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Come on, you didn’t think Atlanta GM Alex Anthopoulos would go quietly into the trade deadline, did you?

Anthopoulos, who pulled off the three-outfield miracle in 2021 before the trade deadline when their season was on the brink, only to win the World Series, this time resorted to a checkbook.

Atlanta acquired outfielder Jorge Soler, their 2021 World Series MVP, along with veteran reliever Luke Jackson, for only reliever TylerMatzek and minor-league infielder Sabin Ceballos.

The key to the deal?

Cold cash.

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Atlanta is picking up every penny of the contracts, paying in excess of $30 million. They will owe Soler $13 million in 2025 and $13 million in 2026, while Jackson has a $7 million club option or a $2 million buyout. They also owe Soler and Jackson about $5 million for the remainder of this season.

Just like that, Atlanta, who lost reigning MVP Ronald Acuna Jr. to a season-ending knee injury in May, just like in 2021, found a power-hitting outfielder to replace him. When Acuna went down in 2021, Atlanta acquired Soler, Eddie Rosario and Joc Pederson. Now, they have the band back together with Soler and Rosario, along with Jackson, who was also on their 2021 World Series team.

Atlanta (56-49), without ace Spencer Strider for the season, might have even bigger hurdles this time around. They are trailing the Philadelphia Phillies by 8 ½ games in the NL East, and just one-half game ahead of the New York Mets for the top wild-card spot.

The San Francisco Giants (53-55), who are just four games out in the wild-card race, may be headed the other direction. Maybe if Soler (.240, 12 homers, 40 RBI) had performed better, they wouldn’t be in this predicament, but after holding their cards close to the vest, It appears now they could be selling.

If the Giants indeed have decided to sell, it means that Cy Young winner Blake Snell could be out the door, along with outfielders Michael Conforto and Mike Yastrzemski, reliever Taylor Rogers, and perhaps third baseman Matt Chapman.

The Giants will be forced to show their hand for all of their competitors to see Tuesday before the 6 p.m. ET deadline. The clock is ticking on the Giants’ ultimate decision, while Atlanta plans to be busy playing baseball once again in October.

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One more day to grab provisions for the next 90.

That’s what Major League Baseball teams face Tuesday as the hours and then minutes tick down to the 6 p.m. ET trade deadline. The agita has only been compounded by a market heavily tilted toward sellers, as contenders are paying premium prospect price for a limited supply of reinforcements.

As the clock drags toward Tuesday evening, a look at the biggest unfilled needs from the top contenders as GMs get set to put their pencils down and see if they aced the test come dinnertime:

Cleveland Guardians: Starting pitcher

Monday was a tough one for the Guardians, who saw the reasonably-priced Erick Fedde go to St. Louis in a three-way trade, sentient Frankie Montas get shipped from Cincinnati to Milwaukee, struggling but effective Yusei Kikuchi (Toronto to Houston) and Michael Lorenzen (Texas to Kansas City) slip off the board.

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That leaves not a lot for a club that has so many excellent playoff pieces in place: A dominant and brilliantly-deployed bullpen, a contact-friendly and dynamic offense and a few serviceable starting pitchers.

But no true No. 1.

Not since Shane Bieber succumbed to elbow surgery in the season’s first week, anyway. Tanner Bibee and Ben Lively are passable playoff starters and perhaps Gavin Williams will round into form as he gets more than five starts under his belt.

Can they swing an intra-division deal for Jack Flaherty? That’s one of few dwindling options to upgrade as the clock winds down.

New York Yankees: Relief pitcher

Pretty nice deadline there. Jazz Chisholm is taking to New York like Charlie Parker, they’re in the hunt for Flaherty and Giancarlo Stanton is off the injured list (no, we won’t call that “almost as good as a trade pickup,” but it’s not for nothing).

Yet the bullpen dashboard has been blinking red since before the All-Star break, with a Clay Holmes ninth inning something of a dice roll right now and the innings piling up for Luke Weaver. Are clubs holding out for Spencer Jones, the Yankees’ hulking hitting prospect?

That would seem a disproportional haul for a rental closer or even a guy under contract for 2025, like Washington’s Kyle Finnegan. But with prices what they are, rival clubs will almost surely make Yankees GM Brian Cashman sweat right up until the buzzer.

Baltimore Orioles: Starting pitcher

Zach Eflin was a dandy pickup, and paid dividends in his first start with Baltimore. A Corbin Burnes-Grayson Rodriguez-Eflin playoff 1-2-3 is credible, competitive.

Yet it could be even better.

No system has the top-end talent and depth as the Orioles’ farm, and the one-year rental of Burnes – pitching like a Cy Young candidate – suggests this is the year to unload some of that prospect capital.

While Eflin is under contract for 2025, Burnes will walk. There remains the giddy specter of going big for AL Central lefties Garrett Crochet or Tarik Skubal, though one faces 2024 innings limits and the other the slim chance his team would move him. But both are under team control for two years, making them remarkable arms to dream on.

There’s also the matter of the Yankees, lurking a half-game back in the AL East. The fewer games Albert Suarez and rookies Cade Povich and Chayce McDermott start, the better. Baltimore faces a dogfight now and then in the postseason.

It will be fascinating to see what GM Mike Elias’s move might be in his first all-in deadline.

Los Angeles Dodgers: Starting pitcher

Really neat Monday for the Dodgers, snagging Tommy Edman as their new Optionality King to hedge against injuries and iffy performance in the middle of the diamond. If pitching coach Mark Prior can fix hard-throwing Michael Kopech, the wheezing bullpen will exhale.

Yet the rotation remains dotted with so many question marks, be it flamethrowers in uncharted innings waters (Tyler Glasnow), youngsters with no late-season track record (Gavin Stone, River Ryan, Landon Knack) and once-and-future-aces battling physical demons (Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Walker Buehler, Clayton Kershaw).

YThat’s no way for a $320 million payroll to approach October. GM Andrew Friedman is almost certainly aiming for 11th-hour fireworks – might they entertain Crochet’s desire for financial security? – and faces little choice but to augment. This might be the most fascinating and impactful addition (or non-addition) of the day.

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PARIS — Pollution in the Seine river forced Olympic organizers on Tuesday to postpone the men’s triathlon event, threatening to derail a centerpiece of the Paris Games where a massive, $1.5 billion clean-up effort aimed to allow athletes to compete in the notoriously dirty waterway that runs through the heart of the city.

A statement issued by Paris 2024 and World Triathlon said tests showed the water quality in the Seine was still below an acceptable standard for a race day. The men’s race has been postponed to Wednesday at 10:45 a.m. local time (4:45 a.m. ET), immediately following the women’s event, which is scheduled for 8 a.m.

‘Unfortunately, meteorological events beyond our control, such as the rain which fell over Paris on 26 and 27 July, can alter water quality and compel us to reschedule the event for health reasons,’ the World Triathlon statement said. ‘Despite the improvement of water quality levels over the last hours, the readings at some points of the swim course are still above the acceptable limits.’

Both triathlons remain subject to water tests complying with the established World Triathlon thresholds for swimming, and the original contingency competition day of Friday, Aug. 2 also remains in place, the World Triathlon statement said. The mixed triathlon relay event is scheduled for Monday, Aug. 5 with a contingency day of Tuesday, Aug. 6. Two training sessions had already been canceled ahead of the race-day postponement.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

If the water quality is still not deemed acceptable, the swimming leg could be dropped. The race would become a duathlon, with athletes competing in biking and running legs only. The Seine also is due to be used for the outdoor marathon swimming event. The women’s marathon kicks off on Thursday, Aug. 8; the men’s a day later.

There are five Americans competing in the Paris Olympics triathlon: Morgan Pearson and Seth Rider are the American men. Taylor Knibb, Taylor Spivey and Kirsten Kasper are the U.S. women. Gwen Jorgensen is the only American to have ever won an Olympic triathlon gold. She did so in 2016 at the Rio Olympics.

French authorities have banned swimming in the Seine since 1923 because of pollution and busy boat traffic Organizers have touted cleaning up with river, especially its elevated levels of E.coli bacteria, as a selling point for the Games. They have said that if cleanup effort is successful, the river will open to public swimming in 2025.

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PARIS — Hours before the men’s gymnastics team final at the 2024 Paris Olympics, Stephen Nedoroscik solved a Rubik’s Cube in 9.32 seconds. It’s a hobby of his. And that time, for context, is quite impressive. ‘Good omen,’ he wrote on Instagram.

It was indeed.

In arguably the most pressure-packed situation that one could imagine in men’s gymnastics − the last routine of the last rotation of the Olympic final − Nedoroscik delivered in a big way Monday night, putting together a smooth, confident showing on pommel horse that wrapped up the bronze medal for the U.S. men’s gymnastics team.

It was his only event of the night, on the apparatus he’s practiced exclusively since the waning days of high school. And when it was over, his teammates hoisted him into the air, and he raised his hands above his head.

‘It was just the greatest moment of my life, I think,’ Nedoroscik said.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

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It’s difficult to describe, in non-gymnastics terms, the sort of proverbial pressure cooker that Nedoroscik stepped into Monday night. It’d be like an NFL kicker sitting on the bench for the entirety of the Super Bowl, then coming out in overtime and draining a 49-yard field goal to win the game.

Yet even that analogy might not work. It’s not just that the 25-year-old’s only event in the team final was dead last, but also that pommel horse is notoriously known as the trickiest event in the sport. And that Team USA had not won a team medal in men’s gymnastics at the Olympics since Nedoroscik was 9 years old.

So, pressure? Oh yeah, he admitted, he felt some pressure.

‘(But) I thought about it before, about how I get to be the last person that goes in the Olympics,’ Nedoroscik said. ‘I put that in my head as a positive. Like, I can be the exclamation point.’

It was, in many ways, a validating moment for Nedoroscik, a Massachusetts kid who made a big decision all the way back at the tail end of high school. He knew, even eight years ago, that he probably did not have the talent to make it as an all-around gymnast at the collegiate level, let alone at the Olympic level. But in pommel horse, he realized, he might have a chance. He might be able to make it.

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So Nedoroscik went all-in on one thing. He won two NCAA titles at Penn State, then four national championships and even a 2021 world title − all on pommel horse.

‘Somebody like Stephen is a real anomaly,’ his college coach, Randy Jepson, said in an interview earlier this summer. ‘You don’t get a lot of those guys that stand up and stick out where they’re the best in the world (in a single event).’

But amid his successes, a narrative also started to form in some corners of the gymnastics world − that Nedoroscik could not hit a routine under pressure. He fell at the 2021 Olympic trials, which prompted the U.S. to instead bring Alec Yoder to Tokyo. And he missed again in the final at the 2022 world championships, where the Americans finished fifth. What was the point of bringing a specialist, the naysayers started to ask, if he couldn’t do his singular job?

The questions continued even through the leadup to these Games, when Nedoroscik locked in his spot on Team USA based on math rather than a selection committee’s preference. USA Gymnastics used scores from the national championships and Olympic trials to calculate the best possible teams for Paris − and, in part because other U.S. gymnasts struggled on pommel horse, Nedoroscik was on all of them. They needed his best, even if it meant risking a fall.

‘I think there were a lot of people critical of Stephen being on the team to begin with − some of his history of not hitting the routine during a team event,’ said Syque Caesar, one of his coaches. ‘You only need to hit when you need to hit. And yes, he missed at some other competitions, but nothing comes to the Olympics.’

After years of hyping himself up before competition, Nedoroscik said he later came to learn that it was better to calm himself down. He said his goal isn’t to win anything, or make finals, or earn a certain score. These days, he focuses only on doing ‘a good Russian flop’ − the second skill in his routine.

On Monday, Caesar said, Nedoroscik didn’t warm up with the rest of the team. Instead, when they passed the halfway point of the competition, he went to practice in a back gym with three-time Olympian Sam Mikulak, another one of his coaches. ‘It’s just one Russian flop,’ Nedoroscik told him.

He then proceeded to step out onto the podium and record a score of 14.866 that, while three-tenths below his score in qualifying, was plenty good enough to put the U.S. on the podium.

‘It’s like a Cinderella story, fairy tale ending,’ Mikulak said. ‘I just hope everyone starts believing and gives him the credit that’s due – especially Team USA, for creating the procedures that got him on the team.’

Mikulak smiled when told by reporters that Nedoroscik had already been picking up fans on social media for his ‘nerdy’ appearance — he wears glasses and used to compete in goggles.

‘He’s this awesome personality. He’s a great kid,’ Mikulak said. ‘And he deserves to be recognized for his individuality and his character.’

Nedoroscik, for his part, said he’s mostly been trying to stay away from the internet in the weeks leading up to Paris − though he was well aware of the people who didn’t think he deserved a spot on the Olympic team.

‘I knew that there was going to backlash to it,’ Nedoroscik said. ‘I do one event compared to these guys that are all-arounders − phenomenal all-arounders. And I am a phenomenal horse guy, but it’s hard to fit on a five-guy team.

‘I think I kind of used that as motivation a little bit. In the gym, I was thinking, ‘Let’s prove these people wrong. Let’s show them I am consistent. Let’s show them I can do it for Team USA.’ I think I did that tonight.”

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

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Vice President Harris, in the week since she launched a new bid for the presidency following President Biden’s departure from the race, is now backing away from several far-left stances she once promoted. 

To garner attention during her primary run for president years ago, Harris catered to the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. She discontinued that campaign in December 2019, and just months later, in the summer of 2020, aligned more with the new radical ideals pushed by Democrats following George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis and the Black Lives Matter anti-police protests and riots that rocked the U.S. afterward. 

In resurfaced clips that began airing in ads by Republican David McCormick’s campaign for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania, Harris is seen on camera opposing fracking, stating she would ‘think about’ abolishing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), describing hiring more police officers as ‘wrongheaded thinking’ and weighing the proposal of permitting felons to vote. Harris is also seen saying she was in favor of a ‘mandatory buyback program’ for guns and said private health insurance should be eliminated, according to a summary of the ads’ content by the New York Times. 

On fracking, which is particularly important to the economy in Pennsylvania, a key battleground state during the 2024 race, the Harris campaign reversed course on Friday. An official with Harris’ re-election campaign told The Hill that she will not seek to ban fracking if she is elected president. 

That contrasts with what Harris told CNN while campaigning for the 2020 presidential nomination. 

‘There’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking,’ Harris said at the time.

Former president and Republican nominee Donald Trump told rallygoers in Minnesota on Saturday how Harris had opposed fracking.

‘Oh, that’s going to do well in Pennsylvania, isn’t it?’ Trump said. 

‘Remember, Pennsylvania, I said it. She wants no fracking. She’s on tape. The beautiful thing about modern technology is when you say something, you’re screwed if it’s bad.’

A Harris campaign official told the Times that Harris staffers plan to paint Republicans who drudge up Harris’ past statements espousing left-wing ideas as exaggerated claims or lies about Harris’ record. The campaign also plans to paint Harris as a candidate with deep ties to law enforcement by highlighting her record as a local prosecutor and state attorney general in California, according to the newspaper. 

At a November 2018 confirmation hearing, then-Sen. Harris asked Ronald Vitiello, Trump’s nominee to lead ICE, if he was ‘aware of the perception’ of parallels between ICE and the KKK.

Harris campaign officials, meanwhile, told the Times this week that she now supports the Biden administration’s budget requests for increased funding for border enforcement, is no longer in opposition to a single-payer health insurance program and supports Biden’s call to ban assault weapons – but is now against any requirement for private gun owners to sell those weapons to the federal government. 

Regarding health insurance, that means Harris is no longer promoting Medicare-for-All. 

‘Kamala Harris spent 20 years as a tough-as-nails prosecutor who sent violent criminals to prison,’ Brian Fallon, a Harris campaign spokesman, told the Times. ‘Her years spent in law enforcement and her record in the Biden-Harris administration defy Trump’s attempts to define her through lies.’

The Trump campaign on Monday highlighted how Harris said in 2019 that she was ‘open to conversation’ about expanding the Supreme Court. But the Harris campaign released a statement this week endorsing Biden’s Supreme Court reform proposal for term limits and ethics guidelines for justices. That proposal does not include adding additional justices to the nation’s highest court.  

Regarding video of Harris espousing far-left views, ‘the archive is deep,’ Brad Todd, a Republican strategist and ad maker working with McCormick and other campaigns, told the Times. ‘We will run out of time before we run out of video clips of Kamala Harris saying wacky California liberal things. I’m just not sure that the rest of this campaign includes much besides that.’

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Imagine a political world where a Democratic president cuts taxes in the middle of a recession while beefing up the military.

Imagine having a pro-Life Democratic president in the Oval Office.

Imagine a Democratic Speaker of the House meeting with a Republican president for an after-hours drink to hash out policy differences in the name of compromise.

Imagine a Democratic president declaring ‘the era of big government is over’ while working with a Republican House Speaker on welfare reform and a balanced budget amendment.

And finally, imagine a Democratic president who was so aggressive on the issue of illegal immigration, that he was angrily labeled the Deporter-in-Chief by the left?

Believe it or not, these leaders actually existed in this country. It was John F. Kennedy who cut taxes in 1961 after inheriting a recession. It was Jimmy Carter who was a pro-Lifer. It was House Speaker Tip O’Neil who put aside his ideological differences to meet President Reagan over a cocktail to help advance the country forward. It was President Bill Clinton who went hard to the center heading into the 1996 election by working with Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich to pass common sense proposals into law. And it was President Barack Obama who understood that mass illegal immigration could help destroy a country.

This is the premise of my new book, ‘Progressively Worse: Why Today’s Democrats Ain’t Your Daddy’s Donkeys,’ out on Tuesday, July 30.  The party that once championed the working man and woman is now the party of elites. 

Don’t believe me? Chew on this: The 40 richest congressional districts in the country are represented by Democrats.

This is also the party that is anti-woman. How else can anyone explain supporting biological males competing against biological women?

This is also the party of war. Because we could be talking about even five years from now the trillions we poured into keeping Ukraine’s stalemate with Russia alive and well.

One only has to look at Kamala Harris’s positions to see what the party is now embracing. Kamala Harris — who as a 2020 presidential candidate did not receive one primary vote. And in 2024, she’s suddenly the nominee without receiving one vote from the public.

Yet these are the same folks who insist it is their party that is here to save democracy?

Back to Kamala Harris. Let’s match up her positions with those of a majority of voters in the key swing states.

For Pennsylvania: Harris is on record saying she wants to ban all fracking. She is backtracking on that now, but that’s only because she wants to get elected. She is also on record saying she wants to end the fossil fuel industry. If she somehow wins the presidency — this will result in devastating job losses.  

How about Michigan? Harris supports a government mandated electric vehicle push and the end of the sale of gas-powered cars. That also means massive job losses for autoworkers in Michigan.

How about Wisconsin? Kamala Harris is on record saying she wants to limit consumption of red meat. So, if you’re a poultry farmer in Wisconsin, how do you feel about that? Because that will cripple your industry too.

If you’re a voter in Arizona or New Mexico, states overrun by illegal immigration, do you like the fact that she wants to abolish ICE? Or that she compared ICE to the KKK? And she unequivocally is against border wall construction and Remain in Mexico policy. 

So, if you’re voting in Arizona or New Mexico, can you really support this candidate?

And on a national level, do you support banning all offshore drilling, as Harris does? 

If you’re one of the 87% of Americans that don’t have any student loan debt, do you like the fact that she supports running roughshod over the Supreme Court and Congress to help the other 13 percent with your taxpayer money?

As an American, no matter where you live, are you for the elimination of cash bail laws– as Kamala Harris is?

Do you support those in jail serving hard time for murder or rape being able to vote in our elections? Because she’s ‘open’ to the idea. 

Do you support expanding the Supreme Court?

How about voting without showing identification?

How about eliminating all private health insurance? Yet at the same time… Providing free health insurance to all those who enter this country illegally?

These ain’t your Daddy’s Donkeys, that’s for certain.   

And it’s all laid out in ‘Progressively Worse,’ a book that couldn’t possibly be better timed than at this pivotal moment, less than 100 days before the most consequential election in the history of the country.

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Taiwan’s annual Han Kuang exercises took place this past week. The yearly war drills aim to rehearse combat readiness for a potential Chinese invasion. Our team traveled to the island to join the military and speak to officials about the annual war games.

While a typhoon grounded several of the air force drills, other exercises took place across Taiwan. Throughout the week, troops opened fire on mock invading forces approaching the island and rehearsed rapid response drills to an attack.

‘When you’ve got such a giant threat besides you, any kind of preparation – you cannot say it’s enough,’ said MP Wang Ting Yu, co-chair of Taiwan’s defense and foreign relations committee. ‘The next few years, maybe three or five years will be a crucial moment to Asia, to the world. Once we do something right, we can deter or postpone that potential conflict,’ he told Fox News.

China views the democratically governed island as its own. Taiwanese government officials argue their best defense is deterrence.

An example of Taiwan’s defensive tactics is the island’s ‘porcupine strategy’. Taiwanese researchers explain that with enough small defense mechanisms, the military could disincentivize an attack.

‘We are trying to procure more precision weapons, maybe long range, maybe short range, missiles, air defense weaponry, anti-tank missiles. Some portable like a stinger, javelin or everything. That will make Taiwan just like a porcupine. China can attack Taiwan, but they will feel hurt,’ said Jyh-Shyang Sheu, a researcher at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research.

The Taiwanese government says it needs to invest in Western training and more weaponry. ‘The Taiwanese military need opportunities to have the real battle experience. That’s what we can learn from our friends. And second, for the next few years, our indigenous submarines will become our capability, can defend our country,’ Wang said.

In April, Washington approved a $95 billion dollar aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. The United States is also Taiwan’s largest arms supplier. Earlier this year, China sanctioned 12 U.S. defense-related companies for arms sales to Taiwan in retaliation after the U.S. sanctioned Chinese companies linked to Russia.

While some analysts argue a blockade is more likely than an invasion, the tension along the Taiwan strait is a common conversation among civilians. It is even enough incentive for some residents to try to flee.

‘My friends ask: Why do you want to study abroad, and I say: Because I want to get the visa elsewhere and take all my family away,’ said Fanyi Chao, a Taiwanese college student studying in California.

That fear is not entirely shared around Taipei. Others told our team they think tensions will never actually amount to an invasion. ‘We have a Chinese saying: the barking dog will not bite people. So, they (China) are always barking, but they don’t have the guts to fight people,’ a man named Peter, who did not provide his last name, said.

Taiwan however, is drawing parallels between itself and Ukraine. The government says its holding talks with Kyiv on lessons learned from Russia’s invasion.

‘The Russian Ukraine (situation) gives lessons, and we must further secure the peace of the Taiwan Strait,’ said Taiwan’s new Foreign Minister, Lin Chia-Lung, in his first briefing with foreign press since taking office earlier this year.

Those lessons are top of mind for civilians who say they doubt Western allies would come to the island’s aid.

‘Because of the Ukraine-Russia war, I want to know more about this area. In the future, should a war break out, it might help me to have a chance to protect myself,’ said Eric Luo. The 30-year-old man is among those spending their free time learning to use firearms. As guns are illegal in Taiwan, students practice realistic airsoft guns.

‘I’m a person who wants to be prepared for any situation, but peace must be the most important thing,’ said another student, Jason Chang.

Across the board, that statement remains consistent. Civilians in training say they want to know how to protect themselves but repeatedly stressed they desperately hope it never comes to that.

‘Our fathers, grandfathers experienced wars. We are the children of that generation, so we pass our knowledge to the next generation of young people’. Chi-yi Zang, an instructor at the training camp told Fox News. ‘Whether there will be a war or not, it is not something we ordinary people can decide, but in the face of a war, it’s up to us to protect ourselves.’

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Apple on Monday released the first version of Apple Intelligence, its suite of artificial intelligence features that will improve Siri, automatically generate emails and images and sort notifications.

The new software called Apple Intelligence was released in the developer beta of iOS 18.1. It is also available in similar releases for iPad and Mac. It is currently only available to registered Apple developers. Apple’s developer program costs $99 a year.

In addition, users will have to register for a waitlist inside Apple’s settings app after updating to gain access to the service, which involves pinging Apple servers for more complicated requests.

Later this year, it will be released to the public, but the 18.1 version number suggests Apple Intelligence will not be released alongside new iPhone hardware, which is expected to be launched running iOS 18 in the fall.

Apple Intelligence is an important initiative for Apple. Investors hope the tight integration of AI with Apple’s operating system can spur a big wave of upgrades in the coming years, especially since the system will only work on the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max and newer.

We expect this iPhone cycle to remain strong for longer as AI feature sets (software and possibly hardware) improve in the 2025 iPhone,” Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan wrote in a note Monday.

The preview does not include everything in Apple Intelligence the company demoed at its annual developers conference in June.

The preview released on Monday includes:

These features are not in the AI preview yet, although Apple says they will be rolled out over the next year:

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The NFL season is upon us, and with Madden 25 set to be released in a few weeks, it’s time to get hyped or rage at the release of player ratings.

Madden 25 will be released on Aug. 16 and EA Sports will spend this week announcing which players are in the ’99 Club’ — those rated 99 overall, the highest rating possible in the game — as well as the highest rated players at every position. The top receivers and safeties in the game were announced on Monday, and other positions will be released in the coming day, culminating with the top rated teams.

Here are the top player ratings for Madden 24:

Madden 25 safeties rankings

Jessie Bates III, Atlanta Falcons: 97
Antoine Winfield Jr., Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 94
Minkah Fitzpatrick, Pittsburgh Steelers: 93
Derwin James Jr., Los Angeles Chargers: 91
Tyrann Mathieu, New Orleans Saints: 91
Budda Baker, Arizona Cardinals: 90
Kevin Byard III, Chicago Bears: 89
Kyle Hamilton, Baltimore Ravens: 89
Talanoa Hufanga, San Francisco 49ers: 88
Jevon Holland, Miami Dolphins: 88

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

Madden 25 wide receiver rankings

Tyreek Hill, Miami Dolphins: 99
Justin Jefferson, Minnesota Vikings: 98
CeeDee Lamb, Dallas Cowboys: 96
A.J. Brown, Philadelphia Eagles: 95
Amon-Ra St. Brown, Detroit Lions: 95
Davante Adams, Las Vegas Raiders: 94
Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati Bengals: 93
Stefon Diggs, Houston Texans: 92
Brandon Aiyuk, San Francisco 49ers: 91
Mike Evans, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 91

Tyreek Hill in the 99 club

The first player to be part of the 99 club in Madden 25 is Miami Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill. The first Dolphins player to ever achieve a 99 rating, Hill is coming off an explosive season when he had 1,799 receiving yards and 13 receiving touchdowns, both first in the NFL. It was also his third-straight season with more than 110 catches.

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Among them is the social media account ‘ArtButMakeItSports,’ which has amassed over 488,000 X followers, plus 175,000 followers on Instagram, since 2019 by taking pictures of athletes and finding similar art to mimic the picture. The account has made a killing in the first few days of the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Among the most viral so far was a picture of United States gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik, who was shown preparing for the pommel horse with his eyes closed as he aimed to lock in for the event. The account then posted the painting, ‘Welders’ by Ben Shahn, which looks shockingly similar to the picture of Nedoroscik.

The account also has a Substack, where they dive deeper into the process of finding art to match the sports photos. It can be a tedious process, as the account claims to not use artificial intelligence help.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Here’s a compilation of the best posts so far from the Olympics:

Best ArtButMakeItSports photos from Olympics

Here are some of the best submissions from the Olympics so far from social media account @ArtButMakeItSports:

Who runs ArtButMakeItSports account?

The account is ran by LJ Rader, whose personal X account counts much fewer followers than his ‘ArtButMakeItSports’ following.

Does ArtButMakeItSports use AI?

No, the account does not use AI for its content creation, as stated in its bio on X.

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