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China’s market regulator said Tesla Inc. will fix software in more than 1 million vehicles to reduce the chance of accidents, the regulator said on Friday.

The action is described as a product recall under Chinese regulations, the regulator said, but it was not immediately clear if drivers might need, or would be eligible, to return vehicles to Tesla for refunds.

From May 29, the U.S. automaker will issue over-the-air software updates to 1.1 million units of its Model S, Model X, Model 3 and Model Y cars, both imported and China-made, the State Administration for Market Regulation said in a statement.

The regulator said the vehicles concerned did not allow drivers to turn off regenerative braking or provide enough warnings when drivers stepped on the accelerator pedal hard, which, combined, could increase the risk of collision.

The update will restore the option of switching off regenerative braking and warn drivers when they step hard on the accelerator pedal, it added.

Tesla was not immediately available for comment.

Regenerative braking works to save energy from the process of slowing a car, feeding the surplus to batteries to increase its driving range. Tesla had disabled the option to switch off the technique on cars produced after 2020.

Some consumers in China welcomed the technology, also known as one-pedal driving, as it enabled them to bring a vehicle to a complete halt without use of the brake pedal.

However, others complained it could confuse drivers and increase the risks of misstepping on accelerators.

Chinese police have been investigating a crash involving a Model Y car in which a motorcyclist and a high school girl died and three people were injured when the driver lost control of the vehicle last November.

At the time, Tesla said videos showed the car’s brake lights were not on while it was speeding and data showed issues such as there being no action to step on the brakes throughout its journey.

Reporting by Reuters’ Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Jacqueline Wong

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Let the ‘Mayhem’ begin.

The NCAA announced the 64 Division I softball teams that were selected to compete in the 2023 tournament on Sunday, as each eyes the ultimate prize – a trip to the Women’s Colllege World Series in Oklahoma City.

Sixteen teams will host double-elimination regionals, beginning Friday, and the top eight teams will host best-of-three super regionals the following weekend. Those winners will advance to the double-elimination WCWS, beginning June 1, until only two teams remain to battle in the championship series, June 7-9.

After another absolutely dominant season, Oklahoma earned the No. 1 overall seed for the fourth consecutive NCAA tournament and fifth time since 2007. The Sooners have won the past two Women’s Colllege World Series and have six titles overall since 2000.

Oklahoma (51-1) comes into the postseason on a 43-game winning streak, the second-longest in NCAA history. Arizona holds the record with 47 consecutive wins in 1996-97.

UCLA (52-5) earned the No. 2 overall seed and will seek to add to its record 12 national championships. The Bruins, who won the first-ever NCAA softball tournament in 1982, are the only program to have won at least one softball championship in each of the first four decades.

Here is everything you need to know for the 2023 NCAA Division I softball tournament:

Who are the top 16 seeds?

No. 1 Oklahoma (51-1)No. 2 UCLA (52-5)No. 3 Florida State (50-8)No. 4 Tennessee (44-8)No. 5 Alabama (40-18)No. 6 Oklahoma State (41-14)No. 7 Washington (38-12)No. 8 Duke (45-10)No. 9 Stanford (40-13)No. 10 LSU (40-15)No. 11 Arkansas (38-17)No. 12 Northwestern (38-11)No. 13 Texas (42-13-1)No. 14 Georgia (39-13)No. 15 Utah (37-13)No. 16 Clemson (46-9)

When are the dates for regionals?

Regionals run from Friday, May 19 through Sunday, May 21 at 16 host schools. All times below are Eastern.

Norman, Oklahoma Regional

Friday

No. 1 Oklahoma vs. Hofstra, 5 p.m. ET (ESPNU)

Missouri vs. California, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Los Angeles Regional

Friday

No. 2 UCLA vs. Grand Canyon, 8 p.m. (ESPN+)

San Diego State vs. Liberty, 11 p.m. (ESPNU)

Tallahassee, Florida Regional

Friday

No. 3 Florida State vs. Marist, 4 p.m. (ESPN+)

Central Florida vs. South Carolina, 7 p.m. (ESPN2)

Knoxville, Tennessee Regional

Friday

Louisville vs. Indiana, 3 p.m. (ESPN2)

No. 4 Tennessee vs. Northern Kentucky, 5:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Tuscaloosa, Alabama Regional

Friday

Middle Tennessee vs. Central Arkansas, 4:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

No. 5 Alabama vs. Long Island University, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)

Stillwater, Oklahoma Regional

Friday

No. 6 Oklahoma State vs. Maryland-Baltimore County, 4 p.m. (ESPN+)

Nebraska vs. Wichita State, 7 p.m. (ESPNU)

Seattle Regional

Friday

Minnesota vs. McNeese State, 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

No. 7 Washington vs. Northern Colorado, 9 p.m. (ESPN+)

Durham, North Carolina Regional

Friday

No. 8 Duke vs. George Mason, Noon (ACC Network)

Campbell vs. Charlotte, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Stanford, California Regional

Friday

Florida vs. Loyola Marymount, 6 p.m. (ESPN+)

No. 9 Stanford vs. Long Beach State, 9 p.m. (ESPNU)

Baton Rouge, Louisiana Regional

Friday

Omaha vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, 3 p.m. (ESPN+)

No. 10 LSU vs. Prairie View A&M, 6 p.m. (SEC Network)

Fayetteville, Arkansas Regional

Friday

Oregon vs. Notre Dame, 5 p.m. (ESPN2)

No. 11 Arkansas vs. Harvard, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Evanston, Illinois Regional

Friday

Kentucky vs. Miami (Ohio), 1 p.m. (SEC Network)

No. 12 Northwestern vs. Eastern Illinois, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Austin, Texas Regional

Friday

No. 13 Texas vs. Seton Hall, 5 p.m. (Longhorn Network)

Texas State vs. Texas A&M, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Athens, Georgia Regional

Friday

Virginia Tech vs. Boston University, 2 p.m. (ACC Network)

No. 14 Georgia vs. North Carolina Central, 4:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Salt Lake City Regional

Friday

Mississippi vs. Baylor, 1 p.m. (ESPNU)

No. 15 Utah vs. Southern Illinois, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Clemson, South Carolina Regional

Friday

No. 16 Clemson vs. UNC-Greensboro, 3 p.m. (ESPNU)

Cal State-Fullerton vs. Auburn, 5:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

What are the dates for the super regionals?

Super regionals, which will will be held either May 25-27 or May 26-28, feature the 16 teams that won regionals the weekend before.

What is the schedule for Women’s College World Series

The eight-team Women’s Colllege World Series, featuring the eight super regional winners, begins Thursday, June 1 at USA Softball Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City. The best-of-three championship series begins Wednesday, June 7.

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The St. Louis Cardinals’ Lars Nootbaar got a Mother’s Day surprise during an interview on ESPN before Sunday night’s game against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park.

‘She’s everything to me, really,’ Nootbaar said about his mom while being interviewed by ESPN’s Eduardo Pérez. ‘She’s my rock, she’s my everything. She’s my best friend and …’

Nootbaar paused when he realized that his mother, Kumi Enokida Nootbaar, had surprised him on live television.

‘Is this live right now?’ he asked.

Kumi Enokida Nootbaar thanked Lars for the Mother’s Day flowers as the video chat continued.

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Lars understandably got emotional during the duration of the interview.

‘He cries a lot,’ Kumi Enokida Nootbaar said. ‘He’s a crier.’

Nootbaar went 3 for 6 and scored three runs as the Cardinals won the game, 9-1, to complete the series sweep.

Who is Lars Nootbaar?

Selected by the Cardinals in the eighth round of the 2018 draft out of USC, Nootbaar ― who is from El Segundo, California ― is in his third season in the big leagues.

The 25-year-old is the starting right fielder for the Cardinals and is hitting .302 this season with three home runs and 13 runs batted in.

In March, Nootbaar became the first foreign-born player to play for Japan in the World Baseball Classic. Nootbaar became a cult hero in Japan as the country won its third World Baseball Classic.

“Without making any judgment on talent,’’ Nootbaar said, “baseball means the most in Japan. In the Tokyo Dome, you have 50,000 people chanting the fight song of every player in the lineup, knowing every single word.

“Baseball is completely embedded in the country.’’

Nootbaar’s mother was born and raised in Japan, and he honored her heritage by playing for the country in the WBC.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

FIRST ON FOX – Former Vice President Mike Pence returns next month to Iowa – the state whose caucuses lead off the GOP presidential nominating calendar – to take part in an annual motorcycle ride that benefits veterans, as he gears up for his expected entry into the 2024 Republican presidential nomination race.

Fox News has learned that Pence will ride in Sen. Joni Ernst’s, R-Iowa, annual ‘Roast and Ride’ motorcycle ride on Saturday, June 3 – a vital stop on the Iowa Republican political calendar. The event this year benefits the Freedom Foundation, an organization supporting veterans based in Cedar Rapids.

Ernst, who served in the Iraq War during her more than two decades as an officer in the Iowa Army National Guard, has invited all the confirmed and potential GOP White House contenders to take part in her annual ride through parts of Des Moines and ensuing rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds.

Among those invited are former President Donald Trump, who is making his third straight White House run and is currently the overwhelming front-runner in the Republican primary battle, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who remains on the 2024 sidelines but is expected to launch a campaign in the coming weeks.

The senator announced last week that former Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina, who later served as ambassador to the United Nations in the Trump administration, would be participating in the ‘Roast and Ride.’

In a statement announcing the former vice president’s participation in her ‘Roast and Ride,’ Ernst said that ‘as a fellow motorcycle fan, Mike will also be joining me on my Ride to benefit Iowa’s Freedom Foundation.’

Pence, who rode a Harley-Davidson motorcycle as the then-vice president took part Ernst’s event six years ago, said in a statement to Fox News on Monday that ‘wherever Joni Ernst asks me to be, I will be.’

He continued: ‘As proud parents of a Marine pilot, Karen and I understand the importance of giving back to organizations like Cedar Rapids’ own Freedom Foundation, an incredible veterans support charity. I am honored that Joni has once again asked me to join her annual Roast and Ride and look forward to being back with the people of Iowa soon!’

Pence, who’s made numerous trips to Iowa and the other early voting presidential nominating states the past two years, has said he’ll make a decision on launching a presidential campaign in the coming weeks.

Taking aim at President Biden and the Democratic National Committee for their move earlier this year to bump Iowa from its leadoff position in the Democrats’ presidential nominating calendar, the senator emphasized that ‘even though Joe Biden and the national Democrats ditched Iowa, Republicans are maintaining our FIRST in the nation status. My annual Roast and Ride is THE event to be at in 2023. It’s the perfect opportunity to engage directly with Iowans from all corners of the state.’  

Ernst launched her annual ride soon after winning election to the Senate in 2014. She said at the time that her goal was to showcase her party’s top candidates, just as former longtime Sen. Tom Harkin, of Iowa, had done with his annual ‘steak fry’ for Democratic presidential hopefuls.

Ernst, along with the rest of Iowa’s all Republican congressional delegation, is staying neutral as the GOP presidential contenders battle in out in Iowa’s caucuses.

The senator, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, is also hosting foreign policy and national security policy discussions with the White House hopefuls. 

Both Haley and Pence have already taken part in the discussion that Ernst hosts with the Bastion Institute, a think tank whose goal is ‘to discuss the path toward strengthening America’s leadership and standing on the international stage.’

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Former President Trump attacked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for his abortion stance on Monday, suggesting in an interview that Florida’s six-week ban was ‘too harsh.’

Trump made the statement in a wide-ranging interview with The Messenger published on Monday. Trump refused to elaborate on his own stance regarding abortion, however, instead claiming to have heard that pro-life voters opposed DeSantis’ bill.

‘He has to do what he has to do,’ Trump said when asked about Florida’s six-week ban. ‘If you look at what DeSantis did, a lot of people don’t even know if he knew what he was doing. But he signed six weeks, and many people within the pro-life movement feel that that was too harsh.’

When asked about whether he would support a six-week ban, Trump replied, ‘I’m looking at all options.’

Trump also confirmed in the interview that he supported exceptions in abortion legislation for ‘the life of the mother, raping and incest.’

‘Just as Ronald Reagan was a believer in the exceptions, but I’m a believer in the exceptions,’ he added.

DeSantis’ abortion bill, signed in mid-April, bans most abortions beyond six weeks but includes exceptions for rape and incest. Existing state exceptions for the life of the mother also remain in place. 

Rather than get specific on his abortion stance, Trump went on to tout his role in overturning Roe v. Wade, saying he was the only president who could have done so.

‘For 50 years, they’ve been trying to get rid of Roe v Wade. I was able to do it. Nobody else could have done that but me. And I was able to do it [by nominating] three excellent judges on the Justices of the Supreme Court. And I was able to do that,’ he said.

‘I’m looking at all alternatives. I’m looking at many alternatives,’ Trump added when asked if six weeks was too harsh. ‘But I was able to get us to the table by terminating Roe v. Wade. That’s the most important thing that’s ever happened for the pro-life movement.’

It is unclear who Trump was referring to when he stated that ‘many people within the pro-life movement’ opposed DeSantis’ bill.

Students For Life President Kristan Hawkins thanked the Florida governor after he signed the legislation in April, saying, ‘Florida will no longer be the fifth highest abortion state in the nation thanks to the Heartbeat Protection Act. Thank you @GovRonDeSantis for having the courage to do the right thing. You are setting the standard for GOP and they should follow your lead.’

Conservative legal organization Alliance Defending Freedom also celebrated the signing.

‘By enacting the Heartbeat Protection Act, Florida is continuing its work to protect the health of pregnant mothers, the dignity of the unborn, and the integrity of the medical profession.  We commend @GovRonDeSantis for taking a stand to preserve life,’ the organization said.

Pro-life activist Abby Johnson claimed DeSantis signing the bill is ‘one step closer to protecting children from the moment of conception just like they deserve.’

Live Action founder and pro-life activist Lila Rose also praised DeSantis’ move at the time. She tweeted, ‘BREAKING: @RonDeSantisFL has signed a bill protecting most preborn children 6 weeks gestational age and older from the violence of abortion! This is a big win for Florida and the nation. The next step is completely ending abortion and protecting all of Florida’s children.’

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With other state lawmakers seated around her in the Ohio House, Democratic state Rep. Tavia Galonski got to her feet and began to loudly chant, ‘One person, one vote!’

The former Teamster’s cry spread quickly through the visitors gallery, then began to rise from the throng of protesters gathered outside in the statehouse rotunda. Struggling to be heard over the din, the Republican speaker ordered spectators cleared from the chamber.

Last week’s striking scene came as Ohio joined a growing number of Republican-leaning states that are moving to undermine direct democracy by restricting citizens’ ability to bypass lawmakers through ballot initiatives and constitutional amendments.

The Ohio proposal will ask voters during an August special election to boost the threshold for passing constitutional amendments to 60% rather than a simple majority. It also would double the number of counties where signatures must be collected, adding an extra layer of difficulty to qualifying initiatives for the ballot.

The Missouri Legislature failed to approve a similar measure on Friday, but Republicans vowed to bring the issue back in 2024 in an attempt to head off a citizens’ attempt to restore abortion rights in the state through a constitutional amendment.

A similar measure will be on North Dakota’s ballot next year, while one in the works in Idaho would ask voters to increase signature requirements imposed on petition gatherers. In Wisconsin, which does not allow statewide citizen initiatives, Republicans who control the Legislature have proposed prohibiting local governments from placing advisory questions on ballots. Such referenda are sometimes used to boost voter turnout, though results don’t carry the weight of law. Florida Republicans added new hurdles to that state’s constitutional amendment process in 2020.

The trend has taken off as Democrats and left-leaning groups frustrated by legislative gerrymandering that locks them out of power in state legislatures are increasingly turning to the initiative process to force public votes on issues that are opposed by Republican lawmakers yet popular among voters. Only about half the states, mostly in the Western U.S., allow some form of citizen ballot initiative.

In Ohio, voters have proposed using the initiative process to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution this November, as well as to increase the minimum wage, to legalize recreational marijuana and to reform a redistricting system that has produced persistently unconstitutional political maps favoring Republicans.

Arkansas Sen. Bryan King, a Republican who has joined the League of Women Voters in a lawsuit challenging his state’s latest initiative restriction, said he views efforts to undermine the initiative process as anti-democratic.

A measure approved earlier this year by Arkansas’ majority-GOP Legislature and signed by Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders makes it harder to get initiatives on the ballot by raising the number of counties where signatures must be gathered from 15 to 50.

‘I think one of the things it does is, no matter what party is in power, when you start trying to make it harder for citizens to challenge what their government does or make changes, then it just makes people not have faith in the process,’ King said. ‘So I do think that making it harder is wrong.’

In Ohio, former governors and attorneys general of both major parties have lined up against the proposed constitutional amendment that would alter the simple majority threshold for passing citizen-led initiative that has been in place since 1912.

Democratic legislators point to the bipartisan opposition and the maneuvering that allowed the proposal to be on an August ballot as evidence that today’s Republicans are extremist in their desire to maintain political power.

Republican state Rep. Brian Stewart, the Ohio plan’s sponsor, argued during last week’s raucous floor session that a simple majority of voters will get to decide whether to impose the stricter requirements on future ballot initiatives.

‘SJR 2 will ask Ohioans, not us, whether Ohio’s constitution should require a 60% vote threshold to adopt amendments going forward. It will ask Ohioans, not us, to decide whether all 88 counties should have a voice in determining what amendments make it onto the ballot and to eliminate the cumbersome ‘cure’ period, which gives initiative petitions effectively a do-over when they fail to meet the requirements for ballot access,’ he said. ‘Putting this issue in front of Ohioans, that is democratic.’

What Stewart didn’t address is how Republicans circumvented a law they had just passed so they could put the proposed amendment on a summertime ballot when voter turnout is typically quite low, rather than putting it before voters in the regular election this November.

Democratic Rep. Casey Weinstein called out Stewart and Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, for previously opposing the very August special elections that they supported for offering the 60% question.

Weinstein read in its entirety LaRose’s testimony from December advocating for the provisions of a new law — signed in January — that eliminated most August elections. LaRose argued that making big decisions, including those regarding ballot issues, in chronically low-turnout August elections ‘isn’t the way democracy is supposed to work’ and that such elections ‘aren’t good for taxpayers, election officials or the civic health of our state.’

In testimony, Mark Gavin Sr., outreach director for the Black Environmental Leaders Association, referred to the U.S. Constitution’s counting of enslaved people by calling the Ohio proposal ‘the new Three-Fifths Compromise.’

Gavin was among hundreds of protesters who packed statehouse hearings and overflow rooms, testified and marched in opposition to the Republican proposal, which he said is intended to dilute the power of individual voters.

‘I’ve been a voter in Ohio for 15 years, and it’s getting really old to always have to have new rules and regulations on a ballot,’ he said.

Anti-abortion and pro-gun groups were the primary forces behind the push in favor of the proposed Ohio amendment. Since the Supreme Court’s decision last year overturning Roe v. Wade, voters in Michigan, Kentucky and Kansas have protected abortion rights through statewide votes.

David Couch, an attorney who has worked on citizens’ initiatives in Arkansas, said Republicans’ efforts to thwart direct democracy are uniquely partisan.

‘If you look in Arkansas history in the ’90s, when the Democrats controlled Arkansas, the conservative right passed same-sex marriage amendments, they passed adoption amendments,’ he said. ‘They passed all sorts of reforms, and the Democrats didn’t try to change the process.’

Democrats in Missouri did try to cripple the initiative process through legislation in 1992. Then-Gov. John Ashcroft, a Republican who went on to serve as U.S. attorney general, vetoed the bill. Ashcroft’s son, Jay, is the state’s current secretary of state.

‘It is through the initiative process that those who have no influence with elective representatives may take their cause directly to the people,’ the elder Ashcroft said in a veto letter that became part of this year’s debate. ‘The General Assembly should be reluctant, therefore, to enact legislation which places any impediments on the initiative power which are inconsistent with the reservation found in the Constitution.’

Missouri’s Republican lawmakers are singing a different tune today. Fearing a constitutional amendment to protect abortion rights, they vowed last week to make it a priority in 2024 to adopt a ballot measure that would establish a 57% threshold for passing future amendments.

Not all Republicans in the state think that’s a good idea. Former Republican House Speaker Pro Tem Carl Bearden said the proposal would infringe on the rights of Missouri voters while noting that the initiative process is intended to be a check on the power of the Legislature.

‘It is not a conservative policy,’ he said of the Republican plan.

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After a three-year national health emergency, over 1.1 million Covid deaths, a wave of retirements and high inflation, the U.S. labor force is smaller and tighter than before the pandemic. For workers, that means continued leverage to secure pay gains and better conditions even as the economy cools.

The labor market rebounded sharply from the blow dealt by Covid-19 as it swept the country in early 2020, thanks to aggressive federal relief measures and widespread vaccine rollouts. But the health crisis transformed the economy in ways that have persisted throughout the recovery, and analysts expect its ripple effects to linger despite a hiring slowdown and simmering recession fears.

When the world shut down in March 2020, low-wage workers in hospitality and other service roles saw some of the steepest job losses amid the sharpest drop in employment post-WWII, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) study in March. While some parts of the economy have rebounded beyond pre-pandemic metrics, employers in many industries are still contending with staffing challenges.

Spending is back, demand for labor is back, but we have a smaller labor force.

— Wendy Edelberg, the brookings institution

“Spending is back, demand for labor is back, but we have a smaller labor force,” said Wendy Edelberg, director of the Hamilton Project and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “That is one of the reasons why the labor market feels tight and why firms have been reporting left, right and center that they’re having a hard time finding workers.”

The U.S. population is 1.4 million people shy of pre-pandemic projections based on its growth rate before Covid hit, according to an April Brookings analysis of federal data. About 900,000 of those “missing” people would have been expected to be working.

Edelberg attributed roughly 650,000 of those absences to deaths (Covid-related or otherwise) and the remaining 250,000 to immigration policies during the pandemic — particularly Title 42, a Trump administration measure that expired Thursday night along with the federal public health emergency.

Many of the nation’s workers continue to suffer from health effects incurred during the pandemic.

A January report by the New York State Insurer’s Fund, the state’s largest workers’ compensation carrier, found that during the first two years of the pandemic, 71% of patients with “long Covid” symptoms required ongoing medical treatment or didn’t return to work for six months or longer.

A report from the management consulting firm McKinsey & Co., also from January, estimated that the economy lost 315 million to more than 1 billion working days among U.S. employees because of Covid last year alone, equivalent to 1.3 million to 4.3 million people’s leaving the workforce.

“At the high end, that’s about double the average number of sick days taken by US workers in the decade before the pandemic,” the researchers wrote.

A key reason the labor market remains so tight is that the pandemic collided with an already aging U.S. population.

Some older workers bowed out of the workforce earlier than planned as employers slashed jobs and furloughed staff. As the subsequent recovery kicked off a hiring spree, many recent retirees came back off the sidelines, but others stayed put.

A recent study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York flagged a 2.1 million worker “participation gap,” which it largely attributed to the aging of the massive baby boomer population and a surge in retirements.

While job growth is finally cooling down and layoffs have been piling up for months, many employers remain hungry to hire. Government data showed 9.6 million job openings in March, coming down from last year’s levels but still much higher than the roughly 7 million openings posted before the pandemic — in what was already a hot market at the time.

Last month the U.S. added 253,000 roles, continuing a lengthy run of job gains that have been a boon to workers, with many taking part in the so-called Great Resignation to seek out better opportunities and work-life balance, or even entirely new careers during the economic recovery. Others have reaped rewards by sticking around, as bosses add incentives to retain staffers.

Wage growth at the bottom is really making the labor market more equal.

— Arindrajit Dube, UMass Amherst

“We’ve had this huge imbalance between demand for employees and supply of employees for the last couple of years,” said Paige Ouimet, a finance professor at the Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

“It’s slowly starting to shift,” she said, “but it is still a different situation in terms of the bargaining power that employees have relative to their employers.”

An NBER study from March found that wage gains among the lowest-paid workers have substantially slowed the growth of income inequality. Arindrajit Dube, a study co-author and economist at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, said the scale of low earners’ pay gains was striking — rising 6% from January 2020 to September 2022.

“Wage growth at the bottom is really making the labor market more equal,” Dube said.

Lower-wage workers have been pulling in more income “because they’ve been able to leave, because they’ve been able to find better jobs,” he said. The trend has fanned a pandemic-era surge in labor organizing efforts, including at name brands such as Starbucks and Amazon, as workers test their leverage.

There are also signs that the tight competition for workers is increasing labor participation among certain groups.

According to Brookings, women ages 25-54 boosted their labor force participation by 1.5 percentage points since 2019, and Black people aged 25-64 did so by 1.7 percentage points over the same period.

Some demographics, however, are seeing the opposite trend. “White men of all ages and older white women are participating less” in the workforce, the Brookings researchers wrote. Labor force participation among white men ages 20 and older stood at 70.1% in April, down from 71% in March 2020.

The 23% labor force participation rate among people with disabilities is up from 20.7% in 2019, according to federal employment data. The uptick reflects the many disabled workers who have entered the workforce during the job boom — as well as the increase in people working with long Covid.

Remote and flexible work arrangements have made many jobs more accessible to those with disabilities. Government data showed 27.5% of private employers allowing full- or part-time telework as of last fall, the latest data available.

“I’m very confident that the ability to work remotely will continue to affect who works and who doesn’t,” said Edelberg of Brookings. “Those effects are not fully settled down in the data. That’s with us for a long time.”

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Forget Ja Morant, the Memphis Grizzlies NBA star.

Forget about the NBA salary and lucrative off-the-court sponsorships. For the hundreds of millions of dollars.

This is not about basketball and money.

This is about Ja Morant the person and who he wants to be and what he wants to become.

On Sunday, video and images of Morant holding what appears to be a pistol while in a car spread on social media. The Grizzlies suspended Morant from all team activities, and the NBA is gathering more information, league spokesperson Mike Bass said.

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This comes two months after the league suspended Morant eight games without pay for “holding a firearm while intoxicated” inside a Denver-area strip club.

At the time, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver called Morant’s conduct ‘irresponsible, reckless and potentially very dangerous. It also has serious consequences given his enormous following and influence, particularly among young fans who look up to him.  He has expressed sincere contrition and remorse for his behavior.  Ja has also made it clear to me that he has learned from this incident and that he understands his obligations and responsibility to the Memphis Grizzlies and the broader NBA community extend well beyond his play on the court.’

It appears Morant’s contrition and remorse was temporary and that he hasn’t learned from the incident and doesn’t understand his obligations and responsibility to the Grizzlies and the broader NBA community.

Let’s say, for the sake of hypotheticals, that Morant was holding a toy or fake gun in his latest video, he still doesn’t understand the message he’s sending. (Quick aside: Who are Morant’s friends, by the way, who are broadcasting this on social media?)

In an interview with ESPN’s Jalen Rose in March, Morant said of the first gun video, ‘It’s not who I am.’ He said he took ‘full responsibility.’

Maybe. Maybe not. Hard to tell today. The evidence does not support Morant’s statements. I wrote with empathy in March. He has two directions, and the choice is his. He’s headed in the wrong direction right now even after spending 11 days at an in-depth counseling facility in Florida.

He has not handled fame and wealth well, but I maintain that empathy. Basketball should be low on the list of priorities Morant needs to address. More assistance is required, but that’s up to him, too.

Morant also has to deal with the league.

Silver was the benevolent disciplinarian in March. His tone was stern, but nurturing. I don’t expect the same benevolence if the league investigation learns Morant was once again reckless with a gun.

Morant has violated and displayed a blatant disregard for the league’s code of conduct for the second time. He has been involved in other troubling incidents including one where he threatened a mall security officer, according to allegations in a Memphis Police Department report.

Silver believed what Morant had to say when the two met, along with others, in New York in March. Morant served a light eight-game suspension but has now embarrassed the league.

There were some who thought Morant would receive a longer suspension in March, but in general, that has not been Silver’s approach to punishment. That may change with Morant. If there’s another suspension, it should come with significant impact.

Morant doesn’t need basketball right now anyway. He needs to decide what he wants to do with his life. His choice. And all the consequences – good or bad – that come with that.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

GREEN BAY, Wis. − Simone, we’re so glad you asked!

There’s nothing locals like more than helping a new Green Bay Packers fan get the lay of the land, and if she just happens to be an Olympic champion gymnast, well, hey, they kind of flip out.

When Simon Biles tweeted photos of herself and husband Jonathan Owens at Lambeau Field, where the former Houston Texans starting safety signed with the Packers on Friday, she did two things to instantly endear herself to the city and the fanbase.

She gave a robust, all-caps ‘GO PACK GO’ and she asked for recommendations on places to eat and things to do in Green Bay. As luck would have it, Packers fans are really good at both of those things.

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Here’s hoping she’s prepared for the avalanche of suggestions that immediately began pouring in on Twitter. Not surprisingly, food and drink took priority.

Local dining institutions like Kroll’s East, Kroll’s West, Union Hotel, Maricque’s Bar, Redwood Inn, The Pancake Place (‘stuffed hash browns’), Sammy’s Pizza and Zesty’s Frozen Custard were all accounted for, and Pila’s Kitchen, Vintage Cantina, Toast & Co., Umi Sushi, Cheesesteak Rebellion and a host of other offerings were named, too.

You knew Chives Restaurant in Suamico, the favorite dining spot of former Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, was going to get mentioned. It did — often.

Biles and Owens are newlyweds (they married May 6 in Mexico and were on their honeymoon when Owens was signed), so nice date-night-out spots like Angelina (psst, don’t forget the charming patio hidden out back), Republic Chophouse, Hinterland and Rustique Pizzeria + Lounge are sure to be appreciated.

Bonus points to Rustique, not just because it’s housed in a chapel that’s more than 120 years old, but because Packers running back Aaron Jones was among those who chimed in to recommend it.

Supper clubs came up, of course, with one person noting that ‘real ones are worth the wait.’ WLUK-TV meteorologist Phil DeCastro called them ‘a true Wisconsin cultural experience’ but also cautioned they are not for a quick night out. Regulars know, but first-timers might not, that before- and after-dinner drinks are a must.

There was Green Tea for takeout, Kavarna for coffee and Kwik Trip for … everything.

Did somebody suggest cheese curds? Do you even need to ask?

Beer? Oh, come on. As one person wrote: ‘All the breweries.’

A few people took the shortcut and pointed her in the direction of Packers running back AJ Dillon, who has basically conducted a master class in how to embrace the local food scene (and all Door County has to offer). Quadzilla himself checked in, offering Biles and Owens some of his favorite places on his Dining with the Dillons Instagram with wife Gabrielle.

Beloved destinations like Bay Beach Amusement Park, Bay Beach Wildlife Sanctuary, Green Bay Botanical Garden, NEW Zoo & Adventure Park and Door County racked up all kinds of recommendations.

Biles has two French bulldogs with their own Instagram, Lilo and Rambo, so all the mentions of the Fox River Trail and Baird Creek Greenway could come in handy for walks.

People gave shoutouts for hairstylists and yoga studios, practical advice to “buy some warm clothing” and warnings to prepare to pick up a Wisconsin accent.

If there was any doubt about how excited Green Bay is to welcome Biles and Owens and to share all the city and surrounding area have to offer, just start counting the exclamation points in the responses.

A tweet from Jason Meyer (@jaymeyer20) maybe summed it up best: “600+ responses and counting, all with the same level of pride and excitement to share their favs in the area. That’s why I love and miss Green Bay :)”

Make that 1,400-plus responses and counting before the day was over.

Kendra Meinert is an entertainment and feature writer at the Green Bay Press-Gazette. Contact her at 920-431-8347 or kmeinert@greenbay.gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @KendraMeinert. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHOENIX — It could be terribly awkward for everyone in the San Francisco Giants’ clubhouse these days, but he’s managed to make a clumsy situation feel as if it’s simply a neighborly thing to do. 

He could be selfish but instead spends his free time preparing their rookie sensation to replace him as the face of the franchise. 

He could be terribly bitter, knowing the Giants already tried to give away his job last winter and have offered no hints that they plan to keep him after the season, but he remains calm, almost at peace about his fate. 

Brandon Crawford is the last man standing from the Giants’ dynasty, representing every bit of the championship fabric of his proud organization. 

Crawford, 36, deserves to go out when he wants and how he wants. 

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This is a man who helped lead the Giants to two of their three World Series championships. He won four Gold Gloves, made three All-Star teams and was a Silver Slugger winner. He had his greatest year in the Giants’ historic 107-victory season in 2021. 

But now, just six weeks into the season, and about to come off the injured list, Crawford finds himself at the crossroads of his fabulous career. 

He wonders whether to retire at the end of the season, keep playing as the Giants’ starting shortstop, stay aboard as a part-time player. Or will he even be given a choice? 

‘I’m not too worried about what’s maybe going to happen after this year,’ Crawford tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘It’s the last year of my contract. I don’t know what the future holds after that. 

‘I’m sure it will end up being a feeling that I have and the conversation that I’ll have with my wife. It’s a decision we’ll make together.’

Crawford who’s coming off the injured list for the third time in the past 10 months, knows the time is near. His body, which held up for 12 years, is having difficulty holding up. He has a wife and four young kids at home – two daughters and two sons ranging in age from 4 to 10 – and it was excruciating not being able to see them for 24 days while they are still in school in Scottsdale, Arizona. 

‘It’s made it a little bit harder this year as they get older and more serious in their school and sports,’ Crawford says. ‘I mean, there are a lot of things that I would love to be able to do and spend time with my family and stuff like that. But, you know, as long as I’m able to play baseball, I know my family also loves watching me.’ 

Crawford, who wondered if he’d still be in the organization two years ago until the Giants signed him to a two-year, $32 million extension, would love to retire a Giant. He was born and raised in the Bay Area. He idolized Barry Bonds and Jeff Kent as a kid. 

Now, he’s the one that has kids in the Bay Area wearing his jersey and clamoring for his autograph. 

‘I was one of those kids,’ says Giants infielder J.D. Davis. ‘I mean, being a kid from Northern California and watching him win those World Series, and all of those Gold Gloves and accolades, and to be next to him now is something I’ll forever be grateful. He’s exactly what you hoped he’d be. He truly sets the example on and off the field, just a role model of how to be a big leaguer, really.’

Heralded third-base prospect Casey Schmitt came to camp trying to win a starting job, if it wasn’t at third base, anywhere in the infield. He was called up this past week to make his major-league debut, as a shortstop replacing the injured Crawford. 

Guess who spent the most time talking to him, offering advice, telling him about the nuances of playing shortstop? 

‘He’s been unbelievable,’ says Schmitt, who hit .563 with two homers and a 1.688 OPS in his first five games since his call-up. ‘Whatever I want, whatever I need, he’s there. He’s always helping me. He’s doing everything he can to help me become the best player I can be.’ 

Yep, even if it costs Crawford valuable playing time, perhaps diminishing his value going forward into the free-agent market. 

‘The way he’s worked with Casey has been fantastic,’ Giants manager Gabe Kapler says. ‘You have a young kid coming up, playing his (butt) off and you got a shortstop that won World Series championships and playing at an MVP caliber level (in 2021) with us. Craw has got his arm around Casey and giving him feedback throughout the game and making him better.’

Giants infielder/outfielder LaMonte Wade says: ‘I remember the first day I met him when I was traded over here in 2021, and he just makes you feel immediately welcome and part of the group. Any time he sees something, he comes over and give me advice. We have a lot of young guys who gravitate to him. He’s definitely a role model for me, and I feel everyone in this locker room.’ 

You want unselfish? 

This is a guy who spent 14 years in the Giants organization, played more games at shortstop than any player in franchise history, but yet was told last December that they wanted him to suddenly learn how to play third base because they were making room for Carlos Correa, signing him to a 13-year, $350 million contract. 

The move stung Crawford, but instead of pouting, he was the first player to welcome Correa to the organization before the contract was voided when Correa flunked his physical. 

He’s still the one who handles DJ duties with the Giants’ batting practice and postgame playlists, is the first player in the victory formation congratulating players after wins and is Team Mom when anyone needs help. 

‘He’s just a big kid, who brings a great energy to the clubhouse,’ says Giants starter Alex Cobb. ‘He’s meant so much to this franchise, and is involved with everything going on here. I’ve played with a lot of superstars, seen a lot of superstars that don’t include themselves as much of the shenanigans that go on, and he seems to lead the way.’

There’s a reason why the Giants won three World Series titles in five years, and players don’t have to look any further than Crawford, whose work ethic, leadership skills and talent will result in a permanent place in the Giants’ Hall of Fame. 

‘I was always wondering what their key to winning was all of those years,’ says Giants infielder Wilmer Flores, ‘and now that I’ve been around him, I see it. He plays. He always plays. He takes it to another level.’

Crawford had only two injured list stints his entire career until last season, playing at least 138 games in every full season. If he was sick, if he was sore, if his body ached, he was still playing. 

‘He’s one of the most professional, dedicated athletes I’ve ever seen,’ says Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Evan Longoria, 37, who played five years with Crawford. ‘I’ve never seen somebody with as consistent of a routine, his work ethic, and commitment to playing the position and being the best player he could be. He’s a pro’s pro. No complaints, just shows up and plays. I took inspiration from him just watching him do that every day.’

No one knows for sure whether this will be Crawford’s final season, but they’d be stunned if Crawford puts on another uniform. This was his team growing up, and to spend his entire career with the Giants would be an honor. 

He’s hitting just .169 with a .596 OPS in his 22 games with the Giants, and coming off his worst season when he hit .231 with a .652 OPS. The numbers must improve, he knows, if he’s going to make it a difficult decision for the Giants after the season. 

Crawford, whose sister, Amy, is married to Yankees ace Gerrit Cole, refuses to stop and think about his future. He brought the entire family to New York for the opening day weekend, spending a night with the Cole family, with an off-day at the zoo, and brought his kids on a couple of road trips, but doesn’t think of this year as a farewell tour. 

‘I haven’t been thinking about that a whole lot,’ he says. ‘I think if I started thinking about that, it starts creeping into my head that it is my last year.’ 

For now, he’s going to savor this season. 

‘I feel like I don’t reflect a whole lot on the past unless I’m actually asked about it,’ he says. ‘I like living in the present thing. My preference for sure is to be a Giant my whole career. 

‘You never know what’s going to happen, but it’s too early to even think about that for me. I just want to enjoy this. There’ll be a lot of factors involved, but I know I can still play.’

Human Hit Machine

Luis Arraez, who won the batting title last season for the Minnesota Twins, is now threatening to go where no player in the history of the game has before. 

Arraez entered Sunday hitting hitting .379 for the Miami Marlins, vying to become the first player to win consecutive batting titles in each league. DJ LeMahieu and Ed Delahanty are the only ones who have won batting titles in each league, but not in back-to-back years. 

And, oh yeah, he’s also bidding to become the first .400 hitter since Ted Williams in 1941. 

‘I mean it’s hard to hit .400,’ Arraez tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘But it’s not impossible. If I hit .400, I’d have to stay healthy, work hard every day, and have the little things go right. The pitchers are so good. 

‘I just got to keep in mind to stay strong, and try to hit the ball hard every day.’ 

Certainly, it’s no fluke what Arraez is accomplishing. He’s a career .320 hitter, owning the highest batting average among active players with at least 400 games. 

He hit .334 his rookie season in 2019, after hitting .300 or higher in all five minor-league seasons and hasn’t stopped. 

‘Baseball has changed a little bit, or maybe it’s changed a lot,’ Arraez says, ‘but everybody wants to hit homers. Me, I prefer getting on base, and just hitting the ball.’

Tony Gwynn, a career .338 hitter who won eight batting titles, insisted he could never hit .400 because he didn’t walk enough. He came close, hitting .394 during the 1994 strike-shortened season, and seven times hit .350 or higher, but never had that historic .400 season while averaging just 39 walks a season. 

Rod Carew, a career .328 hitter who won seven batting titles, hit .388 in 1977, but never walked 80 times in a single season. 

Arraez, second in the the majors with .435 on-base percentage, to go along with a .905 OPS, has never walked more than 50 times in a season, but has never struck out more than 48 times either. 

‘I like hitting,’ he says, ‘not walking.’

And, man, is it ever fun to see him swing the bat, spraying the ball to all fields, with at least 30% of his hits going to left field, center field and right field, with all but nine of his 50 hits going for singles. 

Yet, no one seems to appreciate it. 

‘I don’t think people realize what this guy does, and people don’t really care about average as much as I do,’ Marlins manager Skip Schumaker says. ‘I just still think it’s real. Obviously, OPS is definitely a thing for me, but players still look up and they see a betting average. That means something. 

‘It’s just that people are so enamored with the home run and the slug nowadays. It’s the just the way it is, right?  People are just trying to hit home runs and are conditioned to start hitting home runs at the younger levels.’ 

The reason, San Francisco Giants veteran infielder Wilmer Flores says, is simple. 

‘It doesn’t pay,’ says Flores, a career .261 hitter who has hit 16 or more homers in five seasons, and is earning $6.5 million this year compared to Arraez’s $6.1 million salary. ‘I mean, years ago, if a guy was hitting .300, it doesn’t matter the other stats. It didn’t matter what his slugging percentage was, or how many homers did he hit. He hit .300. You’d pay him the big money. 

‘But it’s not what pays now. It’s like you got to go with what teams are looking for. Maybe this hitter doesn’t walk because he puts the ball in play a lot, but teams don’t value that anymore. I feel like a lot of hitters have to adjust to that because they want to stay in the game a long time, including me. 

‘Years ago, nobody told me how important it was getting your walks. Now, it’s better to take a walk than getting a hit. It’s just how the industry works now. It’s just slugging and walking, and you turn heads. You get hits, it doesn’t do much for your value.’

Well, pardon the Marlins for not sharing the same sentiments. They love what they’ve seen after acquiring Arraez in the offseason for starter Pablo Lopez and two prospects. They didn’t try to change him, and never will. He’s exactly what the offense needs, someone to get on base and hoping there’s big boys behind him driving him in. 

‘Obviously, the way hitters are being evaluated now,’ Marlins veteran infielder Joey Wendle says, ‘is different than years ago. But his ability to get on base, put the barrel on the ball, is as consistent as I’ve ever seen anybody. 

‘It’s nothing short of incredible watching him hit.’

This is a guy who’s obsessed with hitting. He worked out all winter in the Dominican Republic with San Diego Padres DH Nelson Cruz. He’ll get up in the middle of the night at home, grab a bat, and start hitting.

So, why aren’t we celebrating one of the greatest pure hitters we’ve seen in decades, a guy who has struck out just 140 times in 1,716 plate appearances? 

‘That’s more of a question for you guys,’ Wendle says of reporters. ‘It’s just how the game is promoted now. It’s power. It’s flash. It’s all of the celebrations, and things like that. 

‘For us, and Luis, hey, we’re fine with it, just keep it under the radar.’ 

The Black College World Series

It wasn’t splashed on any of the TV networks. 

The boxscores weren’t found in any of the newspapers. 

Few baseball fans were even aware the national tournament was even being played. 

Yet, there in Montgomery, Alabama, this week, eight teams were playing in the third annual Black College World Series: Albany State, Savannah State University, Bluefield State University, Edward Waters, Miles College, Talladega College, Rust College, Wiley College and Paine College. 

‘Blacks have always had a footprint in MLB, going back to the Negro Leagues,’ Michael Coker, executive director of Black College Championships, told USA TODAY Sports. ‘We took a turn and went to the glamour sports. Well, now you’re seeing things returning to the urban levels. It’s gaining national attendance and young kids are gravitating towards baseball.’ 

Just 6.1% of opening-day rosters in Major League Baseball consisted of African-American players this year, the lowest since 1955, but with the help of Coker and sponsorship by Tyson Foods, players at HBCUs are starting to at least get professional scouts’ attention. 

There wasn’t a single scout at the inaugural Black College World Series in 2021, which increased to six scouts last year and now 12 pro scouts were in attendance at this year’s tournament. 

‘If we’re going to get the numbers up (Black population in baseball),’ Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith said, ‘HBCUs are probably the best route to go. It gives them exposure. Most scouts are not able to go to a neighborhood to see a kid, but guys playing in the HCBUs should get the opportunity. …

‘We all have concerns that we don’t have as many African-American players playing today, but it’s all about, what do you do about it.’

The majors once had HBCU alumni such as Hall of Famers Lou Brock, Andre Dawson and Larry Doby, but there’s not a current player from an HBCU who plays in the big leagues. 

Coker believes there could be three players from the tournament with the potential to be selected in the 20-round draft in July, including Bluefield State infielder Tahir Meulens, who batted .397 with a 1.091 OPS. 

Even if there are no players who become professionals, Tyrone Brooks, MLB’s senior director of their front office and field staff diversity program, met with each team to inform them there are plenty other jobs in Major League Baseball. 

‘I talked to them about potential career opportunities,’ Brooks said, ‘whether  to get into the front office, coaching staff, or becoming an umpire. I just wanted to plant the seed with them that if you’re interested in the business side of the sport, finance, sales, ticketing, we have all of the options available. 

‘We want you to be part of our game.’ 

The Black College World Series is here to stay. It is negotiating a five-year commitment with the Montgomery Biscuits, the Tampa Bay Rays’ Class AA club, assuring that the best talent from HBCU’s can be noticed, too. 

‘This is growing leaps and bounds every year,’ Coker said. “The promotion of the event is getting us exposure, national media attention, and we can carve a name across America.’’ 

Numbers gamez

2:37: The average time of games compared to 3:05 after the same amount of games last season. 

9.1: The average of runs per game, compared to 8.3 a year ago. 

78.3: The percentage of successful stolen-base attempts, the highest in baseball history. 

.247: The batting average compared to .235 a year ago, with the batting average of balls put in play by left-handed hitters rising by 35 points on pulled groundballs. 

4: The number of stolen bases by Phillies leadoff hitter Trea Turner, perhaps the fastest runner in the game. The Phillies have stolen just 22 bases, with only the Colorado Rockies having fewer in the National League. They were fifth in stolen bases a year ago. 

11: The number of times the Athletics have drawn fewer than 10,000 fans this season at the Coliseum, including six games under 5,000. 

13: The number of games the Padres have failed to get a hit with runners in scoring position. They are last in the major leagues with a .203 batting average with RISP. 

36: The number of games it took for Atlanta to win 25 games, equalling the fewest in franchise history. 

766: The number of days since James Paxton pitched when he returned Friday night for the Boston Red Sox after undergoing Tommy John surgery. 

20 years, 277 days: Eury Perez’s age when he became the youngest pitcher in Marlins history Friday, and the youngest Dominican-born pitcher to make his major-league debut.  

Around the basepaths

– New York Mets owner Steve Cohen and Milwaukee Brewers executive David Stearns cannot have any formal contact, but some around baseball insist that Stearns will be hired by the Mets in a high-ranking position, perhaps as president of baseball of baseball operations in the offseason. 

‘I can’t say anything publicly, or how I know’ one MLB executive said, ‘but I guarantee it’s going to happen.’

Brewers owner Mark Attanasio previously prevented Stearns from leaving, but his contract expires after the season, allowing him to negotiate with the Mets or any other team. 

Stearns stepped down as Brewers president of baseball operations after last season to become a consultant, and plans to leave the organization when the season ends. 

– The reason for the St. Louis Cardinals’ decision to strip Willson Contreras from his catching duties just five weeks into his five-year, $87.5 million free-agent contract, a high-ranking Cardinals official told USA TODAY Sports, was quite simple: 

The starting pitchers told management they simply no longer wanted to pitch to him, at least not this season, after getting off to their dreadful start, producing an ugly 5.40 ERA. 

The Cardinals, off to their worst start in 50 years at 10-24, have since won five of six games after demoting Contreras, although the starting rotation has actually gotten worse, yielding a 5.47 ERA, with no starter lasting past five innings. 

The last Cardinals starter to win a game was Miles Mikolas on April 27. 

Well, Contreras will be given another opportunity on Monday when he’s scheduled to catch struggling Jack Flaherty against the Milwaukee Brewers. 

– The Cardinals can kick themselves for not out-bidding Atlanta for sensational catcher Sean Murphy when the A’s shopped him during the winter, but the truth is that the Cleveland Guardians finished second in the sweepstakes with their offer. 

Certainly, Cleveland could sure use him now. 

They are last in home runs (22), last in slugging percentage (.341), last in total bases (443), 28th in runs scored (138) and 28th in batting average (.222). 

– The best trade commodity this summer will be Detroit Tigers left-hander Eduardo Rodriguez, who’s pitching like an ace with his 1.57 ERA. The Tigers would love to keep him, but Perez has an opt-out after this season, and can walk away from the remaining three years, $49 million in original five-year, $77 million deal. If the Tigers are out of the race and believe he’ll depart, they’ll have no choice but to move him at the trade deadline. 

– In a time where everyone is scrambling for starting pitching, still no one has picked up veteran starter Madison Bumgarner after being released last month by the D-backs. 

‘A highly successful pitcher is resistant to change,’ says D-backs pitching coach Brent Strom, who has not spoken to Bumgarner said his release. ‘It was an amicable divorce.’ 

– The Pirates and starting pitcher Mitch Keller are in negotiations on a long-term contract extension. 

Keller, 27, is earning $2,437,500 this year and is eligible for free agency after the 2025 season. 

– It’s an early-season nail-bitter between the New York Mets and San Diego Padres to earn the moniker: ‘The Worst Team Money Can Buy’ with their bloated payrolls and sub-.500 records. 

‘We’ve got to perform better,’ Padres manager Melvin snapped after a loss against the Twins this week. ‘We have guys that can perform better, and we’re going to. But it’s time to quit just talking about it. It’s time to go out there and do it. 

‘Underperforming.’ 

To say the least. The Padres have scored the sixth-fewest runs in baseball, just five more than the woeful Athletics, despite having a star-studded lineup and a $250 million payroll. 

– Please, enough is enough. The Angels are NOT trading Shohei Ohtani. The only chance to get him is when he hits free agency in November. 

– You wonder why more players are willing to wear a two-way mic and go on live TV during national broadcasts? 

Well, players must be paid $10,000 for each appearance during the regular season and $15,000 in the postseason, under the CBA. 

Their comments will also be screened, with the networks obligated to scrub any controversial remarks that would ’embarrass, be prejudicial to, detrimental to, or critical of, Major League Baseball, the Players Association, the individual wearing the microphone, players, fans or umpires, include any profanity … or likely would be construed as inflammatory.’

– The Giants’ LaMonte Wade says he was stunned that Hall of Famer Willie Mays even knew his name when he asked to talk to him during his visit to the Giants’ clubhouse on his 92nd birthday. 

‘I still can’t believe it,’ Wade tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘I’m on the training table one minute and talking to Willie Mays the next with Barry Bonds right behind him. We were able to talk hitting. As soon as I was done, I called my dad, and he said, ‘Did you get some pictures?’ 

‘Man, I wish I did, but believe me, I’ll remember that for the rest of my life.’ 

– Bizarre scheduling. The St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs, who played their first games against one another this past week, don’t play a single game against one another after July 30. It’s a shame for this great rivalry. 

– The San Diego Padres could use a catcher with Luis Campusano out for two months after undergoing thumb ligament surgery. The Chicago White Sox would gladly trade one-time Padre Yasmani Grandal. 

– San Francisco Giants broadcaster Duane Kuiper says that he actually has a bat from every teammate he played with during his 12-year career, collecting them along the way. He’s not sure what he plans to do with all of them, but he figures he has at least 150 bats, complete with their numbers written on the bat knobs. 

– It’s stunning to see the turnaround with Orioles reliever Yennier Cano. He had an 11.50 ERA last season with the Twins and Orioles, has now given up just four hits without a walk in 19⅔ shutout innings this year, a 0.203 WHIP. 

The dude has thrown 220 pitches. 

The barrel percentage by hitters in those pitches? Zero. 

– The best-kept secret is the Marlins’ sensational bullpen, which is the reason they are 12-0 in one-run games, which are the most consecutive one-run victories to open a season in baseball history. They lost 40 one-run games a year ago, just four shy of the single-season record for one-run losses since the Live Ball Era in 1920. 

– White Sox manager Pedro Grifol, when asked why they had a team meeting Friday: ‘We’re 13-26. Maybe that’s the reason.’

They proceeded to lose and now are 14-27 entering Sunday. 

– This could be the first time in baseball history that every team in a division will produce a winning record. Take a bow, AL East. 

– Congratulations to Red Sox closer Kenley Jansen, who has been given up by two different teams in the past two seasons, and now just produced his 400th career save. 

Jansen is making his way to a possible spot place in Cooperstown, becoming only the seventh pitcher to produce 400 saves, to go along with his 20 postseason saves, three All-Star appearances and a World Series title on his resume. 

– The Colorado Rockies, whose starting rotation is as thin as their air in Denver, are now without their top two starters with German Marquez (Tommy John surgery) and Antonio Senzatela (sprained elbow) for all or most of the season. They had little choice but to grab Rays starter Chase Anderson off waivers. 

– Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Betts became the latest player to believe in ghosts at the historic Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee, and instead stayed at a local Airbnb with friends rather. 

– Should anyone be surprised that the Oakland A’s are now in their second binding agreement in three weeks trying to get a stadium in Las Vegas, this time trying to build a place near the Tropicana resort, with $395 million in public funding instead of $500 million? 

– Time to update those passports: 

In 2024, the Padres and Dodgers are playing a two-game series in South Korea or Japan. 

The Astros and Rockies are playing in Mexico City. 

The Mets and Phillies are playing in London. 

– The Royals already are listening to teams who have expressed interested in veteran closer Aroldis Chapman, but expect to keep him until the trade deadline. 

– Well, if nothing else, the A’s have slugger Brent Rooker to keep their minds off their losing ways. 

Rooker, 28, leads the major leagues with a 1.091 OPS and .667 slugging percentage, and is tied for the American League lead with 11 home runs. 

He has been quite the find after being cast aside by the Twins, Padres and Royals, and now has found a home as the A’s everyday DH. 

– Tampa Bay Rays magic: The White Sox released veteran reliever Jake Diekman after yielding a 7.94 ERA the first month of the season, went home to Nebraska, and got a call from the Rays, asking if he’d come over to replace injured Garrett Cleavinger. 

Diekman, with the White Sox still responsible for all but the pro-rated $720,000 of his $3.5 million contract, jumped on a plane, joined the Rays in New York and promptly pitched a scoreless inning in his debut against the Yankees. 

‘I feel very rejuvenated to be here,’ he told reporters. ‘It’s better than mowing my yard back home. Spending six, seven days at home, I was getting very bored.’  

– Remember when the Pirates were the talk of the National League with their league-leading 20-8 record? 

Well, reality has since arrived, losing 10 of 11.

They have hit a league-low .181 during their slide, including .133 with runners in scoring position, after hitting .312 with runners in scoring position the first 28 games. 

– Baseball lost two scouting legends this past week with the passing of Dave Yoakum, 76, and Deacon Jones, 89, two of the nicest men you’ll ever meet. 

Certainly, their passing is a reminder of the beautiful advice from brilliant MLB.com reporter Sarah Langs, who was diagnosed last year with ALS. 

‘Think about the people in your life who help you on a daily basis, make you happy, whatever it may be,’ Langs told Jayson Stark and Doug Glanville on their podcast. ‘Make sure you’re explaining to them how important that is, because you want to be able to share that with them while they can still appreciate it. Overwhelm them like I’m overwhelmed.’ 

Amen. 

Follow Nightengale on Twitter: @Bnightengale 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY