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A federal judge on Wednesday unsealed a key filing from special counsel Jack Smith’s updated election interference case against former President Donald Trump.

U.S. District Judge for the District of Columbia Tanya Chutkan unsealed Smith’s 165-page filing, in which Smith argues that Trump is not immune from prosecution for his alleged criminal scheme to overturn the 2020 election results. Smith submitted the document after the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year ruled that a president is immune from prosecution for official acts. 

‘Although the defendant was the incumbent President during the charged conspiracies, his scheme was fundamentally a private one,’ Smith wrote. ‘Working with a team of private co-conspirators, the defendant acted as a candidate when he pursued multiple criminal means to disrupt, through fraud and deceit, the government function by which votes are collected and counted — a function in which the defendant, as President, had no official role.’ 

The Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States held that Smith could not prosecute Trump for the president’s alleged use of the Justice Department to look into unproven claims of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election. In response, Smith filed an updated indictment that revised the allegations against Trump to fit within the scope of the Supreme Court’s decision. 

In the unsealed filing, Smith told the court that Trump is not immune from the remaining allegations against him and laid out his case for why Trump ‘must stand trial for his private crimes.’ 

Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges brought against him by Smith.

Here are five key details from the special counsel’s new filing, which is partially redacted: 

1. Smith’s ‘factual proffer’ 

In the filing unsealed Wednesday, Smith outlined a ‘factual proffer,’ alleging Trump ‘resorted to crimes to try to stay in office’ after losing the 2020 presidential election.

‘With private co-conspirators, the defendant launched a series of increasingly desperate plans to overturn the legitimate election results in seven states that he had lost—Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin,’ Smith wrote. 

‘His efforts included lying to state officials in order to induce them to ignore true vote counts; manufacturing fraudulent electoral votes in the targeted states; attempting to enlist Vice President Michael R. Pence, in his role as President of the Senate, to obstruct Congress’s certification of the election by using the defendant’s fraudulent electoral votes; and when all else had failed, on January 6, 2021, directing an angry crowd of supporters to the United States Capitol to obstruct the congressional certification.’ 

Smith claims that the ‘throughline of these efforts was deceit,’ alleging Trump and co-conspirators engaged in a conspiracy to interfere with the federal government function by which the nation collects and counts election results, which is set forth in the Constitution and the Electoral Count Act (ECA); a conspiracy to obstruct the official proceeding in which Congress certifies the legitimate results of the presidential election; and a conspiracy against the rights of millions of Americans to vote and have their votes counted.’ 

2. Smith claims Trump’s personal attorney told POTUS election fraud claims were ‘bulls—’ 

Smith claims that several people close to Trump had told the former president his claims of election fraud were ‘bulls—.’ 

According to Smith, in one conversation, an unnamed Trump attorney had told Trump that the campaign was ‘looking into his fraud claims and had even hired external experts to do so, but could find no support for them.’ 

‘He told the defendant that if the Campaign took these claims to court, they would get slaughtered because the claims are all ‘bulls—,’’ the filing states, with Smith claiming that a lawyer discussed with Trump the investigations and ‘debunkings on all major claims.’ 

For example, the attorney allegedly told Trump that Georgia’s audit disproved claims that votes had been altered. 

Smith also claims a senior campaign adviser who spoke with Trump on a ‘daily basis’ and had ‘informed him on multiple occasions that various fraud claims were false’ had complained that Trump was losing his election lawsuits because his lawyers could not back up false claims about the election.

‘When our research and campaign legal team can’t back up any of the claims made by our Elite Strike Force Legal Team, you can see why we’re 0-32 on our cases,’ the campaign adviser allegedly wrote.

‘I’ll obviously hustle to help on all fronts, but it’s tough to own any of this when it’s all just conspiracy s— beamed down from the mothership.’  

3. New details on Trump’s interactions with Vice President Mike Pence

The filing details several alleged interactions between Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence in the days following the election.

Smith details a Nov. 7, 2020, call between Pence and Trump in which Pence allegedly ‘tried to encourage’ Trump ‘as a friend’ by reminding him that he ‘took a dying political party and gave it a new lease on life.’ 

Smith also details a private lunch between Trump and Pence on Nov. 12, 2020, when Pence allegedly gave Trump a ‘face-saving option.’ That option, according to the filing, was ‘don’t concede but recognize the process is over.’ 

In another private lunch between Trump and Pence on Nov. 16, 2020, Pence allegedly tried to encourage Trump to accept the results of the election and run again in 2024. Trump is alleged to have responded, ‘I don’t know, 2024 is so far off.’ 

In yet another private lunch on Dec. 21, Pence allegedly ‘encouraged’ Trump ‘not to look at the election ‘as a loss – just an intermission.” Later that day in the Oval Office, Trump allegedly asked Pence for advice on what he should do. According to Smith, Pence said, ‘after we have exhausted every legal process in the courts and Congress, if we still came up short, Trump should ‘take a bow.’’ 

Additionally, Smith reveals that Trump allegedly showed little regard for Pence’s safety during the Jan. 6, 2023 riot at the U.S. Capitol after it became clear that Pence would not support his attempt to stop the certification of the election. 

Smith alleges that an unnamed Trump aide, ‘upon receiving a phone call alerting him that Pence had been taken to a secure location… rushed to the dining room to inform the defendant [Trump] in hopes that the defendant would take action to ensure Pence’s safety.’ 

Smith writes that instead, after the aide delivered the news, Trump ‘looked at him and said only, ‘So what?” 

4. White House staffer allegedly overhears Trump say, ‘It doesn’t matter if you won or lost’ 

Smith alleges that Trump at multiple times showed complete disregard for those who informed him his claims of voter fraud were false, including Republican elections officials in states where Trump had claimed the election was stolen. 

‘Election officials, for instance, issued press releases and other public statements to combat the disinformation that the defendant and his allies were spreading,’ Smith wrote. ‘At one point long after the defendant had begun spreading false fraud claims, [REDACTED], a White House staffer traveling with the defendant, overheard him tell family members that ‘it doesn’t matter if you won or lost the election. You still have to fight like hell.’ 

Smith goes on to assert that Trump and his legal team ‘repeatedly changed the numbers in their baseless fraud allegations from day to day,’ and even ‘made up figures from whole cloth.’ 

The special counsel claimed Trump ‘was on notice that there was no evidence of widespread election fraud in Arizona within a week of the election’ and claimed Trump also ‘had early notice that his claims of election fraud in Georgia were false.’ 

By the time Trump spoke at his rally on Jan. 6, after Pence had refused to stop the certification of the election, Smith said the former president knew his ‘last hope’ to overturn the results was ‘the large and angry crowd standing in front of him.’ 

‘So for more than an hour, the defendant delivered a speech designed to inflame his supports and motivate them to march to the Capitol. The defendant told the crowd many of the same lies he had been telling for months—privately and publicly, including to the officials in the targeted states—and that he knew were not true.’

5. Smith presents case against presidential immunity

Smith argues that based on a ‘factbound analysis’ of Trump’s conduct, the court should determine that the former president was not acting in his official capacity when he challenged the election results and is therefore not immune from prosecution. 

‘None of the allegations or evidence is protected by presidential immunity,’ Smith wrote, asserting Trump’s ‘scheme was a private one.’ 

‘He extensively used private actors and his campaign infrastructure to attempt to overturn the election results and operated in a private capacity as a candidate for office,’ Smith claimed. ‘To the limited extent that the superseding indictment and proffered evidence reflect official conduct, however, the Government can rebut the presumption of immunity because relying on that conduct in this prosecution will not pose a danger of intrusion on the authority or functions of the Executive Branch.’ 

Fox News Digital’s Brooke Singman and Fox News’ Jake Gibson contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

OpenAI has closed its long-awaited funding round at a valuation of $157 billion, including the $6.6 billion the company raised from an extensive roster of investment firms and big tech companies.

While OpenAI didn’t name the investors in Wednesday’s press release, a person with knowledge of the matter said the round was led by Thrive Capital and included participation from existing backer Microsoft as well as chipmaker Nvidia, SoftBank and others. Thrive planned to invest $1 billion in the round, CNBC previously reported.

OpenAI’s rapid ascent, which began with the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, has been the biggest story in the tech industry over the last couple years, bringing the concept of generative artificial intelligence into the mainstream and paving the way for tens of billions of dollars of investments in AI infrastructure.

“The new funding will allow us to double down on our leadership in frontier AI research, increase compute capacity, and continue building tools that help people solve hard problems,” OpenAI wrote in a blog post Wednesday.

OpenAI generated $300 million in revenue last month, up 1,700% since the beginning of last year, CNBC confirmed last week, following reporting by The New York Times. The company expects to bring in $11.6 billion in sales next year, up from $3.7 billion in 2024, according to a person close to OpenAI who asked not to be named because the financials are confidential.

But all that revenue is extremely costly, as OpenAI has to ramp up purchases of Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs) to train and run its large language models. The company expects to lose about $5 billion this year, the person said. Microsoft has invested billions of dollars in OpenAI and is a key partner as the software giant bolsters its Azure cloud business.

Earlier this year, OpenAI was valued at a reported $80 billion, up from $29 billion in 2023. Following the viral growth of ChatGPT, momentum has continued with new products for businesses and an expansion into AI-generated photos and videos.

OpenAI now has 250 million weekly active users on ChatGPT, CFO Sarah Friar told CNBC in a statement. There are also 11 million ChatGPT Plus subscribers and 1 million paying business users on ChatGPT, a person close to the company said.

“AI is already personalizing learning, accelerating healthcare breakthroughs, and driving productivity,” Friar said in the statement. “And this is just the start.”

OpenAI is experiencing plenty of growing pains along the way, including the loss of key executives, a trend that continued through last week.

Last Wednesday, OpenAI Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati, who briefly served as interim CEO, said she would be leaving after 6½ years. Shortly after that, research chief Bob McGrew and Barret Zoph, a research vice president, said they were leaving the company.

In an interview the next day at Italian Tech Week, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said, “I think this will be hopefully a great transition for everyone involved and I hope OpenAI will be stronger for it, as we are for all of our transitions.”

Also on Thursday, OpenAI held an all-hands meeting, following the board’s decision to consider restructuring the company to a for-profit business, according to a separate person with knowledge of the matter. Altman said the departures were not related to the potential restructuring, contrary to some media reports.

Should the change occur, the nonprofit segment would remain as a separate entity, the source said.

At Thursday’s meeting, Altman denied reports of plans for him to receive a “giant equity stake” in the company, calling that information “just not true,” according to a person who was in attendance.

OpenAI Chairman Bret Taylor told CNBC in a statement last week that while the board has talked about the matter, no specific figures are on the table.

“The board has had discussions about whether it would be beneficial to the company and our mission to have Sam be compensated with equity, but no specific figures have been discussed nor have any decisions been made,” Taylor said.

The latest funding round also included participation from Khosla Ventures, Altimeter Capital, Fidelity, MGX and Tiger Global, sources told CNBC.

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Kayode Awosika helped lead the Detroit Lions to a 42-29 win over the Seattle Seahawks in his first start of the 2024 NFL season.

The interior offensive lineman also earned a big win on social media, as a tale of him standing up to a bully during his high school days went viral on TikTok.

It all started with a video shared by Peyton Morris that captured the attention of Lions fans. Her post showed David Montgomery’s game-opening touchdown run and then a close-up of her face after it with the following caption:

‘When you’re a Seahawks fan but the guy from high school that backed you up against a bully is on the Lions.’

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Naturally, that led Lions fans to wonder which player Morris was referencing. The video was viewed more than 1 million times which prompted her to make a follow-up video that revealed it was, in fact, Awosika, as at least one astute commenter had guessed.

Morris went on to detail that she had attended both junior high and high school with Awosika, and that she didn’t expect him to stand up for her.

‘I was not popular,’ she said. ‘He was one of the star players on the football team and the basketball team, and he had no reason that he needed to be nice to me. But he was. That’s just the kind of person that he is.’

Morris did not provide details about the specifics of the situation, but went on to say that she would be a lifelong fan of Awosika. She also said she was ‘excited’ watching him play on ‘Monday Night Football’ against the Seahawks.

‘It just makes me so happy when good things happen to good people,’ she said. ‘He deserves all of the success and I will always root for him.’

Awosika, 25, broke into the NFL with the Philadelphia Eagles as an undrafted free agent out of Buffalo in 2021. He joined the Lions in 2022 and has appeared in 29 games (six starts) since coming to Detroit.

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The lawyer who led representation of former UCLA men’s basketball player Ed O’Bannon in a landmark antitrust victory over the NCAA has filed documents opposing a recently adjusted version of the proposed multi-billion-dollar settlements of three athlete-compensation cases against the NCAA and the Power Five conferences.

The filing, made late Wednesday night Pacific Time (early Thursday morning, Eastern Time), said that it was on behalf of a group comprising three current college athletes, two former college athletes, two current high school athletes. It also mentions one of the high school athletes’ parents, a person who also is a former college athlete.

‘The Settlements involve illusory, contradictory and overreaching terms … (they) go too far, offer too little, present too many contradictions, and should be rejected,’ argues the brief, which is signed by lawyers including Michael Hausfeld, who led the O’Bannon plaintiffs in a case that was decided in 2014 at the district-court level by the same judge who is handling the proposed settlement.

Among the items included in support of Hausfeld’s new brief is a letter from the governors of five states that do not have a Power Five school to NCAA President Charlie Baker and the NCAA Board of Governors, urging the association to ‘to restructure the settlement to take the concerns of our colleges and universities, who make up a majority of your member conferences.’

South Dakota’s attorney general has filed a suit against the NCAA in state court there to stop or alter the settlement, its governor, Kristi Noem, joining in the letter also signed by the governors of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and North Dakota.

Under the proposed settlement, the NCAA and the conferences would fund a $2.8 billion damages pool for current and former athletes over a span of 10 years and allow Division I schools to share revenue with their athletes by paying them directly for use of their name, image and likeness (NIL), subject to a per-school cap that would increase over time.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs, the NCAA and the conferences have been seeking to gain preliminary approval for the settlement from U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken in California.

During a hearing on the matter on Sept. 5, Wilken said she would not approve the original version of the settlement, citing concerns with how certain types of NIL deals that athletes currently have would be impacted by a new regulatory structure that also would be put in place under the settlement.   

Last week, lawyers involved with the proposed agreement provided Wilken with an updated version that included small changes aimed at addressing her concerns.

With that version awaiting some type of action from Wilken, the overnight filing argued that she should reject it.

It presented some of the same points made by previous opponents of the settlement, and added new ones. For example, it contends that the recent changes to the proposed settlement don’t address one of the issues that Wilken raised during the hearing, when she seemed puzzled by an NCAA attorney’s contention that the NIL payments from schools to the athletes would not constitute pay for play.  

At present, the NCAA has rules that prohibit athletes from receiving pay for play and from having NIL deals that are used as an inducement to enroll or remained enrolled at a specific school. However, those rules have been virtually impossible for the association to enforce. That initially was due to the growing prevalence of school-specific collectives – donor groups dedicated to pooling resources earmarked for NIL payments that often are, at best, only loosely based on the value of an athlete’s NIL rights or their promotional work. Beginning in February, it also was because a federal judge in Tennessee issued a preliminary injunction in a case brought by the state’s attorney general that says recruits and transfers can negotiate and sign NIL contracts before enrolling at a university.

Under the original version of the settlement, athletes would have to report NIL payments of more than $600 to a clearinghouse that would be established. And their deals – if made with a ‘booster’ – would be subject to review, with the goal being the prevention of pay for play and deals that pay amounts above market value.

Athletes who have questions about the permissibility of their agreements would be able to seek advisory opinion from an enforcement group. If the enforcement group sought to sanction an athlete because of a deal, the athlete would have the ability to bring the matter to a neutral arbitrator.

In the revisions filed last week, the basic reporting, clearinghouse and arbitration processes would remain as originally proposed, but the settlement now would do away with the term ‘booster’ and replace it with a new term, ‘Associated Entity or Individual,’ that carries a specific, five-part definition. 

The new filing argues that, regardless of the terminology, if the goal of the proposed regulatory setup is to prevent pay for play, that doesn’t make sense because – and this was emphatically presented in italics – ‘that is precisely what revenue sharing with college athletes is.’

The new filing also contends that the new regulatory arrangement would effectively ‘end the opportunities created by NIL Collectives’ and ‘serves as a blatant attempt by the NCAA to gain control of a free market they have no legal authority to control.’

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Thursday Night Football features an NFC South rivalry with aspiring playoff teams in Week 5.

Kirk Cousins and the new-look Atlanta Falcons will host Baker Mayfield and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Thursday night.

Both teams enter the game after victories last Sunday: The Falcons beat the New Orleans Saints in a thrilling 26-24 win, while the Buccaneers dominated the Philadelphia Eagles at home 33-16.

The NFL schedule makers have been kind to Atlanta (2-2), who will host their third consecutive home game and fourth overall. But the Falcons needed kicker Younghoe Koo to make a career-best 58-yard field goal to secure last week’s win and avoid a 0-3 start at home.

Meanwhile, Mayfield rebounded from Tampa Bay’s bad loss to the Denver Broncos with 347 yards passing and three touchdowns (two passing, one rushing) to help the Buccaneers start 3-1 this season under third-year coach Todd Bowles.

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Here’s everything you need to know about the Bucs and Falcons on Thursday Night Football:

When is the Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. Atlanta Falcons game?

The Falcons host the Buccaneers on Thursday night at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta at 8:15 p.m. ET.

How to watch Buccaneers vs. Falcons on Thursday Night Football

The game between the Buccaneers and Falcons can be streamed on Amazon Prime Video.

Al Michaels (play-by-play) and Kirk Herbstreit (analyst) will be in the broadcast booth for Prime Video, with Kaylee Hartung (sideline) and Terry McAulay (rules analyst) providing additional coverage.

The Prime Video pregame, halftime and postgame shows feature Charissa Thompson as host, as well as former NFL players Ryan Fitzpatrick, Tony Gonzalez, Richard Sherman and Andrew Whitworth as analysts. Taylor Rooks is the feature reporter for Prime Video’s ‘Thursday Night Football’ coverage.

What are the betting odds for Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Atlanta Falcons?

The Falcons are moneyline favorites (-125) to win at home over the Buccaneers (+105), with an over/under set at 43.5 points, and a 1.5-point spread, according to BETMGM.

Spotlight on QBs: Baker Mayfield vs. Kirk Cousins

Mayfield is second in the NFL with eight touchdown passes, and sixth with 984 yards passing, despite being one of the most sacked quarterbacks (15) through four games. Mayfield also has two rushing touchdowns this season and continues to be a reliable starter for the Buccaneers, who lost in the second round of the playoffs last year to Detroit.

Cousins hasn’t been as productive to start the season with four touchdown passes, four interceptions and 216.0 yards per game (17th in NFL) to start the season as he progresses after an Achilles injury last season. The veteran quarterback signed a four-year, $180 million deal in the offseason before the Falcons selected Michael Penix Jr. with the eighth overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft.

Players to watch: Buccaneers RB Bucky Irving

While star receivers Mike Evans and Chris Godwin are doing their part with three touchdown catches each, Buccaneers rookie running back Bucky Irving has been more reliable on the ground than incumbent starter Rachaad White to start the season.

Irving has six fewer carries (35 vs. 41), but has gained 203 yards rushing, while White has 115 yards and no touchdowns through the first four games.

White, however, has more total yards (248 vs. 237) from catching 14 passes for 133 yards out of the backfield, showing the Buccaneers might just have a dynamic 1-2 punch on their hands instead of a running back controversy.

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And the youngsters shall lead them.

Standing six outs away from bowing out meekly yet again in the postseason, the Milwaukee Brewers got a game-tying home run from Jackson Chourio and a go-ahead, two-run home run from Garrett Mitchell to blaze past the New York Mets, 5-3, Wednesday night in Game 2 of the National League wild-card series at American Family Field.

Chourio’s homer was his second of the game; he led off the bottom of the first with an opposite-field shot off Mets starter Sean Manaea three pitches in.

Mitchell, meanwhile, had entered the game as a pinch-runner in the sixth. The at-bat was his first of the game and came after Willy Adames singled to left with two outs and the score tied at 3-3.

Phil Maton hung a first-pitch curveball and Mitchell hammered it out to right-center, electrifying the crowd while he gestured to fans while rounding the bases.

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Devin Williams retired the Mets in order in the ninth, putting the finishing touches on the Brewers’ six-game losing streak in the playoffs that dated to 2021.

Jackson Chourio has a short memory

‘I think it’s going to be a beautiful game out there,’ is what Chourio told reporters early Tuesday afternoon.

Then, three pitches into the bottom of the first Wednesday, he smacked an 0-2 sinker left out over the plate by Manaea out to right to pull the Brewers even with the Mets at 1-1 and send the crowd of 40,350 into a frenzy.

It was the second postseason leadoff homer in franchise history. Corey Hart led off Game 6 of the 2011 NLCS by going deep against the St. Louis Cardinals.

What an answer by the 20-year-old Chourio to his fifth-inning fielding gaffe in Game 1, a miscue that helped open the door to a game-turning, five-run rally by the Mets in an 8-4 loss.

The first-inning homer was the second Manaea allowed to the Brewers in five days. Rhys Hoskins slugged a grand slam against him last Friday.

More fielding woes for Milwaukee pitchers

Three batters after Chourio misplayed Tyrone Taylor’s fly ball into a double in Game 1, Joel Payamps failed to cover first base in a timely fashion on a ground ball by José Iglesias. That slight hesitation allowed Iglesias to slide head-first into the bag just ahead of Payamps touching it and shortly thereafter the dam burst.

A similarly bad mistake was made in the second inning Wednesday, only this time by Frankie Montas and on a ground ball to the right side by Starling Marte.

Hoskins fielded the ball and made a perfect toss to Montas, who got to the bag in plenty of time but somehow failed to make the catch. Taylor and Francisco Alvarez followed with singles, and then Francisco Lindor hit a sacrifice fly to left to put New York back in front, 3-1.

It’s the fourth postseason game Montas has appeared in during his nine-year career, and there probably haven’t been many easier plays than the one he failed to make.

Another short leash for a Milwaukee starter

Freddy Peralta allowed three second-inning runs in Game 1 but eventually found his groove and retired nine straight batters before being pulled by manager Pat Murphy with his pitch count at only 68.

There’s certainly something to the ‘third time through the order’ argument, but after seeing things immediately go south once Payamps entered only provided more fuel to the fire for fans who believed Murphy’s hook for Peralta was too quick.

Montas had retired six of seven batters, including the last two via strikeout, before being lifted by Murphy with a runner on second in the fourth and his pitch count at 60.

Trevor Megill entered and induced a flyout to keep it a 3-1 game and close the book on a six-hit, three-run (one earned), one-walk, three-strikeout start for Montas.

The Brewers’ veterans have been (mostly) MIA

One of the more intriguing storylines coming into the series was how the Brewers’ core of young and inexperienced players would perform with the lights at their brightest.

As it turns out, they’ve been more than OK. Chourio has shined, Brice Turang has multiple hits in each game and Sal Frelick has exhibited tremendous toughness by playing through a painful left hip contusion and generating offense at the bottom of the lineup.

Milwaukee’s veterans, however, have been a different story.

Adames was 0 for 3 with a walk in Game 1 and 1 for 4 with a run scored in Game 2. William Contreras was 1 for 4 with two RBI in Game 1 and 1 for 4 in Game 2. And Hoskins was 0 for 3 with an RBI and a walk in Game 1 and 0 for 4 in Game 2.

Needless to say, it’s tough to win any sort of game with such a glaring lack of production from your best and most consistent run producers, let alone in the postseason.

The rookie comes through yet again

And right on cue, when the Brewers needed a lift and the air had been let out of the crowd of 40,350, Chourio delivered.

With New York holding a 3-2 lead and only three outs away from being able to turn the game over to closer Edwin Diaz, the rookie stepped to the plate against the right-hander Maton.

In a 1-1 count, Chourio got a cutter up and over the plate and again sent the ball out to right, this time hitting it off the facing of the second deck to tie it at 3-3.

Talk about clutch performers. Think the Brewers are happy to have the kid locked up long-term?

This story was updated to add new information.

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One of Pete Rose’s longtime teammates and closest friends opened up about the last time he was with the baseball great, which was one day before his death.

Tony Perez, who played 13 seasons with Rose for the Cincinnati Reds as part of the ‘Big Red Machine,’ was with Rose at the Music City Sports Collectibles and Autograph Show in Nashville, Tennessee, on Sunday, one day before Rose’s death at his Las Vegas home. Also, there were other members of Cincinnati’s star 1970s squad like Dave Concepcion, George Foster and Ken Griffey Sr.

Perez spoke to TMZ Sports about the last day together and said it wasn’t a good time because Rose didn’t seem like his usual self.

‘He wasn’t feeling that well, he didn’t look too good,’ Perez said. ‘He wasn’t a talker. He didn’t say much.’

The comments from Perez came one day after another former Reds teammate expressed his concern. Baseball Hall of Famer Johnny Bench said during an appearance with ‘The Dan Patrick Show’ on Tuesday he missed seeing Rose at the collectible show, but he was worried about his health after hearing from those that saw him.

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‘The guys were very concerned about him on Sunday because they said he just wasn’t the same old Pete,’ Bench said. ‘It’s sad. It really is.’

The Baseball Hall of Famer Perez also said the last time he saw Rose prior to Sunday was at another card show about six months ago and he appeared to be in better condition than the one on Sunday. Perez also reminisced about his time playing with Rose and how he inspired every one on the team to play hard.

‘You see him play and you have to play the way he plays,’ Perez said. ‘When you didn’t run the ball out or run the base like you’re supposed to do, you’re going to look bad, because Pete, he was a machine. He never stopped, and he was gone. You have to play hard like he did.’

Rose died at the age of 83. MLB’s all-time hits leader died of hypertension and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, according to the Clark County (Nevada) Coroner’s Office.

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The San Diego Padres held off the Atlanta Braves with a 5-4 win to finish a two-game sweep in the National League wild-card series on Wednesday, setting up an NLDS showdown with the rival Los Angeles Dodgers.

San Diego scored all five of its runs with two outs in the second inning, starting with Kyle Higashioka’s solo home run. The Padres strung together five consecutive hits after the homer, with Manny Machado (double) and Jackson Merrill (triple) each driving in two runs to take a lead they’d never relinquish at Petco Park.

The Padres now face the Dodgers in a best-of-five series, a rematch of the 2022 NLDS that saw San Diego dispatch Los Angeles’ 111-win juggernaut en route to the franchise’s first NLCS appearance since 1998.

Atlanta entered the season with high expectations as the six-time defending NL East champions, but were overwhelmed by season-ending injuries to stars Ronald Acuña Jr., Spencer Strider and Austin Riley – among others – and ultimately settled for a wild-card spot on the final day of the regular season.

‘I’m about as proud of a team as I’ve ever had, quite honestly, with how they’ve handled everything,’ Braves manager Brian Snitker said after the loss.

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The NLDS begins on Saturday at Dodger Stadium.

Michael Harris II home run makes it a one-run game

Atlanta’s Orlando Arcia led off the eighth with a single against Jason Adam before Michael Harris II slammed a first-pitch home run that cut the Braves’ deficit to 5-4.

Atlanta squanders sixth-inning chance

Atlanta got the tying run to the plate in the top of the sixth, but Tanner Scott got Matt Olson to line out left field in a lefty-on-lefty matchup to end the threat.

It’s 5-2 Padres halfway through six.

Joe Musgrove injury, Padres up 5-2 through 5

An apparently injury to starter Joe Musgrove forced the Padres right-hander out of the game with two outs in the fourth inning. Musgrove seemed to notice something during his windup after throwing an incredibly slow curveball to Matt Olson. Bryan Hoeing came out of the bullpen to relieve Musgrove.

2021 World Series MVP Jorge Soler hit a solo home run in the top of the fourth to make it 5-2.

Padres storm back with 5-run second

The Padres scored five runs with two outs in the bottom of the second against Max Fried, taking a 5-1 lead after going behind in the top of the first. 

Kyle Higashioka homered for the second game in a row to tie it before the Padres reeled off five more consecutive hits, with four more runs coming around on Manny Machado’s two-RBI double and Jackson Merrill’s two-RBI triple.

Padres fail to score after loading bases

Two infield singles and a fielder’s choice loaded the bases for the Padres in the bottom of the first with no outs. Manny Machado struck out swinging for the first out, then Braves ace Max Fried got consecutive ground-balls from Jackson Merrill and Xander Bogaerts to escape the jam unscathed.

Braves take first-inning lead

Michael Harris II led off the game with a double and was moved over to third on Ozzie Albies’ grounder to the right side, setting up Marcell Ozuna’s sacrifice fly against Yu Darvish to open the scoring.

Atlanta was held scoreless in Game 1, striking out 15 times in the 4-0 loss.

Braves vs. Padres lineups

Atlanta Braves

Michael Harris II (L) CF
Ozzie Albies (S) 2B
Marcell Ozuna (R) DH
Matt Olson (L) 1B
Jorge Soler (R) RF
Ramón Laureano (R) LF
Gio Urshela (R) 3B
Sean Murphy (R) C
Orlando Arcia (R) SS

San Diego Padres

Luis Arraez (L) DH
Fernando Tatis Jr. (R) RF
Jurickson Profar (S) LF
Manny Machado (R) 3B
Jackson Merrill (L) CF
Xander Bogaerts (R) SS
Donovan Solano (R) 1B
Jake Cronenworth (L) 2B
Kyle Higashioka (R) C

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Messi scored two goals, Luis Suarez added another and Inter Miami withstood a second-half comeback attempt by the defending champion Columbus Crew to win 3-2 and clinch the MLS Supporters’ Shield on Wednesday night.  

“The truth is that we are happy to achieve the first goal and now we are thinking about what is coming, right?” Messi said in a postgame interview with Apple TV.

Inter Miami owner Jorge Mas began the locker room celebration, presenting the Supporters’ Shield trophy to the team. Messi raised the trophy next to Mas, while also holding a bottle of his ‘Mas+ by Messi’ drink over his head. Talk about product placement. 

Inter Miami won the Leagues Cup title last year, shortly after gaining worldwide attention with Messi’s arrival in July 2023. The Supporters’ Shield, the title given to the MLS regular-season champions, is the club’s second of the Messi era. But Inter Miami is already focused on reaching the Dec. 7 MLS Cup final, and potentially playing in the FIFA Club World Cup next year in the United States.

“Leo was the game changer,” said Inter Miami coach Tata Martino, who’s also coached Messi at FC Barcelona and with the Argentine National Team. “Our goal is to get to Dec. 7, and we would like to play in the Club World Cup. With the names we have on our team, they could just give us a spot, but it would be more just and mean more if we earn it, and this Supporters’ Shield was very important for us.”

Messi tapped his first goal in with his left foot in the 45th minute, and scored a patented free kick that bended into the left side of the net just before halftime (45+4’) to give Inter Miami a 2-0 lead before a dramatic second half.

Suarez scored his team-leading 18th goal in the 48th minute, two minutes after Crew star Diego Rossi opened the second half with a goal.

Crew leading scorer Cucho Hernandez scored a penalty kick in the 61st minute, but his second penalty kick to tie the game in the 84th minute was denied by Inter Miami goalie Drake Callender.

The game lived up to its billing as the best game of the MLS season thanks to the Crew’s persistence, but Messi’s greatness left its mark.

“Today, in probably the most important match we have played this year so far, we found again the version of Leo that defines matches and championships,” Martino said.

Messi, the World Cup champion and two-time Copa America champion, played in his fifth game since returning from a right ankle injury he suffered during the Copa America final in July.

Messi scored three goals in his first four games, but still received criticism for looking tired and needing more time to get back into shape. He was even partially blamed for Inter Miami entering the match with three straight draws, as the club lacked collective rhythm working their star back into the lineup.

Messi may indeed still need some time to round into the form we’re used to seeing from the world’s greatest player before the MLS Cup Playoffs, but he was more than good enough for Inter Miami in Columbus.

And as much as Messi helped Inter Miami secure the MLS Supporters’ Shield, his teammates deserve plenty of praise for their work in keeping the club atop the MLS standings for most of the season.

Messi has 17 goals in 17 games, despite missing 15 of Inter Miami’s MLS matches this season. Inter Miami was 10-2-3 (W-D-L) without Messi during the MLS season, accounting for 32 of the 68 points the club has accumulated before its final two games. From June 15 to Aug. 31, Inter Miami played nine games without an injured Messi and won eight of them (24 points).

“Throughout the year we had many, many injuries, where we couldn’t all be together … but the group was getting the most out of every tough game,” Messi said.

Inter Miami has two games remaining – Saturday at Toronto and Oct. 19 hosting the New England Revolution – to contend for the MLS record for points in a season. Inter Miami has 68 points after the Crew win, and would reach 74 with two more wins. The record set by the Revolution in 2021 is 73 points.

“Even though we have a great opportunity to go down in history in that, I also think it is less important,” Messi said of the MLS points record. He has his eyes on a deep playoff run.

“The first objective has been achieved and now we have to think about what is coming, right? The first (playoff matchup) is (best of) three, but then it’s a game (each). Anything can happen in a game, but we have a great advantage in that we play all the games at home, which is what we were looking for. I think we are very, very strong at home.”

Inter Miami – a club co-owned by brothers Jorge and Jose Mas, and David Beckham – has gone from seldom winning to Supporters’ Shield champions. The club, which joined the league in 2020, was unable to qualify for the playoffs last year after Messi’s arrival.

Now, Inter Miami has secured home-field advantage for the MLS Cup Playoffs where a third club title, and No. 47 for Messi, possibly awaits.

Check out these game highlights from USA TODAY Sports:

Inter Miami vs. Columbus Crew highlights

Drake Callender saves penalty kick by Cucho Hernandez: Inter Miami 3, Columbus Crew 2

Cucho Hernandez went right again. This time, Drake Callender followed him.

The Crew had a chance to tie it another penalty kick, but Callender’s save in the 84th minute has kept this score 3-2 in favor of Inter Miami.

Rudy Camacho red card leads to ejection: Inter Miami 3, Columbus Crew 2

Crew defender Rudy Camacho was sent off in the 64th minute after receiving his second yellow card for a questionable tackle on Inter Miami’s Federico Redondo. The Crew will play the rest of this match with 10 players instead of 11.

Cucho Hernandez scores goal: Inter Miami 3, Columbus Crew 2

Cucho Hernandez has scored in the 61st minute for the Crew on a penalty kick, following a handball by Inter Miami.

That’s three goals in the second half already by both teams, and we’re back to a one-goal lead for Inter Miami.

Luis Suarez goal: Inter Miami 3, Columbus Crew 1

Luis Suarez has scored for Inter Miami, tapping in a goal after Crew goalie Patrick Schulte collided with a teammate. It created a loose ball opportunity and a 3-1 lead for Inter Miami.

Columbus Crew coach Wilfried Nancy could only put his hand on his head in disbelief.

Diego Rossi begins second half with goal: Inter Miami 2, Columbus 1

Crew star Diego Rossi was the beneficiary of a breakdown defensively by Inter Miami, scoring a goal in the 46th minute as the second half got underway.

Lionel Messi scores second goal on free kick: Inter Miami 2, Columbus Crew 0

Messi showed once again why he’s the world’s greatest, scoring a free kick in extra time (45+4′) before halftime to give Inter Miami a 2-0 lead against Columbus Crew.

Lionel Messi goal highlight: Inter Miami 1, Columbus Crew 0

Lionel Messi has scored in the 45th minute as Inter Miami takes a 1-0 lead over Columbus Crew.

Messi was able to tap in the goal with his left boot past Crew goalie Patrick Schulte just before halftime.

Christian Ramirez shot is wide right: Inter Miami 0, Columbus 0

Christian Ramirez, one of the Crew’s star players, lined up a right shot that bended just outside the right side of the net in the 34th minute.

Chelo Weigandt goal disallowed, Mo Farsi collision: Inter Miami 0, Columbus 0

Messi waved his finger in the air in disapproval. Inter Miami coach Tata Martino had his hands raised in disbelief. Inter Miami had a goal disallowed because of a player offsides. It would have been an own-goal by Columbus.

Columbus attacker Mo Farsi is now being tended to by trainers after colliding into Inter Miami’s Sergio Busquets in the 26th minute.

Cucho Hernandez goal disallowed after offside call: Inter Miami 0, Columbus 0

Columbus nearly got off to a 1-0 lead, but Cucho Hernandez was just a step or two ahead of the Inter Miami back line. He was ruled offsides after finding the back of the net in the 8th minute.

Update from opening minutes of the match: Inter Miami 0, Columbus 0

Both teams have traded possession during the first five minutes, with Messi securing at least one clearance for Inter Miami already. These clubs are ball dominant, so it’s going to be interesting to see which one pushes the envelope to control the ball in this one.

How to watch Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami game on TV

The Inter Miami match against Columbus Crew will be broadcast by FS1 in the United States.

How to live stream Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami game tonight

The match will also be available for live stream via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

What time does Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami game start?

The match will begin at 7:45 p.m. ET (8:45 p.m. Argentina time)

Is Messi playing tonight?

Yes, Lionel Messi is expected to start and play for Inter Miami against Columbus Crew tonight.

Columbus Crew coach Wilfried Nancy pregame interview

The message from Columbus coach Wilfried Nancy: “We deserve to be here. The most important thing for me is a good performance,” he said in a pregame interview.

Inter Miami coach Tata Martino pregame interview

The key to the game from Inter Miami’s Tata Martino: “We have to be consistent for 90 minutes,” he said through a translator before the game.

Messi takes on Columbus Crew

It will be Messi’s first game against the Crew, although both teams played each other twice already this season. And it will be Messi’s fifth game since returning from his Copa America right ankle injury.

“My players, yeah, they know that Miami is coming with Messi, and we know that this is a good game for both teams,” Crew coach Wilfred Nancy told reporters Tuesday. “This is good for the league, obviously. This is good for everyone.”

Messi has scored three goals in four games, but Inter Miami has secured three straight draws during the span as the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner improves his conditioning. It left some media wondering if Inter Miami has played better without Messi when it won 9 of 10 matches before his return.

“I am happy to have the best player in the world with us. And well, adapting to that won’t be a problem,” Inter Miami assistant Javier Morales said.

Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami starting lineups

Messi is indeed starting for Inter Miami. Here are the starting lineups for both clubs:

Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami predictions

Inter Miami 4, Columbus Crew 3: Messi may have heard the talk about Inter Miami playing better without him before his injury return, and makes a statement to deliver the club the MLS Supporters’ Shield title. Messi scores two goals with an assist to Luis Suarez, and Matias Rojas will score for Miami against the Crew. Columbus might have tired legs in its seventh match in 24 days, while Miami will play its fifth in the same span. Safid Deen, Lionel Messi reporter for USA TODAY.

Columbus Crew vs. Inter Miami matches

Inter Miami won at home 2-1 in June was Messi was away during Copa America, and the Crew won 3-2 in August with Messi injured en route to winning Leagues Cup 2024.

The way how Columbus won was emphatic: Christian Ramirez scored in the 67th minute, while Diego Rossi scored a brace in the 69th and 80th minutes to steal the victory.

MLS Supporter Shield standings, scenarios

Inter Miami sits atop the MLS regular season standings with 65 points with three games remaining. A win tonight would give Inter Miami 68 points, and no other club would be able to reach that mark, giving them the Supporters’ Shield. If Inter Miami wins out, it would set a new MLS record with 74 points. A loss to Columbus would force Inter Miami to win its final two games to win the Shield.

Columbus Crew is in third with 57 points, but has four games remaining. A loss against Inter Miami would tap the Crew to 66 points if they win their final three games. A win against Inter Miami, however, opens a path to a maximum of 69 points.

MLS playoff clinching scenarios for Wednesday night’s games

➤ Inter Miami CF clinches Supporters’ Shield with:

Win

➤ Charlotte FC clinches playoff berth with:

Win
Draw, and Toronto FC loss or draw, and D.C. United loss or draw, and New England Revolution loss or draw, and Atlanta United loss or draw
Toronto FC loss or draw, and New England Revolution loss or draw, and Atlanta United loss or draw, and D.C. United draw

➤ Los Angeles FC clinches home-field advantage in Round 1 with:

Win, and Real Salt Lake loss, and Houston Dynamo FC loss or draw, and Colorado Rapids loss or draw, and Vancouver Whitecaps FC draw

➤ Minnesota United FC clinches playoff berth with:

Win
FC Dallas loss or draw

➤ Portland Timbers clinch playoff berth with:

Win
Draw, and FC Dallas loss or draw

MLS playoff picture: If the season ended today …

Heading into MLS Matchday 36, these would be the MLS playoff matchups through the first round …

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Clinched playoff spot: Columbus Crew, FC Cincinnati, Inter Miami CF, New York City FC, New York Red Bulls, Orlando City SC

Wild-card match:

Toronto FC (No. 8 seed) vs. Philadelphia Union (9)

Round 1 (best-of-three series):

Inter Miami CF (1) vs. Toronto FC-Philadelphia Union winner
Columbus Crew (2) vs. Charlotte FC (7)
FC Cincinnati (3) vs. New York Red Bulls (6)
Orlando City SC (4) vs. New York City FC (5)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Clinched playoff spot: Colorado Rapids, Houston Dynamo FC, LA Galaxy, Los Angeles FC, Real Salt Lake, Seattle Sounders FC, Vancouver Whitecaps FC

Wild-card match:

Minnesota United FC (No. 8 seed) vs. Portland Timbers (9)

Round 1 (best-of-three series):

LA Galaxy (1) vs. Minnesota United FC-Portland Timbers winner
Los Angeles FC (2) vs. Vancouver Whitecaps FC (7)
Real Salt Lake (3) vs. Houston Dynamo FC (6)
Colorado Rapids (4) vs. Seattle Sounders FC (5)

What is the format and schedule for the 2024 MLS Cup Playoffs format and schedule?

A total of 18 teams qualify for the 2024 MLS Cup Playoffs — the top nine finishers from each conference. The eighth- and ninth-place finishers in each conference will play in wild-card matches. The top seven seeds qualify for the Round 1 best-of-three series. Here is the playoff schedule:

Oct. 3: Wild-card matches (single-elimination matches)
Oct. 26-Nov. 10: Round 1 (best-of-three series)
Nov. 23-24: Conference semifinals (single-elimination matches)
Nov. 30-Dec. 1: Conference finals (single-elimination matches)
Dec. 7: MLS Cup (single winner-take-all match)

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Iran has finished its largest-ever barrage of missiles fired at Israel, but warns that a retaliatory strike could warrant further ballistic response.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said during the Asia Cooperation Dialogue summit this week that Israel must not believe it can act with ‘impunity,’ according to Reuters.

‘Any type of military attack, terrorist act or crossing our red lines will be met with a decisive response by our armed forces,’ said Pezeshkian.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with the heads of the country’s security establishment on Wednesday following Iran’s firing of 181 missiles into Israel amid fears that a lethal regional war is around the corner.

Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani of Qatar was also in attendance at the summit in Doha, where he called the ongoing violence in the Middle East a ‘collective genocide’ perpetuated by Israel, according to Reuters.

‘It has become crystal clear that what is happening is genocide, in addition to turning the Gaza Strip into an area unfit for human habitation, in preparation for displacement,’ the Qatari monarch said.

Iran’s strikes on Israel forced nearly 10 million people to find safety in bomb shelters on Tuesday. 

The barrage of aerial warfare was the first time in Israeli history that the country’s densely populated cities – Tel Aviv and Jerusalem – in the center of the biblical nation, faced such devastating attacks.

The only fatality from the Iranian barrage was the murder of a Palestinian man in the West Bank (known in Israel by its biblical regional name of Judea and Samaria).

President Biden said Wednesday that he would not support an attack by Israel on Iranian nuclear sites in retaliation for Iran’s firing of 181 missiles at Israel amid fears that a lethal regional war is around the corner.

‘We’ll be discussing with the Israelis what they’re going to do, but all seven of us [G7 nations] agree that they have a right to respond, but they should respond proportionally,’ he said.

But when asked whether he would back Israel striking Iranian nuclear sites as it has long threatened, Biden told reporters, ‘The answer is no.’

Fox News Digital’s Sarah Rumpf-Whitten and Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report.

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