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Former Cincinnati Bengals great Chad ‘Ochocinco’ Johnson posted on X Wednesday that he’s fighting former Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison in an exhibition MMA-format bout in New Orleans before the Super Bowl in February 2025.

Johnson said the fight is scheduled for three rounds. Harrison, who played for the Bengals in 2013, said it’s scheduled for five rounds.

Harrison and Johnson weren’t teammates with the Bengals; Johnson’s final season in Cincinnati was 2010.

Johnson, who was inducted into the Bengals’ Ring of Honor last September, got knocked down by mixed martial artist and boxer Brian Maxwell during their exhibition bout in June 2021.

Harrison and Johnson are both 46 years old. During their NFL playing careers, Harrison outweighed Johnson by about 50 pounds.

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

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Hopefully for Cal football fans, he even shows up to the set on the injury cart.

Former Golden Bears running back Marshawn Lynch will be on ‘GameDay’ for Cal’s (3-1, 0-1 ACC) game against No. 8 Miami (5-0, 1-0) on Saturday night.

The Super Bowl 48 champion, two-time All-Pro selection, five-time Pro Bowler and member of the NFL’s 2010 All-Decade team played for the Buffalo Bills, Seattle Seahawks and Oakland Raiders in his 12 NFL seasons. He was also known for his funny antics, which made him one of the most well-known players in the league during his career.

Of course, that followed a stellar career at Cal, where Lynch was a first-team All-America selection and Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year in 2006. He rushed for 3,230 yards and 29 touchdowns in three years at Cal, and was selected 12th overall in the 2007 NFL draft by the Bills.

Regardless, his appearance should certainly draw loads of attention on ‘College GameDay.’ Here’s how social media reacted to the announcement:

Marshawn Lynch announced for ‘College GameDay’: Social media reacts

Here is a sampling of the best reactions to Lynch being announced as Saturday’s guest on ‘College GameDay’

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Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff issued a letter to major social media executives this week demanding they reveal how they will combat ‘misinformation’ and ‘disinformation’ in the 2024 election. 

The letter, co-signed by seven other members of Congress, accuses social media platforms such as X, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok of failing to properly prepare for malicious info-hazards in November. 

‘We write to your platforms as concerned Members of Congress, seeking further information about your preparation for and response to the spread of misinformation and disinformation, or the potential incitement of violence on your platforms leading up to the 2024 elections,’ the California congressman wrote. ‘We have already seen how posts with disinformation have spread on the major social media platforms both in the United States and across the globe during election cycles.’

The letter continued, ‘We continue to be concerned with each of your companies’ ability to react efficiently and effectively to misinformation and disinformation, or to any potential incitement of violence occurring on your platforms.’

In the letter, the signers accused social platforms Meta, Discord, and Snap specifically of ‘[reducing] their elections team dramatically’ following the 2022 elections.

X, Meta, and TikTok were singled out and scolded for having ‘not increased their transparency for external groups who can aid in monitoring election information.’

READ THE FULL LETTER — APP USERS CLICK HERE

‘While the impetus of this letter is the 2024 election, political and election-related mis- and disinformation persists even between elections, so we are also urging your companies to commit to taking action on election and political misinformation year-round, not just in the leadup to elections.’

A series of specific questions are offered at the end of the letter, including ‘Will your company be changing your election integrity policies between now and the 2024 U.S. general election?’ and ‘How will your company be more transparent in enforcement of its community guidelines regarding election integrity and transparent with the public about actions it has taken?’

‘Will your company commit to sharing data and metrics on the effectiveness of your enforcement systems in relation to US elections and political speech?’ the Democratic congress members asked. ‘How will your company address mis- and disinformation made by political actors or verified accounts, and how will they be treated differently, if at all, compared to ordinary users?’

The letter was co-signed by Democratic Representatives Julia Brownley of California, Andre Carson of Indiana, Dan Goldman of New York, Robert Garcia of California, Raúl M. Grijalva of Arizona, Hank Johnson of Georgia and Doris Matsui of California.

It was addressed to the following executives: Mark Zuckerberg, Meta; Linda Yaccarino, X; Shou Zi Chew, TikTok; Sundar Pichai, Google; Adam Mosseri, Instagram; Evan Spiegel, Snap; Neal Mohan, YouTube; Satya Nadella, Microsoft.

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Inter Miami’s quest for a third championship, and No. 47 in Messi’s storied career, will begin at 8:30 p.m. ET on Oct. 25. They will face the winner of the Eastern Conference wild-card match on Oct. 22 between the No. 8 and No. 9 seeds.

Inter Miami has earned the No. 1 overall seed and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs after clinching the MLS Supporters’ Shield in a thrilling 3-2 win over Columbus Crew on Wednesday night.

The Supporters’ Shield is the second title Inter Miami has won, following last year’s Leagues Cup title, since Messi joined the club in July 2023. It’s also the 46th title Messi has won in his illustrious career.

Inter Miami’s playoff opener will mark Messi’s first appearance in the MLS Cup Playoffs. Fans with or without a MLS Season Pass subscription can watch the game on Apple TV. Fans in New York City will be able to see the game on SILVERCAST Media’s “Mega-Zilla” – a 78-foot by 330-foot screen that spans an entire city block and is located on Broadway between 45th and 46th St.

The No. 8 and No. 9 teams have yet to clinch their playoff spots: Montreal sits in eighth place with 40 points, while Toronto has the edge in ninth place over Philadelphia and D.C. United as all three teams have 37 points.  

Only Toronto, which hosts Inter Miami on Saturday, has one game remaining this season. Montreal, Philadelphia and D.C. United have two matches remaining. The final day of the season, known as Decision Day in MLS, is Oct. 19.

Round One of the MLS Cup playoffs is a best-of-three series with a home match, an away match and a third possible home match.

After the first round, it’s win or go home for the remaining clubs in the conference semifinals (Nov. 23-24), conference finals (Nov. 30-Dec. 1), and the MLS Cup final (Dec. 7).

If Inter Miami finishes with wins in its final two matches – at Toronto and vs. New England Revolution on Oct. 19 – it would set the MLS record with 74 points in a season. The Revolution set the current mark of 73 points in 2021.

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HOUSTON — Let’s see, there was the strikeout to end the second inning, giving the Detroit Tigers’ second pitcher of the game a chance to get to the third inning, and face Jose Altuve — Brenan Hanifee struck him out.  

There was the double-play grounder with two runners on in the fourth, when the Tigers’ third pitcher of the game — Brant Hurter — fooled Jeremy Peña.  

All things Tigers: Latest Detroit Tigers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

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This 12-team playoff is going to be a dream. Now, if only the Big Ten and SEC would keep their hands off instead of rigging the system.
SEC, Big Ten leaders will meet next week in Nashville, and the future of the CFP will be up for discussion.
Disproportionately increasing the number of automatic bids for SEC, Big Ten would make a mockery of the postseason.

That most uncommon day arrived in December 2022, when the College Football Playoff managers board agreed on a 12-team playoff that promised a fair, accessible format. This system preserves value for the regular season and rewards conference champions while heightening intrigue, participation and access to the playoff.

Five bids are earmarked for conference champions. An additional seven spots up for grabs via at-large selection.

It’s glorious.

As we enter this season’s second month in this inaugural year of the expanded playoff, more than 30 teams, from a variety of conferences, retain realistic playoff hopes.

Enjoy it while it lasts.

A roadblock looms downstream, and it’s a biggie: This playoff format is only finalized for this season and next. After that, all we know is that the playoff will continue with no fewer than 12 teams. Could be more. Won’t be less.

Also, importantly, the manner in which bids are assigned remains subject to change after the 2025 season.

The Big Ten, SEC and ESPN will shape the future direction of the playoff. Gulp. I don’t like the sound of that.

These behemoths do what most behemoths do. They look out for themselves, gobble up all the steak and potatoes, and leave the unsavory scraps for everyone else.

And when Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti and SEC boss Greg Sankey gather next week, I wouldn’t trust them to do what’s best for the Big 12, ACC or the sport as a whole. These fellas are ruthless. They look out for No. 1. In doing so, they could wreck this whole magnificent thing before we even get our first taste of this 12-team format.

Big Ten’s Tony Petitti, SEC’s Greg Sankey can wreck this playoff

Big Ten and SEC leaders will convene next week in Nashville, and the CFP is on the agenda.

Petitti and Sankey are too chummy for my liking. Past commissioners from these super-leagues butted heads. A little disagreement could be healthy. Consider it checks and balances.

If Petitti and Sankey lock arms, they could morph the CFP into a Big Ten-SEC Invitational – not a formal breakaway from the playoff, but rather a heist of the CFP.

Why leave and create your own sandbox, when you could stay in the current sandbox and make everyone else in it cave to your rules?

What might this bullying look like?

There’s nothing wrong with the SEC and Big Ten getting the most bids in a given year. Plenty of good programs reside in those leagues. But, fairness would dictate that those conferences should earn those bids like everyone else, via conference championships or at-large selection, rather than disproportionally collect them pre-emptively.

Please, let this 4+4 suggestion be a negotiable trial balloon. Hand me the arrow, because I’d love to shoot down this pathetic flex that would make a mockery of a playoff that was painstakingly and beautifully constructed two years ago.

Guaranteeing, before the season even kicks off, that the Big Ten and SEC would receive the most playoff bids would be a bald-faced rigging of the system.

Let’s at least see what this 12-team playoff looks like first, shall we?

Want to increase the playoff from 12 to 14 teams two years from now? Fine. Seems unnecessary, but more games means more revenue opportunities, so I get it. But, don’t reserve a bid for a fourth-place conference finisher before the season even starts.

A front-end stacking of the playoff deck would be akin to the NFL deciding in the preseason that the AFC gets 10 playoff bids and the NFC gets six.  The NFL would never do that, of course, because unlike college football, the postseason is not run by individual conferences or divisions.

College football enjoys a popularity heater. Saturday’s Georgia-Alabama game on ABC attracted 12 million viewers, making it the most-watched primetime college football game since 2017.

This 12-team playoff format, with its healthy mix of automatic and at-large bids, magnetizes fans who never before had hope of making the playoff. Fans are not just emotionally invested. They’re financially invested. Everyone and their grandmother wagers on games.

If there’s one way to threaten this swelling popularity, it’s for two men in suits to decide they’re rigging the postseason.

And the silly thing is, it would be wholly unnecessary.

The SEC and Big Ten should have no trouble qualifying teams on merit. Come December, these two conferences likely will gobble up most of the at-large bids.

In the meantime, powerbrokers from two conferences will head to a meeting, and it already smells rotten.

When solipsistic leaders go into a room, never trust that they’ll emerge with a solution that will be fair to anyone other than those who made the decision.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer.

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The debate between the candidates for vice president — GOP nominee Ohio Sen. JD Vance and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz — was dominated by Vance, and all but a handful of hardened partisan pundits agree on that conclusion. 

Walz wobbled and panicked from the first question — which everyone in the world knew would be about Iran’s ballistic missile attack on Israel earlier in the day. Yet Walz still fumbled his response, and it got worse from there until the CBS moderators invoked the unwritten mercy rule for left-wing moderators watching the Democrat melt and tossed Walz some softballs on J6 at the debate’s close, by which time the internet was howling and laughing at the Minnesota governor. 

There were three important takeaways:  

First, Vance is a superb and calm debater and a reassuring figure on the national stage. 

Second, Walz is not, and he represents the one big decision Vice President Kamala Harris has had to make since President Joe Biden dropped out. It was a terrible decision. Imagine her Cabinet and White House staff if somehow, she wins.  

Third, legacy media is irretrievably broken and cannot be reclaimed from its lurch into rote leftism and extreme partisanship, or even pulled back to a minimum level of seriousness on big occasions.  

Do executives at these networks — ABC, CBS, CNN and NBC— not see what has happened? Americans don’t trust the news divisions at the legacy networks. It’s as if those divisions are run by a combination of fresh-from-campus-demonstration interns and hardened partisans from the Obama years.  

The CBS debate was not, however, as overtly biased against Vance as ABC’s earlier debate was against Trump, but it was still very, very biased against the center-right and conservative audience. Viewers saw the question set veer quickly from a world crisis and the border crisis to get to the left’s favorite issue of abortion.  

With the world tuning in only hours after Iran launched 180 ballistic missiles at Israel, the moderators Norah O’Donnell and Margaret Brennan did open with an obligatory round of questions on that crisis. But, after 10 minutes, they plowed on to a quick exchange on immigration and the Biden-Harris massive fail on the relief efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s savaging of North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Virginia in order to get to … abortion, which had been discussed at length in the ABC debate and about which there are zero mysteries.  

Three rounds of questions on abortion, really? And three rounds marked by the rote framing favored by the hard left? Predictable but still shocking.  

The debate ended in a morass of childcare questions and then the obligatory ‘Wasn’t January 6th terrible?’ questions.  

What a farce. Not one question on China’s vast military build-up and its threat against Taiwan and the Philippines. Not one question on the Chinese Communist Party spies shot through our country, including the office of New York’s current and past governor.  Not one question on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  

Yes, there was a quick dash through the consequences of more than 10 million illegal immigrants flowing across the southern border under the Biden-Harris regime, but also a quick cut-off when Vance began what was an obviously embarrassing factcheck of the CBS factcheck on the ‘legal status’ of the Haitians in Springfield, Ohio. ‘We have a lot to get to,’ was the trigger for cutting off anything uncomfortable.  

Walz was asked about his lying about his trips to China — sort of. It was left hanging. A knuckleheaded answer for a knuckleheaded team of debate organizers. Chinese President Xi Jinping is a sort of Voldemort for the networks — never to be named — perhaps because ABC and CBS all have corporate ties to companies that must do business there?  

Look, whatever votes were moved by the debate moved toward the GOP because Vance hammered that the costs of everything from food to gas skyrocketed under Biden-Harris, gave a quick tutorial on why construction costs have soared and thus the price of houses, and repeatedly reminded the audience of Harris’s failure in her job as ‘border czar,’ while also stressing the need for more domestic energy production. Tim Walz provided comic relief.  

The loser wasn’t just Walz though. It was also CBS, which joined ABC in a legacy media hall of shame. When we get back to debates in four years, the good news is the ‘debate commission’ is already dead and that, by 2028, the idea of the big networks hosting debates unchecked by center-right moderators will be as well. The candidates will call on C-SPAN and find some fair moderators. Siri could have done a better job in our past two debates this year.  

What has to be dawning in the C Suites of networks — if they are at all self-aware — is that their product and their talent are awful, and their audiences have already left or will soon leave. Tuesday night was just the most recent example of why. 

Hugh Hewitt is host of ‘The Hugh Hewitt Show,’ heard weekday mornings 6am to 9am ET on the Salem Radio Network, and simulcast on Salem News Channel. Hugh wakes up America on over 400 affiliates nationwide, and on all the streaming platforms where SNC can be seen. He is a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel’s news roundtable hosted by Bret Baier weekdays at 6pm ET. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996 where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990.  Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, has authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and his column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcast, and this column previews the lead story that will drive his radio/ TV show today.

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The NHL offseason was interesting because the wild-card Nashville Predators and Washington Capitals, plus the non-playoff New Jersey Devils and Utah Hockey Club, were among the most aggressive teams.

The last-place San Jose Sharks and Chicago Blackhawks also boosted their rosters while the 111-point Carolina Hurricanes and 2023 champion Vegas Golden Knights lost key players.

So how will that translate to the regular-season standings? Theoretically, the aggressive teams should improve while the Hurricanes’ and Golden Knights’ point totals should drop.

But injuries and even the break for the 4 Nations Face-Off could throw things off.

USA TODAY Sports makes its annual attempt at projecting the records for all 32 NHL teams (explanations below) before the season starts on Friday.

PREDICTIONS: Who’ll win the Stanley Cup, major awards?

SALARIES: Who makes the most in 2024-25?

Pacific Division

The Oilers‘ lineup looks different because of the salary cap, including losing Dylan Holloway and Philip Broberg to offer sheets. But by adding Viktor Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner, this roster could be deeper.

The Canucks could drop off depending on how long injured goalie Thatcher Demko is out. Arturs Silovs will need to play like he did in the playoffs.

The Golden Knights lost lots of depth with the departures of Jonathan Marchessault and Chandler Stephenson, but still have plenty of talent, a strong defense and a full season of Tomas Hertl and Noah Hanifin.

The Kings will have to navigate the beginning of the season without injured defenseman Drew Doughty. If youngster Brandt Clarke and others step up, the Kings could survive.

The Kraken added former Cup winners in Brandon Montour, Stephenson and coach Dan Bylsma, but they’ll also need a bounce-back season from Matty Beniers.

The trades of goalie Jacob Markstrom and forward Andrew Mangiapane continue the Flames‘ retool. Their point total should drop again.

The Sharks bottomed out last season and drafted Macklin Celebrini No. 1 overall. GM Mike Grier brought in veterans (Tyler Toffoli, Alex Wennberg) to help Celebrini and Will Smith in their first NHL season.

The Ducks have promising youngsters, including rookie Cutter Gauthier. But veteran goalie John Gibson is out early after an appendectomy and chances are they’ll be sellers at the trade deadline again.

Central Division

The Stars won the Central Division last season even though goalie Jake Oettinger’s numbers were down. He’ll get them back to the division title.

The Avalanche could get captain Gabriel Landeskog back later this season after two seasons out. That alone makes them a better team when he returns.

The Predators‘ aggressive offseason moves, which included signing Steven Stamkos and Marchessault, should help their middling power play and push them beyond a wild-card spot.

The Jets feel like they’re due for a dropoff from last season’s 110 points, but Vezina Trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck should keep them a playoff team.

Blues GM Doug Armstrong made shrewd offer sheets to land Holloway and Broberg, but Torey Krug’s season-ending surgery will hurt.

Utah has a new home and ownership. The former Coyotes upgraded their defense with Mikhail Sergachev, John Marino and Ian Cole and should be more competitive.

The Wild couldn’t do much this offseason because they lack cap flexibility. Next year, they’ll have more room, but that doesn’t help now.

The Blackhawks added help (Tyler Bertuzzi, Teuvo Teravainen) for Connor Bedard, and the rookie of the year should have a bigger season if he stays healthy. But it will take more for Chicago to escape the basement.

Atlantic Division

The Panthers have won the division title two of the last three seasons and are defending Stanley Cup champions. Even with their offseason losses of Montour, Oliver Ekman-Larsson and others, they’re the team to beat.

The Maple Leafs beefed up their defense with Chris Tanev and Ekman-Larsson and new coach Craig Berube will hold everyone accountable. They just need goalie Joseph Woll to stay healthy.

The Bruins‘ point total will depend on when goalie Jeremy Swayman signs. They did plug some gaps in the offseason by adding two-way center Elias Lindholm and gritty defenseman Nikita Zadorov.

The Lightning will miss Stamkos on the power play and in the dressing room. But newcomer Jake Guentzel will bring a lot of offense.

Goalie Linus Ullmark is an upgrade in net, so the Senators should be in the playoff hunt through the season.

The Sabres hired Lindy Ruff, the last coach to get them to the playoffs. Is it enough to end a 13-season postseason drought? They looked good in the preseason.

The Red Wings lost scoring depth in the offseason and added Vladimir Tarasenko. Does the addition of Cam Talbot do enough to upgrade their goaltending?

The Canadiens will be without injured newcomer Patrik Laine for the first two to three months. That dampens the enthusiasm of a young team that’s on the rise.

Metropolitan Division

The Rangers made only a few moves in the offseason. But they’re the defending Presidents’ Trophy winners and goalie Igor Shesterkin is expected to have a strong season as he approaches free agency.

The Devils should get back to the postseason after boosting their goaltending (Markstrom), defense (Brett Pesce, Brenden Dillon) and scoring depth. But they already have some injuries on defense.

The Hurricanes took a step backward with numerous offseason departures (Guentzel, Pesce, Brady Skjei, Teravainen, etc.), but coach Rod Brind’Amour should keep the team from falling out of the playoffs.

Flyers coach John Tortorella says he won’t stifle Matvei Michkov’s creativity. If the rookie looks like he did in the preseason, that would help Philadelphia’s playoff hopes. They’ll need to avoid another late-season slump.

The Capitals were busy, adding Pierre-Luc Dubois, Mangiapane, Jakob Chychrun, Matt Roy and Logan Thompson. They should improve on last season’s -37 goal differential. This season will be more than just watching Alex Ovechkin chase Wayne Gretzky’s goal record.

The Islanders will benefit from a full season of coach Patrick Roy. Newcomer Anthony Duclair will help the offense but will they score enough? Also, goalie Ilya Sorokin is working his way back from offseason surgery.

Sidney Crosby signed a two-year extension, but the Penguins will need more from their power play and bottom six to push for a playoff spot.

This will be a tough season for the Blue Jackets emotionally and on the ice after the death of Johnny Gaudreau. New coach Dean Evason will try to keep them competitive.

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Six days, two champagne celebrations – and the promise of more to come – and Pham couldn’t be prouder of his young teammates, some barely old enough to imbibe.

“They’re some professional bottle poppers, now!” Pham said, as the party rolled on into the night and eventually back outside, turning the infield into an impromptu disco.

These are the spoils for October’s greats, and to be clear, these Royals aren’t quite there yet. One season after losing 106 games, Kansas City injected the perfect amount of veterans over the winter and at the trade deadline, won 86 games, claimed a wild-card spot and now, over the course of two games at Camden Yards, became what every team aspires to be this time of year.

A problem.

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

They knocked out the 91-win Baltimore Orioles across two taut playoff afternoons at Camden Yards, finishing the job Wednesday with a 2-1 victory that catapulted them to the American League Division Series for the first time since 2015.

Next stop: Yankee Stadium.

Game 1 of the ALDS will be Saturday night, likely a matchup of reigning AL Cy Young winner Gerrit Cole and veteran right-hander Michael Wacha. Aaron Judge and Juan Soto will loom in the middle of the opposing lineup and more than 50,000 championship-starved fans will be in full throat.

Yet they also have plenty to fear.

Oh, Kansas City didn’t set Statcast on fire during these two days in Charm City, but perhaps that’s the point. The Royals scored three runs in 18 innings. They prevailed 1-0 in Game 1, pecked out one lousy extra-base hit in two games and needed a six-man pitching tag-team to suppress the talented, powerful but try-too-hard Orioles.

But that plays, very well, in the playoffs, especially when the transcendent Bobby Witt Jr. can lift up the whole operation with just a few athletic movements.

He won both games, in essence, with sixth-inning RBI singles, the Game 2 version coming with two outs in the sixth inning, runners at the corners and 38,698 fans at Camden Yards fearing the very worst.

Witt smashed the ball up the middle, but second baseman Jordan Westburg made a fantastic diving stop. He tried scrambling to his feet knowing that the fastest man in the major leagues was running. Yet Westburg did not reach his feet nor release the ball cleanly.

Witt beat it out. Kyle Isbel scored the winning run. The Brewers held it down.

And Witt’s perfect week continued. It started with an RBI hit in Game 1 and continued with a crucial and largely underappreciated maneuver in the first inning of Game 2: Following Michael Massey’s leadoff double by grounding a ball to second base, enabling Massey to reach third with one out.

Vinnie Pasquantino followed with an RBI single. It was 1-0, and a Camden Yards crowd already fearing the worst with Baltimore on a decadelong, nine-game playoff losing streak palpably groaned.

Witt is an All-Star because of his 32 home runs, his major league-leading .332 batting average, his sterling defense. The Royals are a playoff team – and moving on – for so many other reasons, even if Witt’s greatest contributions here won’t inspire anyone to put “instant” and “classic” in the same sentence.

That doesn’t much matter to the Royals.

“That’s how baseball should be played,” says Pasquantino, who returned from a five-week absence after thumb surgery to assume his usual No. 3 spot in the lineup this series. “Talk about Bobby all you want. What he did in the first inning tonight to get the guy to third and let me do my job, that is the best baseball play in the world, getting the guy to third base.

“It made my job easy, I was able to get it done. Now we’re on to New York.”

Even if Witt’s go-ahead single in Game 1 was just an 88-mph parachute to left field, and his selfless groundout in Game 2 measured just 68 mph on the ol’ exit velocity.

“Pardon my French, that does not (expletive) matter,” says Pasquantino, dodging suds in the victorious clubhouse. “What matters is scoring runs. And we were able to do that. Who gives a (expletive) about the exit velo, anything like that.

“Launch angle? Get that outta my face. We gotta score runs. That’s all that matters.

“Sorry about that.”

‘Hustle and heart’

No apologies necessary. The Royals, along with their AL Central brethren Detroit Tigers, are on the verge of becoming these playoffs’ greatest story. And you can’t blame them if they believe they already are.

“Like I keep saying, we didn’t come this far just to come this far, so we’re going to keep getting after it, keep trying to create our own legacy,” says Witt. “So, it’s pretty special to see what this team has done this year from what happened last year, and so now we’ve just got to keep doing it.”

At this point, it’s difficult to imagine this group losing 106 games, under any circumstances. But the additions of free agent veteran right-handers Wacha and Seth Lugo rounded out a rotation that’s a legitimate five deep and also gets, as they say, plenty of swing-and-miss.

In Game 2, Lugo was his usual befuddling self, deploying nine pitches in his famous 12-pitch mix to strike out six into the fifth inning. But after Cedric Mullins’ home run tied the game 1-1, Lugo promptly loaded the bases, on a walk, single and his own fielding error.

He buckled down to get 44-home run man Anthony Santander to pop out, and yielded to lefty reliever Angel Zerpa.

The 25-year-old Venezuelan found some good fortune, striking out Colton Cowser on a pitch that could’ve struck Cowser, and getting Adley Rutschman on a grounder to short to leave the bases loaded, and the game tied

Witt’s go-ahead hit would come moments later.

“It’s kind of the embodiment of our entire season, is hustle and heart,” says Lugo. “Just really proud for (Witt) to do what he’s done all year.”

Still, there was plenty of work left: Manager Matt Quatraro asked the bullpen for 14 outs. The relievers delivered all of them, without so much as allowing a runner to second base.

That, too, is playoff baseball.

“We’re bringing Zerpa into the biggest spot of his life and he gets two huge outs to stem the tide there,” says Quatraro. “These guys, it’s so impressive that they believe in themselves and they trust their stuff and they just come after some of the best hitters in the world.”

Zerpa was followed to the mound by John Schreiber, Sammy Long, Kris Bubic and closer Lucas Erceg, who saved both games and closed this one with a strikeout of Gunnar Henderson.

The Royals converged on the mound, dispensing hugs but no dogpiles, a nod to the road ahead. The clubhouse bacchanalia was a little less reserved.

“We probably made it more dramatic than we would have liked,” says Pasquantino. “As an offense, we’ve got some work to do, because you want to be able to separate and give your pitchers some freedom. We would like to do a better job offensively.

“But it was enough this series. We just want to keep working and get ready for Saturday night.”

‘The bats are coming’

Pham is ready. He got all the way to Game 5 of the 2023 World Series with the Arizona Diamondbacks, popping a 4-for-4 game along the way.

These Royals aren’t yet so offensively proficient. But there’s time for it to come, to fuse with this stellar pitching staff, just as the vets mesh with Witt and the other talents on this increasingly imposing squad.

“Pitching. Defense. Timely hitting. That’s what it’s about. We’ve got some guys that can give us some length. Our starters are giving us innings,” says Pham. “The bats are coming. It’s coming. Once we get that going, we’re going to take off.”

And as for this untested squad ready to take on Yankee Stadium?

“I’ll be sure,” he says, “to put in a good speech.”

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San Diego right-hander Joe Musgrove departed the Padres’ National League wild-card series game against the visiting Atlanta Braves on Wednesday with what the team called right elbow tightness.

He will undergo an MRI exam on Thursday.

San Diego held a 5-1 advantage when Musgrove exited after 3 2/3 innings. He struck out four and gave up one run on one hit and no walks.

The Padres held on to win the game 5-4 and eliminate Atlanta in two games.

After the game, Musgrove sounded as if there were some concern about the injury.

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‘I don’t know what the future looks like for me right now, but I know I’m going to give it every chance I have and I’ll do whatever I have to do to get back in here at some point,’ Musgrove said.

Musgrove threw a curveball for a strike to Atlanta’s Matt Olson on his 44th and final pitch of the night. As he prepared to throw his next pitch, Musgrove stretched his arm upwards and then later shook his right arm. When Musgrove again stretched his arms high, catcher Kyle Higashioka rushed to the mound.

Pitching coach Ruben Niebla went to the mound, and a short while later, manager Mike Shildt and a trainer hurried out. After a short discussion, Musgrove departed the contest.

Musgrove, 31, was on the injured list twice this season due to elbow issues. The second time, he was diagnosed with a bone spur in the elbow and missed 2 1/2 months, returning Aug. 12.

Musgrove went 6-5 with a 3.88 ERA in 19 regular-season starts.

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