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A U.S. judge temporarily blocked media companies Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox from launching their sports streaming service, Venu, according to court filings.

The temporary injunction, granted in response to a lawsuit brought by Fubo TV, comes just weeks ahead of the start of the NFL season. The companies had planned to launch their service by that date.

Fubo, an internet TV bundle akin to the traditional pay TV package, alleged in its lawsuit that Venu was anticompetitive and would upend its business. Fubo’s stock gained 16% Friday on the news of the injunction.

“Today’s ruling is a victory not only for Fubo but also for consumers. This decision will help ensure that consumers have access to a more competitive marketplace with multiple sports streaming options,” said Fubo CEO David Gandler in a press release after the court decision.

Warner Bros. Discovery, Fox and Disney’s ESPN announced the formation of the joint venture streaming service in February. Soon after Fubo filed an antitrust lawsuit against the venture.

On Friday, Fubo said it intends to move forward with its antitrust lawsuit against the companies for their anticompetitive practices. In recent months, lawmakers, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., and Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Tex., sent a letter pushing to scrutinize Venu.

“We respectfully disagree with the court’s ruling and are appealing it,” Warner Bros. Discovery, Fox and Disney’s ESPN said in a joint statement on Friday.

“We believe that Fubo’s arguments are wrong on the facts and the law, and that Fubo has failed to prove it is legally entitled to a preliminary injunction. Venu Sports is a pro-competitive option that aims to enhance consumer choice by reaching a segment of viewers who currently are not served by existing subscription options.”

Earlier this month, Venu announced pricing of $42.99 per month.

The service would offer the complete suite of live sports rights owned by the parent companies, which includes the NBA, NHL, MLB, college football and basketball, among others. Venu subscribers would also have access to 14 traditional TV sports networks of its parent companies, including ESPN, ABC, Fox, TNT and TBS, as well as the streaming service ESPN+.

The expensive price point is common when it comes to streaming live sports so it doesn’t shake up any carriage agreements with traditional pay TV distributors.

In court documents, U.S. Judge Margaret Garrett noted that the three companies control about 54% of all U.S. sports rights, and at least 60% of all nationally broadcast U.S. sports rights.

“There is significant evidence in the record that the true figures may be even larger,” Garrett said in court papers.

“This means that alone, Disney, Fox, and [Warner Bros. Discovery] are each significant players in live sports licensing, who otherwise compete against each other both to secure sports telecast rights and to attract viewers to their live sports programming. But together, they are dominant,” Garrett said her decision.

Outside of these companies, Paramount Global’s CBS and Comcast’s NBC are the other largest holders of U.S. sports rights. Streaming services, such as Amazon’s Prime Video, have also begun offering live sports exclusively.

The marketing around Venu so far had been that it would target sports fans outside of the traditional pay TV bundle.

But Fubo’s lawsuit alleged that the sports streaming service violates antitrust law, and is the latest example of anticompetitive behavior from the three media companies.

A multi-day hearing took place in the last week, in which representatives for Fubo, as well as satellite TV bundle providers DirecTV and EchoStar’s Dish — which also offer competing internet TV bundles and supported Fubo in the suit — argued the streaming bundle would be detrimental to their businesses.

During the hearing, an attorney for Warner Bros. Discovery told the judge an injunction would “terminate” Venu, Front Office Sports reported.

“This ruling is a major victory for consumers and competition in the video marketplace,” said Jeff Blum, EVP of government and external affairs at EchoStar, said in a statement.

“We are pleased with the court decision and believe that it appropriately recognizes the potential harms of allowing major programmers to license their content to an affiliated distributor on more favorable terms than they license their content to third parties,” DirecTV said in a statement Friday.

Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.

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Most people who are allergic to something, whether it is food, an animal or anything else, rectify the problem so it doesn’t affect their daily lives.

But what happens when you are allergic to one of the things that helps you perform at your place of employment?

New York Yankees left fielder Alex Verdugo found out recently that he is allergic to … his batting gloves.

He told NJ Advance Media about the issues with his hands, saying they blister and scab. Verdugo said he has dealt with the problem since the 2021 season.

The Yankees sent him to an allergist to determine the issue, and he was shocked to find that the answers were in his batting gloves.

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

Verdugo said the doctors found that the allergic reactions were caused by two chemicals, chromate and cobalt, in his Franklin batting gloves.

“Chromate is used in curing the leather,” Verdugo said. “And cobalt is found in the color dyes.”

Franklin’s senior director of baseball operations, John Ballas, said his company would fix the issue.

“It’s something that’s never come up before, but I’m hoping that we have an answer soon,” Ballas said. “It’s good that Alex finally figured out what he’s allergic to because this has been going on for a while. The next step is, I have my people looking into exactly what goes into the leather. Once we get the final determination, I’ll figure out how we can make something for Alex that won’t give him an allergic reaction.”

Verdugo, who is batting .235 with 10 home runs and 53 RBI this season, is also looking into taking Dupixent shots.

“I’ve had this for three years,” he said. “That’s long enough.”

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LIV Golf marked its 100th round Friday since the controversial league stunned the industry 26 months ago.

The idea, hatched by Greg Norman, took off once Saudi Arabia, through its Public Investment Fund, agreed to throw billions of dollars at the project.

LIV touted this venture as one that would grow golf by taking the league’s unique, untraditional format globally. And while that can be questioned, what cannot be disputed is LIV has gotten the attention of the PGA Tour, and directly affected its finances and economics, and the money being directed toward golfers.

‘We’ve changed the face of golf,’ Bubba Watson said Wednesday, ahead of this weekend’s LIV event at Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. ‘So to be on that side of history is pretty special.’

Watson then compared this to when Jack Nicklaus was instrumental in the first big split in professional golf that led to the forming of the PGA Tour in 1968. Nicklaus, though, strongly disagrees that the two are even related.

Scheffler can thank LIV for record earnings

Either way, Watson is spot-on when he says, ‘Scottie Scheffler has made a lot of money this year because of the changes that we’ve started putting in place.’

LIV’s impact on the PGA Tour has been significant. Every move the tour has made in the past two years to infuse money into the game, including the creation of Signature Events, more events with $20-$25 million purses, and pouring money into the Player Impact Program, has been a reaction to LIV and its endless stream of Saudi money.

One way to reduce the number of players jumping to LIV is to compete financially. The tour did that by pumping millions into its purses and billions into the game with a $3 billion deal with Strategic Sports Group that includes an initial investment of $1.5 billion into the launch of a commercial venture, PGA Tour Enterprises.

Scheffler has made $28.1 million this year in prize money with two $20 million purses, St. Jude and BMW championships, remaining ahead of the Tour Championship that will distribute $100 million, $25 million to the winner.

By the end of the season, Scheffler could make five to seven times what the tour’s top earner made in 2020-21, the year before LIV debuted. That does not include his share of the $50 million that will be distributed through the Player Impact Program, which rewards players for brand exposure.

In 2021, Jon Rahm topped the PGA Tour money list with $7.7 million. Rahm is LIV’s most recent blockbuster signing, luring the Spaniard with a reported $350 million deal that could surpass $550 million after bonuses.

Joaquin Niemann LIV’s money leader in 2024

Joaquin Niemann is LIV’s prize money leader in 2024 with $14.2 million through 12 of the 13 individual events. LIV concludes its season with the team championship on Sept. 20-22 at Maridoe, north of Dallas.

The prize money, though, is not the biggest lure for the handful of marquee golfers who made the jump to LIV. What got their attention was the massive contracts, especially those reportedly for at least $100 million that went to Rahm, Phil Mickelson, Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson and Cameron Smith.

‘Things need to evolve. Things need to change,’ LIV’s Patrick Reed said Wednesday. ‘I feel like that’s what LIV is. They’ve stepped into a world that was all about tradition only and changed the face of golf for the better. And I feel like with LIV, we’re now allowed to touch a lot broader and better way of golf. Golf is boring, slow, long, and we’ve now brought in the fast and more entertaining part of life.’

While LIV certainly has impacted the sport where it matters most for the players, in their bank accounts, other areas have not been as consequential.

LIV’s format, which includes 13 four-man teams playing 54 holes with no cut, has not taken off as hoped. While LIV golfers praise the team aspect, which does add a piece of additional drama and ‘family’ atmosphere, the league continues to struggle to attract viewers and has been hurt by the OWGR board denying LIV’s application to receive ranking points.

Despite that, money talks, and nobody can dismiss how much more of an impact LIV could have on the sport regardless of whether a deal is reached with the PGA Tour. Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said this week that the two sides will continue to operate separately next year, casting doubt that a deal is anywhere close.

‘When people start to see the true value that we’re bringing, that intrinsic value is only going to exponentiate over the course of time, which is what I’m excited for,’ DeChambeau said. ‘I’m waiting for that kind of domino effect, for it to start falling in that cool direction that we see here on our side at LIV, especially with the team aspect.’

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The 2024 Little League World Series continues on Saturday with four elimination games taking center stage.

Canada, after an 8-0 loss to Chinese Taipei in the opening round, bounced back strong to stay in the LLWS. Canada face Puerto Rico and dominated 12-5 to kick off the Saturday slate of games.

New York then won a thrilling 6-3 game to eliminate South Dakota. In the penultimate game of the day, Aruba jumped out to an early lead and held on for an 8-3 win over Czechia. The final game of the day was a shutout win for Pennsylvania 5-0 over New Hampshire.

Follow live for all of the Little League World Series action on Saturday:

Little League World Series: Aug. 17 schedule

All four games on Friday will be broadcast on ESPN. All times Eastern.

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

LLWS: Elimination Games

Canada vs. Puerto Rico, 1 p.m. | Volunteer Stadium
South Dakota vs. New York, 3 p.m. | Lamade Stadium
Czechia vs. Aruba, 5 p.m. | Volunteer Stadium
Pennsylvania vs. New Hampshire, 7 p.m. | Lamade Stadium

Follow Friday’s LLWS games with an ESPN+ subscription

Pennsylvania wins 5-0

New Hampshire couldn’t mount a late comeback and Pennsylvania held on for the shutout victory.

Last chance for New Hampshire

Pennsylvania leads 5-0 after the top of the sixth inning. It’s now down to New Hampshire to close the gap and stay in the tournament

Pennsylvania holds New Hampshire scoreless

After five innings, Pennsylvania leads 5-0. They take to the plate first for the final frame.

Pennsylvania building a lead

Another three runs makes it 5-0 heading to the bottom of the fourth inning.

Pennsylvania up 2-0

Two early runs gave the Mid-Atlantic champions the lead in the fourth inning.

Game start: Pennsylvania vs. New Hampshire

The final game of the day features the champions from the Mid-Atlantic and New England regions.

Aruba eliminates Czechia

Czechia’s comeback fell short and their Little League World Series run is over with Aruba’s 8-3 win.

Czechia finally gets on the board

Three runs in the top of the fourth inning cuts Aruba’s lead to 8-3 midway through the fourth inning.

Aruba pouring it on in the third inning

Aruba’s pushed their lead to 8-0 in the bottom of the third.

Aruba extends the lead

Another run in the second inning puts Aruba up 3-0.

Aruba up 2-0 early

Aruba took little time getting on the board with two runs in the first inning.

Game start: Czechia vs. Aruba

The winner of this matchup takes on Australia and the loser will be eliminated from the tournament.

New York eliminates South Dakota

After an exhilarating sixth inning, New York defeats South Dakota 6-3, advancing in the Little League World Series tournament.

New York extends the lead in the sixth

New York is in a dominant position, adding two more runs in the sixth inning to extend their lead over South Dakota to 6-2.

South Dakota scores in the fifth

South Dakota narrows the score with scoring one run in the fifth. New York leads 5-2 are are up to bat in the bottom of the fifth inning.

New York is on fire in the fourth

After the video review, it was determined that the ball popped out of the catcher’s glove to begin the momentum for New York. They have come to life and scored three runs in the bottom of the fourth. New York leads South Dakota 4-1.

South Dakota gets on the board first

It was South Dakota that capitalized on an opportunity to score first. South Dakota leads New York 2-1 in the fourth inning.

Scoreless between South Dakota, New York

It’s still scoreless in the bottom of the second inning as South Dakota faces New York in a do-or-die game to keep their LLWS hopes alive.

Canada dominates Puerto Rico 12-5

After an attempt to battle back from Puerto Rico, it was ultimately Canada that advanced in the Little League World Series by defeating Puerto Rico 12-4.

Puerto Rico dismisses three batters in a row

Puerto Rico is doing everything they can to stay competitive in the game and dismiss three Canadian batters in a row. Canada leads 12-4 in the bottom of the fifth inning.

Puerto Rico continues to battle and scores in the fourth

Puerto Rico showed their mettle by scoring two early runs in the fourth inning to narrow the lead to 12-5 for Canada.

Canada dismisses three batters in a row

Canada continues to take control of the game and dismisses three consecutive batters in the top of the fourth inning. Canada is up to bat and currently leads Puerto Rico 12-3.

Puerto Rico struggles in the second inning

Puerto Rico failed to respond to Canada’s strong performance in the second inning, coming up short and failing to score any runs. Canada leads 12-3 heading into the third inning.

Canada delivers a 12-run second inning

Canada’s lower batting order wasted no time scoring 12 runs against Puerto Rico. Canada now has the lead 12-3 against Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico makes it 3-0

Puerto Rico adds to their momentum by scoring three runs in the first inning. They lead Canada 3-0 as Canada comes up to bat at the top of the second inning.

Puerto Rico takes the lead

Puerto Rico scores their first run early in the bottom of the first inning. Puerto Rico leads Canada 1-0.

Puerto Rico starts off strong on the plate

Puerto Rico holds Canada scoreless in the top of the first inning, setting the tone right from the start. Puerto Rico is up to bat in the bottom of the first with a 0-0 score.

2024 Little League World Series: Time, TV, streaming and how to watch

All 39 games of the Little League World Series will be broadcast on ESPN, ESPN2, or ABC, with streaming options including ESPN+, the ESPN app and Fubo, which offers a free trial. Coverage begins at 1 p.m. ET.

Stream the LLWS with a Fubo subscription (free trial)

When is the LLWS championship game?

The LLWS championship game is slated for Sunday, Aug. 25, at 3 p.m. ET. The third-place consolation game will take place the same day at 10 a.m. ET.

The international and U.S. championship games — which serve as the semifinals to Sunday’s championship game — will take place on Saturday, Aug. 24 at 12:30 and 3:30 p.m. ET, respectively.

How does the Little League World Series work?

The Little League World Series is split into two brackets: the United States bracket and the international bracket. Each bracket will play out their own individual tournaments, with the winner from each bracket facing each other in the championship.

The U.S. and international brackets are double-elimination brackets, meaning a team must lose twice before it is eliminated from the tournament.

The 2024 U.S. Regional Champions

Great Lakes – Hinsdale Little League – Hinsdale, Illinois
Metro – South Shore Little League – Staten Island, New York
Mid-Atlantic – Council Rock Newtown Little League – Newtown, Pennsylvania
Midwest – Sioux Falls Little League – Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Mountain – Paseo Verde Little League – Henderson, Nevada
New England – Salem Little League – Salem, New Hampshire
Northwest – South Hill Little League – Puyallup, Washington
Southeast – Lake Mary Little League – Lake Mary, Florida
Southwest – Boerne Little League – Boerne, Texas
West – Central East Maui Little League – Wailuku, Hawaii

The 2024 International Regional Champions

Asia-Pacific – Kuei-Shan Little League – Taoyuan City, Chinese Taipei
Australia – Hills Little League – Sydney, New South Wales
Canada – Whalley Little League – Surrey, British Columbia
Caribbean – Aruba Center Little League – Santa Cruz, Aruba
Cuba – Santa Clara Little League – Villa Clara, Cuba
Europe-Africa – South Czech Republic Little League – Brno, Czech Republic
Japan – Johoku Little League – Tokyo, Japan
Latin America – Cardenales Little League – Barquisimeto, Venezuela
Mexico – Matamoros Little League – Tamaulipas, Mexico
Puerto Rico – Radames Lopez Little League – Guayama, Puerto Rico

LLWS bracket and schedule

Here is the full 2024 LLWS bracket, courtesy of the Little League World Series:

Past Little League World Series results

Teams from the United States have dominated the Little League World Series as of late, having won each of the last five dating back to 2017. The last international team to win the tournament was Japan, who beat Lufkin, Texas 12-2 in just five innings in the 2017 final.

List of past winners:

Results date back to 2010 LLWS.

2023: El Segundo, Calif.
2022: Honolulu
2021: Taylor, Mich.
2020: Canceled due to COVID
2019: River Ridge, La.
2018: Honolulu
2017: Tokyo
2016: Maine-Endwell, N.Y.
2015: Tokyo
2014: Seoul, South Korea
2013: Tokyo
2012: Tokyo
2011: Huntington Beach, Calif.
2010: Tokyo

When is the 2024 MLB Little League Classic? TV, time and how to watch

The seventh annual MLB Little League Classic will take place on Monday, Aug. 18 at 9 a.m. ET with the New York Yankees taking on the Detroit Tigers in Williamsport. The game will air on ESPN.

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It’s the Democrats’ race to lose. 

That’s the view of liberal activist and filmmaker Michael Moore who has warned Democrats not to fumble their chances of beating former President Trump in November’s presidential election now that Vice President Kamala Harris heads the ticket.

The outspoken and influential Moore told the Guardian that the party is riding on a wave of optimism following President Biden’s decision to bow out of the race after succumbing to unwavering pressure from powerful left-wing voices, including Moore.

‘This isn’t just a sugar-high or what [recovering] heroin addicts call a pink cloud,’ Moore told the U.K. publication. ‘It was so depressing for so many weeks and then it was instantly not depressing. I am hopeful now but it’s ours to blow – and we have a history of blowing it.’

Moore has been here before. He warned Democrats of Trump beating Hillary Clinton in his 2016 movie ‘in Trumpland’ where he said Trump’s message appealed to disenfranchised voters in Michigan and other battleground states. 

In 2020, he took to X and said that enthusiasm for Trump was ‘off the charts’ and pleaded with Democrats to come together to defeat the incumbent. 

Moore says he’s happy Harris chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate and that he’s confident Harris can inflict serious damage on Trump when they debate next month.

‘Once anybody gets under that thin skin anything can happen,’ Moore says. ‘On live TV? Trump could explode, start talking like a 12-year-old, though no offense to 12-year-olds, or get up and leave.’

‘I understand why people are nervous it might be a sugar high but Harris and Walz are people of substance. They’re being slow and cautious enough to get it together. It’s just been a couple of weeks. They are going to have to tell us what they’re going to do and hopefully come up with the right thing. And there will be mistakes.’

Moore hailed Harris’ decision not to attend Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s address to congress last month, signaling a change of direction while urging her to cater to the party’s anti-Israel base.

‘Young people hate war and they’re totally against Biden and his support of the war.’ 

He says Harris needs to tap into ‘affordable housing, student debt, peace and the dying planet.’

Moore says the way to beat Trump is to continue doing ‘weird and cringe until the debate and then nail him.’ 

‘But nail him with irony, satire and a simple way to point out the beyond weird absolute idiocy and insanity of what these two men are talking about. Reach them on a commonsense level so it doesn’t matter if you’re Democrat or Republican.’

Democrats have been labeling the Trump-Vance ticket as ‘weird’ as part of a new line of criticism, while the Harris-Walz campaign have been criticized for their cringeworthy and scripted online videos. 

Last month, Moore joined many on the Left in calling for Biden to drop out of the race and allow Vice President Kamala Harris to take his place.

‘May I ask you, Mr. President, for one more brave and bold action?’ Moore wrote in a Substack article days before Biden withdrew. Weeks earlier, he accused the Democratic Party of committing ‘elder abuse’ by continuing to push President Biden to stay in the race.

‘She will have three and a half months (as they say, ‘an eternity in politics’) to show the American people her smarts, her strengths, her heart,’ he continued. ‘She is fierce, and compassionate, and unstoppable. She will have the power to issue significant executive orders that can provide help to the middle class, protect the environment, restore basic women’s rights.’ 

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Resounding calls for Vice President Kamala Harris to conduct press interviews are mounting after the Democratic presidential nominee unveiled her economic plan days before heading to her party’s national convention in Chicago.

Tim Murtaugh, senior adviser to the Trump campaign, told Fox News Digital Harris is running the ‘most deceitful campaign in history’ as she ‘hides from the American people.’

Murtaugh added that Harris is following President Biden’s lead in avoiding the media.

‘While she hides from the American people like Joe Biden always does, she’s pretending to hold the opposite position on everything she’s ever stood for as a San Francisco liberal,’ the Republican nominee’s adviser said.

Harris has gone 27 days without giving a formal interview or holding a press conference since Biden dropped out of the race and she quickly rose to take his spot. 

CNN’s Jim Acosta pressed a Harris campaign spokesperson Wednesday on why she had avoided doing a press conference.

Harris communications director Michael Tyler said she and her running mate, Tim Walz, had been ‘busy’ traveling across the country and conducting campaign rallies.

Tyler assured Acosta that Harris would be sitting down for an interview by the end of the month. 

‘Kamalanomics’

On Wednesday, Harris announced that, as president, she would institute a federal price-fixing plan ‘on food and groceries’ in an attempt to stop ‘big corporations’ from taking advantage of consumers.

Harris has framed her economic road map, dubbed by social media pundits as ‘Kamalanomics,’ as an ‘opportunity economy’ plan. Her price control plan includes expanded down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers and providing a $6,000 child tax credit for first-time parents.

Murtaugh told Fox News Digital Harris is choosing not to say that her economic policy supports higher taxes for Americans.

‘On taxes, she’s promised to eliminate the Trump tax cuts, and she voted against the package when it expanded the child tax credit,’ he said. ‘It doesn’t matter what she says today. When she had the choice, she supported higher taxes.

‘No wonder her handlers don’t want her to talk. Every time she does, she causes problems for herself.’

Since Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz joined the Harris ticket as her running mate, Trump gave press conferences at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, and Bedminster, New Jersey, and was part of a lengthy sit-down with tech billionaire and supporter Elon Musk. 

Trump’s running mate, JD Vance, has spoken to reporters multiple times in that period and has appeared on a series of shows.

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The Indiana Fever completed a season sweep of the Phoenix Mercury on Friday night.

The Fever appeared to benefit from the one-month Olympic break, coming out the gate with high energy and offensive firepower, while the Mercury (featuring gold-medal Olympians Diana Taurasi, Brittney Griner and Kahleah Copper) appeared to have some rust. Indiana jumped out to a 28-point lead in the first half, but the Mercury heated up in the second half to take the lead in the third quarter. But Indiana didn’t panic.

‘It’s huge. It sets the tone of where we want to be the rest of the season,’ said Clark, who shot 8-for-16 from the field, including 4-for-11 from three. ‘To grind this one out and get it done is the step in the right direction.’

Clark knocked down three 3-pointers in the first half, registering 16 of her 29 points in the first 13 minutes of the game. Four Fever players were in double figures by halftime — Clark, Kelsey Mitchell, Aliyah Boston and NaLyssa Smith. But the Fever came out cold in the second half. Copper led the Mercury on a 36-9 run to take the lead with 2:42 remaining in the third quarter, but the Fever responded to retake a double-digit lead and earn their 12th win of the season.

Much like the first Fever-Mercury matchup in June — where five technical fouls and two Flagrant 1 fouls were called between the two teams — things got chippy and tensions boiled over during the physical contest.

With 5:07 remaining in the third quarter, the Mercury’s Natasha Cloud and Fever’s Kelsey Mitchell got tangled up on a screen. Mitchell shoved Cloud, who then responded by bumping chests with Mitchell. Double technical fouls were called. 

With 7:07 remaining in the game, Griner and Boston were jockeying for position under the basket when Griner elbowed Boston. Griner was called for a foul, her fifth, and was forced to check out for the game to her dismay. While walking to the bench, Griner continued chirping at the referees and was called for a technical foul.

Mitchell finished with 28 points, Boston had 14 and Smith had 13 for Indiana.

Just five days ago, Griner, Taurasi and Copper won a gold medal with the U.S. women’s national team at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Copper finished with a game-high 32 points, Cloud had 19, Taurasi added 16 and Griner had 10 in that contest.

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Flag football will make its debut as an Olympic sport in Los Angeles in 2028, and numerous NFL players have expressed their desire to join Team USA.

Those who are currently on the United States flag football team – which has won each of the last four IFAF Flag Football World Championships and will defend that title later this month – didn’t take too kindly to a commercial shown during the Paris Olympics that showed Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts promoting the sport.

Darrell ‘Housh’ Doucette, the quarterback of the U.S. flag football team, said he isn’t going to give up his job without a fight.

“I think it’s disrespectful that they just automatically assume that they’re able to just join the Olympic team because of the person that they are – they didn’t help grow this game to get to the Olympics,” Doucette said to The Guardian. “Give the guys who helped this game get to where it’s at their respect.”

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow and Chicago Bears rookie QB Caleb Williams have both expressed interest in playing in the Olympics.

2024 Paris Olympics: Follow USA TODAY’s coverage of the biggest names and stories of the Games.

Doucette said he and his current teammates could handle their business on the world stage and against the best the NFL has to offer because there is a difference between 11-on-11 in pads and trying to stop a player with a flag attached to their hips.

“Some of the things that they do in the NFL that they call trick plays? We’re accustomed to seeing them on an every day basis,” Doucette said.

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In response to a question last month about his son’s ongoing bankruptcy case, Colorado football coach Deion Sanders made a request to the USA TODAY Sports reporter who asked him about it.

“I want you to do this for me,” the Pro Football Hall of Famer said then. “I want you to do your homework and do a whole investigation on that and then write that. I mean the whole complete investigation on what truly happened.”

USA TODAY Sports already had been doing that and previously published other reports about it and the incident that led to it in 2015. But in response to Sanders’ urging, USA TODAY Sports reexamined records and sought further information from officials who looked into the case involving his son, Shilo, who filed for bankruptcy last October with more than $11 million in debt.

As a result, USA TODAY Sports found that at least five agencies or institutions with access to witnesses and evidence in the 2015 case made conclusions about it – Dallas police, Shilo’s school, an insurance company, Texas child protective services and a civil court in Dallas.

What did those agencies and institutions conclude?

None of them favored Shilo Sanders, now a standout safety for his father at Colorado.

Four of those five official inquiries instead favored John Darjean, the school security guard who claimed he suffered permanent and severe spinal and nerve injuries after Shilo allegedly assaulted him in 2015, when Shilo was a 15-year-old ninth grader at FOCUS Academies in Dallas.

The other of those five investigations initially sided with Shilo but then obtained information that forced it to reverse its conclusion and instead ruled that fault was “unable to be determined.”

USA TODAY Sports also solicited further clarification from Shilo’s attorney in Texas but didn’t get a response.

Below is a summary of how each of the five inquiries ended up after Darjean said Shilo threw a roundhouse elbow into his upper torso when Darjean was trying to confiscate his phone at school. Darjean sued Shilo in civil court to recover for his injuries and won a default judgment of $11.89 million in 2022 – a massive debt for Shilo that led him to file for bankruptcy in hopes of eliminating it.

The bankruptcy case remains pending and still could hinge on that incident in 2015.  Deion Sanders has said Darjean’s claims are false and portrayed it as a money grab. Shilo Sanders said he acted in self-defense after Darjean assaulted him. Shilo’s attorneys also have questioned whether Darjean’s injuries were pre-existing.

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What Dallas police said about the Shilo Sanders case

Dallas police provided this information when asked about it by USA TODAY Sports.

“On September 17, 2015 at about 11:55 AM, Dallas police responded to a call for service in the 2500 block of W Ledbetter Drive. The preliminary investigation determined a security officer and teen were in an argument when the teen hit the security officer. Dallas Fire Rescue responded and transported the security officer to a local hospital for further medical treatment.”

Dallas police said the incident was referred to a grand jury, but there is no public record of any criminal charge or indictment.

Court records show that a day after that incident, Shilo Sanders was involved in a separate incident at school with another student and was taken that day to a juvenile detention center in Dallas. Court records also show Darjean underwent spinal surgery a few days after the incident.

What the school found

Darjean initially was suspended with pay pending the outcome of an internal investigation. Five days after the incident, the CEO and founder of the school, Leroy McClure, wrote a letter to Darjean saying the suspension was being lifted and Darjean was being reinstated effectively immediately.

“Video evidence supports your statement and the statement of the nearest employee in the area,” the school’s findings stated in the letter. “You were trying to take the student’s cell phone away from him. You were struck in the upper chest area by the student’s elbow. You then attempted to restrain the student against the wall. The student pushed back against you, moving both of you back off the wall. You attempted to restrain the student a second time against the wall and then moved the student to the floor to restrain him. At that point other employees entered the area to assist.”

It’s not clear what video evidence was used to clear Darjean. In 2016, TMZ published some security video evidence that only shows a part of the incident. But Darjean has said there was other video evidence that supports him – video that was deleted by a computer technician around the same time that Deion Sanders approached that technician to obtain it.

USA TODAY Sports recently contacted McClure, the school CEO, and asked what the video showed.

“I would have to refer you back to the letter I signed back in 2015,” McClure said. “Yes I did my due diligence in looking at different angles before I signed the letter.   I have nothing to add nor delete from the letter.  The signed letter stands on its own.   I have no idea where the video may be.”

What Texas child protection services found

The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services got involved in this case to determine if Shilo Sanders had been abused as a minor at school.

On Oct. 30, 2015, the agency initially found that there was “reason to believe” that abuse or neglect had occurred against Shilo in this case based on a preponderance of the evidence. In February, Shilo Sanders’ attorneys in bankruptcy court even used this initial ruling to try to convince a judge to dismiss Darjean’s complaint against Sanders there.

But that initial ruling was not the final word in that case and was based largely on false information from two school officials who said Darjean was being fired over the incident, according to court records. McClure, the school CEO, testified in a pretrial deposition afterwards that Darjean never was terminated and that this false information came from two officials who had personal conflicts with Darjean and hadn’t been authorized to make such determinations. McClure also testified that he considered the two school officials to be a “liability,” and both were let go from the school in 2016.

Records obtained by USA TODAY Sports show that the agency’s initial ruling then was reversed after two additional witness statements were obtained that corroborated Darjean.

As a result, the disposition of the case was changed to “Unable to be Determined.”

Another odd twist is that Deion Sanders initially told the agency’s investigator, Jordan Ham, that he didn’t suspect Darjean used excessive force in restraining Shilo and that he thought Darjean handled the situation appropriately, according to court records. He said so 12 days after the incident in the presence of his attorney, according to Ham. But Deion Sanders later disavowed that, saying he didn’t witness the incident and couldn’t have known.

What workers comp insurance found

Employees can file a workers compensation insurance claim when injured on the job to help pay for medical bills and a portion of lost wages. But such claims are not automatically approved for benefits. The insurance company can investigate to make sure the claim is legitimate and also can deny a claim if it finds that the injury was caused by the employee’s attempt to “unlawfully injure another person,” according to Texas law.

That is not what the insurance company found in Darjean’s case. An independent doctor reviewed his medical records and determined he had compensable injuries. The company also obtained records from the school about what happened.

“As a result of the filing of the workers’ compensation claim, Utica National Insurance Company paid both medical benefits to or on behalf of John Darjean and indemnity benefits,” said a sworn affidavit from the company’s custodian of records from July 2021.

The affidavit said the company had paid $112,000 in medical benefits at that time, plus $99,000 in indemnity benefits.

The doctor did note a pre-existing condition with Darjean, who had undergone another surgery before the incident, in 2014. But he said the injury from the incident in 2015 made his physical condition far worse.

“The accident resulted in cervical myelopathy and cervical cord compression and urine incontinence because there was a spinal stenosis,” the doctor wrote to the Texas Department of Insurance in 2016. “In other words, there was what l would call an aggravation of a pre-existing condition.”

What the civil court found

Darjean initially sued Shilo and both of his parents in 2016, but by early 2019, both parents had been dropped from the lawsuit, leaving Shilo as the sole remaining defendant in 2019, when he went to college as a freshman at South Carolina. At that point, Shilo had defended himself in the lawsuit for years. He even had filed counterclaims and testified in a pretrial deposition.

But then he elected to drop his attorneys in April 2020 without hiring new ones. Shilo was “unwilling or unable to continue funding” his defense, according to his attorneys then.

Without an attorney to represent him, trial notices then were sent to his email address and his old home address at South Carolina, even though he left there after the 2020 season to transfer to Jackson State.

Then when the case finally did go to trial in March 2022, he didn’t show up to defend himself, leading to the $11.89 million default judgment against him.

The court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law after hearing evidence in the case.

“On September 17, 2015, Shilo Sanders did in fact cause physical harm and injuries to John Darjean by assaulting him,” the court stated. “The Court finds that Shilo Sanders’ actions were the proximate cause of John Darjean’s injuries/damages. The Court further finds that Shilo Sander’s actions were a substantial factor in bringing about the physical and mental injuries sustained by John Darjean, without which such injuries and damages would not have occurred.”

The question now is whether the bankruptcy court will take Shilo’s side after all these other agencies and institutions did not. If he succeeds this time, the court could essentially erase that judgment debt and let him start over with relatively minor damage to his bank account.

A University of Colorado spokesman said Deion and Shilo Sanders were ‘unable to comment’ on the bankruptcy case while it remains pending. The Buffaloes open their second season under Sanders on Aug. 29 vs. North Dakota State.

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The 2024-25 English Premier League season officially got underway Friday with Manchester United securing a late win over Fulham in the first game of a campaign that will run all the way through May.

Saturday’s slate included six matches with title-hopefuls Arsenal (2-0 win vs. Wolves) and Liverpool (2-0 win at Ipswich Town) in action. Four-time defending champion Manchester City starts its season on Sunday with a high-profile opener against Chelsea to kick off its quest for a fifth consecutive title.

West Ham vs Aston Villa: Onana scores on debut in Villa win

Amadou Onana scored four minutes into his Aston Villa debut and Jhon Duran netted the late winner as Unai Emery’s men kicked off their Premier League season with a 2-1 victory at West Ham United on Saturday.

The 22-year-old Onana, signed from Everton, leapt high to head home Youri Tielemans’ corner in the fourth minute, easily darting away from Michail Antonio to beat keeper Alphonse Areola from three yards out.

Villa squandered several excellent chances before Lucas Paqueta drew the hosts level from the penalty spot in the 37th minute, the spot-kick awarded after a VAR check showed Matty Cash had fouled Tomas Soucek.

Goals

4th minute: Amadou Onana, Aston Villa
37th minute: Lucas Paqueta, West Ham (penalty)
79th minute: Jhon Duran, Aston Villa

Arsenal vs Wolves: Havertz, Saka score in 2-0 Gunners win

Arsenal eased to a 2-0 win at home to Wolverhampton Wanderers with goals by Kai Havertz and Bukayo Saka getting their latest Premier League title challenge up and running on Saturday.

It was far from a fluent display in the summer sunshine but Mikel Arteta’s side, once again regarded as the team most likely to halt Manchester City’s domination, deserved the points. Havertz headed in from Saka’s cross in the 25th minute but the hosts never looked completely comfortable until Saka’s clinical finish doubled their advantage in the closing stages.

Goals

25th minute: Kai Havertz, Arsenal
74th minute: Bukayo Saka, Arsenal

– Reuters

Brighton vs Everton: Toffees lose 3-0 at home

Danny Welbeck scored one goal and set up another as Brighton & Hove Albion eased to a 3-0 victory at 10-man Everton on Saturday, a perfect start for the Premier League’s youngest ever permanent manager.

Kaoru Mitoma scored at the back post after excellent work from debutant winger Yankuba Minteh, before Welbeck profited from sloppy play by Everton in midfield to add a second and Simon Adingra added a late third to underline Brighton’s superiority.

Goals

25th minute: Kaoru Mitoma, Brighton
56th minute: Danny Welbeck, Brighton
86th minute: Simon Adingra, Brighton

Red card

Ashley Young, Everton – 66th minute

– Reuters

Newcastle vs Southampton: 10-man Newcastle wins at home

Joelinton’s goal earned Newcastle a 1-0 win over promoted Southampton in their first game of the Premier League season at St James’ Park on Saturday, despite going down to 10 men in the first half.

Fabian Schar was sent off in the 28th minute for retaliating after a foul by Ben Brereton Diaz but the visitors failed to make the most of their numerical advantage, and Newcastle took the lead just before the break.

Goals

45th minute: Joelinton, Newcastle

Red cards

Fabian Schär, Newcastle – 28th minute

– Reuters

Nottingham Forest vs Bournemouth: Cherries secure late draw

Bournemouth forward Antoine Semenyo rescued a point for his side with a late equalizer as they drew 1-1 at Nottingham Forest in the Premier League on Saturday.

Forest took the lead in the 23rd minute when defensive midfielder Ryan Yates’ close-range shot was parried by goalkeeper Neto and Chris Wood reacted quickly to slot the ball home. The hosts looked comfortable but Bournemouth equalized in the 86th minute when Semenyo smashed the ball in from close range.

Forest’s Brazilian midfielder Danilo was carried off on a stretcher 10 minutes into the game with what appeared to be a serious injury following a collision with Semenyo.

Goals:

23rd minute: Chris Wood, Nottingham Forest
86th minute: Antoine Semenyo, Bournemouth

— Reuters

Liverpool vs Ipswich: Arene Slot gets 2-0 win in debut

Second-half goals from Diogo Jota and Mohamed Salah allowed new Liverpool coach Arne Slot to get off to a 2-0 winning start at newly-promoted Ipswich Town in the Premier League on Saturday.

Ipswich, cheered on by new minority shareholder and singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran from the Portman Road stands, went toe-to-toe with Liverpool in the first half but failed to take their chances when they presented themselves. Slot’s new side improved markedly after the break, taking the lead on the hour mark through Jota, before a fine move was finished off by Salah five minutes later to effectively kill off the Ipswich challenge.

‘The first taste (of Premier League football) in the first half was maybe as expected because they were all on top of us, very aggressive. Second half was a joy to watch,’ Slot told TNT Sports.

– Reuters

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