Eagles DB accuses Saints of ‘playing dirty’ as DeVonta Smith injured

ByTIM MCMANUS
September 22, 2024, 5:59 PM

NEW ORLEANS — Philadelphia Eagles safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson called the hit that injured receiver DeVonta Smith in Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Saints a “cheap shot” and accused his former team of “playing dirty.”

Smith left early in the fourth quarter with a concussion after a big collision with Saints defensive tackle Khristian Boyd. Smith’s momentum was going backward after he was corralled by Saints defenders following a short completion, and he was blindsided by a high hit from Boyd. There was no flag on the play.

“Man, that’s the dirtiest s— I ever saw in football, bro,” Gardner-Johnson said following the Eagles’ narrow 15-12 win. “Y’all obviously saw forward progression was stopped. For them to take a cheap shot on one of our key players, it goes to show what type of team that is. They’re front-runners.”

This was Gardner-Johnson’s first time playing against the Saints since they traded him to the Eagles in August 2022, and his emotions were clearly running high.

“Y’all always talk about Ceedy this, Ceedy this, but let’s talk about how they’re playing dirty on their side,” Gardner-Johnson said. “At the end of the day, the league will handle it. … We got the dub and keep it pushing.”

Gardner-Johnson’s teammates were more measured, though the play appeared to be weighing on the minds of several players in the locker room.

“Did I think it was dirty? Yeah,” said left tackle Jordan Mailata, who pushed Boyd to the ground following the play. “Did I think it was intentional? No — ah, I don’t f—ing know. I’ve got to watch it. I’m conflicted as you can tell. I hope Smitty is OK.”

Mailata added that Boyd was “just trying to make a play” — a sentiment echoed by defensive end Brandon Graham.

Smith remained on the ground for several minutes. Teammates gathered around him and coach Nick Sirianni placed a hand on Smith’s knee before the receiver eventually got up and walked off under his own power. He was later ruled out for the game.

On the next play, running back Saquon Barkley broke off for a 65-yard touchdown run to put the Eagles ahead for the first time.

“You see something like Smitty getting hurt today, that’s frustrating,” center Cam Jurgens said. “I hope everybody’s all right. There were a lot of injuries, but it sucks when a player gets hit like that.”

Standout right tackle Lane Johnson also exited with a concussion in the first half and did not return. Right guard Mekhi Becton (finger) and receiver/returner Britain Covey (shoulder) sustained injuries as well and were ruled out. Covey was wearing a sling on his left arm as he walked out of the locker room postgame.

White Sox tie record for most losses since 1900 with 120

ByABC News
September 22, 2024, 6:09 PM

SAN DIEGO — The Chicago White Sox had a 2-1 lead going into the bottom of the eighth inning on Sunday, and then history struck.

That tenuous lead disappeared in the span of four San Diego Padres batters, and the White Sox went on to their 120th loss, tying the post-1900 record set by the 1962 expansion New York Mets.

The dichotomy couldn’t have been greater.

The White Sox headed to a somber clubhouse and quietly packed for their flight home.

The Padres, who are closing in on a postseason berth, gathered in front of their dugout to applaud the sellout crowd of 45,197 that roared through the bottom of the eighth and then the top of the ninth of the 4-2 win in their regular-season home finale on the brilliant first day of autumn. Some fans even chanted “Beat L.A.!” in anticipation of a huge series starting Tuesday night at the Los Angeles Dodgers.

“I guess when you lose 120 it’s easier to brush it off but it [stinks] to go through it, but that’s where we’re at,” veteran White Sox outfielder Andrew Benintendi said.

There had been hope for the White Sox to at least delay the historic loss, until there wasn’t. Right-hander Sean Burke, making just his second big league start — and third appearance — was outstanding through six innings. The White Sox took their lead on two home runs off Yu Darvish, including one by Korey Lee, who grew up in northern San Diego County.

“Burke threw a hell of a game,” Benintendi said. “They’ve got a lot of good bats up and down that lineup, guys that have played a long time, and once they get the lead with that bullpen, it seems like it’s pretty much over at this point.

“So yes, it [stinks].”

So many of the White Sox’s losses have come late in games.

“Yeah, we joke about it all the time. It never seems like we get blown out, and the seventh, eighth and ninth come around and we’re facing their seven-eight-nine-inning guys every night, which is big. It’s hard to score runs off the back ends of the bullpen,” Benintendi said.

“It seems like we have been here a lot of times and it just hasn’t panned out.”

With one more loss in their final six games, the White Sox will hold the modern-day record outright. They finish with three at home against the Los Angeles Angels beginning Tuesday night and finish with three at Detroit, which is in the AL wild-card hunt.

The 1899 Cleveland Spiders hold the major league record for losses at 20-134.

Interim manager Grady Sizemore didn’t address the team afterward.

“No loss is good,” he said. “It’s not something that we’re focused on. I think everyone outside this clubhouse is more obsessed with it than us. The way we spin is to put this one behind us and get ready for the series back home.”

Asked how his players were digesting it, Sizemore said: “We all know the situation. We know where we are at. We have a job to do and they are still playing for something. They have handled it like professionals and we will be back out there on Tuesday ready to go and give it our best.”

Said Lee: “I think if you ask all 50 guys or so [who have been on the roster this season] we are not going to be happy about it. If you’re happy about it, I don’t know what you are doing here.

“I think it’s obviously hard, but at the same time everyone is coming in here every day and giving their best.”

The catcher said the team has stayed together through all the losing.

“It shows you how close we are. We talked about it earlier today. Honestly, that is what I look forward to every day when I come in here is having the guy right next to me and knowing he is going to care for me, inside and out, on the field and off the field.

“That is all you can ask for. It’s good family around us. Obviously there is a lot of bad, but you have to take the good out of every day. And the good is coming in here with this group of guys and doing the thing we all love to do.”

The White Sox had tied the AL record of 119 losses by the 2003 Detroit Tigers on Saturday night. They lost their 20th straight road series and were swept for the 24th time this season.

Antonio Pierce blasts Raiders for ‘business decisions’ made in loss

ByPAUL GUTIERREZ
September 22, 2024, 8:59 PM

LAS VEGAS — Antonio Pierce angrily rocked back and forth for more than five minutes at the postgame podium, the Las Vegas Raiders coach searching for answers in the wake of his team’s stunning 36-22 loss to the Carolina Panthers.

Pierce was sure of one thing: His team did not show up for its home opener — and he went in on some unnamed players.

“As the game went on,” Pierce said, “I think there was definitely some individuals that made business decisions. And we’ll make business decisions going forward, as well.

“We got our ass whupped … I would have booed us too.”

Given what was on the table — a festive home opener after last week’s emotional comeback win at the Baltimore Ravens, the heretofore winless Panthers having benched their former No. 1 draft pick Bryce Young in favor of 14th-year veteran quarterback Andy Dalton and the Raiders’ offense having seemingly caught up with the team’s opportunistic defense — this loss, to longtime observers, was comparable to several embarrassing defeats in recent memory.

From losing to the Indianapolis Colts and former high school coach Jeff Saturday in 2022 in his first NFL game at the helm — the fallout of which led to then-Raiders QB Derek Carr crying at the podium — to falling to Baker Mayfield two days after he joined the Los Angeles Rams later that same season to last season’s defeat at the Chicago Bears, who started undrafted rookie Tyson Bagent at quarterback.

The difference? These Raiders were thoroughly dominated by Dalton and the Panthers.

“We’ve got a lot of people that have to look in the mirror,” said Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby, who was severely hampered by a left high ankle sprain suffered on the second-to-last play of the Raiders’ win at Baltimore and finished Sunday with three tackles and a pass defensed.

“Everybody’s got to continue getting better. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s a wake-up call, you know what I mean? We’ve got to be better. Period. Simple as that.”

The Raiders surrendered 437 total yards to Dalton & Co., who also dominated the time of possession 36:02 to 23:58. Offensively, only 55 of Las Vegas’ 331 offensive yards came on the ground. And the Raiders trailed by as much as 33-7 early in the fourth quarter.

Raiders wide receiver Davante Adams seemed puzzled by Pierce’s claim of players making “business decisions” late in the game.

“I feel like, I don’t know, this is tough for me to identify that,” said Adams, who had four catches on nine targets for 40 yards. “I’m not sure.”

Crosby offered his take.

“I don’t know. There’s a lot of things. You’ve got to watch the film,” he said. “Just wasn’t good enough. Just a bad loss. I mean, s—ty. We didn’t play our best football.”

Meanwhile, Pierce said not much should be gleaned from his replacing starting quarterback Gardner Minshew with Aidan O’Connell with 4:47 to play and Las Vegas trailing 36-15.

“The game was kind of out of hand, and we’ve got two quarterbacks that battled,” Pierce said in reference to the training camp competition, eventually won by Minshew. “Let the other guy go in there and see what he can do for a little bit.”

O’Connell led the Raiders on a 13-play, 70-yard touchdown drive, completing 9 of 12 passes for 82 yards, including an 8-yard TD to Tre Tucker, while another pass was nearly intercepted.

Minshew, meanwhile, passed for 214 yards in completing 18 of 28 attempts with a 13-yard TD pass to Jakobi Meyers and an interception.

“It sucks, obviously, especially at home,” O’Connell said. “You wanted to take another step forward and, hopefully, get a win here, but we’re going to bounce back. Good thing about football is there’s always the game next week.”

Strong ‘vet presence’ pays off for Dalton with big day in Panthers’ win

ByDAVID NEWTON
September 22, 2024, 9:29 PM

LAS VEGAS — Carolina Panthers quarterback Andy Dalton looked relaxed and comfortable as he paused from Sunday’s pregame warmups to pose for a picture with his wife and friends on the sideline at Allegiant Stadium.

It was that demeanor first-year coach Dave Canales was looking for earlier in the week when he benched Bryce Young in favor of the 36-year-old veteran, who delivered with three first-half touchdown passes in a 36-22 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders.

It was that demeanor Canales believed a squad stinging from an 0-2 start by a combined 60 points needed to jump-start an offense and team he thought was closer to finding an identity than the losses made things appear.

“That was one of things coming into this, I got a chance to just be me and be out there like how I normally am,” Dalton said after completing 26 of 37 passes for 319 yards and three touchdowns. “I’m normally pretty calm, I’m normally relaxed.

“Guys were having fun. I was just trying to make sure guys were having fun, because you put in a ton of work for this thing … and now you get a time to just go and enjoy the work you put in.”

Nothing had been fun for the Panthers in a 47-10 loss to New Orleans opening week and a 26-3 defeat to the Los Angeles Chargers in the home opener coming off an NFL-worst 2-15 season.

It had been especially hard offensively with Young, the top pick of the 2023 draft, putting up historically bad numbers.

Benching the quarterback who a year ago team owner David Tepper proclaimed would win “Super Bowls” at Carolina made for what Canales called a “really heavy week.” Seeing it all come together in a complete team victory was satisfying even if he was less than his normal cheerful self in his postgame presser following his first win as an NFL head coach.

“I’m smiling inside,” Canales said. “I’m absolutely beat. This has been an amazing week, but again a really heavy week just with all the factors, just getting back to work and to continue to push to establish our culture and process.”

Canales pushes complementary football and stays away from giving too much praise to one player. He never credited Dalton specifically with jump-starting the turnaround after two weeks of critics calling Carolina the worst team in the league.

But it was Dalton who set the tone. He led Carolina to a touchdown on its opening series, ending the NFL’s longest active streak of a team failing to accomplish that at 20 games.

His three first-half touchdowns were the most by a Carolina quarterback since Cam Newton had the same number on Dec. 20, 2015, against the New York Giants during his NFL MVP season.

It was the first time since Week 16 of 2022 that Carolina had been up by seven-plus points in the first half. The Panthers had gone seven straight games without holding any lead, period — the third-longest streak over the past 20 seasons.

So it had been dismal, and the biggest difference from the first two games was Dalton, known since college as the “Red Rifle” for his bright red hair.

“A vet presence,” wide receiver Diontae Johnson said of what Dalton brought that had been missing. “Just having a quarterback back there to get us in position, score, execute plays. We just did a great job of staying locked in. Every play called we made the most of it.”

Johnson, acquired in an offseason trade with the Pittsburgh Steelers to help Young improve, finished with a career-high 122 yards and a touchdown on eight catches. He had only five catches for 34 yards the first two games with Young.

The running game flourished with Dalton as well. Chuba Hubbard had 114 yards on 21 carries and caught five passes for 55 yards and the first touchdown.

It was Carolina’s first game with a 300-yard passer, 100-yard rusher and 100-yard receiver since Week 8 of 2022 against the Atlanta Falcons.

“Panthers football,” said Canales, who has stressed for weeks that the team still was searching for an identity. “That’s Panthers’ football, team football right there. And I get to show [the players] that, and I get to show them how it all complements and plays off each other.”

For Dalton, the game solidified that he still has what it takes at the end of his career to play winning football. For Young, it justified why he was benched and amplified that, like most rookie quarterbacks, he needs time to develop.

While Dalton and the Panthers were celebrating, Young was on the sideline observing without much expression. His first move after the game was to find Raiders quarterback Gardner Minshew and give him a hug.

“It definitely was a heavy week, and hard on a lot of people,” Dalton said. “Bryce and I have had conversations throughout this whole thing. Those conversations are between us.”

The heavy week became a joyous Sunday with the team holding a fourth-quarter lead with time on the clock for the first time in 20 games dating back to Week 18 of 2022.

Dalton was all smiles and tried his best to get Canales to smile afterward.

Even wide receiver Adam Thielen, who suffered a hamstring injury on a 31-yard, second-quarter touchdown catch that could force him to miss games, was smiling. Dalton, who gets to face the team ( Cincinnati Bengals) that drafted him in 2011 next week, was a big reason.

“Andy did a great job of just communicating and leading us and starting fast,” said Thielen, who plans to have an MRI on Monday. “That was his message to us — we’ve got to start fast — and he was able to lead that first drive and get that momentum.”

Cincinnati Reds fire manager David Bell after 6 seasons

ByABC News
September 22, 2024, 9:59 PM

The Cincinnati Reds fired manager David Bell on Sunday with five games to go in a disappointing season that began with the Reds as playoff contenders and will end with them missing the postseason for the 10th consecutive full season.

Bell, 52, received a three-year contract extension in July 2023 after the surprising Reds surged into contention following a 100-loss season in 2022. With an exciting young core that included shortstop Elly De La Cruz and a cadre of talented arms, the Reds were expected to be in play for a National League Central title.

Instead, they faltered, with injury and underperformance leading to a 76-81 record and fourth-place standing.

“David provided the kind of steadiness that we needed in our clubhouse over the last few seasons,” Reds president of baseball operations Nick Krall said in a statement. “We felt a change was needed to move the Major League team forward. We have not achieved the success we expected, and we need to begin focusing on 2025.”

Bell, the son of longtime Reds star Buddy Bell, was hired in 2019. His best season came in 2020, when the Reds went 31-29 and made the COVID-expanded postseason, in which they were swept out of the first round by Atlanta.

Beyond De La Cruz — who in his first full season blossomed into one of the best players in baseball — and the emergence of starter Hunter Greene into an ace, the Reds took multiple steps backward.

Second baseman Matt McLain missed the season with shoulder and rib injuries. Third baseman Noelvi Marte was suspended 80 games for PED use. First baseman Christian Encarnacion-Strand played in just 29 games. And recently, almost the entirety of the Reds’ rotation — Greene, left-handers Andrew Abbott and Nick Lodolo, and right-hander Graham Ashcraft — was on the IL.

Bench coach Freddie Benavides will serve as Cincinnati’s interim manager. Among those who could be in consideration to replace Bell: Skip Schumaker, who is expected to leave the Miami Marlins at the end of the season; David Ross, the former Chicago Cubs manager who spent three seasons as a catcher with the Reds; and Eduardo Perez, the ESPN analyst and former Cincinnati first baseman who is the son of Reds legend Tony Perez.

49ers bemoan mistakes in ‘unacceptable’ loss to Rams

ByNICK WAGONER
September 22, 2024, 10:19 PM

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — As he addressed his team Saturday night, San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan issued a stern warning about the type of opponent the Los Angeles Rams would be on Sunday.

Although the winless Rams were coming off an embarrassing loss to the Arizona Cardinals and were as depleted by injuries as any team in the league, Shanahan expected Los Angeles to play with plenty of urgency and desperation.

“You’ve got to take their hope away,” Shanahan said. “You give [Rams quarterback Matthew] Stafford too much hope [and] you put a ball in his hands at the end, it’s not a situation you want to be in.”

Alas, that was precisely the situation the Niners were in late Sunday afternoon. Despite jumping out to a 14-point lead, San Francisco was unable to build on its early momentum because of special teams miscues, defensive breakdowns and offensive errors on the way to a stunning 27-24 loss.

The Niners dropped their second consecutive game, falling to 1-2, and lost to an NFC West division opponent for the first time with Brock Purdy as the starting quarterback. After the game, Shanahan described his team as “pissed” at how a victory slipped away. That frustration was apparent in the locker room as wide receiver Jauan Jennings, who had nearly carried the Niners to a win with a career-best outing, declined to speak to the media.

“It was unacceptable,” linebacker Fred Warner said. “We can’t do that. We can’t beat ourselves. Can’t make those type of mistakes again. All three phases have got to play better. We’ll look at the tape, fix it and move on.”

A proud 49ers team that has been to at least the NFC Championship Game in four of the past five years has plenty to fix. The Niners entered Sunday without a trio of their best players — injured star running back Christian McCaffrey (Achilles tendinitis), receiver Deebo Samuel (calf) and tight end George Kittle (hamstring) — but the Rams felt little sympathy as they also are missing plenty of injured players.

For San Francisco, the game took a turn for the worse with 6:22 left in the second quarter and the Rams facing a fourth-and-6 from their 43. Down by two scores with little to lose, it was an obvious spot for a fake punt, so much so that Shanahan and the Niners called the punt return with the expectation of a fake.

It didn’t matter, as the direct snap to Rams running back Ronnie Rivers turned into a 7-yard gain and, eventually, the Rams’ first touchdown. Instead of a potential three-score deficit, the Rams were left with plenty of hope. That was only bolstered by continued San Francisco blunders on special teams.

After allowing a blocked punt in last week’s loss to the Minnesota Vikings, the Niners allowed the fake punt conversion, missed a 55-yard field goal and yielded a 38-yard punt return to set up the Rams’ winning field goal.

“That’s where I thought we had a chance to run away with it, not give them any hope,” Shanahan said. “That gave them a lot of hope. Got them back in it … those are three big plays in the game.”

Special teams wasn’t the only issue for the Niners on Sunday. A defense that held the Rams to zero points, 29 yards and one first down in the opening quarter allowed Los Angeles to post 27 points, 267 yards and 18 first downs over the final three. The Niners also did not force a turnover as Stafford authored his 45th game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime, seventh most since the 1970 merger.

The 14-point comeback win is the largest by the Rams under coach Sean McVay and biggest overall since Week 2 of the 2012 season.

“I think we have to feel the loss,” end Nick Bosa said. “We can’t just move on and act like it’s fine … The NFL, it’s up and down, and no matter how talented you think you are, you have to play good on Sunday.”

Despite all of that, the Niners still had a chance to win, largely because of Jennings and Purdy. Starting in place of Samuel, Jennings delivered a game to remember with 11 catches for 175 yards and three touchdowns, becoming the fourth player in franchise history to have 175 receiving yards and three scores in the same game.

Purdy, meanwhile, didn’t miss a beat without his usual weapons, finishing 22-of-30 for 292 yards and three touchdowns with a 137.1 passer rating. But those numbers could have been better as Purdy didn’t get much help from pass catchers not named Jennings. The Niners were charged with three drops, though they had others wiped out by penalties.

None was bigger than the deep pass Purdy fired to an open Ronnie Bell down the right sideline with 1:08 to go. Purdy’s pass was on target and Bell had a clean chance at a big catch to set up a potential game-winning field goal. Instead, Bell dropped it and the Niners were forced to punt to set up the Rams’ final drive.

The loss made Purdy the third 49ers signal caller (alongside Joe Montana and Steve Young) to lose a game in which he completed at least 70% of his passes and three or more touchdowns. It also dropped the Niners below the .500 mark for the first time with Purdy as the starter.

At 1-2, the Niners are well aware that there is plenty of season left. Their locker room is full of players who have helped them dig out of even more difficult spots in the recent past. But they also know opportunities like Sunday’s can come back to haunt them later in the year.

“That’s just part of the NFL and being a professional in a professional sport, everybody’s really good,” Purdy said. “Last year means absolutely nothing. And every time you show up on Sunday, you’re going to get everybody’s best shot. It’s the NFL and we all have to be real with that. We have to have the mindset of going and taking it every Sunday and nothing’s ever going to be given to us.”

Skylar Thompson suffers ‘painful’ rib injury in loss to Seahawks

ByMARCEL LOUIS-JACQUES
September 22, 2024, 10:59 PM

SEATTLE — Miami Dolphins quarterback Skylar Thompson left midway through the third quarter of Sunday’s 24-3 loss to the Seattle Seahawks after suffering what coach Mike McDaniel called a painful rib injury.

Making his first start of the season in place of the injured Tua Tagovailoa, Thompson took a hard hit on Miami’s second drive of the third quarter and remained down for several minutes while medical trainers attended to him. He was ultimately able to leave the field and return to the Dolphins’ locker room under his own power.

Third-string quarterback Tim Boyle entered the game for Thompson. Boyle was signed to the Dolphins’ practice squad prior to Week 1 and was elevated this past week after Tagovailoa was placed on injured reserve.

McDaniel said Thompson suffered a rib injury and wanted to play through it; ultimately, the Dolphins will not know the full extent of Thompson’s injury until Monday.

“I haven’t talked to Skylar as of the end of the game,” McDaniel said after Sunday’s game. “It was a rib injury that was pretty painful. And half the pain or half of the frustration for him, I think, was he was trying to find a way to not come out of the game. And ultimately it was pretty painful. He fought through it, but we’ll get a chance to look at him tomorrow.”

Before leaving, Thompson completed 13 of 19 passes for 107 yards. He was sacked five times in his fourth career start.

McDaniel didn’t reveal what the Dolphins’ plan is for the upcoming week if Thompson is unable to go for Miami’s home matchup against Tennessee next Monday night. Miami did sign Tyler Huntley off the Baltimore Ravens’ practice squad last week, but he was not active for Sunday’s game. Huntley was listed as the team’s emergency quarterback.

Boyle completed 7 of 9 passes for 79 yards, adding a 6-yard scramble on the ground as well.

He nearly led the Dolphins to their lone touchdown drive of the day but threw an incomplete pass on fourth down at the Seattle 2-yard line; the Dolphins earned nine first downs in the game, four of which came on that drive.

“It’s an attitude game. Go out there, we’re down a couple scores. But you got to go out and prove what you’ve got,” Boyle said. “It builds a lot of character as a person, as a competitor. I’m glad we put a couple drives together. Obviously, we got stopped there on fourth down at the goal line. When you’re struggling like that, you’re trying to find completions, you’re trying to find positive yards and put a drive together.”

Boyle said nothing about his preparation would change if he were to start next week’s game against the Tennessee Titans; it’s unclear whether he or Huntley would get the nod in the event Thompson is not cleared to play.

The Dolphins will be without Tagovailoa for at least three more games after he suffered a concussion in Week 2. NFL rules state that any player on injured reserve must miss at least four games, but it is unclear when Tagovailoa might return. McDaniel has insisted that there is no timeline and that the team is simply focused on getting Tagovailoa healthy.

Tagovailoa remains in concussion protocol but was able to travel with the team to Seattle.

Thompson wasn’t the only Dolphins starter knocked out of Sunday’s game. Cornerback Kendall Fuller left with a concussion, and left tackle Terron Armstead was ruled out with an eye injury.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Scoreboard roundup — 9/22/24

iStock

(NEW YORK) -- Here are the scores from Sunday's sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

INTERLEAGUE
San Francisco 2, Kansas City 0
St. Louis 2, Cleveland 1
San Diego 4, Chi White Sox 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston 8, Minnesota 1
Boston 9, Minnesota 3
Detroit 4, Baltimore 3
Tampa Bay 4, Toronto 3
Texas 6, Seattle 5
LA Angels 9, Houston 8
NY Yankees 7, Oakland 4

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh 2, Cincinnati 0
Atlanta 5, Miami 4
Chi Cubs 5, Washington 0
Milwaukee 10, Arizona 9
LA Dodgers 6, Colorado 5
NY Mets 2, Philadelphia 1

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PRESEASON
Calgary 6 Seattle 1
Florida 3, Nashville 2
Philadelphia 6, Washington 2
Utah 5, St. Louis 3
NY Rangers 3, Boston 2
Edmonton 3, Winnipeg 2 (OT)
Florida 6, Nashville 2
NY Islanders 4, New Jersey 2
Ottawa 6, Toronto 5 (OT)
Vegas 4, San Jose 2

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Denver 26, Tampa Bay 7
Green Bay 30, Tennessee 14
Indianapolis 21, Chicago 16
Minnesota 34, Houston 7
NY Giants 21, Cleveland 15
Philadelphia 15, New Orleans 12
Pittsburgh 20, LA Chargers 10
Carolina 36, Las Vegas 22
Seattle 24, Miami 3
Baltimore 28, Dallas 25
Detroit 20, Arizona 13
LA Rams 27, San Francisco 24
Kansas City 22, Atlanta 17

WOMEN'S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS
Las Vegas 78, Seattle 67 (Las Vegas leads series 1-0))
New York 83, Atlanta 69 (NY leads series 1-0)
Connecticut 93, Indiana 69 (Conn. leads series 1-0)
Minnesota 102, Phoenix 95 (Min. leads series 1-0)

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
Philadelphia 4, D.C. United 0

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’ holds off ‘Transformers One,’ tops box office again with $26 million weekend

Parisa Taghizadeh

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice topped the domestic box office for the third straight week, earning an estimated $26 million and bringing its total up to $226 million. The sequel added an estimated $17.2 million overseas for a global tally of $300 million.

Right behind Beetlejuice Beetlejuice was Transformers One, opening in second place with an estimated $25 million -- below its targeted $30-$40 million. Internationally, the animated film, with a voice cast that includes Scarlett Johansson, Steve Buscemi, Laurence Fishburne, Jon Hamm and Keegan-Michael Key, collected an estimated $14 million, for a $39 million global haul.

Speak No Evil took third place with an estimated $5.9 million second week haul, bringing its North American total to $21.4 million. The black comedy grabbed an estimated $7.3 million overseas, for a worldwide total of $42 million.

The Halle Berry-led horror film Never Let Go debuted with an estimated $4.5 million at the domestic box office for a fourth place finish.

Deadpool & Wolverine rounded out the top five, adding an estimated $3.9 million to bring its domestic haul to $627 million. Globally, the film has collected $1.3 billion.

Elsewhere, The Substance, starring Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley, opened just outside the top five with an estimated $3.1 million.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Zavalla issues boil water notice, school out early Tuesday

Zavalla issues boil water notice, school out early Tuesday
UPDATE: Zavalla ISD announced they will only hold classes for half a day on Tuesday. Car riders will be released at 11:45 a.m. and bus riders will go at 12 p.m.

ZAVALLA – The City of Zavalla’s public water system has issued a boil water notice as they try to locate a leak in a water main. Zavalla ISD said that school is cancelled on Monday because of the impacted water supply. According to our news partner KETK, the area between the GUI well near the Coleman’s store at State Highways 167 and 63 and into Zavalla is currently under the boil water notice. Affected residents should bring any water for cleaning or consumption to a vigorous rolling boil for at least two minutes before use. Bottled water can also be used if boiling isn’t possible. Continue reading Zavalla issues boil water notice, school out early Tuesday

Olivia Munn and John Mulaney welcome second child

Dave Benett/Getty Images

Olivia Munn and John Mulaney are welcoming their second child.

Munn posted a collection of photos on Sunday including a shot alongside Mulaney holding their newborn, MĂ©i June Mulaney. The couple welcomed their daughter earlier this month via a surrogate.

"MĂ©i June Mulaney came into the world September 14, 2024, the year of the dragon," Munn wrote.

"I had so many profound emotions about not being able to carry my daughter," she added.

The actress was diagnosed with Luminal B breast cancer in both breasts in April 2023. Munn revealed in March that she underwent a double mastectomy among other surgeries in the months following her breast cancer diagnosis. She also opened up about undergoing a hysterectomy in the wake of her cancer treatment.

"When I first met our gestational surrogate we spoke mother to mother. She showed me so much grace and understanding, I knew I had found a real-life angel," wrote Munn.

She continued to express gratitude for the gestational surrogate who carried Munn and Mulaney's child.

"Words cannot express my gratitude that she kept our baby safe for 9 months and made our dreams come true," she wrote. "I am so proud of my little plum, my little dragon for making the journey to be with us. My heart has exploded."

She ended the post with a note clarifying the pronunciation of her newborn. "MĂ©i (pronounced may) means plum in Chinese," she finished.

Mulaney also took to Instagram to celebrate the news writing, "We stole so much stuff from the hospital. I love my little girl so much."

Mulaney and Munn, who wed this year, also share a son, Malcolm, who they welcomed on Nov. 24, 2021.

 

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Trump says he won’t run again if he loses in November

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- Former President Donald Trump said Sunday that he doesn't see himself running for president again if he loses in November.

"No, I don't. No, I don't," Trump responded to Sinclair Broadcast Group's "Full Measure" host Sharyl Attkisson's question about another run. "I don't see that at all. I think that, hopefully, we're going to be successful," he said.

With President Joe Biden's withdrawal from the 2024 election, Trump is now the oldest presidential nominee in history as age and mental acuity have become focal points in this year's election cycle.

During his third presidential bid, Trump has balanced his courtroom appearances in the four criminal cases he faces with campaign stops.

As he lays out the stakes for the 2024 election, Trump often emphasizes his point by describing the turmoil that has he and his campaign have faced over the course of the cycle.

"I didn't need this. I had a very nice life. I didn't need to go through court systems and go through all the other stuff and run at the same time," Trump told tech entrepreneur Elon Musk during a livestream conversation in August when asked why he decided to launch another presidential bid.

"But if I had to do it over again, I would have done it over again, because this is so much more important than me or my life,"

Trump was also asked about the possibility of Tulsi Gabbard or Robert F. Kennedy Jr., two former Democrats that have become surrogates for the Trump campaign, serving in his cabinet during a potential second administration and claimed that he made no promises to them.

"It doesn't mean anything. It means it could be, but I didn't make deals with anybody," Trump said about when asked about Kennedy serving as Health and Human Services secretary, as Kennedy's former running mate Nicole Shanahan suggested. "It's not appropriate to do it. It's too early."

Trump briefly talked about unity after an assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July, but now blames rhetoric from Democrats for political violence.

"They are a danger. They're destroying our country," Trump said in the interview which aired Sunday.

Trump again repeated his claims that he feels that "only consequential" presidents are in danger as he talked about the close call he had with a would-be shooter on his golf course in Florida last week.

"Well, I think we just have to do what you have to do," he said, praising his Secret Service protection.

"I think that I will feel safe I think I'm going to feel safe."

"I can't be scared, because if you're scared, you can't do your job, so I just can't be I have, thus far, had somebody protecting me," he said.

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Trump’s goal of mass deportations fell short. But he has new plans for a second term

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Donald Trump has long pledged to deport millions of people, but he’s bringing more specifics to his current bid for the White House: invoking wartime powers, relying on like-minded governors and using the military.

Trump’s record as president shows a vast gulf between his ambitions and the legal, fiscal and political realities of mass deportations of people in the United States illegally — 11 million in January 2022, by the Homeland Security Department’s latest estimate. Former President Barack Obama carried out 432,000 deportations in 2013, the highest annual total since records were kept.

Deportations under Trump never topped 350,000. But he and his chief immigration policy architect, Stephen Miller, have offered clues in interviews and rallies of taking a different approach if they are returned to power in November. They could benefit from lessons learned during their of four years in office and, potentially, from more Trump-appointed judges.

“What Trump seems to be contemplating is potentially lawful,” said Joseph Nunn, counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s School of Law. “There might not be a lot of legal barriers. It is going to be logistically extraordinarily complicated and difficult. The military is not going to like doing it and they are going to drag their feet as much as they can, but it is possible, so it should be taken seriously.”

The Trump campaign, asked how his pledge would be carried out, said Trump would begin the largest deportation program in U.S. history, without elaborating in detail. Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman, said Trump “would marshal every federal and state power necessary to institute the largest deportation operation of illegal criminals, drug dealers, and human traffickers.”

How would Trump overcome inevitable legal challenges?

Trump has said he would invoke the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 law that allows the president to deport any noncitizen from a country that the U.S. is at war with.

Texas Gov, Greg Abbott has advanced a theory that illegal immigration amounts to an invasion to justify state enforcement measures, so far without success, but legal scholars say judges may be reluctant to second-guess what a president considers a foreign aggression.

The sweeping Alien Enemies Act authority may sidestep a law that bans the military from civilian law enforcement.

Trump has said he would focus on deploying the National Guard, whose troops can be activated on orders of a governor. Miller says troops under sympathetic Republican governors would send troops to nearby states that refuse to participate.

“The Alabama National Guard is going to arrest illegal aliens in Alabama and the Virginia National Guard in Virginia. And if you’re going to go into an unfriendly state like Maryland, well, there would just be Virginia doing the arrest in Maryland, right, very close, very nearby,” Miller said last year on “The Charlie Kirk Show.”

The military has been peripherally involved at the border since President George W. Bush’s administration with activities that are not deemed to be law enforcement, such as surveillance, vehicle maintenance and installing concertina wire.

Nunn, of New York University’s Brennan Center, said Trump may look to 2020, when he ordered the National Guard to disperse peaceful Black Lives Matter protests near the White House, despite the mayor’s opposition. Trump did so without invoking the 18th-century war powers law, but the District of Columbia’s federal status gives the president outsized authority to act.

Trump may also contend with rights afforded under immigration law and court rulings that took shape after 1798, including a right to seek asylum that became law in 1980. Under a 2001 Supreme Court ruling, people in the country illegally can’t be detained indefinitely if there is no reasonable chance their countries will take them back. Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and others are either slow to accept their citizens or refuse.

How would Trump pay for this?

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is funded by Congress for 41,500 detention beds this year, raising questions about where Trump would house people before they board deportation flights and how long they could hold them if countries refuse to take them back. Miller floated the idea of “large-scale staging grounds near the border, most likely in Texas.”

ICE officers are painstakingly deliberate, researching backgrounds of their targets and prioritizing people with criminal convictions. They try to capture suspects outside their homes because they generally work without court warrants and people don’t have to let them inside.

A single arrest may require hours of surveillance and research, a job that one ICE official likened to watching paint dry.

“On practical level, it will be nearly impossible for (Trump) to do the things he’s talking about, even if could bring in the military,” said John Sandweg, a senior Homeland Security Department official in the Obama administration.

Obama’s deportation numbers were made possible by local police who turned people over to ICE, but many state and local governments have since introduced limits on cooperation with federal immigration authorities. Obama’s presidency also predated a surge of asylum-seekers at the border, which drained limited resources of the Trump and Biden administrations.

How would a mass deportation drive fare politically?

While many support Trump’s plans, mass deportation could tear apart families, exacerbate labor shortages and uproot people with deep ties to their communities. Pew Research Center estimates 70% of households with at least one person in the United States illegally also have someone in the country legally.

Military leaders are likely to resist because it would undercut other priorities and damage morale, Nunn said.

“The military is going see this and say this is not the kind of duty that soldiers signed up for,” he said. “This is getting the military involved in domestic politics in a way the military doesn’t like to do.”

Adam Goodman, associate professor of history and Latin American studies at the University of Illinois, Chicago, who has written about deportations, said a threat of a mass expulsion can have a serious impact even if it isn’t carried out. He thinks it is highly unlikely that Trump can do what he promises but it can strike fear in immigrant communities.

In June 2019, Trump announced ICE would “begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens” the following week. A month later, the agency said it targeted about 2,100 people, resulting in 35 arrests, indicating the president’s plans fell far short but only after they generated widespread concern in immigrant communities.

Trump himself acknowledged the political perils during an interview Sunday with journalist Sharyl Attkisson. “You put one wrong person onto a bus or onto an airplane and your radical left lunatics will try and make it sound like it’s the worst thing that’s ever happened,” Trump said, before repeating his pledge: “But we’re getting the criminals out. And we’re going to do that fast.”

Rep. Mike Kelly on Trump assassination attempts: ‘We cannot accept this as Americans’

ABC News

(WASHINGTON) -- Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., the chair of the bipartisan panel investigating the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump in July and the apparent one last week in Florida, called for more resources and reforms at the Secret Service during a tense time before Election Day.

Speaking to "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos along with Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., the ranking member of the committee, Kelly cited an array of explanations for breakdowns in Secret Service protection in Butler, Pennsylvania, the site of the first attempt on Trump, including lack of resources and overworked agents, and that it is crucial to remedy them.

"We can redeploy money, and we need to do that. Secret Service works under Homeland Security, but getting more people on the ground, people who are trained, people who are competent, and people who have a nose for all this," Kelly said. "These guys are exhausted. They have been played out to the very end. Why don't we look at where we're spending money, redeploy it, try to get more people on board."

"This is not a Republican or Democrat issue. This is an American issue. We have to protect those who we have up for election and those that are already serving," Kelly added. "It's a very dangerous time for us to be looking at this and thinking this is just the way the world is. It's not and we cannot accept this as Americans."

The remarks come as Congress and the Secret Service both scramble to plug any operational holes that allowed a gunman in Butler in July to get off shots at Trump. The urgency of protecting him and other top candidates this election cycle was put into stark relief again just a week ago when the Secret Service thwarted another apparent assassination attempt by a man armed with a rifle outside Trump's golf course in Florida.

In a report on Butler released Friday, the Secret Service said it failed to secure the line of sight to the former president by not securing the roof on which the shooter had taken up a firing position. It also said law enforcement did not adequately communicate that there was a threat to Trump and cited a "lack of due diligence" in establishing a secure perimeter.

"It's important that we hold ourselves accountable for the failures of July 13, and that we use the lessons learned to make sure that we do not have another failure like this," acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said Friday.

In a joint interview with Stephanopoulos, both Kelly and Crow agreed the solution involved both resource redistribution and personnel adjustments.

"You can redeploy funds to where it is that you need them the most. I will say this. Our Secret Service now is trying to guard more people than they've ever had to guard in the past," Kelly said.

"It takes years to create a Secret Service agent. So we have to rely on Department of Defense agents, other federal agencies to cover down and provide some relief to these folks, because one of the issues that we saw in Butler, Pennsylvania, was the over-reliance on local law enforcement. These are fantastic folks. They do really well, but they are not trained and equipped to provide presidential level security," Crow added.

Both lawmakers also called on Americans to tone down rhetoric around politics amid concerns that the tense atmosphere around November's election is playing a role in the heightened threat environment.

"Mike is a very conservative Republican. I'm a very proud Democrat,” Crow said. “And what we're trying to show folks is we can go through an election cycle, we can have fierce and tough debates, and we can show people that we will settle our political differences and debate, but we're going to come together on an issue that Americans expect us to come together on," Crow said.

"There is no place in our American society, whether you're Republican and Democrat for anybody ever to take actions into their own hands and resort to violence," he said.

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John Kirby says U.S. working to prevent ‘all-out war’ in Middle East amid rising tensions

ABC News

(WASHINGTON) -- Amid rising tensions in the Middle East, White House National Security Communications Adviser John Kirby said Sunday that the Biden administration is doing “everything we can to try to prevent this from becoming an all-out war there with Hezbollah across that Lebanese border.”

Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah traded fire earlier Sunday morning, with an Israeli Defense Forces spokesperson saying that Hezbollah launched 150 rockets toward Israel, reaching deeper into the country than many previous strikes. In response, the IDF said it was striking “Hezbollah terrorist targets” in Lebanon. The IDF struck 400 targets on Saturday and said that the attacks will only intensify.

The fresh strikes come as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledges to "take whatever action is necessary to restore security and to bring our people safe back to their homes" near the Lebanese border in the north of the country.

Asked by ABC "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos if escalation in the region is inevitable, Kirby said the White House believes a "diplomatic solution" is still possible.

"We believe that there are better ways to try to get those Israeli citizens back in their homes up in the north, and to keep those that are there, there safely, than a war, than an escalation, then opening up a second front there at that border with Lebanon against Hezbollah," Kirby said.

But Stephanopoulos pushed back, noting it seems like Netanyahu is not listening to the United States's consistent pleas for de-escalation.

"Look, the prime minister can speak for himself and what -- and what -- what policy he’s trying to pursue, what operations he’s trying to conduct. We’ll, of course, recognize that the tensions are much higher now than they were even just a few days ago. ... But all that does, George, is underscore for us how important it is to try to find a diplomatic solution," he said.

Hezbollah called the Sunday assault an “initial response” to attacks from Israel earlier this week. In Lebanon and Syria, thousands of people were injured Tuesday by exploding pagers used by Hezbollah members as part of an Israeli operation. Another round of attacks targeting two-way radios used by the group followed on Wednesday. The two attacks killed at least 39 people and injured more than 3,000, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry.

Kirby reiterated that the U.S. was “not involved” in these attacks, but refused to say much more than that, saying he would not "get into the details."

"I will just say, though, George, that we are watching all of these escalating tensions that have been occurring over the last week or so with great concern, and we want to make sure that we can continue to do everything we can to try to prevent this from becoming an all-out war there with Hezbollah across that Lebanese border," he said.

A panel of United Nations specialists in international law and human rights has condemned Israel’s use of the exploding devices as illegal “booby traps” with the potential of harming civilians.

Israel had a hand in the manufacturing of the devices with this type of "supply chain interdiction" operation having been planned for at least 15 years, a U.S. intelligence source confirmed to ABC News.

In response to a question about the security of U.S. supply chains, Kirby said that President Joe Biden “has made it clear that he wants the American supply chain to be as resilient and as vibrant as possible.”

The attacks, including Israel's Friday strike on a Beirut suburb that took out a top Hezbollah commander, signal a new stage of escalation in the Middle East and raise fears of that they will increase the likelihood of an expanded conflict in the region.

How these recent attacks impact the efforts to achieve a cease-fire between Israeli and terrorist organization Hamas in Gaza remains an open question.

Kirby conceded to Stephanopoulos that, “We are not achieving any progress here in the last week to two weeks,” and said that Hamas’ leader, Yahya Sinwar, doesn’t appear to be negotiating in good faith.

“But it doesn’t mean that we’re not trying,” he added.

Kirby’s response follows a report from The Wall Street Journal that U.S. officials believe an Israel-Hamas cease-fire deal is unlikely before the end of Biden’s term. When asked Friday about the likelihood of a deal, Biden replied, “A lot of things don’t look realistic until we get them done.”

Stephanopoulos also asked Kirby about alleged election meddling efforts by Iran that U.S. security agencies warned about last week. Kirby said there is “a very robust interagency effort all across the government to deter and to defeat foreign malign actors.

“The American people ought to know that the federal government is working hand in glove with their local and state officials to ensure the safety and security of their ballots and their election day activities,” Kirby said.

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