final stretch Thursday with some “truths” for men, especially Black men, who he said were not delivering the enthusiasm for Vice President Kamala Harris that they did when he was running for president.

He told a group of campaign volunteers in Pittsburgh they have “a choice that is clear … between someone who “grew up like you, knows you,” understands the same struggles and triumphs and has concrete proposals to make life better, and “someone who has consistently shown disregard, not just for the communities, but for you as a person.”

Obama said he had a problem with men who are “coming up with all kinds of excuses” to sit out the election or vote for former President Trump.

“Part of it makes me think that, well, you just aren’t feeling the idea of having a woman as president, and you’re coming up with other alternatives and other reasons for that,” he said.

He said it was not acceptable that some men are “thinking about sitting out or supporting somebody who has a history of denigrating you, because you think that’s a sign of strength, because that’s what being a man is? Putting women down?”

The comments underscore the urgency Democrats are feeling in an election that remains a virtual toss-up with less than a month to go. Pennsylvania is the biggest of seven battleground states that are neck and neck in the polls and likely to decide the election.

The same polls show Harris with a wide lead among women voters but at a deficit with Trump among men. Harris is overwhelming ahead with Black men but Trump has been courting them and polls suggest Harris has work to do to motivate them to come to the polls. Their impact could be especially large in Pennsylvania and Georgia, where both campaigns are making concerted efforts to appeal to them.

Trump may not have helped his own case Thursday when, speaking in Detroit, he disparaged the majority-Black city.

“Our whole country will end up being like Detroit if she’s elected president,” Trump said at the Detroit Economic Club, speaking of Harris. “We’re not going to let her do that to this country.”

Speaking to reporters at the Las Vegas airport Thursday, Harris called out Trump’s comment. “It is great to be back in Las Vegas … by contrast, my opponent, Donald Trump, has yet again trashed another great American city, Detroit.”

Trump’s remarks echoed his labeling of Haiti and African nations as “shithole countries” during a 2018 White House meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers. He has also falsely accused Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, of stealing cats and dogs to eat them.

Obama did not reference those comments directly. But when he spoke for 45 minutes Thursday night at a large rally in Pittsburgh, he devoted most of his speech to the contrast between the two candidates’ personal qualities.

“It’s not just about policies that are on the ballot,” Obama said. “It is about values and it is about character.”

Obama touted Harris’ stances on abortion, the Affordable Care Act and economic programs designed to help low-income people buy homes. He portrayed Trump as an old rich guy who complained and cared only about lowering taxes for people like himself and cast blame for all of the nation’s problems on immigrants. He eviscerated the former president for lying to victims of the recent hurricanes about the federal government’s efforts to deliver relief.

“If you had a family member who acted like that, you might still love him, but you’d tell him ‘You got a problem,’” Obama said. “And you wouldn’t put him in charge of anything.”

“And yet, when Donald Trump lies or cheats or shows utter disregard for our Constitution, when he calls POWs losers or fellow citizens vermin, people make excuses for it,” Obama continued. “They think it’s OK. They think, well, at least he’s, he’s owning the libs.”



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How Sabrina Ionescu went from ‘dark days’ of injury to the brink of a WNBA championship

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How Sabrina Ionescu went from ‘dark days’ of injury to the brink of a WNBA championship


Follow live coverage of Lynx vs. Liberty in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals today

NEW YORK — Sabrina Ionescu could barely walk during last season’s WNBA Finals. The New York Liberty star needed an injection into her aching hip to even take the floor in the early games of the series against the Las Vegas Aces. She struggled to score, and as the Aces were en route to clinching the championship in a one-point victory on the Liberty’s home court last October, Ionescu threw up into a sideline trash can.

The Liberty and Aces were billed as the WNBA’s super-teams last year because of their star power, including Ionescu. But Vegas made a statement and left a lasting scar for Ionescu.

“Losing,” she said, “motivates you.”

The Liberty had room for growth, and Ionescu recognized that included her. Before traveling home to California last fall, she met with New York’s coaching staff. They discussed in detail how she could improve. While she was good with the ball in her hand, they told her she was too easily defended off-ball. They stressed identifying and taking advantage of pick-and-roll situations. They wanted Ionescu to become a better cutter, play with different speeds and attack the basket more.

Once healthy, she got to work with no physical limitations or, apparently, without a ceiling on how hard she’d push herself.

“It’s just about wanting to be better all the time and not really being OK with being complacent,” Ionescu said.

She was in the gym constantly. She worked on her handle and quickness. She added various floaters to her game. She focused on pulling up out of different dribble variations and utilizing her strength. She played five-on-five against current and former Pac-12 players, WNBA players and overseas pros. “Nothing compares to defense and live reps,” she said.

That wasn’t even enough. Ionescu devised challenges to make difficult drills even tougher. Her trainer recalled a catch-and-shoot sequence in which Ionescu was tasked to make 20 deep 3-pointers, requiring the last five be consecutive. Ionescu added that each needed to be all net. After making 13 in a row, she called out that a few had barely grazed the rim. “No absolutely, not. These don’t count,” she said. She started the sequence again.

“Being able to go full blast was a whole different story,” said Breen Weeks, her basketball skills trainer the last two offseasons.

Another time, Ionescu made herself hit five one-dribble, same-handed, same-footed floaters, but she required the last three be banked in off the glass without using her right hand as a guide. “If she didn’t like the height on it, (it) doesn’t count,” Weeks said. “That’s how obsessive she is. That’s how locked in and detailed she is. I call her a cold-blooded competitor.”

Said Ionescu: “I know I can make a shot, but I want to continue to challenge myself to chase perfection. Sometimes that’s with a swish, sometimes that’s with a challenging move.”

Taking difficult moments head on has been a theme through the early stages of Ionescu’s career, which has been marked with accomplishments but also injuries and shortcomings. But her competitive obsessiveness this offseason has elevated her game to new heights. She gets downhill more and is now New York’s primary ballhandler, averaging a career-high 18.2 points and 6.2 assists per game, and playing more minutes than ever.

It culminated in guiding the Liberty back to the WNBA Finals and to the doorstep of a franchise peak. Following its loss last season, New York — one of the WNBA’s original teams — is in position to win its first championship, taking on the Minnesota Lynx in Game 1 on Thursday.

“It’s been really rewarding to see my true self come out,” Ionescu said.


Those who know Ionescu best aren’t surprised that she lived in a gym all winter and spring. As a high school sophomore on the way to becoming one of the nation’s top recruits in Orinda, Calif., her coach gave her a key to the school’s gym. She practiced there late into the night so often that the school principal informed Miramonte High School’s janitorial staff to “just leave her alone and let her shoot,” her coach Kelly Sopak said.

When coach Kelly Graves recruited Ionescu to Oregon, he told her the university’s practice facility was open 24/7 for players, but she quickly learned that wasn’t necessarily true. Ionescu was booted out of the facility on her first night on campus by a security guard, the first of many times throughout her college career. “She was the only player that I’ve ever had that’s been kicked out of the practice facility,” Graves said.

That work ethic was vital as Ionescu’s celebrated entry to the WNBA was quickly marred by injuries. Ionescu was the No. 1 pick in the 2020 WNBA Draft, but she suffered a severe ankle sprain in her third WNBA game and she missed the remainder of her rookie season. Ankle pain lingered throughout the 2021 season, and it wasn’t until the 2022 campaign she said she was fully healed. Still, thoughts of injuries remained with her, later recalling those plagued stretches her “dark days.” Finishing an entire season healthy was a goal, in the same way as winning a championship.

“She just competes against herself,” Liberty general manager Jonathan Kolb said.

When the Liberty reconvened in the spring, assistant coach Olaf Lange said he quickly noticed “the flashes were there in training camp.” Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello took note of Ionescu’s improved explosiveness.

By her 14th game, Ionescu had made more floaters than she did in all of 2023. Heading into the finals, 37.2 percent of her shot attempts had been runners or at the rim, up from 26.3 percent last year, according to Synergy Sports. “When she’s aggressive like that it kind of opens things up for everyone else,” Liberty teammate Breanna Stewart said.

Stewart and Jonquel Jones are New York’s lone players with MVP awards on their resumés, but Ionescu is arguably the franchise’s motor. Aces coach Becky Hammon said the 5-foot-11 guard is “what makes (New York) go with her pace, her ability to read, her ability to put defenses in different dilemmas.” Hammon called her the Liberty’s “head of the snake.”

“I love her shooting, everything that she brings to the game. Even just her finishing around the rim, I think has been a bit better,” Hammon said. “It’s tough when you take really, really good players, and they get better.”


Sabrina Ionescu has played with more confidence and strength this season, helping lead the Liberty back to the WNBA Finals. (Barry Gossage / NBAE via Getty Images)

It’s why Las Vegas sought to specifically shut her down in Game 3 (Ionescu’s four points were her second-lowest of the season). Stop Ionescu, the Aces believed, and they could get back into the semifinals. Then Game 4 happened. Ionescu scored 12 first-quarter points en route to an eventual team-high 22 to close the door on the Aces’ comeback attempt.

Stopping Ionescu consistently this season has proved challenging, not just statistically, but because of the new confidence she is playing with. “Sometimes early in her career, I thought when she feels the crowd, she just wants to make a play and force the issue,” Lange said. “As of late, she lets it come to her.”

As Sopak watches Ionescu throughout New York’s postseason run, he has had constant flashbacks. He recalled a middle school contest when she hit a late runner off the glass that reminded him very much of a late-game shot over A’ja Wilson in New York’s Game 2 win over the Aces. With the Liberty leading by only one point with 11.6 seconds left, Ionescu approached the free-throw line looking to close out the win. She missed the first free throw, however, and from his home in California, Sopak said, “St. Mary’s–Stockton.”

The meaning dates back to Ionescu’s freshman year of high school, when Ionescu was fouled and went to the line for a one-and-one against what Sopak said was a top-10 program. She missed the front-end, and Miramonte lost by a point. The loss motivated Ionescu to avoid being in that position again.

“You can’t sugar coat it with Sabrina,” Sopak said. He said he told her after that game: “If you’re to be a great player, you’re going to have to be prepared for failure. If you’re not willing to lose that game and take the consequences of it, then you’re never going to win it.”

Ionescu doesn’t shy away from key moments. It’s why Sopak had no doubt she would make the second free throw. She embraces trying to win games, not just avoiding losing them. “She’s not proving anything anymore,” Sopak said.


Over the last three weeks, Ionescu has dapped up Spike Lee, fallen into Carmelo Anthony’s lap and sung with Alicia Keys. She fist-pumped after making 3-pointers, waved her hands to amp up Barclays Center crowds and iced playoff wins at the free-throw line.

Amid all the fanfare and the victories, Ionescu’s drive has been evident. After she tied New York’s franchise playoff-record with 36 points to close out its first-round series with the Atlanta Dream, she sat in a corner of the Liberty locker room and took a rare breath.

“Good f— job,” Ionescu said to her teammates as she fixed her headband. “This game wasn’t perfect, but we played hard. We played hard for 40 minutes and we just chipped away.”

 

Healthy, focused and confident, Ionescu said she’s felt more comfortable with being vocal and showing who she is. “People have been able to see a little bit more of my personality this year, who I am as a person,” she said. “Because I’ve just felt more confident in myself.”

She is in the ear of coaches about what she can do to score and how she wants to help her teammates succeed. At a recent practice, she urged the staff to continue repping out-of-bounds plays instead of taking a water break. Every minute, and every drill, matters.

Winning a ring is paramount, she said. She said she’s thought about what it would feel like to be victorious, and what it would mean for her teammates, for a Liberty franchise that has lost its five prior trips to the finals, and for New York City, which hasn’t won a basketball title since the 1970s.

“I’ve been thinking about a championship since we lost last year,” Ionescu said.

(Illustration: Daniel Goldfarb / The Athletic; Top photo of Sabrina Ionescu:  Evan Yu / NBAE, Mitchell Leff / Getty)





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Yoshinobu Yamamoto to be ‘part’ of Dodgers’ Game 5 plan, but bullpen will have key role

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Yoshinobu Yamamoto to be ‘part’ of Dodgers’ Game 5 plan, but bullpen will have key role


Exactly 25 hours before the biggest game of his team’s season, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was only sure of one thing about his pitching plans for Game 5 in the National League Division Series on Friday night.

“Obviously, I’m sure Yoshinobu will be a part of it,” Roberts said Thursday, referring to $325-million offseason signing, and Game 1 starter, Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

What does that mean exactly?

“I just don’t know,” Roberts said.

Or, at least, he wasn’t ready to say yet.

When the Dodgers made a late change to their starting rotation for this series last week, they did it with Game 5 largely in mind.

After initially announcing that trade deadline acquisition Jack Flaherty would start Game 1, the Dodgers instead bumped Yamamoto up to the opener and Flaherty to Game 2.

The idea was to keep both pitchers available for a potential fifth game, giving Yamamoto his standard five days of rest (a schedule he has followed all season since arriving from Japan) and Flaherty the typical four days off most MLB starters take before starts.

However, circumstances have changed in the four games since, which the Dodgers and San Diego Padres split to set up Friday’s winner-take-all showdown.

Yamamoto was not only knocked around in Game 1, giving up five runs in three innings, but was also believed to be tipping his pitches, a problem that plagued him early in his rookie MLB season.

Flaherty, meanwhile, was only slightly better in Game 2, managing to pitch into the sixth inning but also giving up four runs in a loss.

Then, of course, there was the success the Dodgers found in a Game 4 bullpen game, shutting the Padres out on a night eight different relievers combined for nine dominant innings.

It set up a question that surrounded Thursday’s off-day: Would the Dodgers go with a traditional start from Yamamoto or Flaherty, or run back a bullpen plan that was tantalizingly effective in Wednesday’s elimination-game win.

The answer, it appears, might be somewhere in the middle.

Yamamoto seems likely to pitch at some point. Flaherty will also be available, according to Roberts. But the appeal of another bullpen game still beckons — maybe one in which Yamamoto and/or Flaherty handle a few innings, but leave the bulk of the game to a lockdown relief corps.

“We’re still talking through it,” Roberts said. “I think the main variable is seeing our [relief] guys go out there today, play catch, see how they feel, which will give us a little bit more information on ultimately who takes the brunt of the game, who starts the game.”

“But coming off of what they did last night,” Roberts added of the bullpen, “makes everyone feel pretty confident going into Game 5.”

The simplest scenario could be the Dodgers using an opener in front of Yamamoto, and having him come out of the bullpen for bulk innings.

Yamamoto has pitched out of the bullpen before in his career, both as a young pitcher in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball league and during last year’s World Baseball Classic with the country’s national team.

Roberts said Yamamoto told the team he’s open to do so again on Friday night.

“I just feel he’ll do whatever we ask,” Roberts said.

As for Yamamoto’s potential pitch-tipping issue in Game 1, Roberts said the 25-year-old right-hander has “cleaned stuff up” over the last week.

“Where Yoshinobu is at, I feel really comfortable,” Roberts said.

That didn’t stop Roberts from illustrating the advantages of a more bullpen-heavy pitching plan — especially considering the 0.93 ERA the team’s seven leverage relievers (Michael Kopech, Blake Treinen, Evan Phillips, Daniel Hudson, Ryan Brasier, Alex Vesia and Anthony Banda) have combined for this series.

“You have a lot of neutrality with our guys,” Roberts said. “I feel that we have a lot of different guys that we can kind of deploy in certain lanes or certain spots.”

Where Yamamoto, or anyone else on the staff, fits into the script for Friday remains to be seen.

“I think our only focus,” Roberts said, “is finding the best pitchers to prevent runs tomorrow.”

It’s a task that will determine the fate of the Dodgers’ season.



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Review: A power broker takes on a quick study in ‘The Apprentice,’ a window onto Trump’s rise

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Review: A power broker takes on a quick study in ‘The Apprentice,’ a window onto Trump’s rise


Girded by powerhouse performances from Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong, the Donald Trump biopic is better than the former president would like you to believe.



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Georgia May Jagger and boyfriend Cambryan Sedlick are ‘so in love’ with newborn son

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Georgia May Jagger and boyfriend Cambryan Sedlick are ‘so in love’ with newborn son


Model-multihyphenate Georgia May Jagger is officially onto her next gig: motherhood.

The 32-year-old daughter of Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger on Thursday announced the birth of her first child with skateboarder boyfriend Cambryan Sedlick, 24.

“Our Son Dean Lee Jagger Sedlick was born September 30th. We are so in Love and happy and can’t stop staring at him,” she said, going on to give Sedlick a shoutout “for being so incredible through everything and taking such good care of us.”

Accompanying Georgia May’s Instagram announcement were a series of Polaroids featuring the first-time parents and their newborn son, who wore socks with red hearts. Smiling alongside her daughter was actress-model-grandma Jerry Hall.

The new arrival is Mick Jagger’s sixth grandchild.

The May Botanicals founder announced her pregnancy in June with a photo carousel of maternity portraits.

“Patiently waiting for our new best friend,” she wrote at the time, receiving congratulations from family and famous friends — including “Daisy Jones and the Six” star Suki Waterhouse, who welcomed her own baby with partner Robert Pattinson in March.

Georgia May, who has worked for brands including Wrangler, Pandora and Vivienne Westwood, kept herself booked and busy during her pregnancy, she told InStyle Magazine in August, saying she feels “like that’s been good for me.”

She also spoke about embracing her maternity wardrobe, telling Hello! Magazine last month, “For me this is really a new chapter of my life and it was so wonderful to get to have this moment where I really felt comfortable in my own skin.

“I’m about to become a mum so I’m sure that it will give me a whole new meaning to joy that I haven’t experienced before.”





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Miguel Rojas on fan’s IG post saying he cost Dodgers Game 3: ‘I [screwed] that decision up’

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Miguel Rojas on fan’s IG post saying he cost Dodgers Game 3: ‘I [screwed] that decision up’


Miguel Rojas is more than a veteran shortstop whose elevated play at age 35 was key to the Dodgers’ posting the best regular-season record in baseball. He is a recognized clubhouse leader routinely referred to as a manager in waiting, a player who like former Dodgers Dave Roberts and Alex Cora could develop into a respected skipper perched on the top step of the dugout.

That’s why his emotional, profane response to a fan’s Instagram post that criticized him as a reason the Dodgers lost Game 3 of the National League Division Series to the San Diego Padres at Petco Park was notable.

Rojas’ response, which has since been deleted, pointed out that he and his teammates are trying their hardest to win. He went on to acknowledge that his poor decision in the second inning could have cost the Dodgers the game. Rojas’ heavy sprinkling of profanity might have obscured the fact that he, essentially, was taking responsibility and standing up for his teammates.

The play came with no outs and runners on first and third, immediately after a ground ball resulted in first baseman Freddie Freeman pegging runner Manny Machado with a throw. Xander Bogaerts hit a routine grounder to Rojas, who rather than tossing the ball to second baseman Gavin Lux attempted to touch second himself before throwing to first. Both runners were safe and scored when David Peralta followed with a double, triggering a six-run rally in the Padres’ 6-5 win.

The post that prompted Rojas’ response was a video clip of the play with this comment: “YEAH MACHADO OUT ON THE GRASS WAS WACK, BUT MIGUEL ROJAS IS A HUGE REASON FOR THE L YESTERDAY.”

Rojas response (sparing our readers the profanity per Times guidelines): “You think you guys are the only ones who want to win this [crap], every single one of the players and ppl in this clubhouse are doing everything to … win, it’s not bc of the … effort we doing everything possible if that’s not enough to you guys I understand all you guys want is a victory after the final out. Nobody in this [crap] is lost we playing to win not to be the reason for the … L.”

“Yeah one … mental mistake I wish I would of pass the ball and get one out but my … sorry a— was trying to do everything possible to get 2 … outs,” Rojas wrote in his second comment. “Yeah I [screwed] that decision up and you can blame the … reason of the L.”

The Dodgers rebounded in Game 4 with an 8-0 victory and Roberts said Rojas probably will not start in the decisive Game 5 on Friday night at Dodger Stadium. Rojas is injured, having aggravated a left abductor muscle injury trying to make the play in question and sat out Game 4.

In a calmer moment, Rojas explained to reporters shortly after Game 3 the play and the injury.

“On that play at second base when I tried to take it myself to the bag, I feel like I reached a little bit for the bag with my left leg, and it was a bad decision,” Rojas said. “I made a bad decision there for the play and for my health.”

I made a decision there that hurt me and hurt the team at the time. Unfortunately, I have to deal with the consequences now.”

The episode doesn’t obscure Rojas’ contributions. After opening the season as a backup, he took over at shortstop when Mookie Betts was injured and made only two errors in 596 innings. He also batted .283 with an on-base-plus slugging percentage of .748, the second-highest of his 11-year career.

Rojas’ contract includes a $5-million option for 2025 that he hopes the Dodgers will exercise. That hasn’t kept him from already wondering about what might come next.

“I understand what part of my career I’m in right now — I might be playing for a few more years and then I’m going to have to do something after baseball,” Rojas told The Times in May. “I’m embracing this opportunity to actually start coaching a little bit with my teammates. That way, I can prepare myself for what’s coming next.

“I feel like there’s many possibilities, but my main focus and my main goal is to manage at the big league level.”





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LeBron James on Bronny’s best play from cardiac arrest return: ‘He walked off on his own’

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LeBron James on Bronny’s best play from cardiac arrest return: ‘He walked off on his own’


LeBron James wasn’t on the court for one of the most significant games for him last season.

It wasn’t a Lakers game or even an NBA game.

It was the Dec. 10 matchup between USC and Long Beach State, during which his oldest son, Bronny James, made his collegiate debut with the Trojans less than five months after suffering sudden cardiac arrest.

“Every minute he ran, every minute he jumped, took a bump to his chest — it’s just a lot of nerves for sure,” LeBron James said during an interview on the Netflix docuseries, “Starting 5.” “For me, the best play of the whole game is when the game ended and he walked off on his own, in his own power.”

LeBron and Bronny James are now Lakers teammates, after Los Angeles drafted Bronny with the 55th overall pick in June.

Less than a year earlier, during a July 25 Trojans workout, Bronny James collapsed on the Galen Center floor. The family later said the probable cause of his sudden cardiac arrest had been identified as an “anatomically and functionally significant congenital heart defect.”

“Shout-out to the man above, one, to the whole coaching staff, training staff, members of that program,” LeBron James said on the docuseries. “They are the reason Bronny is alive now and smiling and thriving and doing what any 19-year-old should be doing, and that’s living out their dream.”

James described the period of time following the incident as “a hard-ass few months, watching our son go through the things that he was going through personally. I mean, it affected all of us in our household.”

His wife, and Bronny’s mother, Savannah James got choked up while discussing that time on “Starting 5.”

“It was tough,” she said. “I think that we processed it differently. I think at the end of the day, it was just about us supporting each other and just being super grateful for the outcome.”

“Starting 5” chronicles the 2023-24 seasons of James and fellow NBA superstars Jimmy Butler of the Miami Heat, Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves, Domantas Sabonis of the Sacramento Kings and Jayson Tatum of the Boston Celtics.

A significant portion of one episode focuses on Bronny James’ first game with USC. The night before, LeBron James helped the Lakers defeat the Indiana Pacers 123-109 to win the NBA’s first in-season tournament title in Las Vegas. Immediately afterward, James said, he got on a plane so he could be there for his son.

“I know he had to be nervous as hell ‘cause I was nervous as hell,” LeBron James said.

Bronny James said on the docuseries: “There were a lot of butterflies, but that is to be expected. Every game it pretty much feels the same way.”

The freshman guard recorded four points, three rebounds, two assists, two steals and a block in 16 minutes during an 84-79 Trojans loss in overtime that sure felt like a huge victory for the James family.

“To see your kid being able to thrive and being able to live out his dream is one thing,” an emotional LeBron James said. “But to see your kid go through adversity and be able to overcome adversity is another. Because you gotta imagine, like, the last time he was on a basketball floor doing anything live, he was taken out on a gurney going to the hospital.”



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