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Less than a week since becoming the presumptive Democratic Party nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris is facing a tidal wave of GOP attack ads as she enters the spotlight in the presidential race and while she is benefiting from a massive surge in ‘earned’ media.

The Associated Press reports that former President Trump and his allies are outspending Harris’ campaign 25-1 on TV and radio advertising. Republicans have spent more than $68 million, compared to $2.6 million by Democrats, since Monday, according to the media tracking firm AdImpact. Top topics include the ongoing border crisis and inflation, as well as her record that critics have presented as extremely left-wing.

Meanwhile, Harris has earned a flood of media coverage since President Biden announced Sunday that he would not stand for re-election and endorsed Harris as his successor. The Trump campaign has dubbed it a ‘Harris honeymoon’ and predicted a polling boost for the former California senator.

But the Harris campaign is not worried about the flood coming from the Republicans. 

‘We’re working to get up ads as quickly as we can (though it’s only been three days) and in the meantime she’s dominating earned media,’ a campaign official told Politico.

 ‘I think it’s lighting your money on fire to do ads when you’re getting the best and most earned media of the cycle,’ Clinton veteran Nick Merrill told the outlet.

That outlet reported that filmmakers were at Harris’ rally in Wisconsin on Tuesday to catch footage for a digital-only ad.

Meanwhile, the AP reported that the Harris campaign raised a massive $100 million between Sunday and Monday afternoon and can launch a robust advertising campaign whenever it wants to.

Harris spokesperson Kevin Munoz told the AP that the vice president ‘will make her case aggressively alongside a campaign infrastructure designed to win close elections.’

‘In just 24 hours, Kamala Harris put abortion rights front and center for voters, broke fundraising records, and spun Donald Trump out into a manic and public breakdown — because he knows she is best-equipped to prosecute the case against a convicted felon like himself,’ he said.

Democratic-backed ads are set to fire up soon, too. While there’s only about $2.6 million in ads through the end of August, according to AdImpact, the pro-Biden super PAC Future Forward will roll out a $129 million ad campaign in September.

But the Trump campaign still has more coming. The pro-Trump Preserve America Super PAC has booked $45 million in ads through the end of August, while MAGA Inc. has booked another $23 million.

Meanwhile, Harris and Trump are locked in an extremely close contest, according to a new national poll conducted entirely after Biden announced that he was suspending his campaign and endorsing his vice president.

Trump stands at 46% support among registered voters in an NPR/PBS News/Marist Poll; Harris stands at 45% support. Trump’s one-point edge is well within the survey’s sampling error. Nine percent of those questioned were undecided.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Vice President Kamala Harris is beginning to vet her list of potential running mates for 2024, according to sources familiar with the campaign.

The presumptive Democratic Party nominee has been moving quickly to formalize a campaign ticket after President Biden stepped down on Sunday afternoon.

Harris’ team has requested information on approximately a dozen individuals, according to anonymous sources speaking to The Associated Press.

Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona, Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky, Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina are among the most-discussed prospects for the Democratic vice-presidential nomination.

Her selection will set the tone for her last-minute presidential campaign launched with an endorsement of Biden following his sudden and unexpected withdrawal from the race.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Harris campaign for comment on the reports.

The campaign of former President Trump, the Republican nominee in the 2024 election, has dismissed Harris’ eventual vice-presidential pick as inconsequential. 

‘There is a short list of governors and senators. They are all interchangeable,’ Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung told reporters on Wednesday. ‘It doesn’t matter.’

Many top Democrats have fallen in line behind Harris, receiving endorsements from the Clintons, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York.

Harris and Trump are locked in an extremely close contest, according to a new national poll conducted entirely after Biden announced he was suspending his campaign and endorsing his vice president.

Trump, who last week was formally nominated as the Republican Party’s 2024 presidential candidate, stands at 46% support among registered voters in an NPR/PBS News/Marist Poll.

Harris, who on Monday night said she had locked up the Democratic nomination thanks to verbal commitments from delegates at next month’s Democratic National Convention, stands at 45% support. Trump’s one-point edge is well within the survey’s sampling error. Nine percent of those questioned were undecided.

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In late June, Gilead Sciences (GILD) stock surged following positive results of a late-stage trial for its latest HIV drug. 

The big market buzz was that Gilead was on the verge of something huge, and investors were not about to wait around for proof. They dove in early, seeing the price jump as a prime “ground floor” opportunity.

Expecting a pullback, given the speculative nature of the spike, there were key levels where a bounce could occur, providing an opportunity for you to ride Gilead’s momentum, even if just for a swing trade. The bullish thesis worked out, so let’s examine what happened.

What Happened and Where’s GILD Going?

The Gilead chart below zooms in on the price action following the trial results. The big unknown at the time was whether the spike on June 20 was going to pull back, and whether a pullback would end the uptrend. 

CHART 1. DAILY CHART OF GILEAD SCIENCES. The stock price pulled back, and the levels projected in June have so far held. Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Before the Pullback in the Stock Price

What made this decision point particularly difficult were the following:

A StockCharts Technical Rank (SCTR) score of 30 (see blue arrow) wasn’t by any means promising, but from a bullish perspective, it also meant the potential for a ground-floor entry.The Chaikin Money Flow (CMF)  indicated that buying pressure was fading (see blue dotted line in the CMF indicator window), suggesting a pullback or resumption of the downtrend.

With strong bullish sentiment hinging on an upcoming FDA trial and shaky technicals aside from a solid breakout, a long trade might have felt like a coin toss, one slightly favoring the bulls. Hence, the importance of the key levels $68 and $66 and the 50-day simple moving average (SMA).

After the Pullback in the Stock Price

Let’s zoom in to the same chart above.

CHART 2. DAILY CHART OF GILEAD SCIENCES. Here, you can see the exact entry points and how prices respected the levels. Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Here, you can see that the $66 support level converged with the 50-day SMA. GILD respected this level as buyers jumped in, anticipating a bounce, which they did get. Although the CMF entered negative territory, you can see how selling pressure began to fizzle out, and buying pressure overtook the bears.

As prices took out the June high, its pullback respected the $70.50 level (see second magenta circle), launching GILD to take out critical resistance right below $75 (see heavy blue dotted line).

The question is whether, upon a third pullback, the stock price will respect support at $75 and surge to (or beyond) $79. 

At the Close

You might be wondering if GILD is still a buy. It was a buy (emphasis on “was”), as the price action presented an ideal opportunity on the ground level. If you’re a longer-term investor, it would be wise to wait and see how GILD fares in light of its final testing period and FDA review process. 

If anything, the June GILD scenario underscores the importance of acting on key levels when the market flashes a fleeting opportunity amidst drastic (and bullish) fundamental and technical shifts. 

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.

Economic activity in the U.S. was considerably stronger than expected during the second quarter, according to an initial estimate Thursday from the Commerce Department.

Real gross domestic product, a measure of all the goods and services produced during the April-through-June period, increased at a 2.8% annualized pace adjusted for seasonality and inflation. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for growth of 2.1% following a 1.4% increase in the first quarter.

Consumer spending helped propel the growth number higher, as did contributions from private inventory investment and nonresidential fixed investment.

Personal consumption expenditures, the main proxy in the Bureau of Economic Analysis report for consumer activity, increased 2.3% for the quarter, up from the 1.5% acceleration in Q1. Both services and goods spending saw solid increases for the quarter.

On the downside, imports, which subtract from GDP, jumped 6.9%, the biggest quarterly rise since Q1 of 2022.

Stock market futures drifted higher following the report while Treasury yields moved lower.

There was some good news on the inflation front: the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key measure for the Federal Reserve, increased 2.6% for the quarter, down from the 3.4% move in Q1. Excluding food and energy, core PCE prices, which the Fed focuses on even more as a longer-term inflation indicator, was up 2.9%, down from 3.7% in the prior period.

The so-called chain-weighted price index, which takes into account changes in consumer behavior, increased 2.3% for the quarter, below the 2.6% estimate.

One other key variable, final sales to private domestic purchasers, which the Fed considers a good indicator of underlying demand, accelerated at a 2.6% pace, the same as in the prior quarter.

However, the report also indicated that the personal savings rate continues to decelerate, at 3.5% for the quarter, compared to 3.8% in Q1.

There have been signs of cracks lately in the consumer picture.

A report Wednesday from the Philadelphia Federal Reserve showed credit card balances at an all-time high for data going back to 2012. Revolving debt balances also reached a new high even as banks reported tightening credit standards and declining new card originations.

However, retail sales numbers have continued to climb indicating that consumers are weathering the headwinds of high interest rates and persistent inflation.

There also is pressure in the housing market: Sales are declining while home prices continue to climb, putting pressure on first-time homebuyers.

Federal Reserve officials are expected to hold interest rates steady when they meet next week, though market pricing is pointing to the first cut in four years in September. Policymakers have been circumspect about when they might start reducing rates, though recent comments indicate more of a willingness to start easing policy and most central bankers have said they see further increases as unlikely.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The National Basketball Association has rebuffed longtime media partner Warner Bros. Discovery’s bid to keep airing games after next season.

The NBA told the media company it doesn’t believe it holds legal matching rights for the league’s new media deal. It instead plans to move ahead with Amazon as its third partner, along with ESPN and NBCUniversal, in its 11-year deal worth about $77 billion.

 “Warner Bros. Discovery’s most recent proposal did not match the terms of Amazon Prime Video’s offer and, therefore, we have entered into a long-term arrangement with Amazon,” the NBA said in a statement Wednesday.

Warner Bros. Discovery acquired matching rights as part of its current media rights deal with the league, which expires at the end of next season. That provision allows the company to match payment for any of the games that air on TNT, which it attempted to do Monday.

The NBA doesn’t believe Warner Bros. Discovery’s rights extend to an all-streaming package, which was carved out for Amazon. Warner Bros. Discovery also owns a streaming service, Max, which it could use to air games, but the company has told the NBA it plans to simulcast TNT games on Max rather than only putting them on Max.

The NBA sent a letter Wednesday to Warner Bros. Discovery explaining why it can’t match Amazon’s package, citing language from the original matching provision, according to people familiar with the matter. CNBC obtained a portion of that letter, addressed to Luis Silberwasser, chairman and CEO of TNT Sports.

The NBA cited a provision that says the existing media partner can exercise matching rights “only via the specific form of combined audio and video distribution (e.g. if the specific form of combined audio and video distribution is internet distribution, a matching incumbent may not exercise such games rights via television distribution).”

In its statement, the NBA said that “throughout these negotiations, our primary objective has been to maximize the reach and accessibility of our games for our fans. Our new arrangement with Amazon supports this goal by complementing the broadcast, cable and streaming packages that are already part of our new Disney and NBCUniversal arrangements.”

“All three partners have also committed substantial resources to promote the league and enhance the fan experience,” the league added. “We are grateful to Turner Sports for its award-winning coverage of the NBA and look forward to another season of the NBA on TNT.”

Warner Bros. Discovery said Monday it matched one of the NBA’s three media rights packages, which people familiar with the matter identified as the $1.93 billion per-year deal earmarked for Amazon Prime Video. Disney and Comcast’s NBCUniversal signed deals for the other two packages, part of the league’s $77 billion media rights renewal over 11 years. NBCUniversal is the parent company of NBC News.

“We have matched the Amazon offer, as we have a contractual right to do, and do not believe the NBA can reject it,” Warner Bros. Discovery said in a statement on Wednesday. “In doing so, they are rejecting the many fans who continue to show their unwavering support for our best-in-class coverage, delivered through the full combined reach of WBD’s video-first distribution platforms — including TNT, home to our four-decade partnership with the league, and Max, our leading streaming service.”

“We think they have grossly misinterpreted our contractual rights with respect to the 2025-26 season and beyond, and we will take appropriate action,” the statement continued. “We look forward, however, to another great season of the NBA on TNT and Max including our iconic Inside the NBA.”

Warner Bros. Discovery’s Turner Sports has carried live NBA games for nearly 40 years. The cable network TNT is home to “Inside the NBA,” the popular studio show starring Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Shaquille O’Neal. The future of the show is in doubt if the NBA doesn’t strike a deal with Warner Bros. Discovery.

The league also wants its streaming partner to have maximum reach. Amazon Prime Video has more than twice as many global customers — more than 200 million to Max’s roughly 100 million — which may make the service a more appealing platform for the league. The streaming rights are global, even though Warner Bros. Discovery is only bidding on U.S. rights, according to people familiar with the language in the contract.

Warner Bros. Discovery may need to sue the NBA to claim its matching rights. Lawyers for the company and the NBA have been poring over contractual language for the past several months, according to people familiar with the matter.

Details of the new NBA rights deal

Disney is paying $2.62 billion per year for its package of games and NBCUniversal is paying $2.45 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. The new rights deal begins with the 2025-26 season and runs through the 2035-36 season.

The NBA application will be a central portal for games, directing consumers to each national game, whether it is on broadcast, cable TV or a streaming service. Approximately 75 regular-season games will be on broadcast TV each season, up from 15 games in the current rights deal. The league will have two broadcast stations as partners — Disney’s ABC and NBCUniversal’s NBC.

“Our new global media agreements with Disney, NBCUniversal and Amazon will maximize the reach and accessibility of NBA games for fans in the United States and around the world,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. “These partners will distribute our content across a wide range of platforms and help transform the fan experience over the next decade.”

Disney will distribute 80 NBA regular-season games per season, including more than 20 games on ABC and up to 60 games on ESPN. ABC and ESPN will have one of the two conference finals series in 10 of the 11 years of the agreement. ABC will remain the exclusive home of the NBA Finals, which it has broadcast since 2003.

NBCUniversal will return as a league broadcasting partner after losing NBA rights in 2002. NBCUniversal will air 100 NBA games each regular season, including about 50 that will be exclusive to its streaming platform Peacock, according to CEO Mike Cavanagh.

“We are proud to once again partner with the NBA and WNBA, two iconic brands and the home of the best basketball in the world,” Cavanagh in a statement. “We look forward to presenting our best-in-class coverage of both leagues with our innovative programming and distribution plan across NBC and Peacock to entertain fans and help grow the game.”

WNBA games are also a part of all three packages. The partners will distribute more than 125 regular-season games and playoff games nationally each season. Disney will air a minimum of 25 regular-season games, NBCUniversal will carry 50 regular-season and playoff games on its platforms, and Prime Video will get 30 regular-season games, assuming Warner Bros. Discovery can’t match Amazon’s package.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

INDIANAPOLIS − Just because the Michigan has become familiar with Indianapolis doesn’t mean it’s become bored with it.

On the contrary, the hope for the Wolverines 135 days from Thursday − when first-year coach Sherrone Moore, running back Donovan Edwards, fullback Max Bredeson and safety Makari Paige held court at Big Ten Media Days − is that they’ll be back on the same field to compete for a fourth consecutive Big Ten championship.

‘For the University of Michigan, our football program, our players, our coaches, our staff, what an unbelievable job our Team 144 did,’ Moore began Thursday. ‘But we’re ready for Team 145 to take the reigns. We’re excited to be here at Lucas Oil Stadium, a place we look forward to try to strive to end the regular season here.

‘Humbly, been blessed to be able to be here the past couple of years, look forward to working our process to continue to do the same.’

While there is admittedly quite a bit that’s changed for the reigning national champions, Moore was more intently focused on what’s been able to remain in place.

‘Making sure our culture, that our alignment stays the same,’ Moore said of his primary focus since he shifted from offensive line coach and offensive coordinator to the head job in January. ‘Our players have done an outstanding job of keeping the culture, keeping the togetherness, the brotherhood, so really it’s a testament to them.’

Even with three banners all with block M’s on them representing Michigan’s recent run of dominance, prognosticators don’t seem to believe the run will continue. The Wolverines were picked to finish fourth in the Big Ten in a preseason media poll behind rival Ohio State, newcomer Oregon and longtime nemesis Penn State.

There are some who could see it as a bit insulting; the Wolverines haven’t lost to the Buckeyes since 2019 or to Penn State since 2020, however those on hand representing the Maize and Blue kept their reactions even-keel.

‘That’s fine,’ Edwards said. ‘You know, people always put stuff to paper, but ultimately it’s nothing we haven’t been through at all at Michigan. Ultimately, we’re going to do whatever it takes to win every single game this year.’

When will Michigan name its starting quarterback?

Though there are a number of unknowns on the roster, there is a glaring question that stands out above the rest. Who will be the starting quarterback when Michigan opens the season against Fresno State under the lights on Aug. 31?

The three leading candidates heading into fall camp are junior Alex Orji, graduate student Jack Tuttle and senior Davis Warren.

‘They all have the attributes you need to be a successful starting quarterback at the University of Michigan,’ Moore said. ‘The No. 1 thing we’re looking for out of any guy that’s our quarterback is they’re a playmaker; they make plays, they’ll make the right decision, they’ll take care of the football and they want to win.’

Each player brings something unique to the table. The most tantalizing option seems to be Orji, the 6-foot-3, 235-pound dual threat athlete. He’s run the ball 21 times in his career for 123 yards and three touchdowns, however, he’s only been entrusted with throwing one pass (a five-yard completion).

Then there’s Tuttle, who was the No. 2 last year prior to injury. He’s thrown 199 career passes at both Indiana and Michigan, which included a nice campaign in spot duty last year, when he completed 15 of 17 passes for 130 yards and a score and ran four times for another 35 yards.

As for Warren, he didn’t complete a pass last year (0 for 5), but threw the most consistent ball of the spring game and showed nice precision on his deep passes. All three will get a chance to run with the starters at some point in the fall, as they did in the spring, but don’t expect Moore to make a decision before the season starts just because it’s here.

After all, his predecessor (Jim Harbaugh) took a quarterback competition into the season in 2022, and that worked out just fine when J.J. McCarthy ultimately beat out Cade McNamara.

‘The ideal timeline is when we feel like we’ve got the guy who will help us win,’ Moore said. ‘There’s not a date, not a time. We will have a feel as a staff … Kirk Campbell is a phenomenal coach … he will make a great decision and we will be there to make it together.’

Game recognize game

The Wolverines became just the fourth team to go 15-0 in a single season in college football history, joining an illustrious list that consists of Georgia, Alabama and Clemson.

Michigan is the king of the sport until proven otherwise and Thursday, Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck made sure he gave the Wolverines their flowers. Fleck has spent the past seven years in Minneapolis, doing all he can to turn the Gophers into a consistent winner.

He and athletic director Mark Coyle combine to make up the longest tenured duo at the two positions in the conference, something Fleck said he takes great pride in. During his tenure, the landscape of college football has changed greatly, but Fleck has always tried to stay consistent.

‘We’re a transformational program, academically, athletically, spiritually, socially, spiritually, the whole life program. Our world has changed in this transactional world, with NIL, with the portal, with salary caps,’ Fleck said. ‘We believe in the transactional piece as a piece that allows our student-athletes to benefit, but you still get this transformational life program.’

It’s the balance that every major college program is trying to find and Fleck said he believes it’s exactly what happened last year in Ann Arbor. Fleck said last year’s Michigan squad is evidence that programs don’t have to buy their way to a winning team; rather it’s about find the right pieces which fit them.

‘I think Michigan proved this last year − team, team team,’ Fleck said. ‘If you build the best team, you’ve got a chance to win. It’s one thing to have the transaction, but you have to transform them.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – As a Rhode Island native, former Boston College star and career New York Yankee, Michael King faced an adjustment after the Yankees dealt him to the San Diego Padres in the Juan Soto blockbuster last December.

The year-round sunshine was a nice perk, as was a different cuisine and a cadre of veteran Padres from which he could learn. Yet he wasn’t fully prepared for the guy sitting in the general manager’s chair who orchestrated his trade from New York.

“Preller,” King says of A.J. Preller, now a decade into his tenure as chief Padres baseball officer, “is crazy. But I absolutely love him.”

It was Preller who orchestrated a seven-player trade in July 2022 that landed Soto from Washington. And Preller who dealt him away two years later, with a National League Championship Series run to show for two summers of Soto.

And it was Preller who in mid-March, just as the Padres got set for their season-opening trip to South Korea and King for his first outing as a full-time starter, who traded for Chicago White Sox ace Dylan Cease, showing that despite the trade of Soto, the November death of franchise scion Peter Seidler and the perception that the high times in San Diego were ending, they were still in it to win it.

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No, the Padres aren’t threatening the Dodgers for the NL West title, and their 2022 NLDS conquest of, as Seidler called them, the “dragon up the freeway” remains the high-water mark of Preller’s era. And the club’s future – as big spenders, perennial contenders – remains in some doubt.

Yet as next week’s trade deadline looms, the Padres are 54-50, tied for the third wild card spot and a half-game behind the No. 2 Mets. They have switched up from paying for power to trading for bat-missing.

And even if the days of awarding third baseman Manny Machado a $350 million extension, or infielder Xander Bogaerts a $280 million contract are over, the sellout crowds overflowing Petco Park and the aim to give them a winner are not.

“You know that at any given time,” Cease tells USA TODAY Sports, “something big could happen.”

Cease saw that from two perspectives: He was the prize of the offseason trade market, even if the Chicago White Sox did not deal him until the Padres’ spring training was nearly over, and his new teammates were practically on the flight for their two-game series in South Korea.

And he also felt the boost that comes with a major in-season add, in this case the May 4 trade with the Miami Marlins for two-time batting champ Luis Arraez.

If nothing else, the Padres are showing there’s no reason to cash it in when a dalliance with a generational player goes sour.

‘The vibes are high here’

Make no mistake: Soto is a smash hit in New York. With 25 home runs, a 1.017 OPS, 71 RBI and a .431 OBP, he’s in the top five in the major leagues in almost every statistical category. And if teammate Aaron Judge is atop both the leaderboard and the proverbial marquee in the Bronx, Soto is crowding him.

His offseason free agency will be the story in baseball. And the Yankees, should they fail to win the World Series, will be that much more motivated to pay the moon for Soto, given the cost to acquire him.

For Soto, the Padres received King, top pitching prospect Drew Thorp, catcher Kyle Higashioka and pitchers Randy Vasquez and Jhony Brito. It looked like something of a half-measure – deleting a 5.5-WAR player and getting back a pitcher who never quite leapt to full-time starter, a backup catcher and prospects.

Yet the Padres were just 82-80 a year ago with Soto; the 2022 playoff surge grew more distant with each desultory month that resulted in manager Bob Melvin departing to San Francisco.

Veteran Mike Shildt was hired to replace Melvin. And when Preller packaged Thorpe with prospects Jairo Iriarte, Samuel Zavala and reliever Steven Wilson to the White Sox for Cease, the 2024 vision crystallized.

“That was huge,” says Higashioka, who has contributed 12 home runs and an .807 OPS in backup duty. “Anytime management goes out and makes a move for a big-time superstar player like Dylan, it just reaffirms to us the commitment they have in winning.

“That always gives you a huge boost.”

Suddenly, the chess pieces started moving. Bereft of outfielders after the Soto trade, the Padres brought back 31-year-old Jurickson Profar in February and, just before the season started, moved top prospect Jackson Merrill to center field.

Both were All-Stars; Merrill had four hits and boosted his average to .284 in a 12-3 rout of the Nationals on Tuesday. The trade for Arraez gave San Diego a half-dozen elite bat handlers atop the lineup and the former Marlin has not disappointed: He has 88 hits in 65 games.

Then there is King.

‘Realizing how beneficial this is’

A starter in the minors, he’d found a niche as a dominant multi-inning reliever in 2022, only to suffer an elbow fracture that July. He returned by April 2023 and, after the Yankees’ season devolved into a .500 affair, admittedly “was definitely begging to start last year. (Manager Aaron) Boone definitely caught my wrath a couple times but eventually gave in.”

Ultimately, he was Soto trade bait, and the Padres chose correctly.

King, 29, has made 20 starts and completed at least six innings in 10 of them, half of those seven-inning outings. In his last start, he took a no-hitter into the seventh inning against the potent Cleveland Guardians, striking out six.

While the Padres will try to buy him extra days’ rest here and there since he’s already past his major league career high in innings, King says working with pitching coach Ruben Niebla and leaning on the wisdom of veterans Joe Musgrove and Yu Darvish has been invaluable.

He ranks in the 97th percentile in soft contact, relying almost equally on a four-seam fastball, sinker and changeup.

“I think it’s been awesome for my career,” says King. “Being able to bounce ideas off them, see how my body’s reacting, see what recovery methods they do, see how to flip a lineup a third or fourth time – just to get their opinions has been huge for me.

“I felt like originally, I didn’t want to get traded. And now, I’m realizing how beneficial this is for my career.”

Says Higashioka, King’s teammate since 2018: “That opportunity came back to him and this time, he really proved he could do it. That was great to see. I know what he’s capable of. And he’s showing it this year.”

Cease has certainly been as advertised, leading the majors with 159 strikeouts. Most notably, his strikeout-walk ratio is 4.30, by far the best of his career and a 59% improvement on last season.

He nearly won the AL Cy Young Award for a 81-81 White Sox team in 2022, suffered through a 101-loss season last year and, thanks to the trade, avoided their 27-76 disaster this year.

“From that sense, no matter what, it was going to be refreshing,” says Cease. “But it’s been a pleasant thing to be a part of. The vibes are high here and there’s expectations, and we’re playing pretty well, so it’s been a lot of fun.

“Anytime you’re forced to do new things, it’s going to ultimately end up making you grow.”

Windows shopping

Preller’s King, Cease and Arraez acquisitions make even more sense when you consider all four players had two seasons remaining before free agency, prying open a definitive window with that group. The club will be tied to Machado and Bogaerts into the next decade and must fortify around them.

Having lived it, King has found a method to Preller’s madness.

“He always talks about, when we trade for a Luis Arraez, you’re trading away potential future MVPs,” says King. “And I understand that risk. But you’re trading away potential future MVPs to a team you don’t know will be competing. And right now, we’re competing. We want to win this year.

“He’s very good at understanding, ‘I can figure it out later.’ And very good at figuring it out later to where, later on, when these guys have moved on to a new team, he can put together a team that can compete.”

The cost can be dear. All-Stars Max Fried, Trea Turner, Josh Naylor and future closers Emmanuel Clase and Andres Muñoz were all part of early Preller purges. But there’s also dozens of traded players forgotten to time or hardly remembered as guys, including the entire four-player package sent to Tampa Bay in December 2020 for Blake Snell, who won a Cy Young Award last season.

Preller really only has to wince this week, when CJ Abrams, MacKenzie Gore and James Wood all suited up as potent contributors in the opposing clubhouse, for the Nationals. That was the cost for acquiring Soto.

Yet there’s no trade that can’t be undone by one, two, five more. Heck, even Vasquez, a throw-in in the Soto deal, is now competently filling the No. 4 starter role with Musgrove on the injured list and Darvish the restricted list.

Come the July 30 deadline, the Padres will find out what gifts Preller may have for their stretch drive.

“There’s still a lot of talent on the team,” says Cease. “If you got rid of your top six guys, it’d be like, ‘OK, you’re rebuilding.’ But I think this organization has a desire to be very competitive – and they’ve shown that with their moves.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

What better venue for a Sweet 16 than Paris?

The 2024 Summer Olympic Games officially get underway on Friday, and as is usually the case for the Olympics, some of the world’s best athletes are the ones who aren’t allowed to legally drink or vote just yet.

That much is true for track and field athlete Quincy Wilson and gymnast Hezly Rivera, who head to Paris to try and secure some hardware for the Stars and Stripes. Not only are the two athletes immensely talented, but they’re both just 16 years old.

On Thursday, they struck a pose for cameras ahead of the opening ceremony on Friday, an image that could potentially be a lasting one for years to come.

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Wilson is already in the history books ahead of the games: At 16, he becomes the youngest American male track and field athlete in history, as he was added to the men’s 4×400 relay pool. In June, he also set the U18 record in the outdoor 400-meter dash, posting a 44.20.

Rivera, a New Jersey native, turned 16 on June 4 and joins the women’s gymnastics squad which features Simone Biles, Jordan Chiles, Sunisa Lee and Jade Carey. Team USA gymnastics is looking for their first gold medal since 2016, a team which also featured Biles.

This is all to say, the future is bright for Team USA Olympians – beginning on Friday, it also might be golden.

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PARIS — A Filipino gymnast’s Olympic experience was almost over before it began because of an allergic reaction.

Levi Jung Ruivivar told Gymcastic.com, a gymnastics podcast, that she went into anaphylactic shock Monday and had to go to the emergency room at the Olympic Village. She later posted on Instagram that she hadn’t ingested any tree nuts, to which she’s allergic, or been bitten by any bugs.

But her symptoms — labored breathing, throat tightening, swelling, itching — worsened as she went to the ER, to the point she had to use her Epi-pen.

“I actually don’t know what happened,” Ruivivar told Gymcastic. “I don’t know what it was from. I hadn’t eaten anything in three or four hours. I don’t know what got in my system, but it was really, really bad. My whole face swelled up.”

Ruivivar said she’s had a similar reaction once before and was out of the gym for two weeks afterward. On Thursday, she was on the Olympic floor for podium training. She’ll compete in qualifying Sunday.

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“I’m trying to recover from it. It’s really hard because there’s not a lot I can about it. I’m just trying to push through and do as much as I can,” she said.

“(It) does suck,” Ruivivar added. “Leading up, the preparation was going really well and I was feeling good. My body will just continue to recover, but it took a lot out of my system.”

Ruivivar is part of a three-woman team from the Philippines, all of whom originally represented the United States. Ruivivar is eligible to compete for the Philippines because her paternal grandfather was born there, coming to the United States as a teenager. “I am here for the experience as well,” Ruivivar said. “Even if it’s not my best gymnastics, I can try to give a performance that hopefully is memorable, in a good way, and try to get back to where I was before.”

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The U.S. women’s soccer team is making its return to Olympic play with it first match of the 2024 Summer Games on Thursday.

The USWNT will play against Zambia in head coach Emma Hayes’ first major tournament match since she officially began her role in May, and all eyes will be on her starting XI to open this year’s Olympics. Beginning group play on the right foot could be pivotal to success as the squad is looking for its first Olympic gold since 2012. In the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the U.S. team won bronze.

Here is the starting XI for the USWNT in their first match in Group B:

USWNT starting XI vs. Zambia

Goalkeeper: Alyssa Naeher
Defender: Emily Fox
Defender: Naomi Girma
Defender: Tierna Davidson
Midfielder: Lindsey Horan (captain)
Midfielder: Rose Lavelle
Midfielder: Sam Coffey
Forward: Sophia Smith
Forward: Trinity Rodman
Forward: Crystal Dunn
Forward: Mallory Swanson

Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from

Available substitutes: Korbin Albert, Casey Krueger, Lynn Williams, Jenna Nighswonger, Emily Sonnett, Casey Murphey, Croix Bethune.

Where is Jaedyn Shaw?

Forward Jaedyn Shaw is unavailable because of a leg injury. She was replaced on the 18-player roster for the match by alternate Croix Bethune, according to a statement released by U.S. Soccer.

USWNT 2024 Paris Olympic schedule

Thursday will be the first of three matches the USWNT will play in group play. The national team will have to be one of the top two teams in Group B or be one of the two-best third place teams to reach the quarterfinals. Here is the rest of the USWNT group play schedule:

Sunday, July 28: USA vs. Germany (3 p.m. ET)
Wednesday, July 31: USA vs. Australia (1 p.m. ET)

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