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First, there were trackers on Taylor Swift and other celebrities’ private jet usage. Now, there will be more scrutiny on executives’ personal use of business aircraft who write it off as a tax expense.

IRS leadership said Wednesday that the agency will start conducting dozens of audits on businesses’ private jets and how they are used personally by executives and written off as a tax deduction — as part of the agency’s ongoing mission of going after high-wealth tax cheats who game the tax system at the expense of American taxpayers.

The audits will focus on aircraft used by large corporations and high-income taxpayers and whether the tax purpose of the jet use is being properly allocated, the IRS says.

“At this time of year, when millions of hardworking taxpayers are working on their taxes, we want them to feel confident that everyone is playing by the same rules,” IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel said on a call with reporters to preview the announcement. Tax season began Jan. 29.

“These aircraft audits will help ensure high-income groups aren’t flying under the radar with their tax responsibilities,” he said.

There are more than 10,000 corporate jets in the US., according to the IRS, valued at tens of millions of dollars and many can be fully deducted.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, passed during the Trump administration, allowed for 100% bonus depreciation and expensing of private jets — which allowed taxpayers to write off the cost of aircraft purchased and put into service between September 2017 and January 2023.

Werfel said the federal tax collector will use resources from Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act to more closely examine private jet usage — which has not been closely scrutinized during the past decade as funding fell sharply in the last decade.“Our audit rates have been anemic,” he said on the call. An April 2023 IRS report on tax audit data states that “continued resource constraints have limited the agency’s ability to address high-end noncompliance” stating that in tax year 2018, audit rates for people making more than $10 million were 9.2%, down from 13.6% in 2012. And in the same time period, overall corporate audit rates fell from 1.3% to .6%.

Werfel said audits related to aircraft usage could increase in the future depending on the results of the initial audits and as the IRS continues hiring more examiners.

“To be clear, that doesn’t mean everyone in a high-income category partnership or corporation is evading or avoiding their tax responsibility,” Werfel said. “But it does mean that there’s more work to do for the IRS to make sure people are paying what they owe.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

JPMorgan Chase was sued by customers who accused the largest U.S. bank of having unfairly charged fees when they deposited checks that, through no fault of their own, bounced.

In a proposed class action filed on Tuesday night, five customers said New York-based Chase docked $12 “deposited item returned fees” from their accounts when checks they tried to deposit were returned unpaid.

Checks can bounce for many reasons, including when writers do not have enough money in their accounts or issue stop payment orders, or when the checks contain errors.

The Chase customers called the bank’s “junk fees” for returned checks “unconscionable” and “predatory,” citing an October 2022 U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau bulletin that said indiscriminately charging such fees was likely illegal.

“By charging these deposited item return fees, Chase unfairly targeted its customers with financial penalties for faulty checks the customers had no hand in issuing,” the complaint said. “They did nothing wrong, yet were penalized.”

Chase declined to comment on the lawsuit, but said it stopped charging the fees in December 2022.

The five customers said they were charged between November 2021 and October 2022.

Their lawyer Lisa Considine called imposing the fees “a pervasive and unfair industry practice.”

The complaint seeks at least $5 million of damages for Chase customers nationwide, alleging violations of New York, California, Illinois and New Jersey consumer protection laws. It was filed in the White Plains, New York federal court.

In October, the Biden administration called for a crackdown on hidden and surprise fees in banking and other sectors including car rentals, hotels and concert tickets, saying the fees cost Americans tens of billions of dollars a year.

The case is Maslowski et al v JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 24-01277.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The firm formerly known as Toshiba is recalling 15.5 million AC laptop adapters due to the potential for burn and fire risks.

The firm, now called Dynabook, said it had received 679 reports of the affected adapters overheating, catching fire, melting, or burning over a period stretching back more than a decade. This includes 43 reports of minor burn injuries.

Recalled Toshiba AC adapter.U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission

The recalled products have date codes between April 2008 through December 2012 and were sold between April 2008 and April 2014.

The affected adapters were included in the purchase of Toshiba laptops and also sold separately.

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled AC adapters and contact Dynabook Americas for a free replacement, according to a notice on the Consumer Product Safety Commission’s website.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Lionel Messi and Inter Miami will help Major League Soccer kick off its 29th season when they host Real Salt Lake on Wednesday night.

Inter Miami is coming off a rough preseason tour that took the club around the world, playing games in places such as Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Japan. The preseason performances left more to be desired, but now Tata Martino’s squad finally gets to play a game that matters.

Real Salt Lake comes into the season having qualified for the playoffs in five of the last six seasons. Inter Miami, meanwhile, missed the playoffs last season and anything short of an MLS Cup title this year would be considered a disappointment.

The majority of the games during the opening week of MLS play take place on Saturday. The biggest is Los Angeles FC hosting the Seattle Sounders in a showdown of expected contenders for the Supporters’ Shield and MLS Cup.

On Sunday, Messi and Inter Miami visit Southern California to take on the revamped Los Angeles Galaxy. Looking to steal some of the spotlight from Messi will be new Galaxy winger Gabriel Pec, who was acquired on the most expensive transfer fee in team history.

MLS 2024: 10 biggest questions for new season

MLS Matchday 1: What are this week’s MLS games?

(All games available on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.)

Wednesday

Inter Miami vs. Real Salt Lake, 8 p.m. ET

Saturday

Columbus Crew vs. Atlanta United, 2 p.m. ET
Los Angeles FC vs. Seattle Sounders, 4:30 p.m. ET (FOX)
Charlotte FC vs. New York City FC, 7:30 p.m. ET
D.C. United vs. New England Revolution, 7:30 p.m. ET
Orlando City vs. CF Montréal, 7:30 p.m. ET
Philadelphia Union vs. Chicago Fire, 7:30 p.m. ET
Austin FC vs. Minnesota United, 8:30 p.m. ET
FC Dallas vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 8:30 p.m. ET
Houston Dynamo vs. Sporting Kansas City, 8:30 p.m. ET
St. Louis City SC vs. Real Salt Lake, 8:30 p.m. ET
Portland Timbers vs. Colorado Rapids, 10:30 p.m. ET

Sunday

FC Cincinnati vs. Toronto FC, 2:30 p.m. ET
Nashville SC vs. New York Red Bulls, 5 p.m. ET
Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Inter Miami, 8:30 p.m. ET

MLS game of the week

Seattle Sounders at Los Angeles FC (Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET on FOX/MLS Season Pass) — While hyped-up Inter Miami and its all-time great superstar, Lionel Messi, have two mildly intriguing matchups this week to open the 2024 MLS season, the best matchup of the weekend is taking place at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles. The Sounders and LAFC have combined to appear in six of the last eight MLS Cups, and should be among the top contenders again this season.

There also will be plenty of star power on display, with newcomers under the microscope early. While the Sounders made an offseason splash acquiring Pedro de la Vega — a 22-year-old attacking player from Argentina — LAFC brought in French World Cup-winning goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.

MLS 2024 season key dates

Feb. 21: Season opener
Feb. 24-25: MLS is Back weekend
May 11-18: Rivalry week
July 24: MLS All-Star Game, in Columbus, Ohio
July 26-Aug. 25: Leagues Cup
Oct. 19: Final day of regular season (MLS Decision Day)
Dec. 7: MLS Cup

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2024 MLS season is upon us, with Inter Miami and Real Salt Lake kicking off on Wednesday night in the league’s earliest-ever opener.

It’s certainly fitting that the league’s 29th season will begin with a standalone match featuring Miami. The Herons will be the most closely watched team in league history, as they embark on their first full season with their cadre of superstars including, of course, the greatest player of all time.

But Messi-watch will be far from the only intriguing story to follow in MLS this season. Here are 10 of the biggest questions we have as the 2024 MLS campaign gets underway.

How bad will the replacement refs be?

Replacement refs are coming to MLS — at least for a small stretch.

MLS referees are officially locked out after their union overwhelmingly rejected the latest offer from their employer, the Professional Referee Organization (PRO).

That means a host of replacement officials have been lined up to take charge of games as long as the lockout lasts. The referees have some degree of top-level experience, but very few have refereed in MLS.

That, needless to say, could be a problem. The lockout may not last long, but even one game with replacement refs could be one too many if, say, Wednesday’s opener between Inter Miami and Real Salt Lake is tainted by some dodgy officiating.

Will Lionel Messi and Inter Miami boom or bust?

No team in MLS history will be under the microscope quite as much as the 2024 version of Inter Miami.

It will be the first full season for Lionel Messi, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, and the MLS debut for Luis Suárez. Clearly, this team is going to blow the doors off MLS, right? Well, maybe.

If Miami’s superstar ex-Barcelona players stay healthy and the club’s younger players pull their weight, this should be a Supporters’ Shield contender. But the likelihood of more injuries — and Messi’s international commitments — mean nothing is assured in South Florida in 2024.

Will the USMNT call up more MLS players in 2024?

Over the past couple years, Gregg Berhalter’s preference for European-based players over MLS stars has become unmistakable.

Last year, a number of players on the 2022 World Cup squad saw themselves phased out of the A-team picture, including the likes of Cristian Roldan, Jordan Morris, Kellyn Acosta, Jesús Ferreira, Walker Zimmerman and DeAndre Yedlin.

Will any of those names return in 2024? Can Miles Robinson maintain his place after eschewing a European move to sign with FC Cincinnati? What about rising MLS talent like Diego Luna? Those are all developments we’ll be watching closely, as well as a related story out in Colorado …

Can the Colorado Rapids rebuild USMNT careers?

The Colorado Rapids made three headline signings over the offseason, all of whom came with a similar backstory.

Djordje Mihailovic, Sam Vines and Zack Steffen joined the Rapids from European clubs, with the trio all aiming to regain their footing in MLS and return to the picture for the USMNT.

Mihailovic battled through form and personal issues at AZ, while Vines and Steffen are coming off injuries. Though all three are on the outside looking in when it comes to the USMNT, they’re all young enough to regain their place with a run of good form.

On a national team that is increasingly reliant on players from Europe, though, there is a question over just how good that form would have to be for any of the new Rapids players to earn a recall. The trio’s situation could have implications that reverberate far beyond Colorado.

Can the LA Galaxy turn it around?

The Los Angeles Galaxy were once the envy of MLS, but lately they’ve been more of a laughingstock than anything else.

After missing the playoffs for the fifth time in seven years and watching crosstown rival LAFC make a second straight MLS Cup, the pressure is on the Galaxy to regain their place near the top of the league.

Two major new signings should help, at least on the attacking side. The club has shelled out nearly $20 million for Gabriel Pec and Joseph Paintsil, a major statement of intent but a risk for a front office that has often misfired on signings in recent years.

There are still major question marks defensively for a team that conceded a league-worst 67 goals in 2023. If head coach Greg Vanney can’t find a workable defensive solution, no amount of offensive firepower will save this team.

What will become of the U.S. Open Cup?

MLS appeared to deliver a death blow to the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in December, announcing it would only field teams from the third-division MLS Next Pro in 2024.

The move drew an immediate backlash, as well as questions as to whether the league could actually do what it was proposing. The answer to that question came just a week later: nope.

U.S. Soccer rejected the MLS request — a word the federation used, not the league — to field Next Pro teams in the Open Cup, leaving the fate of the tournament in limbo.

MLS and U.S. Soccer have been in talks over how to proceed this year, with ESPN reporting that a tentative solution is on the table that would see only some MLS teams participate.

That solution is far from satisfactory, and it’s only for 2024, leaving the long-term future of the Open Cup very much in the balance.

Will the sales start flowing again?

It was a relatively quiet offseason in MLS when it came to outbound transfers, with some of the more anticipated sales not coming to fruition.

Chief among those was Atlanta United star Thiago Almada, who openly stated his desire to leave only for a move to never materialize. Should the World Cup-winner depart, he would likely be sold for a figure around the MLS record for an outbound transfer ($29 million).

Several big names, including Almada, could depart midseason which, as always, is ideal for the buying clubs in Europe and much less so for the selling clubs in MLS.

Keep an eye on LAFC striker Dénis Bouanga, Houston Dynamo midfielder Coco Carrasquilla, New England Revolution midfielder Noel Buck and Philadelphia Union striker Julián Carranza, among others.

Will the regular season matter?

MLS tried out yet another new playoff format in 2023, with 18 of the league’s 29 teams making the postseason. That format returns for 2024.

With almost two-thirds of the league making the playoffs, the MLS regular season will inherently be devalued. But last year at least, there was some reward for regular season performance when it came to the playoffs.

Aside from Sporting Kansas City’s shock upset over top-seeded St. Louis, all of the other seven higher-seeded teams won in the best-of-three first round. The rest of the postseason, though, was a bit less clear as four of the remaining seven one-off matches were won by the higher seed.

MLS is sticking with its playoff format in 2024, with another tweak likely in 2025 when San Diego FC enters the league as its 30th team.

How much will St. Louis City SC fall back to earth?

Notice this section is not titled “Will St. Louis City fall back to earth?” Because, well, it’s going to happen.

Picked by many to be among the worst teams in MLS in its expansion season, St. Louis City SC was instead one of the league’s best teams and stories in 2023. Bradley Carnell’s side finished atop the Western Conference and even the aforementioned early exit in the playoffs didn’t dampen an incredible debut season.

But! The underlying numbers suggest that St. Louis also got very lucky in 2023. How lucky? The team’s expected goal differential of -7.5 was second-worst in the Western Conference, even though its actual goal differential of +17 was the best. You don’t need to be a mathematician to know that success is not sustainable.

St. Louis also didn’t make many big additions this offseason. This can absolutely still be a playoff team in 2024, but a league juggernaut it will not be.

Can the Columbus Crew do it again?

The Columbus Crew achieved the Platonic ideal of the game last season: They won, and looked pretty doing it.

Columbus won its second MLS Cup in four seasons in December, defeating LAFC 2-1 in the title game at its home stadium, Lower.com Field.

The Crew have become the envy of the league by implementing Wilfried Nancy’s positive, attack-first approach seamlessly. Columbus wants the ball, and it usually does something eye-catching when it has possession.

But repeating in MLS is hard. There’s a reason no team since the Galaxy in 2012 has pulled off the feat. And Columbus will face the schedule-congesting Concacaf Champions Cup this season, which has felled plenty of successful MLS teams in the past.

But the Crew have lost very few key players, and added some solid pieces in the form of Marino Hinestroza and Derrick Jones. If any team is capable of breaking the 12-year defending champion curse, it may be this one.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. – In their nearly three decades of existence, the Tampa Bay Rays have given every reason for fans to fixate on what they don’t have.

Even in the best of times.

After winning their first 13 games in 2023 and 27 of their first 33, elbow injuries shelved three members of their stellar pitching rotation, including ace Shane McClanahan. And then the franchise foundation was unmoored when All-Star shortstop Wander Franco was placed on administrative leave and faces possible criminal charges in the Dominican Republic after allegations of a sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl.

A season of great promise went sideways, yet even though they conceded the division crown, the Rays won 99 games and reached the playoffs a fifth consecutive year.

The new year brought the trade of hard-throwing Tyler Glasnow to the Dodgers and the injured starters are still out, even if wounded pitchers Jeffrey Springs and Drew Rasmussen should return in the summer. Franco’s legal situation has many potential outcomes, though his major league future is murky at best.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

Impervious to attrition? Not totally.

Talented enough to flourish anyway? Take it from the stars who remain, who know nothing else but playoff baseball at season’s end.

“It’s no secret that we did lose some of the best pitchers in the league,” says infielder Yandy Diaz, who turned into an All-Star and top-six MVP finisher in 2023, through translator Manny Navarro. “But the pitchers they brought up did a great job. We obviously made it to the playoffs.

“There were some moments of negativity there within the season. But our job was to keep it positive and keep it going from there – and our mentality’s going to stay the same from that point on.”

As a new season dawns, perhaps it’s time to fixate on what the Rays do have.

‘I didn’t plan any of this’

For once, it starts in the batter’s box.

The Rays almost always fascinate because of their pitching, a wicked stew of pitching coach Kyle Snyder’s wizardry and what’s probably still the best analytics department in the majors turning struggling hurlers into All-Stars, and paupers into multi-millionaires.

Let’s consider Diaz, for a moment.

At 32, he’s eligible for free agency and has played all but 88 games for Tampa Bay, after a 2019 trade from Cleveland. Yet he’s just now reaching his apex as a player.

Few put up tougher at-bats than Diaz, whose .330 batting average was good enough for the AL batting title. His 22 homers, a .410 OBP and .932 OPS helped forge 5.2 WAR.

“Yandy took his game to another level,” says Rays manager Kevin Cash, who enters his 10th season as the longest-tenured manager in the major leagues.

 Diaz’s first half earned him an All-Star selection, and after some hesitation, he flew to the game in Seattle, hit a home run and was able to return for the birth of his son a day later.

“It was a blessing to have him,” he says of Yandy Jared Diaz, born to his wife, Mayisleidis. “Now you have double goals – everything is for him.

“Everything I do is for him and to hopefully help the team at the same time.”

He has been in virtual lockstep with his fellow native Cuban, Randy Arozarena: The two were traded in the 2019 off-season after brief careers elsewhere, and Arozarena blew up, figuratively, in the 2020 offseason when he crushed 12 home runs in an 18-game postseason stretch, driving the Rays to Game 6 of the World Series in the pandemic bubble.

Those narratives – Arozarena’s panache, Diaz’s pillar-like presence – have only deepened.

Arozarena’s spot blew up further after an epic performance for Mexico in the 2023 World Baseball Classic. In the year since, he has been name-dropped in a Bad Bunny verse and hung out backstage with hip-hop artist Travis Scott, who assumed Arozarena’s arms-folded pose for the camera.

“We have been working on something,” says Arozarena of Scott. “I can’t say.”

Big-time, eh?

“I won’t say he really likes the attention,” says Diaz, “but he just does things in a way that gets people’s attention. I think that’s just the personality that he has.”

Cash, for his part, calls Arozarena “a model of consistency.” And Arozarena can remember when he was a seldom-used Cardinals outfielder swapped for pitcher Matthew Liberatore after the 2019 season. He now has three 20-homer seasons, a Rookie of the Year honor and All-Star nod to his credit.

“All I wanted to do was have success in the big leagues. That was the ultimate goal,” Arozarena says through Navarro. “I didn’t plan any of this. I didn’t expect any of it. It’s all still kind of new to me as it comes out. I just wanted to have success in the big leagues and support my team.”

‘I don’t forget good people’

They may need it more than ever. Franco played his last game of 2023 on Aug. 12, yet still led the club with 5.5 WAR. His legal limbo in part prompted the club to trade useful outfield platoon man Luke Raley to the Seattle Mariners for shortstop Jose Caballero. The rookie leads a cast of many – Amed Rosario and Yu Chang were added on major- and minor-league contracts Tuesday – vying for infield playing time.

“We have a very good offensive team. We’re going to have more opportunities for younger players to be a part of that,” says Cash.

“Runs are at a premium. We’ll take as many as we can get.”

They’re still pretty good at preventing them. After the ’23 pitcher carnage, the Rays claimed vets like Zack Littell and Chris Devenski off waivers; both saw significant improvement from their prior stops after Snyder and Co. got their hands on them.

Now, Littell is likely going to hold down a rotation spot.

“I think we all kind of understand that the roles are fairly fluid,” says Littell, who started 14 games last year, going two innings at the outset and by year’s end, producing eight innings of one-run ball.

“We all wanna pitch in the big spots and be the guy. But you’ve seen so many times over the years with the Rays, guys who hadn’t yet made an impact on the big league level, and springboards his career from there.”

Devenski, 33, has eight major league seasons under his belt. He was dumped by the Angels as part of their late-season luxury-tax gambit and cut his ERA from 5.08 in Anaheim to 2.08 in nine appearances with the Rays, and made the playoff roster.

It was an easy decision to re-sign with them in December.

“Plans don’t always go as planned, right?” says Devenski. “I like the approach that we have here. I like the language we use. Everything just makes sense. It was a good squad for me last year, a very good bright spot for me.

“In my career, I don’t forget good people. I don’t forget people who treat people well. I’m appreciative of the people here.”

It’s a surprise

For now, the Rays’ plans hinge on Zach Eflin filling something close to a No. 1 starter role, for Ryan Pepiot – acquired for Glasnow – to expand on the promise he flashed with the Dodgers, for second-year man Taj Bradley to find consistency.

Plan Bs will emerge in time.

“I suspect we have players in camp,” says executive vice president Erik Neander, “who can fulfill that unexpected, pleasant surprise.”

For now, it’s all about rinsing any aftertaste from a two-game sweep at the hands of the eventual champion Texas Rangers in the wild-card round. The Rays played particularly badly, not exactly a rousing vital sign that they soldiered on from adversity.

Believing otherwise probably epitomizes the Rays Way, if one must exist.

“We’re all collectively naïve enough to think we can do it,” says Neander. “You have to believe you can be successful.”

In Díaz and Arozarena, they have something beyond simply belief – tangible production and also abundant vibes.

“They kinda cover all of it,” says Littell. “Yandy is one of the most professional players I’ve played with. He comes to the field everyday knowing exactly what he needs to do to get his body ready for the game. The consistency alone, he’s a guy you have to fall behind, and for the young position players, there’s not a better guy to watch.

“Randy just has a bigger gear. It seems like the bigger the moment, the easier the game gets. There’s a handful of athletes who are like that.”

Despite their eternal search for a new ballpark and the consistently low payrolls, the Rays in the Neander era don’t really do windows; the idea is to get in the playoffs every year, and thus maximize the chance that everything goes your way.

Yet Díaz will reach free agency this November, and Arozarena, represented by Scott Boras, will only get more expensive with each passing year. And the AL East remains suffocating from top to bottom.

Perhaps a transition year is due to arrive soon.

For now, Díaz and the Rays will give it another go, aiming for a sixth straight playoff trip and bound by the belief that the sky isn’t, in fact, falling.

“Ever since 2019, I’ve been very fortunate with this team,” says Díaz. “They gave me that opportunity.

“And I always say, even after I retire, I’ll always give thanks to Tampa Bay for the work and the opportunity they gave me here.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The All-Star third baseman offered some pointed comments about the team’s lack of offseason additions as he met with reporters in Fort Myers, Fla.

“They need to make an adjustment to help us players to be in a better position to win,’ he said through a translator. ‘Everybody in this organization wants to win. We, as (players), want to win. I think they need to make an adjustment to help us win.

“I’m not saying that the team is not OK right now, but they need to be conscious of what are the (weaknesses) and what we need.”

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Other AL East division rivals made big splashes on the trade market this winter, with the Baltimore Orioles adding former NL Cy Young award winner Corbin Burnes and the New York Yankees acquiring star outfielder Juan Soto.

Last year at this time, the Red Sox signed Devers to a 10-year, $313.5 million contract extension, but despite a season in which he hit .271 with 33 homers and 100 RBI, the team finished last in the division with a 78-84 record.

This offseason has been a mixed bag. The Sox signed right-hander Lucas Giolito to a two-year, $38.5 million deal and acquired outfielder Tyler O’Neill and infielder Vaughn Grissom in trades. However, they dealt outfielder Alex Verdugo to the Yankees and traded away left-hander Chris Sale to Atlanta for Grissom.

“Everybody knows what we need,’ Devers said. ‘You know what we need, and they know what we need. It’s just there’s some things that I can’t say out loud. But everybody that knows the organization and knows the game knows what we need.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MLBPA executive director Tony Clark said players are just as ‘frustrated’ with the new MLB jerseys as everyone else.

On Tuesday, days before the start of spring training on Thursday, Clark said the Major League Baseball Players Association is working on behalf of the players to resolve the jersey issue ahead of Opening Day on March 28.

‘We are on the phone with the requisite parties that are involved in making that decision because we aren’t,’ Clark told reporters on Tuesday, according to The Athletic. ‘Hopefully, we can get some things done over the course of the next six weeks of spring training. Because I’d hate to be in a place where we’re still having conversations about some of the challenges we have in that regard once the lights come on.’

Last week, the league unveiled its new Nike Vapor Premier uniforms that are manufactured by Fanatics to less than stellar reviews. Although the jerseys are ‘engineered to improve mobility, moisture management and fit,’ MLB said, the threads have drawn criticism over the cheap look, small lettering and limited customization options.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

“Any time there’s change, there’s an adjustment period. Sometimes that adjustment period goes well, sometimes not so much,’ Clark added. ‘In this instance, there appear to be some misses that could have otherwise not been misses.’

Clark said conversations to correct the jerseys are ongoing, but noted that the MLBPA is ‘trying to make sure our guys have what they need in the fashion that they need it.’

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred defended the new jerseys on Thursday and said ‘there’s going to be some negative feedback’ with any new initiative, but predicted that ‘they’re going to be really popular.’

The Atlanta Braves’ Ronald Acuña Jr., St. Louis Cardinals’ Nolan Arenado and Baltimore Orioles’ Adley Rutschman all praised the new Nike Vapor Premier uniforms in the league’s press release — with Arenado describing the uniforms as ‘soft, light and comfortable — but the jerseys haven’t been popular with many fans and players.

“It looks like a replica,” Los Angeles Angels outfielder Taylor Ward said, per The Athletic. “It feels kind of like papery. It could be great when you’re out there sweating, it may be breathable. But I haven’t had that opportunity yet to try that out. But from the looks of it, it doesn’t look like a $450 jersey.’

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GOODYEAR, Arizona – It wasn’t exactly the way either one of them wanted to make an impact this spring.

But Cincinnati Reds teammates Hunter Greene and Elly De La Cruz provided the gotta-see-it moment of the spring — which the team’s president and, yes, an intrepid reporter with a video camera did see, the latter capturing it for posterity when a foul ball hit by De La Cruz off Greene during live batting practice reached a nearby parking lot, where it found the window of Greene’s car.

And Noelvi Marte thought he had it bad when De La Cruz broke his nose with a throw playing catch last season.

“That’ll teach you to park in the first spot,” said Reds president Nick Krall, who didn’t see the actual collision but later took a picture of Greene’s busted window.

‘The funniest thing is he was pitching,’ De La Cruz said. ‘He said, ‘You gotta pay for it.’ ‘

All things Reds: Latest Cincinnati Reds news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

De La Cruz said that’s not gonna happen.

‘I got no money for that,’ said the budding young hitting star, who only broke into the majors last June. ‘That’s an expensive car.’

For what it’s worth ($53 million to be exact), Greene has the biggest contract among Reds players.

Besides, De La Cruz says it’s Greene’s own fault for throwing fastballs.

‘He should throw more sliders. Then I can’t hit the ball,’ he said. ‘He threw it too hard.’

Said Greene: ‘He should have gotten the bat head out quicker.’

When asked about whether Greene and De La Cruz might be able to expense the damage, Krall said he’d have to look into it.

Meanwhile, somebody joked Wednesday morning with Greene about whether he had a deal yet with Columbus-based Safelite, the auto-glass repair company, and he was already on it.

‘Not yet,’ he said. ‘But my agents are actually working on it. Truly.

‘It’d be funny to get something out of it.’

Greene was driving a different car by Wednesday morning with the damaged car in the shop.

He also found a different place to park.

‘I parked a little further today,’ he said. ‘Now I’m going to be parking over by Cleveland.’

He probably meant the Guardians’ side of the shared spring training complex in Arizona.

The only thing for sure at this point is that wherever De La Cruz goes on the practice field or in games, it will be must-see viewing the rest of the spring.

‘But I don’t want to do any more damage,’ he said.

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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Creighton went into its game against UConn having lost all six of its previous meetings with No. 1-ranked teams and never coming closer than 10 points.

The No. 15 Bluejays finally broke through on their seventh try, building a double-digit lead in the first half and knocking off the Huskies 85-66 Tuesday night.

“We played a really good game and we beat an incredible team, a team that has a legitimate chance to win a national championship,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. “But we’re pretty good as well.”

Creighton (20-7, 10-6 Big East) led by 23 points with 10 minutes left but saw its lead cut to 10 before holding the defending national champions scoreless on five straight possessions, rebuilding their cushion and prompting students to leave their seats to prepare to storm the court — which they did as soon as the buzzer sounded.

UConn (24-3, 14-2) had its 14-game win streak end three days after it beat then-No. 4 Marquette by 28 points for one of the most impressive victories of the season.

“It kind of felt like we just ran into a buzz saw there,” UConn coach Danny Hurley said.

Steven Ashworth scored 16 of his 20 points in the first half, Trey Alexander finished with 16 points and Ryan Kalkbrenner added 15. The Bluejays made 14 of 28 3-pointers in their second-best shooting night from beyond the arc this season. Creighton was just 6 of 26 on 3s in its 62-48 loss at UConn last month.

“When I watched that Marquette-UConn game, I’ve got to admit I wasn’t feeling warm and fuzzy about our chances,” McDermott said.

Conditions seemed right for the Bluejays. They came into the game off a pair of 22-point wins and on a three-game win streak, McDermott said his team’s offensive flow has been as good as it’s been all season, and a rowdy sellout crowd was on hand.

The Huskies were playing their third game in seven days, and Hurley said his players’ body language wasn’t good in team huddles once the Bluejays took the lead and built on it.

“We’ve had a great run, but it just kind of felt like today we ran into them playing great and us not playing as well as we need to here in Omaha,” Hurley said. “We were definitely stunned. We knew this was a dangerous game. One of the better teams in the country. But we didn’t expect this to happen.”

UConn’s Tristen Newton scored 17 of his 27 points in the second half, including 10 during the 18-5 spurt that helped pull the Huskies within 74-64.

The Huskies made a season-low three 3s on 16 attempts in their most lopsided loss since Houston beat them 84-45 in the American Athletic Conference Tournament on March 15, 2019. They had come into the game off a Big East-record three straight wins by at least 25 points.

The Bluejays made just two of their first nine shots, trailed by eight points early and had leading scorer Baylor Scheierman on the bench for eight minutes in the first half after he picked up two fouls. Scheierman finished with 12 points.

The Huskies had problems of their own. Donovan Clingan, their 7-foot-2, 280-pound center, was called for two quick fouls and played just 11 minutes in the half, and UConn went through a 2-for-10 spell while Creighton was finding its rhythm.

A few big shots from reserves Francisco Farabello and Jasen Green sparked an 18-2 run. Farabello made two straight 3s and Green hit one from the corner to wipe out the Huskies’ lead.

Then Ashworth struck from over 30 feet to begin a personal run of 13 straight points for the Bluejays, who made 14 of their last 19 shots of the half and went to the locker room with a 43-29 lead.

“When you’re in your home gym, there’s a feeling of confidence, and the fans were a huge part of that,” Ashworth said. “Definitely a home-court advantage, and in that first half we got on a little bit of a heater.”

BIG PICTURE

UConn: The Huskies have lost 21 in a row on the road against Top 25 opponents. They haven’t beaten a ranked team as a visitor since Jan. 16, 2014 at Memphis.

Creighton: The Bluejays gave McDermott his 600th career win and have beaten a top-10 team in nine straight years. They also clinched a 20-win season for the ninth year in a row.

UP NEXT

UConn: Hosts Villanova on Saturday.

Creighton: Visits St. John’s on Sunday.

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