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Justin Herbert’s game status is up in the air again this week.

Los Angeles Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh provided an update on Herbert’s ankle injury on Wednesday.

“Justin did had x-rays (they were) negative and an MRI on Monday, and it showed that he’s progressing,” Harbaugh said told reporters.

The Chargers listed Herbert as a limited participated during Wednesday’s practice.

“I threw around a little bit,’ Herbert told reporters. ‘I did some 7-on-7 and some drills like that.’

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Herbert said his ankle is feeling better and the plan is to take things “day-by-day” as the Chargers prepare to host the Kansas City Chiefs.

This is the second straight week Herbert’s gimpy ankle has been a main NFL storyline.

Herbert sustained a high-ankle sprain during the Chargers’ Week 2 win against the Carolina Panthers. The injury occurred in the third quarter when Herbert tried to escape the pocket but was pulled from behind by Panthers linebacker DJ Johnson and hit simultaneously by defensive end Jayden Peevy.

Herbert didn’t practice on Wednesday or Friday the following week as the team prepared to play the Pittsburgh Steelers. He then reaggravated the ankle injury during the third quarter of the Chargers’ 20-10 Week 3 loss to the Steelers.

The Chargers are dealing with injury concerns to several prominent players ahead of their Week 4 battle against the Chiefs.

Left tackle Rashawn Slater (pectoral), rookie right tackle Joe Alt (knee), and outside linebacker Joey Bosa (hip) all sustained injuries in the loss to Pittsburgh.

The string of injuries comes at an inopportune time for Harbaugh and the Chargers.

Harbaugh’s never faced Patrick Mahomes, but the Chiefs star quarterback is a career 30-5 versus AFC West opponents and 8-2 against the Chargers. The back-to-back Super Bowl champions have won five straight games versus Los Angeles. The Chargers haven’t defeated the Chiefs since Sept. 26, 2021.

“He’s an elite player and the best,” Harbaugh said of Mahomes. “It’s amazing what he can do. Nothing but respect.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We’re three weeks into the NFL season, and there’s a clear frontrunner for Most Valuable Player.

It’s not the reigning MVP in Baltimore Ravens star Lamar Jackson (2019, 2023).

It’s not the reigning Super Bowl MVP in Kansas City Chiefs star Patrick Mahomes (2018, 2022).

And it’s not Aaron Rodgers, the New York Jets’ starter who doesn’t seem far from his 2020 and 2021 MVP form.

As you can see, only three players have won the last six NFL Most Valuable Player Awards.

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But one NFL superstar could break the trend with his first MVP, if he continues to ball out like he has through the first three weeks of the NFL season.

Here’s a countdown of our top three players in the 2024 NFL MVP race, and an honorable mention deserving of praise after Week 3:

3. Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes

The defending Super Bowl MVP and the reigning champions are off to a 3-0 start to the point where NFL fans are clamoring: The Chiefs can’t keep getting away with this!

Kansas City has wins against the Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals and Atlanta Falcons, thriving late in close games like they have during their back-to-back Super Bowl title runs.

Mahomes has a new favorite target in receiver Rashee Rice, who has 24 catches – three times as many catches as the next leading pass catcher (Travis Kelce with eight catches, 69 yards). The Chiefs’ running game also appears in good hands behind rookie Carson Steele (17 carries, 72 yards against the Falcons), starting in place of the injured Isiah Pacheco.

Mahomes hasn’t been flawless: He has four interceptions and hasn’t been able to unleash in the passing game with defenses playing him deep. But Mahomes’ five touchdowns passes and timely scoring drives, coupled with Kansas City’s defense, have him in the MVP conversation.

2. Minnesota Vikings QB Sam Darnold

Darnold is the NFL’s leader with eight touchdown passes, after a four-touchdown performance in a lopsided win over the Houston Texans last week.

The No. 3 overall pick in the 2018 NFL draft has finally found a home in Minnesota, where coach Kevin O’Connell’s offense appears to be a perfect fit with the NFL’s top receiver Justin Jefferson and talented veteran running back Aaron Jones to support him.

The vaunted Vikings defense has also made things easy for Darnold, limiting opponents to just 10 points per game, which is second in the NFL behind the Pittsburgh Steelers (8.7).

Darnold’s touchdown mark and back-to-back victories over preseason-Super Bowl contenders like the San Francisco 49ers and Texans boost his early MVP case.

1. Buffalo Bills QB Josh Allen

Josh Allen is coming off the best individual performance of the early season, where he torched the Jacksonville Jaguars with four touchdown passes and five scoring drives in a dominant 47-10 win on Monday Night Football.

Allen and the Bills are off to a 3-0 start, showing no signs of missing star receiver Stefon Diggs in Buffalo. Ten different players had a completion against Jacksonville as Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady has Allen in prime position to feed all of his targets. Running back James Cook has also emerged as a primary weapon for Allen as a rusher and receiver.

Allen leads the NFL with a 92.6 QBR and 133.7 quarterback rating, and he has not turned the ball over since a fumble on the first Bills drive of the season.

After a comeback win at home over the Cardinals to start the season, and blowout wins against the Miami Dolphins and Jaguars, Allen squarely sits ahead of the pack in the early MVP conversation.

Honorable mention: Philadelphia Eagles RB Saquon Barkley

The MVP award is traditionally a quarterback award, but here’s a shoutout to the Eagles new star running back Saquon Barkley, whose addition to Philadelphia has kept the Eagles as NFC East favorites this season.

Barkley scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns to lead Philadelphia to a win against the New Orleans Saints last week.

Barkley has five touchdowns from scrimmage this season – tied with Saints star Alvin Kamara (who scored four in a game) and Rams running back Kyren Williams (who scored three in a game last week).

Barkley may be second to Kamara in total yards this season (417 vs. 404), but he was the clear standout star in their game last week. Barkley finished with 156 total yards total, while Kamara had 127 yards, and couldn’t find the end zone.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

If there’s only one thing to take from what is said during the ‘Mr. McMahon’ documentary, take it from none other than the WWE founder himself.

During an interview in the final episode of the series, Vince McMahon says in the wrestling business, performers start believing in their on-screen character and lose all sense of who they really are.

‘I’m wondering myself now, which is the character and which is me? I guess maybe it’s a blend. I would suggest that one is exaggerated a little bit, but I’m not so sure which one,’ he said.

It’s not hard to tell.

Despite the greatness he achieved in making WWE a globally recognized brand and one of the biggest forms of entertainment, all the controversy surrounding McMahon during his rise to power — from claims of drug and steroid abuse to multiple sexual assault allegations — did not take a backseat in the six-part Netflix docuseries.

Just days before the series premiered, McMahon ripped it, saying it is a ‘misleading’ and ‘deceptive’ depiction of him. After watching it, it’s clear why McMahon didn’t like it: because all of his baggage was fully laid out.

Throughout the series, he says the ‘Mr. McMahon’ persona he portrayed on screen — a manipulative, power-hungry and sexually depraved boss — is far from who he really is. But the similarities between who we saw on screen and what we’ve learned from behind the scenes are hard to differentiate.

There are plenty of moments when McMahon gets praise. The series shows how he got WWE nationalized and won the war it had with WCW, as well as how the ‘Attitude Era’ forever changed the trajectory of wrestling’s popularity. WWE legend Tony Atlas called McMahon ‘the greatest promoter of all time,’ and The Undertaker said he would take a bullet for him. Other stars said he was like a father to them.

Despite how influential he was in helping wrestlers become stars, there was also fear in how he could quickly change your career. Basically do what I want you to do, or face consequences. The great Trish Stratus said it didn’t seem like a coincidence after she denied kissing another woman on screen, she lost the Women’s Championship the next week.

‘There was a bit of a concern amongst performers that if you didn’t do what you were asked, that you would get punished,’ Stratus said. ‘And yeah, it did happen to some on occasion, sometimes.’

McMahon also displayed a lack of empathy and self-awareness about things he allegedly did wrong. He was dismissive of sexual assault allegations brought against him, including by former referee Rita Marie. Atlas said in the early days of the company, “we abused the hell out of women. All of us did.’

There also appeared to be zero regret about how the death of Owen Hart was handled. Despite falling to his death inside the ring in the middle of a show, McMahon reasoned the show continued because if it were him, ‘I would want the show to go on’ and the crowd came to see a show even though Hart’s blood stained the mat. When talking about the Chris Benoit double-murder-suicide, McMahon suggested the wrestler ‘went nuts’ and wrestling had nothing to do with what happened, even though researchers said they found Benoit suffered with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE).

And there was that odd interview segment when McMahon said he has two brains and one is thinking something different than what he is doing at any given moment. When asked what that other brain is thinking about, McMahon said sex.

However that doesn’t come close to when McMahon confirmed arguably one of the most ridiculous WWE pitches of all time. McMahon once was pitched a storyline where his daughter, Stephanie, was pregnant and he was the father of the child. Stephanie McMahon said she instantly shut it down, but the WWE boss couldn’t help but chuckle thinking back on that storyline he wanted to do. If he thought something was going to make money, he didn’t care if it was morally corrupt.

‘This is business, and there’s nothing I wouldn’t do for business’ McMahon said in one episode.

In more than five hours of footage, viewers were probably hoping for McMahon to address the sexual assault and human trafficking allegations from a former WWE employee. After all, McMahon has staunchly defended himself and isn’t afraid to do so in front of a camera.

Instead, he canceled his last interviews with the production team.

Multiple people interviewed said what made McMahon so good in his role was he blurred the lines of fantasy and reality, so fans couldn’t tell if what they were watching was true or not.

When asked if Vince McMahon and Mr. McMahon are the same person, stars participating in the docuseries were split. Some said they were nowhere near identical, while others said they were the same or close. McMahon said himself nobody really knows who is he is, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Since McMahon took over WWE from his father in 1982, he has spent every second showing the entire world exactly who he is.

Vince McMahon is Mr. McMahon. And Mr. McMahon is Vince McMahon. The two can not be separated.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In this exclusive StockCharts TV video, Joe presents an introduction to the Average Directional Index (ADX), sharing how it is calculated and how to use it. He highlights some of the strengths, and weaknesses, of this powerful indicator. He then analyzes Bitcoin, NVDA, and AVGO, and finishes up the show with a number of symbol requests from viewers.

This video was originally published on September 25, 2024. Click this link to watch on StockCharts TV.

Archived videos from Joe are available at this link. Send symbol requests to stocktalk@stockcharts.com; you can also submit a request in the comments section below the video on YouTube. Symbol Requests can be sent in throughout the week prior to the next show.

Tuesday’s news from China pushed stocks, commodities, and crypto prices higher. China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), took steps to revive its economy and increase consumer demand. These steps include plans to cut interest rates, lower reserve requirements for banks to support lending, provide special funds to allow companies to buy stocks, lower interest rates on existing mortgages, and reduce the downpayment for second homes. This is a big move by the PBOC, and there are probably more liquidity-easing measures on the horizon.

But will these moves be enough to reignite China’s economy?

The equity market soared on the news, as did commodities and cryptocurrencies. Chinese equities also saw a drastic rise. However, the excitement fizzled a little on Wednesday.

The daily chart of the iShares China Large-Cap ETF (FXI) shows that price gapped up on Tuesday, but the rally did not follow through on Wednesday.

CHART 1. DAILY CHART OF FXI. After gapping up after the China stimulus news, FXI pulled back slightly. So far, the uptrend is technically still in place. Let’s see what additional stimulus China injects into their economy.Chart source: StockChartsACP.com. For educational purposes.

Will the gap get filled? It could, given this was a news-driven event. The On Balance Volume (OBV) indicator in the bottom panel trended lower on Wednesday, in line with price direction. I would watch the OBV to see if the trend continues downward. That would indicate that investor interest is waning.

Looking at a longer-term view of FXI, you can see that Tuesday’s price action may be significant, in that price crossed above its 21-day exponential moving average (EMA), but it’s not enough to confirm an upward trend.

CHART 2. MONTHLY CHART OF FXI. The 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level could be a potential resistance level. Watch how FXI reacts to this level in the next few weeks.Chart source: StockChartsACP. For educational purposes.

Looking at the Fibonacci retracement levels from the 2021 high to the 2022 low, FXI is at its 23.6% retracement level. This could be a resistance level to watch and see if the ETF breaks above or falls below, retracing to the $25.40 to $26.60 sideways range it was in before gapping up. Remember, more stimulus is expected from China, so perhaps investors are waiting to see what those are and whether it’ll help increase demand and inject more cash into the economy.

Commodities Pause

Gold prices reached a record high on Tuesday but stalled on Wednesday. Silver, oil, and copper followed a similar pattern (see chart below). Some analysts are now saying the gold rally is exhausted, but gold prices have the potential to rise higher. I won’t analyze gold price action since we covered it in an earlier post, which clearly identifies how high or low gold could go.

CHART 3: GOLD, SILVER, COPPER, AND OIL. Commodity prices rose after China’s news of a stimulus package. Oil prices seem to be falling but gold, silver, and copper are holding up.Chart source: StockChartsACP. For educational purposes.

The chart of the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) still looks strong. Out of the four, oil pulled back the most, with its relative strength at 47.10. Copper and silver are still holding on to their uptrend.

Closing Bell

The China stimulus wasn’t the only major news this week. Further escalations in geopolitical tensions in the Middle East occurred despite the United States’ and France’s work on a peace deal. China also tested the launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile into the Pacific Ocean. The Ukraine-Russia conflict has no end in sight.

While there is some froth bubbling, the CBOE Volatility Index ($VIX) is still relatively low. And even though stocks sold off today, they’re still technically bullish. On Friday, we’ll get the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index for August. Let’s see if that shifts anything.

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.

When I think of the resurrected Pac-12, I think of a vendor hawking cheap sunglasses in Mexico.
Hugh Freeze’s delusions reach an epic proportion.
Tennessee’s Josh Heupel finds new way to win against Oklahoma

Ever walked past a vendor’s stall in Mexico and peeked at the sunglasses?

Some of them probably had an “O” near the hinges. They might even have said “Oakley” across the bridge of the frames, but you knew they weren’t Oakleys, because Oakleys don’t sell for 500 pesos.

And, anyway, upon close inspection, these glasses don’t entirely look like Oakleys. They’re knock-offs, and you wouldn’t want to wear them to stare at the sun, but, what the heck, they only cost 500 pesos, and they’ve got an “O” on them, and you can’t afford real Oakleys, but you’d feel kind of cool wearing these cheapos, and, maybe, no one will notice.

Except plenty of us do notice.

People in on the joke know these sunglasses by a nickname: Foakleys, short for Fake Oakleys.

That’s what the new Pac-Whatever is. It’s the Fake Pac-Whatever. I’ll call it the F-Pac-W.

This resurrected league can welcome Utah State into the fold, slap a Pac logo on its chest and hope no one notices the imitation, but anyone who remembers Reggie Bush or Marcus Allen or Bill Walton or Kareem Abdul-Jabbar will spot this conference for the gimmick it is.

Washington State and Oregon State will tell themselves they saved the ‘Conference of Champions’ while remodeling their home. Except they didn’t save a conference. They couldn’t, because the spirit of the Pac-12 died when 10 members announced in either 2022 or ’23 their defections to the Big Ten, Big 12 or ACC.

Wazzu and Oregon State could’ve found home and harmony in the Mountain West. Instead, they rebuffed a few of their potential Mountain West roommates (too good for you, Wyoming!), invited the rest over to their dilapidated place and put a fresh coat of paint on the tattered house.

As the F-Pac-W scrambled for members this week, it all came off as a little pathetic.

Oregon State and Washington State fired off texts to everyone in their contacts list, hoping someone, anyone, would hit them back so they’d have a date to the prom.

When you’re a two-member “conference” desperate to survive, you don’t get to be choosy.

And they scored a handful of thumbs-up responses, while schools like Memphis and South Florida left on read, holding out hope for a better invitation down the road. If the ACC eventually pings Memphis and USF, they’ll be glad they held off. If not, they might harbor a few regrets.

It’s not that this Pacific imitation league will stink.

It’s going to be a nice little conference that will possess some geographical alignment – a rarity, nowadays. The league will pack a punch with the best of the Group of Fives.

The same could have been said of the Mountain West, particularly in hoops.

The MWC qualified six teams for the NCAA men’s tournament last spring. Four of those schools (Boise State, Colorado State, San Diego State and Utah State) are pledged to join Oregon State and Washington State for this Pac reboot.

So, yes, they’ve got a decent thing going. It just already existed under the Mountain West banner.

Now, it’s half the Mountain West and two vagabonds turned poachers, masquerading as something it’s not.

Slap an “O” on it, and you could hawk it for the college athletics equivalent of 500 pesos.

The delusional mind of Hugh Freeze

Unfortunately for Auburn’s second-year coach, no one except Freeze cares about his record in mythical games that unfold in his imagination.

As for Freeze’s real record, he’s 8-9 at Auburn. If you include his final three games as Liberty’s coach, Freeze has won eight times in his last 20 games.

That’s lousy, and as Freeze free falls from prominence, he’s ramped up his delusions. Here’s what Freeze said on his “Tiger Talk” radio show, days Auburn’s 24-14 loss to Arkansas on Saturday.

“I mean no offense whatsoever to Arkansas or to Cal, (which also beat Auburn),” Freeze said. “I love Sam Pittman. I hope he wins the rest of his games. But I’m telling you, the hard truth is, we play them nine more times, we beat them nine times.”

No, the hard truth is, Freeze lost to Arkansas in the game played on the field, rather than in his mind. Auburn’s 14 turnovers pace the nation. Its quarterback play remains an anchor, after Freeze misjudged his talent at the position and refused to invest in a transfer.

He’s only unstoppable in his imagination.

Brains vs. brawn when Texas A&M meets Arkansas

One of the coaches in Saturday’s Arkansas vs. Texas A&M game graduated from Penn. One of them didn’t.

Pittman, the Razorbacks’ coach, won’t make you guess who’s who.

“It’s obvious which one of us didn’t go. That’s me,” Pittman, Arkansas’ affable coach, said with a grin this week.

And Pittman? Well, he took the long road to snagging a bachelor’s degree from Pittsburg State in Kansas, where he played football and became an NAIA All-American.

“Six years, I got my P.E. degree, what the heck,” Pittman said with a smile, adding that Elko would probably triumph in a spelling bee.

Pittman may be only a few losses away from reclaiming hot-seat status, but no one can say he’s not enjoying himself.

Email of the week

Mike writes: Regarding Tennessee’s surprisingly conservative play-calling in the second half against Oklahoma, do you think Josh Heupel might have chosen to take it easy on Oklahoma because he still wants to be head coach there some day?

My response: No, I chalk up Tennessee’s conservative second-half approach to how well the Vols’ defense played and Heupel’s coaching maturation. Once upon a time, Heupel might have been more interested in chasing yards and points than pursuing the smartest avenue to victory.

Now in his fourth season at Tennessee, he’s a more well-rounded coach. He knew the Sooners’ meager offense couldn’t muster enough points to rally unless Tennessee handed it the game on a platter. So, he valued ball control, time of possession and trusted his defense. I don’t think that was born out of sympathy for his alma mater, but rather an appreciation of his defense.

Three and out

1. Georgia’s Carson Beck possesses NFL tools, but I’m waiting for him to have that heroic performance that tells me this guy will deliver a national championship. Beck embodies more talents than predecessor Stetson Bennett IV, but Bennett put on his hero’s cape in big games. He rose to the occasion in Georgia’s wins against LSU, Ohio State and TCU two seasons ago while it repeated as national champs. Beck rarely has an off night. He’s steady-eddy, but winning a national championship can call on a quarterback to delivery a few transcendent performances.

When No. 1 Georgia plays at No. 4 Alabama on Saturday, Beck will have a platform to show he can be a national champion quarterback before becoming a first-round NFL draft pick.

2. Oklahoma coach Brent Venables corrected the misconceived notion that the Sooners ran off former star quarterback Dillon Gabriel to make room atop the depth chart for Jackson Arnold.

Arnold’s been a bust, while Gabriel thrives at Oregon. Venables incorrectly assumed Gabriel would head to the NFL after last season. Gabriel, Venables said, surprised him last winter when he informed his coach that he’d return for a sixth season but wanted to play closer to home.

Gabriel is from Hawaii. How many flights home could he possibly be taking this fall? A flight to Hawaii – from either Oklahoma or Oregon – is a daylong affair. It’s not like transferred to Hometown U. and skips down the street for a home-cooked Sunday meal.

“Closer to home” sounds like code for, Gabriel viewed Oregon as a better team. He’s not wrong there.

3. James Franklin called on Penn State fans to supply “White-Out energy’ for Saturday’s game against Illinois. Consider Illini coach Bret Bielema unshaken by wardrobe arrangements.

“They’re going to be dressed, right?’ Bielema said of the fans. ‘It’s probably going to be one (color) or the other. I know they’re calling for a White Out energy, whatever the hell that means.’

Bielema never lacked bravado. Now, he’s got an undefeated team to pair with that Big Bielema Energy.

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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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The ball Shohei Ohtani hit to become the first MLB player to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases in a single season is going up for auction.

Collectibles marketplace Goldin announced Wednesday it has consigned the coveted ball and bidding for it will begin on Friday.

The ball was hit by Ohtani last Thursday against the Miami Marlins. The historic home run to get to 50 dingers created a frenzy inside loanDepot Park, with several people in the outfield area rushing to get the ball. It came in one of Ohtani’s best games of his career as he went 6-for-6 with three home runs, two stolen bases and 10 RBI in a 20-4 win.

Goldin said the person that recovered the ball was escorted by ballpark security and had it authenticated. The fan, who can be seen in video but remains anonymous, was offered $300,000, according to Fox Sports 640’s Andy Slater, but declined the offer. Within a week, the ball made its way to Goldin.

‘Ohtani is truly one-of-a-kind, and the 50-50 record may be his crowning achievement. We’re honored to bring this iconic item to collectors. This is a piece of baseball history that fans and historians around the world will remember for decades to come,’ Ken Goldin, founder and CEO of Goldin, said in a statement.

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How much will the Shohei Ohtani 50/50 home run cost?

Bidding on the ball on Goldin’s website starts at $500,000 when it opens on Sept. 29 at 12 p.m. ET. However, someone can ‘purchase this baseball privately’ for $4.5 million. The ball can be purchased outright starting when the bidding opens until Oct. 9. However, if the bidding reached $3 million before Oct. 9, it will no longer be available to be purchased outright.

Extended bidding will begin at 10 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Oct. 16.

It’s anyone’s guess to how much the ball will be sold for, but it has the potential to be the most expensive baseball ever sold. The current record is $3.05 million for Mark McGwire’s 70th home run ball in 1999, which was bought by comic book creator and artist Todd McFarlane. The second most expensive came from a ball that was hit recently. Aaron Judge’s 62nd home run in 2022 that broke the American League-record was sold for $1.5 million.

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OAKLAND — Tommy John, tired of the constant elbow discomfort and cortisone shots, no longer able to throw a pitch without searing pain, pleaded with the Los Angeles Dodgers’ team doctor to try anything humanly possible to keep his baseball career alive.

Dr. Frank Jobe, who worked with children with polio, using tendon transfers to help them, informed John that he could experiment and see if it could work on his elbow. It would be only a 100-1 shot that it would permit him to continue pitching.

John didn’t hesitate and told him to try whatever he needed. Jobe led him into the operating room, removed a tendon from John’s wrist, drilled four holes in the ulna and humerus bones of his left elbow, and grafted the tendons together, holding them in place with anchors.

The date was Sept. 25, 1974.

Fifty years later, it is one of the most innovative and influential surgeries in the history of sports medicine.

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It is now referred to simply as “Tommy John surgery.’

“It’s amazing how many careers that surgery has saved,’ John, 81, tells USA TODAY Sports from his Florida home. “It was just an experimental surgery. I would have tried many things to come back and pitch. I told Dr. Jobe, do whatever you can to fix it. If it works, it works. If it doesn’t, hey, we gave it our best.

“Thank God it worked. It was such a blessing. The only thing I hate is that 50 years later, it’s needed more than ever, and that’s sad. You would think with modern training and techniques, pitchers wouldn’t need that surgery as much.’

John, the first athlete to undergo surgery replacing his ulnar collateral ligament, went on to pitch for another 14 years while winning 164 more games. It was four years before the surgery was performed again, on San Diego Padres pitcher Brent Strom, now the Arizona Diamondbacks’ pitching coach. He never made it back to the big leagues.

Today, studies reveal that 36% of all active Major League pitchers have undergone Tommy John surgery, and the rate continues to increase every year. There were more in MLB last year than the entire 1990s.

“We’ve created a problem with such a great surgical procedure,’ Dr. James Andrews, who retired in January, tells USA TODAY Sports. “When you have success, you’ve got problems that come with it, and now we have to solve those problems.

“This was developed for professional pitchers, but the injury rate for the ligament injury in youth sports is 10 times greater than it was in 2000. They are hurting their arm ligaments before they even get out of high school and coming in and getting surgery. That’s just terrible. I don’t know any other words to say it, but it’s troubling.’

The sickening aspect, Andrews says, is that parents are eagerly bringing their kids to undergo elbow surgery, believing it will make their ligaments stronger and turn them into major league pitchers.

“These parents are smiling when they bring their kids in and are told they need surgery,’ Andrews says. “Some of them don’t even need surgery, but they’re asking to have an operation. Some of these kids are 12 years old and don’t have a mature growth plate.

“That’s not right. It’s just ridiculous. It’s an amazing operation for a lot of people, but it’s only an 85-to-90% success rate. I tell them that, but they don’t care. It’s just a shame.’

The biggest problem, renowned surgeons like Dr. Neal ElAttrache, Dr. Keith Meister, Dr. Tim Kremchek and Andrews say, is baseball’s love affair with velocity. High school kids are throwing every pitch as hard as they can to get noticed by the pros and collegiate baseball programs. Professional pitchers are throwing as hard as they can to get paid as much as possible.

And if they break down, they’ll just undergo surgery and take a year off. If they to go under the knife again a few years later, so be it.

“These guys come up, and are gassing it as hard as they can at max effort,’ says Kremchek, the Cincinnati Reds’ medical director and chief orthopedic surgeon for 26 years, who has performed more than 3,000 surgeries. “The body can only take so much. These guys keep having surgeries, but eventually you run out of trinkets to fix them.

“The love affair with velocity has changed the game, no question. The days of learning to pitch is over. It’s spin rate, and how hard you can throw. It’s ruined the game.’

According to Meister, a Perfect Game showcase in 2012 had three pitchers who threw 94 mph or higher. It increased to 17 kids a year later.

And in 2023, it spiked to 54 kids who were at 95 mph or higher.

“There’s such a huge focus on velocity and spin rate,’ Meister says, “that it completely changed the landscape and the challenges we have to face. When you have all of these high velocities and spin rate, the ligament is not going to last. It’s not sustainable. It’s not sustainable at all.

“The pendulum needs to change back. Things aren’t changing for the better, things are changing for the worse. It’s just so frustrating. I’ve come up with a couple of things baseball can do to help mitigate it, but it’s kind of fallen on deaf ears.’

Meister, who’s on MLB’s committee to examine the epidemic, suggested that since baseball can’t limit pitchers’ velocity, how about making rule changes to reduce the stress? He recommended a rule change that if a player fouls off a pitch with two strikes, he’s automatically out. It was quickly dismissed since MLB is trying to increase offense, not stifle it. He suggested changing a walk from four balls to three, drastically reducing the amount of pitches thrown in a season.

“Why can’t we do something dramatic?’ says Meister, who performed 240 Tommy John surgeries last year and projects to do 300 this year. “The other leagues make changes and adapt. You have the three-point line now in basketball. You have the two-point conversion in football. Why can’t baseball do something like that?

“Look, nothing’s going to change at the lowest levels if you don’t change at the high levels. Something needs to be done.’

ElAttrache completely agrees, believing that MLB needs rule changes to protect pitchers, enabling them to pitch deeper in games. When John returned and won 20 games for the first time in 1977, finishing second in the Cy Young race, there were 907 complete games, 11 by John.

This season, there have been 27 complete games and no pitcher has more than two.

“The thing I’ve talked to the commissioner’s office about is decreasing the amount of exposure,’ ElAttrache says. “If you look at the number of stressful innings and stressful pitches these guys are throwing, I think possibly putting in a seven- or eight-pitch maximum to hitters. So, either you’ve walked, struck out or got a hit by the eighth pitch. If not, you’re automatically out.’

Three-time Cy Young award winner Max Scherzer of the Texas Rangers believes that MLB should rescind the complete ban of using sticky foreign substances. He insists the rule change is responsible for the increase in UCL surgeries, saying it causes pitchers to grip the ball harder to increase their spin rate and velocity.

The surgeons agree.

“Now that the tacky substances are eliminated, you’ve got guys that grip the ball with a death grip on every pitch to get the kind of spin they need,’ ElAttrache says. ‘They have to grip the ball in a way that’s very, very hard on the flexor pronator tendons of the elbow.

“Then, at the same time, you put in a pitch clock, so you’ve eliminated the ability to recover in between pitches. You get a guy that is fatigued, and research shows the greatest thing that correlates with injury is fatigue.’

Says Meister: “They’re forcing pitchers to squeeze the baseball that much more, and it puts more pressure on the elbow. I don’t know why they can’t have pitchers using pine tar; hitters use it. Put it on the mound. I’m not saying your hand can be gooped with all of that crap, but there’s got to be a reasonable compromise here if they really want to help prevent these injuries.’

MLB better find some answers quickly, the doctors say, or they’ll soon be running out of pitchers.

“I’d love to ban radar guns at the high school level,’ Kremchek says, “to force pitchers to learn the art of pitching instead of seeing how hard they can throw it. When you look back, that’s why the surgery on Tommy John was successful. John threw in the mid-80s. If he was throwing 95 mph or more, he probably would have just blown out, and we never would have heard of Tommy John surgery.’

John, who’s scheduled to undergo surgery in October for bladder cancer, wonders, too, what would have happened if the surgery wasn’t successful. There were some complications. It wasn’t as if he returned in 12 to 14 months like today’s pitchers and was lighting up the radar gun like nothing happened. He was 13-3 with a 2.59 ERA when he underwent surgery, and it took him 2 ½ years before he was dominant once again.

“If it didn’t work the first time, knowing Dr. Jobe like I did, he would have tried it again,’ ElAttrache says. “Frank was convinced that this was the main thing that was causing these problems in pitchers’ elbows, and was convinced that he had a good way of treating it. He took care of children with polio, and those tendon transfers were a very, very important part of what he did. He saw how tendons could be transplanted and used in different ways, so he was convinced that was a good way to reconstruct that ligament.’

Jobe, who died in 2014 and recognized as one of the most gifted surgeons who graced an operating room, was so confident in his abilities that when he was honored by the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2013, he apologized at dinner to Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax. Koufax, who went 27-9 with a 1.73 ERA in 1966, leading the league with 27 complete games and 323 innings, abruptly retired after 12 seasons because of the constant elbow pain.

He was 30 years old.

“Frank apologized to Sandy, in front of all of us, for not having conceived that operation a few years earlier,’ ElAttrache says, “because he said it would have saved Sandy’s career.’

But he was on right on time to save John’s career, and after 288 victories, there’s one common question John is always asked about the surgery.

Why was it named after him and not Dr. Jobe himself?

“I asked Frank about that,’ John says. “He was such a humble guy, but he told me that he was tired of saying ‘ulnar collateral ligament replacement surgery with the palmaris longus tendon.’ It was easier for him to say, ‘Oh, the surgery I performed on Tommy John.’

“It quickly just became, ‘Tommy John surgery.”

Now, 50 years later, it has become a fabric of the game, with pitchers coming in for second and even third surgeries – with an improved internal brace procedure that can shorten the recovery time to about one year instead of 14-18 months.

“They’ve made great strides with the internal brace,’ Andrews says from his Birmingham, Alabama, home, “and pretty soon they’ll all have the internal brace. But there have been so many re-dos. They have surgery, throw 100 mph again, come back and have a re-do. They’re not afraid to blow their elbows out. What they don’t realize is that the re-do surgery has only about 40% success rate.’

Andrews pauses momentarily, and says, “We’ve spent all of this time putting Humpty Dumpty back together again, but we’re remiss in not focusing enough on prevention. Let’s not worry about how many operations we’ve done, but how many we can prevent.

“We created this mess.

“It’s time to fix it.’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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UNLV starting quarterback Matthew Sluka announced on social media Tuesday night that he stepping away from the team in order to retain his final season of eligibility after a dispute with the school over payments for his name, image and likeness.

The Rebels are ranked No. 23 in the US LBM Coaches Poll after Sluka led them to victories in each of their first three games this season, including road defeats of Kansas and Houston. He has thrown for 318 yards and six touchdowns, while also rushing for 253 yards and one score.

The move to redshirt before playing in more than four games allows the senior, who spent the first four seasons of his college career at Holy Cross, to enter the transfer portal and find another school for next year.

‘I committed to UNLV based on certain representations that were made to me, which were not upheld after I enrolled,’ Sluka said in a post on X. ‘Despite discussions, it became clear that these commitments would not be fulfilled in the future. I wish my teammates the best of luck this season and hope for the continued success of the program.’

Sluka’s agent, Marcus Cromartie of Equity Sports, told The Associated Press that Sluka was promised $100,000 by a UNLV assistant before transfering to the school and that payment for the use of Sluka’s name, image and likeness was never paid.

UNLV offered its own interpretation of events in a statement Wednesday.

‘Football player Matthew Sluka’s representative made financial demands upon the University and its NIL collective in order to continue playing,’ the statement said. ‘UNLV athletics interpreted these demands as a violation of the NCAA pay-for-play rules, as well as Nevada state law. UNLV does not engage in such activity, nor does it respond to implied threats. UNLV has honored all previously agreed-upon scholarships for Matthew Sluka.’

Sluka was a record-setting dual-threat quarterback during his career at Holy Cross, ranking first in Championship Subdivision career passing efficiency, second in career rushing touchdowns and fifth in career passing touchdowns.

The Rebels will turn to either Hajj-Malik Williams or Cameron Friel at quarterback when they play their Mountain West Conference opener against Fresno State on Saturday.

(This story was updated to include more information.)

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U.S. wrestler Alan Vera died Monday night after suffering sudden cardiac arrest during a soccer game earlier this year, according to a statement from USA Wrestling. He was 33.

A fixture on the Greco-Roman national team who narrowly missed out on qualifying for the 2024 Paris Olympics, Vera went into cardiac arrest while playing soccer with friends in Jersey City, New Jersey on July 29, according to an Instagram post from his club soccer team, New Jersey Wolves FC. He was hospitalized for several weeks before ‘an unexpected infection took hold over the weekend,’ according to a GoFundMe page created on his family’s behalf.

Vera is survived by his wife, two-time Olympic wrestler Elena Pirozhkova, and their infant daughter Alina, who was born earlier this summer.

‘Our hearts have been broken,’ USA Wrestling executive director Rich Bender said in a statement. ‘Our sincere thoughts and prayers go out to Elena, Alina and all of Alan’s family, as well as those who have known Alan. The wrestling community mourns the loss of a great champion, whose incredible life impacted so many within USA Wrestling and around the world.’

Vera was born in Cuba and first competed under its flag, winning four Cuban national championships early in his career as well as a Pan American title in 2016. Later that same year, he immigrated to the United States, where he pursued U.S. citizenship and soon became eligible to represent Team USA.

Vera went on to compete for the U.S. at the world championships in both 2021 and 2022 and spend four years on the U.S. national team in Greco-Roman wrestling, a discipline in which holds below the waist are not allowed. He also secured a Paris Olympics quota spot for Team USA at 97 kilograms by virtue of his performance at an Olympic qualifying event in Mexico, though he did not ultimately win the right to fill that spot, finishing second to Josef Rau at the Olympic trials earlier this year.

USA Wrestling said Tuesday that it had not received information for memorial services for Vera. The GoFundMe account intended to help support his family, and provide childcare for his recently-born daughter, had raised nearly $43,000 as of Wednesday afternoon.

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

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