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If some polls are to be believed, one in three Democrats think that Donald Trump faked his own assassination attempt. When I read that, I thought, could this possibly be true? But this weekend on my drive home to West Virginia from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, I got the theory first hand. And it’s a fascinating doozy.

Station Square Ristorante, just off of I-80 in Liberty, Ohio, is an absolute gem. Ottavio and Bridget Musumeci have somehow managed to create a legitimate fine-dining experience attached to the Super 8 motel. And no, I’m not kidding. In the wood-paneled bar, as I ordered oysters and antipasto for a late lunch, I met Mark, originally from northern New Jersey, which his accent revealed before he did. And Mark, well, he had some very interesting things to say.

As is my way, I turned the conversation to politics and the assassination came up.

‘That whole thing was a setup,’ Mark told me.

Before I could even respond, John, the bartender, who I would learn doesn’t like Trump or Biden, said, ‘Nah, two people are dead. No way.’ 

Mark’s response was, ‘this is Donald Trump, he’s capable of anything.’

So I dug in a bit. How did they get the kid to do it? Mark was ready with answers. They paid off the family, or maybe told him he’d get off with just a few years in jail, he suggested.

‘And the death of Corey Comperatore?’ I asked, referring to the retired fire chief who died shielding his family from the assassin’s bullets.

‘Donald Trump doesn’t care if his supporters die,’ Mark shot back, quite certain of himself.

You should know that Mark did not come off as some kind of lunatic. A bit prone to conspiracy theories maybe, but by no means crazy. So how could he believe all this with no evidence whatsoever?

He also had a good appetite, and as he wolfed down his caesar salad and veal piccante topped with mussels, he made it clear that it all came down to one simple precept: Trump is capable of anything.

I couldn’t help but think that the fact that Mark shares this kind of weird, irrational thinking with a third of his party faithful is because it is exactly what Democrats and their media allies have been feeding them. 

Why wouldn’t Mark, if he has a steady diet of liberal media, think that Trump is capable of killing innocent people? After all, they say he will deny women their rights, he won’t let black people vote, he will destroy democracy, and on and on and on. Mark is conditioned to believe that Trump is a unique evil and nothing should be put past him.

I said to Mark that if I thought one party, one side, or call it what you will, was willing to kill innocent Americans in this way, then it might be time to buy some guns. Then he said something that surprised me.

‘It’s not the other side, it’s just Trump.’

It made little sense, but in a strange way, I was glad to hear him say it. At least Mark doesn’t blame his fellow citizens who support Trump. Not yet, anyway. Mark finished and left before I did, and we had a wholesome and sincere goodbye. After the door closed, I asked to John, ‘What do you make of that?’ ‘It’s crazy,’ he shrugged.

Yes it is, but here we are. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Rafael Nadal reached his first tournament final in more than two years on Saturday, coming from a set and a break down to defeat Duje Ajdukovic 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 at the Nordea Open in Bastad, Sweden.

Nadal’s last ATP Tour final — and win — came in June 2022 at the French Open.

After dropping the first set to the Croatian qualifier, Nadal quickly went down in the second set, broken in the first game. But Nadal found another gear, breaking Ajdukovic’s serve five times throughout the rest of the two-hour, 13-minute semifinal.

‘Always it is a great feeling to be back in a final,’ Nadal, of Spain, said after the clay-court match. ‘I have won four matches in a row, something I was not able to make happen since two years ago. A lot of things happened, but still in this process of recovering, a lot of things I lost, because I had a very important hip surgery almost one year ago.

‘So things were not going that easy, but I am fighting. I am fighting during the whole tournament to be where I am today.’

In the final, Nadal will meet the winner of Saturday’s later match between Nuno Borges of Portugal and Thiago Agustin Tirante of Argentina.

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The Tampa Bay Rays placed first baseman Yandy Diaz on the restricted list Saturday.

He did not accompany the team to New York in advance of Friday’s 6-1 loss to the Yankees, with manager Kevin Cash citing ‘a personal matter.’

‘Probably leave it at that,’ Cash said.

The Rays did not indicate how long they expect Diaz, their leadoff hitter, to be away from the team.

Diaz, who turns 33 next month, is second on the Rays with a .273 average. He leads the team with 104 hits. He has eight homers and 46 RBI in 94 games.

All things Rays: Latest Tampa Bay Rays news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

He hit a club-record .330 last season to win the American League batting title.

In a corresponding move, the Rays called up infielder Curtis Mead from Triple-A Durham.

In 26 games with Tampa Bay earlier this season, Mead hit .218 with one homer and five RBI.

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Slovenia’s Tadej Pogačar outsprinted rival Jonas Vingegaard in the final meters of the race to win the penultimate stage of the 2024 Tour de France on Saturday, effectively sealing his position as the general classification winner barring any catastrophe at tomorrow’s individual time trial. Pogačar’s victory was his fifth individual stage win of the 2024 Tour de France and the 16th of his Tour career. With just one more test remaining tomorrow, the 25-year-old Slovenian seems invincible at this late stage of the race. Pogačar, of UAE Team Emirates, has had a dominant year. If he officially wins the yellow jersey on Sunday, he will become the first man in the 21st century to win both the Tour and the Giro d’Italia in the same season.

‘I’m really happy I got another stage win — just one more day to go,’ Pogačar said. ‘That one, I’m going to enjoy it too.’

Stage 20 marked the last day of group racing, as Sunday’s final stage will be an individual time trial for the first time since 1989. The riders will tackle a 21-mile route from Monaco to the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, France. 

Along the mountainous route from Nice to Nice to Col de la Couillole, the best climbers attacked early. However, the ascending speed of Ecuador’s Richard Carapaz of EF Education-EasyPost and Spain’s Enrich Mas of Movistar quickly separated the pair, who led the field until the final kilometers of the race.

With just the time trial remaining, Carapaz officially secured his polka-dotted jersey, becoming the first Ecuadorian to win the title in history.

‘This Mountain jersey is a prestigious prize,’ Carapaz said yesterday after taking the lead in the mountains category. ‘All riders in my country dream of it because in Ecuador there are many mountains.’

Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay of Intermarché-Wanty also made history with his overall victory in the points classification, becoming the first Black rider to win a green jersey.

‘We did such an incredible job to protect this jersey,’ Girmay said. ‘We gave everything we had.’

Meanwhile, for most of the race, a second breakout group of the field’s top general classification riders formed to chase down Carapez and Mas. Approximately 8 km from the top of Col de la Couillole, white jersey wearer Remco Evenepoel of Belgium and Soudal-QuickStep attacked but failed to decisively break away as leading duo Pogačar and Vingegaard of Visma Lease a Bike followed. 

Portugal’s Joao Almeida of UAE Team Emirates put in extra work to lead the top trio for a few kilometers in aid of team leader Pogačar until Evenepoel attempted to surge to the front once again. This time, though, Vingegaard responded fiercely, and only Pogačar could follow the Dane, dropping the Belgian in the top duo’s wake. 

Vingegaard and Pogačar, both two-time Tour de France Champions, eventually caught Carapaz and Mas 2.5km from the finish line. Carapaz kept pace with the pair for a few hundred meters but was dropped in the last 800m of the race, setting the dynamic duo up for a sprint finish in which Pogačar ultimately prevailed. Pogačar’s relentless pace and strategic brilliance ultimately gave him a seven-second edge over his rival.

Pogačar now stands five minutes and 14 seconds ahead of Vingegaard and eight minutes and four seconds ahead of Evenepoel. Although Evenepoel has the best time trial ability on paper, Pogačar is so far ahead that, unless he suffers a disastrous outing tomorrow, the Slovenian should win his third Tour de France, having previously triumphed in 2020 and 2021, but finishing behind Vingegaard in 2022 and 2023.

Tour de France Stage 20 results

TOUR DE FRANCE: Recap, results and standings after Stage 19

Tour de France general classification standings after Stage 20

Tour de France jersey standings after Stage 20

Yellow (general classification): Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates)Green (points classification): Biniam Girmay (Intermarché – Wanty)Polka dot (mountains classification): Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost)White (young rider classification): Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep)Yellow numbers (teams classification)UAE Team EmiratesGolden numbers (combativity award): Enric Mas (Movistar)

Tour de France Stage 21: How to watch, schedule, distance

Date: Sunday, July 21, 2024

Location: Monaco to Nice

Distance: 21 miles (33.7 km)

Type: Individual time trial

Streaming: Peacock, FuboTV

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With the Paris Olympics just around the corner, Team USA athletes are cranking up their favorite tunes to power through their training sessions as they chase gold in the City of Lights. Some of Team USA’s stars shared with USA TODAY what they are listening to to get pumped up for competition. From pop and country to rock, classical and even Disney soundtracks, their music tastes boast an impressive range.

Here’s a list of athletes’ go-to music choices while training for and competing in the Paris Olympic Games.

Gabby Thomas, track and field

Birds of a Feather by Billie Eilish

Crystal Dunn, soccer

Hype-up songs by Megan Thee Stallion and Cardi B

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

A’ja Wilson, basketball

Everything by Mary J. Blige or America Has a Problem by Beyoncé

Noah Lyles, track and field

New God Flow by Kanye West and Pusha T

CJ Nickolas, taekwondo

Rap, hip hop and the Frozen soundtrack 

Morelle McCane, boxing

Anything R&B and soft rap; Chaka Khan’s ‘I’m Every Woman’ and songs by Meek Mill, Drake, Carrie Underwood

Ashleigh Johnson, water polo

Songs by Beyoncé (especially Cowboy Carter), Labyrinth, Hozier and Childish Gambino

Chase Budinger, beach volleyball

Lose Yourself by Eminem

Daniela Moroz, sailing

All Too Well (10 minute version) by Taylor Swift or All Star by Smash Mouth

Ilona Maher, rugby

Songs by Noah Kahan, Burna Boy and Ashnikko

John Tolkin, soccer

Songs by Billy Joel, Elton John, U2, Eagles, Coldplay and Kygo

Evy Leibfarth, canoe

Everything from Dolly Parton to J. Cole

Lee Kiefer, fencing

The Hamilton soundtrack 

Jordan Larson, volleyball

Any country music

Kate Douglass, swimming     

Any song by Rihanna

Minna Stess, skateboarding (park)

All types of music, including “joke songs” like the Minions soundtrack

Jesse Grupper, climbing 

Classical music and songs by Florence and the Machine and Taylor Swift

Naomi Girma, soccer

Fight Night by Migos

McKenzie Long, track and field

About Damn Time by Lizzo, a song from her late mother’s playlist

Brody Malone, gymnastics

EDM, rock and rap music

Carissa Moore, surfing

Songs by Kita Alexander

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Brittney Griner and wife Cherelle Griner have announced the birth of their first child.

The Phoenix Mercury star shared the news with CBS Sports Friday ahead of the 2024 WNBA All-Star Game in Phoenix.

The couple welcomed the baby boy on July 8.

‘That’s my man. He is amazing,’ Griner told CBS Sports. ‘They said as soon as you see them, everything that you thought mattered just goes out the window. That’s literally what happened.’

Griner said that he will be called ‘pops.’

Griner participated in the WNBA All-Star skills competition on Friday night and will play in the WNBA All-Star Game Saturday before going to Paris for the 2024 Olympics as a member of the U.S. women’s basketball team.

‘It kind of sucks because I have to leave, but at the same time, he will understand,’ Griner told CBS Sports.

‘My whole phone has turned into him now,’ Griner added.

Brittney Griner and Cherelle Griner married in June 2019.

Reach Jeremy Cluff at jeremy.cluff@arizonarepublic.com. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter @Jeremy_Cluff.

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Churchill Downs Incorporated has rescinded trainer Bob Baffert’s suspension effective immediately, according to Churchill Downs.

“We are satisfied that Mr. Baffert has taken responsibility for his actions, completed a substantial penalty and is committed to running in full compliance with the rules and regulations going forward,’ Churchill Downs CEO Bill Carstanjen said via a news release. ‘All parties agree that it is time to bring this chapter to a close and focus on the future. Mr. Baffert is welcome to return to any of CDI’s racetracks, including our flagship Churchill Downs Racetrack, and we wish him and his connections good luck in their future competitive endeavors.”

The suspension was then extended last year because of “continued concerns regarding the threat to the safety and integrity of racing he poses to CDI-owned racetracks,’ according to Churchill Downs.

The extension kept Baffert out of the 150th Kentucky Derby.

Jason Frakes contributed to this report.

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Jake Paul shoved Mike Perry during a face-off at their weigh-in Friday, then went on a rant against UFC president Dana White and mixed martial arts fighters, saying ‘they’ve been trying to assassinate me’ and that they ‘don’t want me in this sport.’

Paul’s outburst started with a shove of Perry.

“He flew like six feet,’’ Paul said during an interview with Ariel Helwani on stage at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida. “But look, Dana White said that he’s going to give (Perry) a UFC contract if he could knock me out. Well, guess what, Dana? You can rip up the (expletive) contract because I’m going to (expletive) up Mike Perry. Anyone you send at me, any one of your MMA fighters is getting (expletive) up.

“They’ve been trying to assassinate me. They don’t want me in this sport. They hate that I run this sport, but when you try to assassinate a guy like me, it only makes me bigger. I’m on a mission from God, a mission from God, a servant of God to save this sport. And that’s exactly what I will keep doing. Keep on winning, keep on fighting.’’

Paul has fought four MMA fighters — Nate Diaz, Tyron Woodley, Anderson Silva and Ben Askren — and defeated them all.

Perry, who also competed in the UFC before joining the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship in 2021, shoved Paul back during the weigh-in. Several security guards then pulled Perry away from Paul.

“They working hard to protect him, bro,’’ Perry said, referring to Paul. “But tomorrow night in the ring, when it’s just me and him, no protection. He going down.

“You’ve seen how hard those big guys had to work to get me back. I was pushing through the (men). Moving all of they (expletive). That’s like a thousand pounds of pressure. That’s called ‘Platinum Pressure.’ I’m putting it on him tomorrow night.’’

Perry’s trainer James ‘JT’ Taylor told USA TODAY Sports he didn’t know anything about a potential contract offer coming from White should Perry win. Spokespeople for the UFC did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the matter left via voicemail and text.

Jake Paul weigh-in

‘Platinum’ Mike Perry, also nicknamed the ‘King of Violence,’ weighed in at 196.6 pounds. He got knocked out in 2015 in his only pro boxing match but is 5-0 in the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship.

Paul, who as a pro boxer is 9-1 with six knockouts, weighed in at 200 pounds – the maximum allowed for the cruiserweight fight.

Words were exchanged before the shoves.

“Why are you nervous?’’ Paul said. “I can see it in your eyes.”

Replied Perry, “I’m excited.’’

Perry indicated he wasn’t worried about the weigh-in showdown.

“You can have all this,’’ Perry said. “I want the ring tomorrow. That’s all I want.’’

Replied Paul, “You’re going to eat the ring tomorrow. Face first.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Friday’s CrowdStrike software disaster has been described as “the largest IT outage in history,” and it brought home just how vulnerable the planet is to itty-bitty coding errors. We were busy publishing the DecisionPoint ALERT Weekly Wrap, so I didn’t have a chance to look at the chart until this morning, but what a surprise it was when I saw the sharp OBV negative divergence set up following the high volume on June 21.

The On-Balance Volume (OBV) indicator has been around since the 1960s, but my impression is that it is not widely used. This is probably because the inventor, the late Joe Granville, was such bombastic figure. Nevertheless, I cut my teeth on OBV in the 1980s and have found that OBV divergences are extremely helpful. The problem with OBV is that it is kind of like watching grass grow — divergences are not frequent occurrences. OBV is simple to calculate. The total day’s volume is added or subtracted to/from the running OBV total based upon whether price closes up or down.

On the chart we can see that CRWD broke to new, all-time highs in June. Then on June 21 it traded down on extremely high volume, setting up the top of an OBV negative divergence. CRWD went on to make another all-time high on July 9, and the same day a lower OBV top set the negative divergence. Also on that day, the PMO crossed down through the signal line (crossover SELL Signal). We see that things started to really deteriorate on Wednesday, and on Friday the genie popped out of the bottle.

OBV divergences are usually much more subtle, so this is not what I would call a “textbook” case. Nevertheless, from the all-time high last week to Friday’s low CRWD declined about -28%, and the chart had plenty of solid, not-so-subtle red flags. This chart makes a good case for OBV in particular, and technical analysis in general.

–Carl Swenlin

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Two rounds down, two more to go in the 2024 British Open. Friday’s cut line of 6-over brought the original 158-player field down to 80 players left in the hunt for the iconic claret jug trophy at Royal Troon Golf Club.

Shane Lowry backed up an impressive 5-under-66 first round with a 2-under-69 Friday in Round 2 to take the lead at 7 under. First round leader Daniel Brown shot 1 over Friday to drop into a tie for second with Justin Rose at 5 under. That duo is three strokes clear over the next group of golfers, Billy Horschel, Dean Burmester, and Scottie Scheffler, who sit at 2 under.

Those six will be among the top golfers to watch from Royal Troon on Saturday. But if you are looking for Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy or Bryson DeChambeau, all three missed the cut and are going home for the weekend.

Here are the tee times for Round 3 of the British Open:

British Open tee times for Round 3

All times Eastern

3:55 a.m. — Darren Fichardt, Tommy Morrison

4:05 a.m. — Guido Migliozzi, Max Homa

4:15 a.m. — Shubhankar Sharma, Sungjae Im

4:25 a.m. — Abraham Ancer, Luis Masaveu

4:35 a.m. — Matt Fitzpatrick, Darren Clarke

4:45 a.m. — Jorge Campillo, Rickie Fowler

4:55 a.m. — Harris English, Robert MacIntyre

5:05 a.m. — Aaron Rai, Matt Wallace

5:20 a.m. — Adam Scott, Daniel Hillier

5:30 a.m. — Young-han Song, Andy Ogletree

5:40 a.m. — Si Woo Kim, Hideki Matsuyama

5:50 a.m. — Davis Thompson, Phil Mickelson

6 a.m. — Alex Cejka, Jacob Skov Oleson

6:10 a.m. — Ewen Ferguson, John Catlin

6:20 a.m. — Sean Crocker, Brian Harman

6:30 a.m. — Chris Kirk, Austin Eckroat

6:45 a.m. — Matteo Manassero, Justin Thomas

6:55 a.m. — Calum Scott, Joe Dean

7:05 a.m. — Cameron Young, Kurt Kitayama

7:15 a.m. — Byeong Hun An, Brendon Todd

7:25 a.m. — Rasmus Højgaard, Ryan Fox

7:35 a.m. — Richard Mansell, Thriston Lawrence

7:45 a.m. — Thorbjørn Olesen, Laurie Center

7:55 a.m. — Tom McKibbin, Emilian Grillo

8:10 a.m. — Jordan Spieth, Sam Burns

8:20 a.m. — Padraig Harrington, Eric Cole

8:30 a.m. — Adrian Meronk, Minkyu Kim

8:40 a.m. — Matthieu Pavon, Russell Henley

8:50 a.m. — Nicolai Højgaard, Alex Noren

9 a.m. — Jeunghun Wang, Tom Hoge

9:10 a.m. — Sepp Straka, Gary Woodland

9:20 a.m. — Marcel Siem, Jon Rahm

9:35 a.m. — Mackenzie Hughes, Collin Morikawa

9:45 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson

9:55 a.m. — Joaquin Niemann, Matthew Jordan

10:05 a.m. — Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele

10:15 a.m. — Jason Day, Corey Conners

10:25 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Dean Burmester

10:35 a.m. — Billy Horschel, Justin Rose

10:45 a.m. — Daniel Brown, Shane Lowry

How to watch the 2024 British Open

All times Eastern

Round 3: Saturday, July 20

5 a.m.-7 a.m.: Peacock7 a.m.- 3 p.m.: NBC/Peacock

Round 4: Sunday, July 21

4 a.m.-7 a.m.: Peacock7 a.m.- 2 p.m.: NBC/Peacock

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