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NEW YORK – They are playing a baseball game between the lines but staging an assault on the senses between every pitch, every inning, every sustainable break in the action in this World Series.

Be it celebrity pleas for more noise from Ken Jeong in Los Angeles to Flavor Flav in the Bronx, or blaring sirens and pounding organs, Yankee Stadium and its Dodger counterpart crank the volume to 11, ostensibly to engage the masses and fill in the gaps in a game that can provide many of them.

But Monday night, in Game 3 of the World Series, the Yankees’ continued futility inspired another, far different aural sensation.

Silence.

After a 15-year wait, World Series baseball returned to Yankee Stadium, and 49,368 fans jammed into the ballpark, eager for an electric moment, the kind that inspired an average price of nearly $2,000 on the resale market.

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But the Yankees again proved incapable of providing juice organically, their high-priced lineup reduced to a series of flails and fails – and now this World Series is on the verge of ending almost as quickly as it began.

They will play Game 4 Tuesday night, but after producing just four hits and getting shut out for 26 outs in a 4-2 loss to fall into a 3-0 Series hole, that potential coronation for the Dodgers almost feels like a matter of course.

The Dodgers are simply better than the Yankees, at least right now, and while there’s certainly plenty of ire to direct at presumed AL MVP Aaron Judge – now 1 for 12 with seven strikeouts in this Series – the hand-wringing feels increasingly pointless.

The Yankees have scored seven runs in three games.

They’re now batting .186 (19 for 102) in this series, and in a postseason environment that’s no longer kind to starting pitchers, have not challenged the Dodgers’ top arms. In Game 3, it was Walker Buehler’s turn: He did not allow a hit until the fourth inning, struck out five in five innings and needed just 76 pitches to do so.

On the heels of Jack Flaherty’s five-hit outing and Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s one-hit, 6 ⅓-inning gem in Game 2, the Yankees are 8 for 51 (.157) against Dodgers starting pitching.

In Game 3, the vibes were grim and almost inevitably off.

A flat pregame set from Bronx native Fat Joe did little to juice the crowd. Minutes later, a Freddie Freeman rocket into the right field stands made it 2-0 before the Yankees could even take an at-bat.

By the seventh inning, one fan aimed to get the crowd juiced for a key full-count pitch to Mookie Betts. There were few takers, and when reliever Tim Hill yanked the pitch for ball four, his expletive echoed well into the upper reaches of the stadium.

Welcome back to the World Series?

“We haven’t been here for 15 years,” says first baseman Anthony Rizzo. “I understand the fans, it’s been a long time in the making. I grew up a Yankee fan, as well. The way we look at it is, we got to the World Series and we’re expecting to win it and that’s still our expectation.

“But it’s definitely not a hole we want to be in.”

The Yankees dusted off the well-worn vows to compete that every team in a 3-0 hole utilizes. Manager Aaron Boone said “hopefully we can go be this amazing story and shock the world. But right now, it’s about trying to get a lead, trying to grab a game, and force another one, and then on from there.

“But we’ve got to grab one first.”  

It was clear quickly that wasn’t going to happen in Game 3, like a prizefight clearly over after one round yet scheduled for nine, anyway. Freeman’s two-run homer brought an air of inevitability to the proceedings. Even as the Yankees put five runners on base in the sixth, seventh and eighth innings, it felt probable they would strand them all, and they did.

Still, the aggregate score in this series is just 14-7, with Freeman’s walk-off Game 1 grand slam that snatched away a Yankee victory, Game 2 solo homer and two-run Game 3 job accounting for half the Dodgers’ scoring.

So close, yet so far?

“The first game was ours. They won it. They had an historic hit,” says Alex Verdugo, whose two-run home run with two outs in the ninth broke up the Dodgers shutout. “The second game, they got us in one inning and we couldn’t bounce back. That’s the offense’s fault.

“If we’re not scoring, we’re putting a lot of pressure on the pitchers to be perfect against what’s a really good Dodgers lineup.”

Perhaps a bullpen game from the Dodgers will be an elixir. Then again, the Dodgers clinched the pennant with a bullpen game in NLCS Game 6, and their high-leverage relievers are relatively rested thanks to the performance of their starting pitchers.

With help from the Yankees’ ineptitude, which cast a sleepy proceeding to this long-anticipated night. Come the bottom of the seventh, a loud Metallica guitar riff prompted fans to rise to their feet. It was 4-0 but Rizzo had just singled and Dodgers reliever Daniel Hudson was appearing for the first time this series.

Alas, pinch hitter Austin Wells – 1 for 10 this World Series, 4 for 42 this postseason – stared at a 96 mph pitch for strike three.

The rally short-circuited. The trek to the exit was on, and large swaths of the high-rent seating area were vacated by the time Verdugo hit his home run.

Quiet enough for fans’ frustration to be heard, certainly. Not that the Yankees are in position to dwell on that.

“That’s all noise,” says Judge. “The fans are here to cheer us on and have our back. But we got a job to do. Anything beyond that, it’s just noise.”

Or, more accurately, silence.

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Now that we’re essentially halfway through the 2024 fantasy football season, there are only two ways to improve your rosters — waiver wire and trades.

Evaluating a fantasy trade can be a daunting task. Most managers value their players more than their actual worth. That’s where the Week 9 fantasy football trade value charts come in. You can also check out my Week 9 fantasy rankings to help with lineup decisions this week.

The charts can be used as your very own fantasy football trade analyzer in standard, half-PPR (point per reception), and full PPR leagues. Someone sends you an offer? Simply pull out a calculator (on your phone, you don’t need an actual calculator) and plug in the values for each player. Don’t worry, six-points-per-passing-touchdown and superflex leagues are covered as well.

Important note: If you’re offered an uneven trade (i.e., a 2-for-1 or 3-for-1), include the values for the players you’d be moving to the bench or dropping within your calculation. For example: If someone offers you J.K. Dobbins, Diontae Johnson, and Cedric Tillman (combined value of 87) for CeeDee Lamb (68), it might look like you’re getting the better end of it. However, if you’re bumping down, say, Raheem Mostert and Keon Coleman (combined value of 31) in the process, it’s a net negative deal for you.

Another note: The ‘1 QB’ values are for standard scoring leagues. Quarterback value diminishes in PPR formats, so deduct roughly 6% of their values in half-PPR and another 6% for full PPR (this number drops as the season goes on and people look to consolidate). For example: Jayden Daniels’ value in standard formats is 24. In half-PPR, his value would be 23 (deducted 6%), and in full PPR, his value would be 21 (deducted 12%).

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The rankings are based on how players should be valued in 12-team leagues. Players are sorted in order of their half-PPR values.

(NOTE: App users might need to switch to a browser if the charts aren’t showing up.)

Quarterback trade value chart

(Note: ‘6/TD’ is for leagues that award six points for passing touchdowns and ‘SFLEX’ stands for superflex.)

Player
TM
1 QB
6/TD
SFLEX

Jalen Hurts
PHI
34
39
71

Lamar Jackson
BAL
33
38
70

Josh Allen
BUF
24
29
65

Jayden Daniels
WSH
24
28
65

Kyler Murray
ARI
18
21
54

Baker Mayfield
TB
15
21
52

Joe Burrow
CIN
13
19
49

Jordan Love
GB
13
19
49

Jared Goff
DET
11
16
45

Sam Darnold
MIN
11
17
45

Geno Smith
SEA
9
14
43

Brock Purdy
SF
9
14
43

Dak Prescott
DAL
8
13
41

Bo Nix
DEN
8
11
40

C.J. Stroud
HOU
5
10
38

Patrick Mahomes
KC
4
8
37

Tua Tagovailoa
MIA
4
8
37

Trevor Lawrence
JAX
4
8
37

Caleb Williams
CHI
3
7
36

Drake Maye
NE
3
6
32

Kirk Cousins
ATL
3
7
32

Jameis Winston
CLE
3
7
32

Aaron Rodgers
NYJ
2
8
30

Matthew Stafford
LAR
1
5
26

Russell Wilson
PIT
1
4
29

Anthony Richardson
IND
0
0
25

Daniel Jones
NYG
0
1
26

Justin Herbert
LAC
0
0
20

Derek Carr
NO
0
2
27

Andy Dalton
CAR
0
2
19

Running back trade value chart

Player
TM
STD
Half
Full

Saquon Barkley
PHI
66
66
66

Kyren Williams
LAR
64
64
65

Derrick Henry
BAL
63
61
59

Joe Mixon
HOU
58
60
61

Bijan Robinson
ATL
55
57
58

Breece Hall
NYJ
54
56
58

Jahmyr Gibbs
DET
52
54
57

Kenneth Walker
SEA
51
52
53

Christian McCaffrey
SF
47
49
51

De’Von Achane
MIA
46
49
54

Jonathan Taylor
IND
49
49
48

Josh Jacobs
GB
46
46
46

Alvin Kamara
NO
37
40
43

David Montgomery
DET
41
39
38

Aaron Jones
MIN
36
38
40

James Conner
ARI
35
35
35

D’Andre Swift
CHI
35
35
36

James Cook
BUF
32
34
35

Rachaad White
TB
27
32
36

J.K. Dobbins
LAC
30
30
32

Najee Harris
PIT
30
30
29

Brian Robinson
WSH
31
29
28

Tony Pollard
TEN
28
28
29

Tyrone Tracy
NYG
26
28
29

Chase Brown
CIN
27
27
28

Bucky Irving
TB
26
27
28

Nick Chubb
CLE
27
26
25

Rico Dowdle
DAL
24
26
28

Rhamondre Stevenson
NE
25
26
27

Kareem Hunt
KC
20
20
21

Isiah Pacheco
KC
20
20
21

Raheem Mostert
MIA
22
20
18

Tank Bigsby
JAX
21
19
18

Chuba Hubbard
CAR
19
19
20

Alexander Mattison
LV
18
19
21

Javonte Williams
DEN
14
16
18

Travis Etienne
JAX
13
16
20

Jonathon Brooks
CAR
14
14
14

Jordan Mason
SF
14
14
13

Austin Ekeler
WSH
8
11
15

Zack Moss
CIN
11
11
12

Zach Charbonnet
SEA
10
11
12

Tyler Allgeier
ATL
10
10
10

Jaylen Warren
PIT
6
9
12

Devin Singletary
NYG
9
9
9

Ray Davis
BUF
9
9
9

Blake Corum
LAR
9
9
9

Braelon Allen
NYJ
9
9
9

Kimani Vidal
LAC
6
6
7

Jaylen Wright
MIA
5
5
5

Dameon Pierce
HOU
4
4
4

Ty Chandler
MIN
4
4
4

Jerome Ford
CLE
2
3
4

Tyjae Spears
TEN
2
3
5

Roschon Johnson
CHI
4
3
3

Justice Hill
BAL
1
3
5

Keaton Mitchell
BAL
3
3
3

Antonio Gibson
NE
1
2
2

Isaac Guerendo
SF
2
2
2

Jaleel McLaughlin
2
2
2

Sean Tucker
TB
2
2
2

Wide receiver trade value chart

Player
TM
STD
Half
Full

Justin Jefferson
MIN
67
68
69

CeeDee Lamb
DAL
68
68
69

Tyreek Hill
MIA
62
63
64

A.J. Brown
PHI
64
63
63

Ja’Marr Chase
CIN
62
62
61

Amon-Ra St. Brown
DET
59
60
61

Drake London
ATL
53
53
53

Nico Collins
HOU
50
51
53

Puka Nacua
LAR
47
48
49

Cooper Kupp
LAR
46
47
48

Malik Nabers
NYG
43
46
48

DK Metcalf
SEA
46
46
45

Terry McLaurin
WSH
42
42
43

Chris Olave
NO
42
42
43

Brian Thomas
JAX
41
41
40

Davante Adams
NYJ
40
40
41

George Pickens
PIT
42
40
38

Marvin Harrison
ARI
39
39
38

Deebo Samuel
SF
40
38
37

DeVonta Smith
PHI
38
38
37

Tee Higgins
CIN
37
37
37

Jaylen Waddle
MIA
35
35
34

Garrett Wilson
NYJ
35
35
36

DJ Moore
CHI
33
34
34

Jayden Reed
GB
36
34
32

Tank Dell
HOU
33
34
34

Mike Evans
TB
32
32
33

Zay Flowers
BAL
28
32
35

Amari Cooper
BUF
32
31
31

Diontae Johnson
CAR
31
31
31

Ladd McConkey
LAC
28
31
34

DeAndre Hopkins
TEN
28
28
29

Jakobi Meyers
LV
26
26
27

Cedric Tillman
CLE
26
26
27

Xavier Worthy
KC
27
25
24

Darnell Mooney
ATL
25
24
24

Khalil Shakir
BUF
24
24
25

Romeo Doubs
GB
23
23
24

Josh Downs
IND
22
23
25

Calvin Ridley
TEN
22
23
24

Jordan Addison
MIN
23
22
21

Jameson Williams
DET
24
22
19

Jauan Jennings
SF
21
21
21

Michael Pittman
IND
20
21
22

Jaxon Smith-Njigba
SEA
16
18
20

Xavier Legette
CAR
16
17
17

Jerry Jeudy
CLE
16
17
18

Ricky Pearsall
SF
13
13
13

Rome Odunze
CHI
13
12
11

Wan’Dale Robinson
NYG
8
11
14

Keon Coleman
BUF
12
11
9

Jalen McMillan
TB
10
10
11

Jalen Tolbert
DAL
9
10
10

Rashod Bateman
BAL
12
10
9

Elijah Moore
CLE
7
10
13

Courtland Sutton
DEN
10
10
10

Keenan Allen
CHI
8
9
9

Tyler Lockett
SEA
8
9
9

Darius Slayton
NYG
10
9
8

Demario Douglas
NE
6
7
8

Dontayvion Wicks
GB
7
6
4

Allen Lazard
NYJ
6
5
4

Christian Watson
GB
8
5
3

Michael Wilson
ARI
6
4
3

DJ Turner
LV
2
4
6

Kayshon Boutte
NE
3
4
4

Demarcus Robinson
LAR
4
3
2

Tyler Boyd
TEN
1
3
5

Calvin Austin III
PIT
2
2
2

Jalen Coker
CAR
2
2
2

Joshua Palmer
LAC
1
2
2

Tre Tucker
LV
2
2
2

Alec Pierce
IND
3
2
2

Quentin Johnston
LAC
1
1
2

Nick Westbrook-Ikhine
TEN
3
1
1

Jalen Nailor
MIN
1
1
1

Andrei Iosivas
CIN
0
1
2

Tight end trade value chart

Player
TM
STD
Half
Full

George Kittle
SF
51
50
50

Travis Kelce
KC
40
42
44

Trey McBride
ARI
36
39
42

Brock Bowers
LV
34
37
41

David Njoku
CLE
33
34
36

Cade Otton
TB
26
27
28

Kyle Pitts
ATL
25
25
25

Sam LaPorta
DET
25
23
22

Tucker Kraft
GB
24
22
20

Mark Andrews
BAL
26
22
20

Jake Ferguson
DAL
19
21
23

Hunter Henry
NE
19
18
17

Evan Engram
JAX
11
14
20

T.J. Hockenson
MIN
14
13
13

Dalton Kincaid
BUF
15
13
13

Cole Kmet
CHI
12
11
10

Zach Ertz
WAS
6
10
14

Dallas Goedert
PHI
8
8
8

Taysom Hill
NO
7
5
3

Pat Freiermuth
PIT
4
4
5

Overall Week 9 fantasy football rest of season rankings

Note: These values are for 12-team, one-QB leagues with half-PPR scoring.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Paolo Banchero became Orlando’s first player with a 50-point game in 20 years and flirted with a triple-double Monday night to lead the Magic past the visiting Indiana Pacers 119-115.

Banchero finished with 50 points and matched Tracy McGrady’s franchise record for points scored in a half, putting up 37 in the first.

While Banchero fell short of McGrady’s Magic-record 62 points in a March 2004 game, the third-year forward joined McGrady, Shaquille O’Neal and Nick Anderson as Orlando’s only 50-point scorers.

Banchero shot 16 of 26 from the field and made 15 of 22 free throws. He added a game-high 13 rebounds and a team-best nine assists.

His heroics offset a balanced scoring effort from the Pacers, who lost their third straight game.

All things Magic: Latest Orlando Magic news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Pascal Siakam’s 26 points led six Indiana scorers in double-figures. Among them was Tyrese Haliburton, who posted his first double-double of the season with 19 points and 10 assists. Haliburton also had nine rebounds.

Haliburton helped ignite a 39-22 third quarter for Indiana to flip a 12-point halftime deficit into a 98-93 lead entering the fourth.

The Pacers built an eight-point cushion in the fourth before Orlando battled back. The Magic held Indiana to five points in the final five minutes while chipping away at the deficit.

After a slow third quarter, Banchero erupted for nine points in the final 6:56. Jalen Suggs played a big role down the stretch, hitting a free throw after Aaron Nesmith was whistled for a technical foul to put Orlando ahead 113-112 with 2:07 left.

After Haliburton made a game-tying 3-pointer with 52.8 seconds to go, Suggs dished the last of his seven assists to Anthony Black on a triple that gave Orlando the lead for good at 118-115.

Suggs finished with 25 points, shot 6-for-13 from 3-point range and grabbed five rebounds. Wendell Carter Jr.’s decisive rebound on a Myles Turner miss gave him a double-double of 11 points and 10 boards.

Moritz Wagner added 14 points off the bench for the Magic.

Obi Toppin scored 14 points coming off the Pacers bench, while Turner and Andrew Nembhard each added 13 points. Nesmith had 10 points before fouling out.

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The Miami Heat held a ceremony outside their arena Sunday to inaugurate their first player immortalized in a statue.

Fans knew it would be a moment to honor Dwyane Wade, the most accomplished player in franchise history. By the time the statue had been unveiled, however, many were left perplexed by what they saw .

The statue went viral Sunday over its portrayal of Wade’s face, seemingly unrecognizable from his likeness.

Wade, for his part, appeared to enjoy the ceremony and basked in the moment on Sunday and defended the look of the statue on Monday.

‘If I wanted it to look like me, I’d just stand outside the arena and y’all can take photos,’ Wade said via the Associated Press. ‘It don’t need to look like me. It’s the artistic version of a moment that happened that we’re trying to cement.’

All things Heat: Latest Miami Heat news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Regarding all the social media jokes, Wade said, ‘I care, but I don’t. The social media world is about opinions. Everyone has an opinion. Everyone, use y’all opinions. Please talk more about us. Talk more about a statue, come on down to see it, take some photos, send some memes. We don’t care.’

Wade, one of the six former Heat players to have his number retired by the team, was heavily involved in the creation of the statue, which was sculpted by Omri Amrany and Oscar León of Rotblatt Amrany Studios. Wade said he traveled to Chicago four times to meet with the sculptors and to provide feedback on its progress.

The other Heat players with their numbers retired are Udonis Haslem, Chris Bosh, Tim Hardaway, Shaquille O’Neal and Alonzo Mourning.

In June 2021, the Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners designated a small stretch of NE 7th Street across from Biscayne Boulevard in Miami, directly in front of the Kaseya Center, as Dwyane Wade Boulevard.

The Heat will honor Wade in an in-game ceremony Monday night, when the team hosts the Detropt Pistons, which marks the 21st anniversary of Wade’s debut during his rookie season.

Here are some of the best reactions to the Dwyane Wade statue

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

(This story was updated to add new information.)

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Kyrie Irving scored 23 points to lead the Dallas Mavericks past visiting Utah in a 110-102 victory on Monday night in a game marred by an injury to Jazz power forward Taylor Hendricks.

Hendricks, a 6-foot-9 Jazz forward, suffered a fractured right fibula and dislocated ankle midway through the third period, the Jazz announced Monday night. He slipped while moving toward the post on offense with his right leg bending awkwardly under his body. Officials delayed the game for several minutes as staff from both teams tended to the ninth overall pick in the 2023 draft before he left the court on a stretcher.

He wound up with two points and three rebounds in 21 minutes, and he is averaging 2.7 points and five rebounds per game this season.

Six Dallas players finished with at least 10 points on Monday and several role players stood out at key points.

In the final 4:31 of the third period, Spencer Dinwiddie went 3-for-3 on 3-point attempts and scored all 11 of his points. That spurt helped turn a 65-63 Mavericks lead into an 82-70 advantage heading into the fourth quarter.

Dallas’ P.J. Washington produced 12 points and 11 rebounds, and Dereck Lively II had 14 points. Klay Thompson scored 18 points, Luka Doncic contributed 15 points, nine rebounds and eight assists, and Irving added a game-high nine assists.

Utah, which shot just 37 percent while losing its third straight, did not get closer than five points during the final quarter. Collin Sexton led the Jazz with 23 points. Lauri Markkanen and Keyonte George each had 17 points, John Collins put up 16 points, and Walker Kessler finished with 12 points and 11 rebounds.

The Mavericks needed efforts from around the roster as Doncic, last year’s scoring champion, made only 5 of 22 shots. Doncic, an All-NBA First-Team player in each of the past five seasons, also hit just one of his nine shots from beyond the 3-point arc.

Dallas led all the way after the opening minute. Irving drained a pair of 3-pointers in the final 37 seconds of the first quarter to give the hosts a 27-19 lead. The point guard would then convert a pair of free throws in the opening minute of the second period to extend the advantage to 31-20, the Mavericks’ largest of the first half.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NEW YORK − Start spreading the news, this World Series is over.

The Los Angeles Dodgers once again cruised past the New York Yankees, 4-2, on Monday night in front of a subdued crowd at Yankee Stadium, and can finish off a four-game sweep with a victory Tuesday night.

The Dodgers have a 3-games-to-0 lead in the World Series, with one baseball team in postseason history who has ever overcome a 3-0 deficit.

And the Yankees aren’t the ’04 Boston Red Sox.

Not even close.

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

The Dodgers know this, and besides ordering champagne, have already tentatively scheduled a parade in downtown Los Angeles on Friday.

The Yankee have been outmatched in virtually every facet of the game, with Freddie Freeman looking like Reggie Jackson and Aaron Judge looking like George Costanza at the plate.

Freeman homered once again, a two-run shot in the first inning, tying a World Series record by homering in five consecutive games, while Judge’s postseason struggles continue.

Freeman is hitting .333 (4-for-12) with three homers and seven RBI, while Judge is hitting .083 (1-for-12) with seven strikeouts.

Judge’s struggles, according to several scouts, can be attributed to being drilled in the ribcage in Game 5 of the ALCS by a 96-mph fastball by Cleveland Guardians starter Tanner Bibee.

Judge hasn’t been the same since, going 1-for-16 with nine strikeouts, and a mere single. It’s almost as if Judge is so conscious of the fastball now that he struggles to even make contact on off-speed pitches. Certainly, the hit-by-pitch has triggered bad mechanics. They haven’t seen him even trying to hit the ball the opposite way to right field, showing how out of whack he is at the plate.

Really, the Yankees entire team is out of synch, with the Dodgers barely breaking a sweat.

The Dodgers don’t need heroics, or even a hit out of Shohei Ohtani to win this series. He wore a sling during the pregame introductions, ran gingerly with his partially dislocated left shoulder, didn’t get a hit, but it hasn’t mattered in the least.

The only real drama was whether Ohtani would even be in the lineup after suffering a subluxation in the seventh inning in Game 2, but he made it a complete non-issue, telling the Dodgers he was playing before they even boarded the flight to New York.

“He was very adamant that he was going to play,’’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I think there was more uncertainty in all of our minds, but in his mind from day one, from Saturday evening, he was going to play. …

“Not that there was ever any doubt that he was going to post, but he’s a competitor, he wasn’t going to not be in there.’’

Yet, even if Ohtani could swing one-handed, just his presence alone, Roberts said, can play a factor.

“I think it’s certainly an edge to us having him in the batter’s box,’’ Roberts said. “Regardless of what limitations a pitcher might think he might or might not have, not many guys are willing to take that chance. I’m just expecting him to control the strike zone, let the at-bats come to him, and swing and fire when the ball is in a hitting zone.

“We’re just very grateful that he’s in the lineup.’’

If Ohtani needs any inspiration, he needs to look no further than Freeman.

Freeman severely sprained his right ankle on Sept 26, an injury that doctors told him would take six weeks to fully heal. Freeman, undaunted, came in for treatment 4 ½ hours before each day, and has turned into the most feared hitter in the postseason.

Freeman, who hit the first walk-off grand slam in World Series history in Game 1, hit a home run in the third inning of Game 2, didn’t waste time thus night, homering on the fourth pitch he saw, drilling Clarke Schmidt’s 93-mph fastball into the right-field bleachers.

“He looks pretty close to normal,’’ Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said. “It’s been pretty special. You’re talking about a six-week injury that he came back from in essentially four or five days.

“He obviously wasn’t himself (early in the postseason), but when you’re talking about a name like Freddie Freeman in the lineup, that does a lot. Just having certain guys in the lineup does a lot because the other team doesn’t ever know how a certain guy is feeling.

“For example, you might try to have a lefty come in and face him, and he hits a grand slam.’’

Ah, nothing like a little shade, with Muncy referring to Freeman’s slam off left-hander Nestor Cortes.

The Yankees’ biggest advantage this series was supposed to be the starting rotation, but they’ve yet to out-pitch the Dodgers in any of the three games. While Schmidt lasted just 2 ⅔ innings this night, Walker Buehler, who hasn’t pitched in 12 days, pitched five shutout innings, giving up just two hits.

The Yankees are getting out-pitched, out-hit, out-played, out-managed, and even out-performed in pre-game ceremonies with Ice Cube easily out-singing Fat Joe in a battle of rappers.

It has been a complete team effort that has methodically dismantled the Yankees, bringing back memories of Roberts’ team speech back in spring training at Camelback Ranch in Phoenix.

“I believe his exact words are ‘you need to want to be the guy,’’’ Muncy said. “That’s why we’re all here. We all want to be in this situation. We all want to be the guy in that moment. …

“That’s definitely something that sticks out to you when your manager calls you out like that in spring training saying, ‘Hey, you guys all need to want to be the guy in that situation. You can’t leave it up to someone else.’

“It’s proven true already how many guys have come through in big moments for us.’’

Now, one more game, one more victory, one more hero, and the Dodgers can get ready to party like it’s 1988.

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NEW YORK — An awkward slide and a shoulder subluxation couldn’t keep Shohei Ohtani out of the lineup for the World Series. 

Ohtani batted leadoff in Game 3 Monday night as the World Series shifted to New York, two days after the Los Angeles Dodgers superstar partially dislocated his left shoulder on a stolen-base attempt in Game 2. 

His impact was immediate, even as he left the bat on his shoulder, drawing a four-pitch walk to begin the game. A few moments later, he could trot home on Freddie Freeman’s two-run homer that launched the Dodgers to a 4-2 victory and 3-0 World Series lead.

GAME 3 LIVE UPDATES: Follow along with Dodgers-Yankees World Series showdown

As Ohtani ran the bases, he kept his injured left arm stationary, which he said was protecting himself from, well, himself.

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

‘The reason why I was holding on to myself when I was running is to make sure that I wouldn’t use that same arm if I were to slide,’ he said via translator Will Ireton after the game.

Ohtani flew separately from the team Sunday after getting further testing and manager Dave Roberts said Ohtani would be in the lineup agains Schmidt if he could manage the pain.

As the Dodgers were on their way to the airport Saturday night, the players received a message from Ohtani in their group text. The news was good.

‘He texted the whole team as we were on our way to the airport and said he was going to be fine, and that’s it,’ Dodgers infielder Max Muncy said. ‘He said he was going to play, so we all put it to the side at that moment.

‘We said, all right, he’s got us. We’ll be ready for him to be in the lineup.’

The team does not believe Ohtani risks further injury by playing. Ohtani, the greatest two-way player in the sport’s history, is not pitching until 2025 and of course, the injury was to both his non-throwing shoulder and his trail arm in his left-handed swing.

‘He was very adamant that he was going to play,’ Roberts said. ‘I watched him take swings last night in the cage, looked really good, strong. Ball was coming off the bat.

‘I think there was more uncertainty in all of our minds, but in his mind from day one – from Saturday evening – he was going to play.’

Roberts confirmed that Ohtani is receiving myriad forms of treatment, including a likely cortisone shot, and his anxiety was allayed when he saw Ohtani working out late Sunday night at Yankee Stadium.

‘Saturday night to yesterday when I saw him in the cage hitting balls 102 miles an hour off a tee, that was joy,’ says Roberts. ‘I’m not really thinking about kind of where he’s at physically. He’s in the lineup, so that’s all I’m thinking about.’

Ohtani says he doesn’t believe he’ll need a surgical procedure after the season, although more testing will be conducted. For the moment, there is Game 4 and a chance to win a World Series.

‘I think it’s something that’s going to happen after the season is over, do additional testing,’ he says. ‘But in terms of how I feel now, I don’t think so.’

WORLD SERIES: Yankee Stadium needs to be a fortress to save Bombers’ season
GAME 3 SIMULATION: Dodgers score early and often in the Bronx

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An unusual moment happened after the San Francisco 49ers beat the Dallas Cowboys Sunday night. Niners quarterback Brock Purdy was being interviewed by NBC when suddenly teammate Nick Bosa appeared, wearing a MAGA hat. And he wasn’t just wearing it. He proudly pointed to it.

Good for Bosa. He can make any political statement he wants. I love this. I love athletes freely expressing those beliefs.

With that expression comes examination. It was a highly unusual move. Players rarely, if ever, videobomb interviews to promote a political candidate. But Bosa made it an issue, so let’s take a look at what he backs, what he supports, what he loves so much that it was worth jumping in front of a television camera pointing to his MAGA hat when he wasn’t even being interviewed.

To do that, we need to go back in time for a moment. Not long. In fact, on the same day Bosa bogarted his way into Purdy’s interview, just hours earlier and 3,000 miles away, came one of the most disgraceful moments in recent American political history. Let’s go to the Donald Trump rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday night. There, lots of people were wearing the same hat as Bosa.

A CNN headline described the rally this way: ‘Trump loyalists spew racist, vulgar attacks at Harris and Democrats at New York City rally.’ This was the New York Times: ‘Trump at MSG: A Closing Carnival of Grievances and Racism.’ This was MSNBC: ‘With racist Madison Square Garden rally, Trump and his allies prove Democrats’ point.’ This was The Daily Beast: ‘Donald Trump’s Racist NYC Rally Was Vile. It Was Also Political Suicide.’

The Times described it as ‘a release of rage’ and ‘a vivid and at times racist display of the dark energy animating the MAGA movement.’

Sure, maybe Bosa wouldn’t believe the reporting. But there is no question about what happened. It’s all on tape. It’s all verifiable. It’s all also extremely horrible. Just a sewage system of ugliness and white nationalism.

This is what that hat Bosa so proudly displayed stands for.

‘Before the GOP nominee even reached the stage, the audience was presented with an avalanche of racist and misogynistic comments,’ MSNBC reported. ‘One speaker echoed a rallygoer who called Harris ‘the devil’ and ‘the Antichrist.’ Right-wing media personality Tucker Carlson joked that the Democratic vice president, who is of Black and Indian descent, would be ‘the first Samoan Malaysian, low IQ, former California prosecutor ever to be elected president.”

This is what that hat Bosa so proudly displayed stands for.

One speaker made a vile joke about Puerto Ricans having too many children. That same comedian called Puerto Rico ‘a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now.’ He also spoke about a Black friend that he ‘carved watermelons’ with.

This is what that hat Bosa so proudly displayed stands for.

Historians and others drew parallels to the 1939 Nazi gathering at the Garden. Initially, this seemed insane. The only thing you compare to Nazis are Nazis. But you know, after seeing clips of the event, and reading coverage about it, the comparisons aren’t crazy.

In the rally, Trump again referred to his opponents as the ‘enemy from within.’ Trump has called people vermin and said immigrants are poisoning the blood of our country. Journalist Anne Applebaum, who writes about autocracies, wrote this in a story in The Atlantic called ‘Trump Is Speaking Like Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini.’

‘If you connect your opponents with disease, illness, and poisoned blood, if you dehumanize them as insects or animals, if you speak of squashing them or cleansing them as if they were pests or bacteria, then you can much more easily arrest them, deprive them of rights, exclude them, or even kill them. If they are parasites, they aren’t human. If they are vermin, they don’t get to enjoy freedom of speech, or freedoms of any kind. And if you squash them, you won’t be held accountable.’

This is what that hat Bosa so proudly displayed stands for.

After the game, Bosa declined to talk about why he wore the hat. Which, for a guy who is so tough on the field, was a massively cowardly move.

He doesn’t want to talk about it in more detail in front of the media because he would be asked detailed questions about why he likes Trump, and while he would be praised by the right, he’d be vilified in other circles. So he’s decided to take the gutless route which is show he’s a Trump supporter, while avoiding all of smoke that accompanies it.

Let’s put it this way: He’s no Colin Kaepernick.

Bosa doesn’t strike me as an intellect who wants to study the financial impact of the tariffs Trump would impose. I don’t think he cares about NATO. So I have to ask: What is it exactly that he likes about MAGA?

Also, what do some of his Black and brown teammates think of the man he supports, who describes immigrants and people of color as vermin? Or who pushed a racist lie that Haitians were eating dogs and cats in a small Ohio town? Putting innocent people’s lives at risk?

Do these players just ignore it? Do they say anything? Or do they just go along for the sake of winning?

What do they say when they see him wearing that hat?

The hat that Bosa so proudly sports.

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Emma Hayes’ latest accolade comes with a bit of history.

The coach of the U.S. women’s national team won the inaugural Ballon d’Or for women’s coach of the year in recognition of her success with both the Americans and Chelsea, her former club team. The Ballon d’Or awards, given out by France Football magazine, have traditionally gone to players but were expanded this year to recognize coaches, too.

“I just want to say a big thank you to all the staff and players from both teams,” Hayes said in a statement from U.S. Soccer. “As we all know, football is a team game and I’m very grateful to have led some amazing teams this year, so this award is for everyone who has been a part of the U.S. team and Chelsea.”

Hayes led both Chelsea and the USWNT to major titles this summer, claiming a fifth consecutive Super League title with the Blues in May and the Olympic gold medal with the Americans at the Paris Games less than three months later. The USWNT went unbeaten in Paris, making Hayes the only coach besides Anson Dorrance to win every game in their first major tournament.

While the USWNT is one of the most successful teams in the game, their four World Cup titles second only to Brazil’s men, the version Hayes took over was badly in need of re-energizing. The U.S. women had made their earliest exit ever at a World Cup or Olympics in 2023, losing to Sweden in the Round of 16 at the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. This after looking slow and overmatched on their way to the bronze medal at the Tokyo Games.

And earlier this year, the USWNT suffered its first-ever loss on home soil to Mexico.

But Hayes rejuvenated the team in quick fashion. The USWNT scored a tournament-high 12 goals in Paris — the 10 goals by Mallory Swanson, Sophia Smith and Trinity Rodman outscored every other team — while conceding just two, none in the knockout rounds.

The USWNT beat Brazil 1-0 in the gold-medal game, with Swanson scoring her fourth goal of the tournament.

The Americans are now unbeaten in 12 games under Hayes after wins over Iceland on Thursday and Sunday.

‘Olympic gold is, I hope, the beginning of an amazing time together,’ Hayes told her USWNT players after learning of the award. ‘I hope we can create many more memories.’

Spain swept the rest of the Ballon d’Or awards, with Aitana Bonmati of Barcelona claiming her second consecutive award and Rodri becoming the first Manchester City player to win. Real Madrid’s Carlo Ancelotti was named men’s coach of the year.

2024 Ballon d’Or award winners

Men’s Ballon d’Or — Rodri (Spain, Manchester City)

Women’s Ballon d’Or — Aitana Bonmatí (Spain, Barcelona)

Kopa Trophy (best U21 player) — Lamine Yamal (Spain, Barcelona)

Yashin Trophy (best goalkeeper) — Emiliano Martínez (Argentina, Aston Villa)

Gerd Müller Trophy (best striker) — Harry Kane (England, Bayern Munich) and Kylian Mbappé (France, Paris Saint-Germain/Real Madrid)

Women’s Johan Cruyff Trophy – Emma Hayes (Chelsea and USA)

Men’s Johan Cruyff Trophy — Carlo Ancelotti (Real Madrid)

Women’s Club of the Year — Barcelona

Men’s Club of the Year — Real Madrid

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One week out from Election Day and Democrat candidate and Vice President Kamala Harris is losing. How do we know? Turnout in states like Arizona, Nevada and North Carolina favors Republicans, GOP candidate and former President Donald Trump is leading Harris in New Hampshire (a state Joe Biden won by 7 points), Harris is mimicking Trump campaign tactics, like meeting Black men in a barber shop, Democrat Mayor Eric Adams defends Trump in his deep blue city, and so much more: 

Harris has changed her tactics and messaging. She has morphed from joyful warrior to crazy-sounding doomsayer, telling voters that Trump, who has been Israel’s most constant champion, is the second coming of Hitler. You don’t do that unless you’re losing.
You also don’t start padding your rallies with celebrities to attract crowds, but the recent Houston event, which advertised an appearance by Beyoncé, massively backfired.

Polling has shifted in favor of Trump, not dramatically, but steadily. Predictions markets have also moved toward the former president.

Major newspapers have declined to endorse Harris, a startling departure from past practice.
Democrat senators running for reelection in toss-up states are running humiliating ads attaching themselves to Trump.

Worried by falling poll numbers, Harris and her surrogates have recently ramped up incendiary – and yes, dangerous – accusations against Donald Trump, likening him to Hitler and even suggesting he will throw his political enemies into internment camps.   

But the New York Times reports that Future Forward, Harris’ foremost super PAC, has warned the campaign that her focus on fascism and Trump’s character isn’t working; his favorability ratings in the latest New York Times/Siena poll, after all, match those of Kamala Harris. People want to hear about policies instead.  

Ironically, some of this idiotic vitriol is spilling from Hillary Clinton, who escaped any punishment at all for myriad misdeeds, including destroying and lying about government-protected communications, recklessly mishandling classified information, and using campaign funds to originate the Russia hoax, a completely fabricated attack that undermined Trump’s presidency from the start.  

Trump could have gone after Clinton on a number of fronts – including the extremely dubious operations of her foundation – but chose not to. Unlike the Biden White House, Trump did not weaponize his Justice Department against his political enemies.   

The irresponsible rhetoric is not Harris’s only new tactic. Like Clinton in 2016, the Democrat candidate is showcasing endless celebrities – Bruce Springsteen, Magic Johnson, Eminem and others – in hopes of filling the bleachers.    

But in Texas, fans grew angry when a much-hyped appearance by Beyoncé resulted in a four-minute lecture about abortion rights instead of a concert. People don’t like being deceived. 

The star power didn’t help Clinton in 2016, and seemingly isn’t doing much for Harris, either. The Real Clear Politics shows Donald Trump leading Harris by a whisker in the average of national polls, but here is the real news: he has the momentum.  

Several major polls show the two candidates tied, when previously they had Harris in the lead. For example, a New York Times/Siena poll of 2,516 likely voters shows the candidates in a dead heat; the same poll earlier this month had Harris ahead by three. 

More importantly, Trump leads in every swing state.   

The betting markets have also moved towards Trump, with the RCP average of betting odds showing Trump the favorite by 24 points, 61.8 to 36.9. The predictions bets are so skewed (and deflating for Democrats) that the liberal media is hinting that those numbers can be (and possibly are being) manipulated by just a few large wagers. 

According to Bloomberg, a French ‘whale’ has been distorting the numbers on Polymarket, the top betting site with over $2 billion of trading volumes. Using various accounts, the unknown trader has placed $45 million on Trump to win, but is also making a side bet that Taylor Swift will announce that she’s pregnant before the end of the year. Partisan at work or rich dude putting his money behind his instincts? I’ll take the latter.  

With Trump ascendent, perhaps it is no surprise that the Washington Post announced it would not endorse Harris this year, abandoning its decades-long traditional backing of Democrat candidates. The shocking decision threw the newsroom into a furor and prompted thousands to cancel their subscriptions.   

Rumors are circulating that Jeff Bezos, owner of the Post but also founder of Amazon and space technology company Blue Origin, feared the business risk of getting on Trump’s bad side. Whatever the cause, the decision cannot bode well for Harris, especially as it followed a similar choice by the Los Angeles Times, a reliably liberal paper in Harris’s own state. 

Of more importance to voters, probably, are endorsements from trade unions and other interested parties. Here, too, Harris is falling short, failing to win the Teamsters’ traditional Democrat backing, after internal polling found that 58% of their members planned to vote for Trump. The International Association of Fire Fighters, which endorsed Joe Biden in 2020, also declined to throw their weight behind Harris, as did the National Border Patrol Council.   

But in Texas, fans grew angry when a much-hyped appearance by Beyoncé resulted in a four-minute lecture about abortion rights instead of a concert. People don’t like being deceived. 

The former president is gaining traction in swing states, but it is still shocking to find Democrat incumbent senators fighting for reelection in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on ads boasting of their ties to Trump.  

Democrat Bob Casey in Pennsylvania is running an ad claiming he ‘bucked’ the Biden administration to protect fracking and ‘sided with Trump to end NAFTA.’ Similarly, Tammy Baldwin in Wisconsin claims in an ad that she ‘got President Trump to sign her Made in America bill…’ For the record, both Casey and Baldwin voted to impeach Donald Trump.  

If Democrats running for reelection want to hang onto Trump’s coattails, you can bet he’s pulling ahead. Pennsylvania Democrat Senator John Fetterman recently told a New York Times reporter, ‘We’re in trouble. And it’s undeniable.’ That sounds right. 

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