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The destructive winds of Hurricane Milton were so powerful that the gusts tore off the roof of Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg.

The domed stadium ‒ the home of Major League Baseball’s Tampa Bay Rays ‒ had been converted into a base camp for thousands of emergency responders in anticipation of the storm making landfall off the western coast of Florida.

But when Milton began to surge Wednesday across the Florida Peninsula at Category 3 strength, Tropicana Field found itself directly in the storm’s path. Video and photos show the moment the strong winds ripped through the stadium’s domed roof, as well as the tattered remnants that now remain.

No injuries were reported, the Rays said in a statement shared Thursday afternoon on social media platform X.

‘Over the coming days and weeks, we expect to be able to assess the true condition of Tropicana Field,’ the team said in the statement. ‘In the meantime, we are working with law enforcement to secure the building.’

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

Watch video of Rays’ stadium roof torn off

See photos of damaged roof of Tropicana Field

This article has been updated to add new information.

Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@gannett.com

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Danny Green announced his retirement on Thursday after winning NBA championships with three different teams.

The 37-year-old swingman shot 40.0 percent from 3-point range over 15 seasons with six franchises.

Green won titles with the San Antonio Spurs (2014), Toronto Raptors (2019) and Los Angeles Lakers (2020).

‘I’m officially moving on from the game of basketball, the NBA. It’s been a great run,’ Green announced Thursday on his podcast. ‘To me, I’m very proud to be able to walk away from the game. I’m at peace with it.’

Green averaged 8.7 points, 3.4 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 832 games (709 starts) with the Cleveland Cavaliers (2009-10, 2023), Spurs (2010-18), Raptors (2018-19), Lakers (2019-20), Philadelphia 76ers (2020-22, 2023) and MemphisGrizzlies (2022-23). He appeared in 169 playoff games (159 starts).

Green ranks 32nd in NBA history with 1,892 made 3-pointers in the regular season and postseason, according to Basketball Reference.

He made his final NBA appearance with the 76ers on Oct. 28, 2023, playing five minutes off the bench at Toronto.

Green was a second-round pick (46th overall) by the Cavaliers out of North Carolina in the 2009 NBA draft and made the NBA’s All-Defensive second team in 2016-17.

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After one major modification, the New York Jets’ retrofit continued Thursday morning.

Interim head coach Jeff Ulbrich, who replaced fired Robert Saleh two days ago, announced that Todd Downing will effectively (if not officially) move into the offensive coordinator role that’s been occupied by Nathaniel Hackett since he was hired last year.

‘Regarding the staff, after a lot of time to think about it – and did not make this decision easily by any means – I’m going to make Todd Downing the play caller for the New York Jets going forward,’ Ulbrich announced. ‘And this is more a byproduct of a different take on things – I’m not saying it’s a better or worse take on things by any means – but just a different take on things, a fresh approach.

‘Ultimately Todd will have the full say on the game plan and, ultimately, the plays that are called within the game.’

Downing has 22 years of NFL coaching experience, including stints as offensive coordinator for the Oakland Raiders (2017) and Tennessee Titans (2021-22).

All things Jets: Latest New York Jets news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Ulbrich had said shortly after replacing Saleh that he had no plans to alter the coaching staff from a manpower perspective but granted that job responsibilities could change.

Hackett’s offense in New York has been widely maligned with and without quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who missed all but four snaps due to an Achilles injury in 2023, over the past 22 games – often appearing stagnant and certainly failing to produce the desired results. It finished 31st among the league’s 32 teams last season.

Through five weeks this year, the Jets (2-3) rank 25th league-wide in scoring and 27th in total offense, i.e. yards gained. They’re dead last in rushing, averaging 80.4 yards per game despite the presence of talented backs Breece Hall and rookie Braelon Allen.

Ulbrich, an experienced defensive assistant and coordinator who played linebacker for the San Francisco 49ers from 2000-09, will also offer input into the stagnant attack, saying he planned to ‘find those places to infuse my personality into that side of the ball from a strategic or from a schematic standpoint.’

The Jets have been overly reliant on the arm of Rodgers, 40, who’s taken a lot of physical punishment during the club’s current two-game losing streak. He threw 54 times, fifth most of his decorated 20-year career, in Sunday’s loss to the Minnesota Vikings in London. He was also intercepted three times.

Rodgers, long a friend and defender of Hackett – he was the Green Bay Packers OC when the QB was league MVP in 2020 and ’21 – said Wednesday during an interview on ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ that he would be supportive of any changes Ulbrich chose to make.

‘There was going to be some things that needed to change regardless of what happened to Robert. We just haven’t been playing consistent football on offense. As we know, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results,’ said Rodgers.

‘I’m on board with whatever he decides as far as the offense goes. I want to do what’s best for the team. We’re throwing our support behind Coach Ulbrich and whatever he believes is best for the team, we’re going to go with.”

The Jets host the Buffalo Bills on Monday night.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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Russia has suffered some 600,000 casualties in its war with Ukraine — more than its losses in every conflict since World War II combined, according to U.S. officials. 

This September was the deadliest month of the entire war for Russia, a senior U.S. defense official told reporters on a call Wednesday. 

‘Russian losses, again both killed and wounded in action, in just the first year of the war exceeded the total of all Soviet losses in any conflict since World War II combined,’ the official said.

However, the steep casualties are not a ‘definitive metric’ of success for Ukraine, the official warned. Ukraine has also suffered mass casualties, though the U.S. has not disclosed how many. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in February that some 31,000 troops had been killed. 

The U.K. Ministry of Defence put Russia’s daily casualty count at 1,271 in September, and said some 648,000 Russians had been killed or injured in the war. 

‘It’s kind of the Russian way of war where they continue to throw mass into the problem, and I think we’ll continue to see high losses,’ the U.S. military official said.

South Korea warned earlier this week that North Korea was sending its forces to fight alongside the Russians. 

Russia has also lost two-thirds of its pre-war inventory of tanks to Ukraine, along with 32 medium-to-large naval vessels. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin is ‘trying to avoid a mass mobilization because of the effect that would have on Russia’s domestic population,’ the official said. 

‘At this point, he has been able to significantly increase the pay of these voluntary soldiers, and he has been able to continue to field those forces without doing a major mobilization.’

‘And I think we’re just watching very closely how long that stance can actually be one that he can maintain, and I think it’s an important one for all of us to watch very closely,’ the official added.

Ukraine’s military said it struck a base in southern Russia’s Krasnodar region storing nearly 400 strike drones on Wednesday.

Russia has made some progress in the Donetsk region, taking the town of Vuhledar earlier this month and pressing toward Povrosk, a key railroad hub and supply station for Ukraine. 

The U.S. official said the Russian strategy around Vuhledar and Povrosk had brought ‘substantial casualties’ for minor gains.

Russia’s Kursk region, which Ukraine invaded in August, is also in the midst of heavy fighting. Ukraine had hoped to divert Russian troops from the front line to defend Kursk. Russia has since recaptured some of the region, though the military official said that Ukrainian troops could hold onto the Kursk region for months or longer. 

Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to pour billions into Ukraine’s defense. Last month, President Biden announced an $8 billion package for Kyiv to supply it with military equipment through January. It is the last of the $61 billion that Congress approved in April for Ukraine. 

Despite Zelenskyy’s calls, Biden has resisted authorizing Ukraine’s use of U.S.-given long-range missiles, known as ATACMs, to strike inside Russia and take out its stores of weapons capabilities, for fear of escalation. 

Many U.S. lawmakers have backed Zelenskyy’s request, but the U.S. official said the Biden administration is not considering reversing its policy. He said many of the arms that Ukraine is looking to take out, like Russia’s deadly glide bombs, have been moved out of range of ATACMs. 

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As Hurricane Milton approached landfall in western Florida on Wednesday, the Biden administration warned consumers and businesses of the heightened risk of potential fraud, price gouging and collusion that accompanies major natural disasters.

“Wrongdoers are looking to exploit opportunities and victims of natural disasters for their own personal gain,” U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Gathe Jr. for the Middle District of Louisiana said in a statement.

Federal Trade Commission chair Lina Khan said the FTC is “hearing troubling reports of price gouging for essentials that are necessary for people to get out of harm’s way — from hotels to groceries to gas.”

By noon ET on Wednesday, nearly a quarter of gas stations in Florida were out of gas, according to Patrick De Haan, an oil and gas analyst who tracks pump supply.

“Companies are on notice: do not use the hurricane as an excuse to exploit people through illegal behavior,” said Manish Kumar, a deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division.

Most states have laws intended to curb price gouging, with many of these restrictions tied to declared states of emergency.

Several major airlines and retailers have told CNBC in recent days that they froze prices in advance of the storm.

“Once we have any emergency situation, all of our prices are freeze,” Kelly Mayhall, president of Home Depot’s Southern division told CNBC Wednesday.

Amid a historic hurricane season, the Biden administration cited a number of issues for consumers to be on the lookout for, including fraudulent charities that claim to be soliciting donations for disaster victims, scammers trying to get personal information or money, and exorbitant pricing for necessities.

“Any company or individual that tries to exploit Americans in an emergency should know that the Administration is monitoring for allegations of fraud and price gouging and will hold those taking advantage of the situation accountable,” Vice President Kamala Harris said in a statement on Wednesday.

Hurricane Milton was moving through the Gulf of Mexico as a Category 4 storm early Wednesday afternoon, and was expected to hit the western Florida Gulf Coast sometime between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. ET, according to NBC News meteorologists.

The National Hurricane Center warned that evacuations and other precautions should have been completed by early on Wednesday.

In September, Hurricane Helen caused widespread devastation across the South, killing more than 230 people. North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein has also warned of price gouging in his state.

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Could Lionel Messi and Argentina’s national football team’s late arrival in Venezuela Wednesday night impact their performance?

Because of travel restrictions and Hurricane Milton ripping through Florida, the team left Miami yesterday afternoon and had a layover in Colombia before arriving in Venezuela the night before a World Cup qualifying match at Monumental Stadium in Maturín. Kickoff is scheduled today at 5 p.m. ET.

Messi is expected to start against Venezuela. It will be his first match with the national team since injuring his right ankle in the Copa America final against Columbia on July 14.

He missed Argentina’s 3-0 win over Chile on Sept. 6, and a 2-1 loss to Colombia on Sept. 10 in a rematch of the Copa America final. The loss to Colombia was just the fourth loss by Argentina in its last 65 matches.

Follow along here for live updates from today’s Venezuela vs. Argentina match:

How to watch Venezuela vs. Argentina live stream?

The game is available for live stream on Fanatiz with a subscription.

Is Messi playing today in Venezuela?

Yes, Messi is expected to be in action today against Venezuela.

Messi made his injury return with Inter Miami on Sept. 14. He has played in five games, scoring four goals and helping Inter Miami secure the MLS Supporters’ Shield. The regular-season title marked No. 46 for club and country in Messi’s legendary career.

“Messi is fine. He played several games for his team in recent weeks, after not being in the last call-up, which was what we had agreed because he needed to recover and get more minutes,” Argentine coach Lionel Scaloni said this week. “Leo is training with the squad and is ready to be part of the team to play against Venezuela, who will be a great rival.”

Is Argentina on upset alert? Here are betting odds vs. Venezuela

Is Argentina in danger of losing their second consecutive match? The oddsmakers don’t believe so. Argentina is the favorite (-175) to win vs. Venezuela (+525), while a draw after regulation has +270 odds, according to BETMGM.

Which teams have beaten Argentina? Here are the last 4 losses

Before the 2-1 loss to Columbia, Argentina last lost to Uruguay in World Cup qualifying last November 2023, Saudi Arabia in the 2022 World Cup opener and Brazil in the Copa America 2019 semifinal.

Argentina leaves Miami before Hurricane Milton

The World Cup champions were unable to fly from Argentina or the United States directly to Venezuela due to travel restrictions by the Venezuelan government. They departed Miami with a layover in Barranquilla, Colombia before arriving in Maturín, Venezuela on Wednesday night.

Argentina trained this week in Fort Lauderdale at the facility of Inter Miami, Messi’s Major League Soccer club. Those plans were made before the threat of Milton, a Category 3 storm that made landfall in Florida late Wednesday.

Messi, Argentina upcoming schedule

Messi and Argentina will return home for a second match Tuesday against Bolivia at 8 p.m. ET.

Then, Messi will return to South Florida for Inter Miami’s regular-season finale on Oct. 19. The MLS Cup Playoffs begin Oct. 25. 

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The Pohlad family, owner of the Minnesota Twins since 1984, announced Thursday that it has begun steps to sell the team.

‘For the past 40 seasons, the Minnesota Twins have been part of our family’s heart and soul,’ said Joe Pohlad, the team’s executive chair, in a news release. ‘This team is woven into the fabric of our lives, and the Twins community has become an extension of our family. The staff, the players, and most importantly, you, the fans — everyone who makes up this unbelievable organization — is part of that. We’ve never taken lightly the privilege of being stewards of this franchise.

‘However, after months of thoughtful consideration, our family reached a decision this summer to explore selling the Twins. As we enter the next phase of this process, the time is right to make this decision public.’

Pohlad said the family intends to sell to an ‘ownership group who all of us can be proud of and who will take care of the Minnesota Twins.’

Toward that end, the Pohlads retained investment bank Allen & Company to guide a potential sale.

All things Twins: Latest Minnesota Twins news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Sportico valued the franchise at $1.7 billion, or 19th among the 30 MLB teams. Earlier this year, Forbes placed the value at $1.46 billion, ranked 21st on its list.

Only three ownership groups have controlled a team longer than the Pohlad family — the New York Yankees (1973), the Chicago White Sox (1981) and the Philadelphia Phillies (1981).

‘After four decades of commitment, passion, and countless memories, we are looking toward the future with care and intention — for our family, the Twins organization, and this community we love so much’ Pohlad said.

The most recent team to change hands was the Baltimore Orioles. MLB owners approved the sale in March to a group led by private equity billionaire David Rubenstein for a reported $1.725 billion.

The late Carl Pohlad paid $44 million to buy the Twins.

Minnesota finished the 2024 season with an 82-80 record, four games out of a wild-card spot following a late-season swoon.

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Even if your fantasy football team is off to a slow start, there’s still plenty of time to right the ship. A new week is set to begin and momentum can turn on a dime.

That said, you can’t just stand pat and merely hope for better results. Sometimes, a few bold moves are required to jump-start a turnaround. And a trade could be just what the doctor ordered.

Let’s take a look at some players who might be worth acquiring, ditching or benching as we enter Week 6 of the NFL season.

Fantasy football buy low candidates for Week 6

WR Tank Dell, Houston Texans. A hamstring injury landed top receiver Nico Collins on injured reserve, so the Texans have a wealth of available targets that need to go somewhere. Dell has been mostly silent all season – zero touchdowns in four games and only four targets last week despite Collins leaving in the first quarter – but he’s the Texans’ best available weapon in the passing game.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

TE Pat Freiermuth, Pittsburgh Steelers. Consistent, if unspectacular, production is Freiermuth’s calling card. He’s had between three and five catches every week, and has scored in each of the past two games. In a down year for tight ends across the board, he’s ninth in PPR points – just ahead of Travis Kelce. No matter whether the Steelers stick with Justin Fields or switch to Russell Wilson at quarterback, the ‘Muuuuuuuth’ chants will continue.

Fantasy football sell high candidates for Week 6

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A woman whose skull was fractured by an illegal immigrant let out of jail as part of a program launched by then San Francisco DA Kamala Harris is blasting the vice president over a resurfaced speech where Harris discusses the matter as being the result of a ‘glitch’ in the system. 

‘That ‘glitch’ certainly had a negative impact on my life,’ Amanda Kiefer, who suffered a brutal attack at the hands of an illegal immigrant in 2008 while she walked down the street with friends, said in a statement to Fox News Digital. ‘It would be easier to believe it was a mistake if Democrats in San Francisco didn’t have a long history of enabling illegal immigration, choosing not to prosecute illegal immigrant criminals and refusal to deport anyone.’

‘It wasn’t a ‘glitch’ that the Biden Harris administration has let in millions of illegal immigrants, including tens of thousands of known, convicted criminals and those on the terror watch list. At a certain point, it can’t be incompetence, it’s intentional. Harris doesn’t care about Americans’ safety.’

Then San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris, in a resurfaced speech, blamed a ‘glitch’ in the system while discussing the attack on Kiefer.

‘But whenever you’re rolling out something new, there will at some point become apparent that there is a mistake or a glitch in the design, and when you’re in these kinds of positions, that mistake or glitch is on the front page of the paper,’ Harris said during a 2010 Women in Leadership conference at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business while discussing the ‘Back on Track’ program she launched that allowed non-violent offenders to avoid jail and instead enter job training and eventually have their records expunged.

‘And so you have to take a knock for that,’ Harris said in the speech. ‘When I rolled out Back on Track, I took a big political hit, when a couple of years later, it turned out, especially in criminal law, because when you’re taking, when you’re doing innovation in the criminal justice system, let me tell you what that means. That means I’m doing something differently with somebody who’s on my radar. Why are they on my radar? Because they committed a crime.’

Kiefer was brutally attacked by 20-year-old Alexander Izaguirre, an illegal immigrant, while she walked with friends down a San Francisco street in 2008. Izaguirre stole her purse and then attempted to run her down in a waiting SUV, fracturing her skull. 

Izaguirre had been arrested a few months prior to the attack on drug charges but was able to roam free, thanks to the program launched by Harris.

Harris continued in the speech, ‘Now, remember, I’m focused on the non-violent offender with these innovative programs, right? The fear will always be that guy will go out and kill a baby and a grandmother tomorrow, and then everyone will look backwards and say, ‘Why didn’t you do it the way it’s always been done? Why did you try something new?’ It’s a big risk. And so when I rolled out Back on Track, couple years in, we learned that there was basically, there was a participant who went out, during the time he was in the program, committed a robbery, there was a horrible injury to the victim. And turned out that this individual is an undocumented immigrant.’

In her speech, Harris went on to mention an article written about her at the time that said, ‘‘Kamala Harris has created a program to shield illegal aliens.’’

‘Right?’ Harris said. ‘And that’s when my friends came really in handy to just say it’s, you know, because I was upset about the unfairness and the mischaracterization and . . . ‘Don’t people want these things fixed? Don’t they understand what innovation requires?’ And, and that’s when you have to rely on your friends who understand what you do and care about you and will support you without judgment, but also give you critical feedback when you need it.’

In 2009, Harris told the press that Izaguirre is ‘being prosecuted’ and ‘will be deported with my full encouragement and support.’ Harris also said at the time that Izaguirre’s release was a ‘flaw in the design’ that was fixed.

Kiefer also spoke out about her experience earlier this year, Fox News Digital reported. She said that the experience was a ‘red pill moment’ for her, leading her to abandon what she said were her liberal political views from the time and embrace candidates such as former President Trump.

Kiefer appeared alongside Trump when he visited the Arizona border earlier this year and spoke along with other victims of illegal immigrant crime.

‘I moved out of San Francisco because I didn’t feel safe there and I don’t think our country is going to be safe under Kamala Harris,’ Kiefer said. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Harris campaign, which did not provide a comment.

Fox News Digital’s Michael Lee contributed to this report.
 

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Georgia Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson re-introduced a death row appeals bill that would allow death row inmates the opportunity to introduce newly discovered evidence in their appeal. 

H.R. 9868, also called the Effective Death Penalty Act, was initially introduced in 2009 and later in 2020. The bill would amend a provision in the U.S. Code that currently governs circumstances under which a state prisoner can file a habeas corpus petition. 

‘We’ve got innocent people on death row right now with no opportunity to show compelling new evidence of innocence,’ Johnson said in a press statement released on Wednesday. ‘The status quo is inhumane and unconstitutional.’ 

Under current law, a federal court cannot grant a habeas corpus petition unless the petitioner has already exhausted all state court remedies. This requirement was explained by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1999, with the Court stating that such a requirement ‘is designed to give the state courts a full and fair opportunity to resolve federal constitutional claims before those claims are presented to federal courts.’ 

The bill would allow a death row inmate to not only introduce newly discovered evidence that ‘demonstrates that the applicant is probably not guilty of the underlying offense,’ but to also raise an ineffective counsel claim on direct appeal. Some states do not currently allow for such a claim on direct appeal. 

The added provision comes as a result of the 2022 Supreme Court case, Shinn v. Ramirez, when the Court held that a habeas corpus court may not conduct an evidentiary hearing or consider evidence beyond the state-court record based on an ineffective counsel claim. 

‘I believe we should completely abolish the death penalty, but while 25 states – half of which are in the South – still have some form of capital punishment on their books and some states like Alabama, Texas and Georgia continue to hold state executions – America needs the Effective Death Penalty Appeals Act to help wrongly convicted people on death row present newly discovered evidence that they are innocent,’ Johnson said in the statement. 

Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-ME, Democratic House Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton and Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., are co-sponsoring the bill. 

The Supreme Court, which kicked off its new term earlier this month, heard oral arguments Wednesday on an appeal from Oklahoma inmate Richard Glossip, who has maintained his innocence in connection with a 1997 murder-for-hire of the owner of a motel he previously worked at. Glossip’s initial conviction was reversed by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals after the court found he had received ‘constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel in numerous respects,’ according to the brief filed. 

Glossip now argues before the Supreme Court that he did not receive a fair trial as a result of the prosecution suppressing evidence of a key prosecution witness’s testimony. Justice Neil Gorsuch did not participate in hearing the appeal due to his prior involvement in the appeals process while serving on a lower court. 

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