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Noah Lyles’ open desire to run on Team USA’s 4×400-relay team is rubbing some sprinters the wrong way.

While appearing on the Track World News Podcast, Lyles said he’d put himself on the Team USA’s 4×400-relay squad along with fellow Olympians Chris Bailey, Michael Norman and Rai Benjamin. Lyles surprisingly didn’t pick the U.S. Olympic track and field trials 400 champion, Quincy Hall – who has the top 400 time in the world this year (43.80) – to be on the 4×400-relay squad.

“The only reason I wouldn’t use the current U.S. champion is because I don’t think he would be a starter. I feel like using him on the first leg would just be almost like a waste to his talent,” Lyles said. “I just don’t see him getting his full capability out of the first leg.”

Hall took offense to Lyles excluding him.

“(Noah Lyles) I don’t bother nobody but my blocks ready anytime you feel like you can beat me in the 400 you was talking (too) much on my name on (your) little podcast,” Hall posted on social media. “I don’t do the little slick comments and remarks I line up.”

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

Hall later posted a video in response to Lyles’ comments.

Lyles qualified for the Paris Olympics the 100 and 200. He’s also expected to be on Team USA’s 4×100-relay team. But the defending world champion in the 100 and 200 has been advocating to be a part of Team USA’s 4×400-relay team recently. He ran on Team USA’s gold-medal winning 4×400-relay team at the world indoor track and field championships last year. His inclusion on the team bothered many U.S. runners, including Fred Kerley who accused USA track and field of favoritism toward Lyles.

Lyles’ personal best time in the 400 came in 2016 when he ran a 47.04. His personal-record wouldn’t rank among the top 500 times in the world this year in the event.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Tiger Woods had two days he would like to forget at the Open Championship at Royal Troon Golf Course in Troon, Scotland.

After carding an 8-over 79 during the first round, it was more of the same on Friday for the 15-time major winner as he missed the cut at his third straight major tournament, finishing at 14-over par.

The last time that happened was in 2015, when he failed to make the weekend at the U.S. Open, The British Open, and the PGA Championship.

‘I’ve always loved playing major championships. I just wish I was more physically sharp coming into the majors,’ Woods said after his round. ‘Obviously it tests you mentally, physically, emotionally, and I just wasn’t as sharp as I needed to be.’

Woods, a three-time winner of the British Open, started his day with a par on the first hole and then got into trouble on the second with a double bogey. Woods then bogeyed No. 5, 9, 12, 14, 17 to finish the round at 6-over. He birdied only three holes during his two rounds.

That final score was good for being tied in 149th place with Ryan van Velzen, only four places from finishing the tournament in last place.

‘I’ve won two Open Championships here in Scotland, so I’ve always enjoyed playing up here,’ Woods said after his round. ‘I’ve enjoyed the different types of links that Scotland brings and the challenges are. I’ve missed playing Troon. It’s been a long time. I remember playing here way back in ’97. I’ve had some good memories here. I just wish I’d done a little bit better.’

Seven others had finishes worse than Woods at the time he completed his second round: Denwit Boriboonsub (+15), Justin Leonard (+15), Wyndham Clark (+16), Todd Hamilton (+17), and the three golfers who withdrew from the tournament.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The University of Alabama athletics department released these conceptual images Friday showing how Saban Field at Bryant-Denny Stadium may appear this fall at Alabama football games.

Saban Field at Bryant-Denny Stadium was adopted before a UA System Board of Trustees committee meeting Friday. Nick and Terry Saban attended the virtual meeting, as did UA President Stuart Bell, along with trustees and other members of the UA community.

The naming was chosen to honor the Sabans and their impact not just on football, but the UA community, Tuscaloosa and beyond. Nick Saban announced his retirement in January 2024, but with the Saban Center evolving downtown, their Nick’s Kids charity and other ties to the area, they don’t plan to be strangers to the Druid City.

Here’s an early look at the stadium.

The formal dedication is planned for the Sept. 7 home game against South Florida.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Jordan Chiles is often, what the kids say, “a mood.” Her personality is evident in her gymnastics and everything she does around it. Moments after she made her second Olympic squad following U.S. gymnastics trials in June, Chiles was asked how she is able to “bring her whole self” to gymnastics. She gestured to her friend and teammate who stood feet away. 

“I honestly think it’s because of this one right here,” Chiles said, pointing to Simone Biles, who was recording all of it for her personal iPhone archives. “She has honestly put me in a position to understand what it’s like to be an athlete in your sport and also a person as well … I give thanks to this one right here (Biles), because I wouldn’t be in this position right now.”

In a matter of four minutes in this post-trials interview, Chiles was the second member of the team to display relatable vulnerability. Reigning all-around Olympic champion Suni Lee broke down as she addressed the crowd inside Target Center. Lee was diagnosed with a kidney disease that ended her college career at Auburn and cast doubt over making it to the 2024 Paris Olympics. 

“A year ago, I didn’t even think this was p-,” Lee said, unable to complete the sentence. She sobbed. She composed herself and finished her thought. A raucous applause for the local hero followed.

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

For Chiles, the death of her grandfather and aunt in 2023 has been an emotional weight in the journey to her second Games. 

On the biggest stage before Paris, neither of Biles’ teammates shied away from peeling back the curtain of their mental state. Their stories were their armor. 

In Chiles’ own words: “Because of this one.” 

Because of Biles.

How Simone Biles pushed mental health conversation forward

Three years removed from the “twisties” that impacted her Tokyo performance, Biles has championed mental health to the point of calling her weekly therapy sessions “religious.” 

“Tokyo gave us the opportunity to open up that stage for that talk,” Biles said at trials. “And so I think now athletes are a little bit more in tune, and we trust what our gut is saying and just taking mental health a little bit more serious.”

Biles’ impact on how mental health is viewed within her own team is undeniable. 

“We are all so focused on our mental health right now because that’s basically the sport of gymnastics,” Lee said.

Lee added: “Being able to lean on my coaches and my teammates … we’ve all gotten so much closer to where we can talk about anything and everything. And it’s really helpful when we’re out there.” 

Ten years ago, the machismo within sporting culture – vulnerability seen as weakness, asking for help means conceding defeat – created a stigma and forced athletes to keep mental health concerns secret, said Dr. Victor Hong, the University of Michigan’s medical director of psychiatric emergency services and the psychiatric lead for the school’s athletic department.

But a wave of acceptance and changing attitudes had been building in the years leading up to Biles’ own struggles. 

NBA forward Kevin Love was one of the first prominent athletes to discuss his problems with anxiety and panic attacks. Michael Phelps followed. Shortly before Biles’s twisties struck, tennis player Naomi Osaka centered the issues Black women face as it relates to mental health. “There was a sort of dam that broke,” Hong told USA TODAY Sports.

“Every time a high-profile athlete comes and speaks about mental health and performance and sports psychology, that helps to decrease stigma,” said Dr. Edson Filho, associate professor of sport, exercise and performance psychology at Boston University who also directs the Performance, Recovery & Optimization (PRO) Lab.

Filho said two types of stigma exist within mental health: social – how we think we are perceived by others – and personal – the expectation an individual places on him- or herself. Both types have been reduced over the years. 

“It has to do with people with high-profile people speaking about it,” Filho told USA TODAY Sports.  

But there is something specific about Biles, Hong said. African Americans are less likely to seek help for mental health issues for many reasons, among them the disparities in health care for Black people in the United States, Hong said. They are also less-represented in the medical field. 

“For a lot of reasons, she stands out,” Hong said. “But I don’t think she’s been the sole reason why there’s been this increase in an openness to talk about it.”

More people feel more comfortable speaking about mental health in the wake of her experience, though, and that’s a good thing, Filho said. That’s also due to the impact of research and the work of scholars and experts. 

“I think it’s good timing for that, because the mind and body connection, people have been talking about for many years,” Filho said. “When high-performing athletes and artists and influential people talk about it, that opens the door for more discussion, more work on the ground, more research and so forth.” 

The NBA, NHL, NFL and MLB, for example, mandate all teams retain an on-staff psychologist or counselor and a contracted psychiatrist for further evaluation and possible medication 

“Not expecting the problem to happen,” Filho said, “but frontloading with interventions.

“Challenges come to everybody. Nobody gets a free ride in life or in sports.”  

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Since the Tokyo Games, Hong said, there has been progression toward overall de-stigmatization. “I think we are on a pretty good trajectory,’ he said. Backlash still exists, however, and has grown uglier alongside the “anti-woke” political shift; Biles and Osaka both received scores of negative online messages for removing themselves from competition to take care of their mental state.

“Anything having to do with vulnerability — quote unquote weakness, quote unquote femininity — you can see in our culture that there’s a big backlash against that,” Hong said. “Regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, I think it would be unreasonable for people not to notice that, and I do think mental health gets lumped into there.

“I don’t know if it’s that people always felt that way or are feeling more emboldened to speak up.” 

The goal – for athletes and mental health professionals alike – is to one day treat mental health like any form of physical treatment an athlete undergoes to be at their best. A torn ligament can keep an athlete sidelined for nearly a year. 

“Sometimes people have a major depressive episode and they have to go out for six months – treat it the same,” Hong said. “But we’re not there yet, obviously.”  

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Cincinnati Reds first-round pick Chase Burns put pen to paper on his contract, officially agreeing to a deal with the Reds.

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2024 MLB draft signed for $9.25 million, breaking Paul Skenes’ draft bonus record. Skenes signed for a $9.2 million bonus with the Pittsburgh Pirates after being selected first in the 2023 MLB draft.

Heading into the 2024 college baseball season, Burns transferred from Tennessee to Wake Forest. He pursued an opportunity to train at the Wake Forest ‘pitching lab,’ looking to take the next step as a pitcher. Burns’ bet on himself paid off as he moved up in the draft and earned a record-setting bonus.

All things Reds: Latest Cincinnati Reds news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“If I’ve heard it once, I’ve heard it 100 times in the (draft) room,” Reds scouting director Joe Katuska said. “He’s a big hairy monster. Those are the guys that pitch in the front of the rotations. They pitch in October. They pitch at the end of games. They’re the ones you want to give the ball to.”

“It always feels good,” Reds amateur scouting director Joe Katuska said. “Stage one is scouting a guy. Stage two is drafting him. Stage three is probably the most important part. Actually getting him signed. Going through the physical process and get their pen to paper.”

Katuska said that Burns’ next step is heading to the team’s spring training complex on Sunday and getting on the field on Monday. 

“The biggest thing first is figuring out where he is in a throwing progression,” Katuska said. “He still has some innings to throw. But it’s been a little bit since he was on the mound in a game situation. We’re going to protect the long-term and what the projection is for him.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, joined Democrats calling on President Biden to drop out of the 2024 race on Friday evening. 

‘At this critical time, our full attention must return to these important issues. I think the President should end his campaign,’ he said in a statement on X. 

According to Brown, ‘Over the last few weeks, I’ve heard from Ohioans on important issues, such as how to continue to grow jobs in our state, give law enforcement the resources to crack down on fentanyl, protect Social Security and Medicare from cuts, and prevent the ongoing efforts to impose a national abortion ban.’

‘I agree with the many Ohioans who have reached out to me,’ he added. 

Brown is the fourth Democratic senator to press Biden to step aside and the 34th Congressional Democrat to do so. 

The Ohio Democrat is in a particularly competitive race in November, where he will face Republican Senate candidate Bernie Moreno, who is endorsed by former President Trump. 

Non-partisan political handicapper the Cook Political Report rated the Ohio Senate race as a ‘Toss Up,’ placing it alongside races in Montana, Nevada, and Michigan. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In this edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave answers viewer questions on the best time frames for viewing charts, insights on using Vanguard ETFs for sector rotation, the duration and effect of the Hindenburg Omen indicator, how stocks are indexed in Dow Jones Groups on StockCharts, and more!

This video originally premiered on July 19, 2024. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV!

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

Hard Rock Stadium, CONMEBOL and CONCACAF are working together with Ticketmaster to offer refunds to fans who purchased tickets on the primary market and were denied entry to the Copa America final, a stadium spokesman told USA TODAY Sports on Friday.

Fans who purchased tickets and were denied entry to the final should reach out to Ticketmaster and request a refund, while fans who purchased tickets on the secondary market should direct their refund request to the entities where they bought tickets. The profits from ticket sales on the secondary market went to ticket sellers, not the organizers of the event.

Ticketmaster and CONMEBOL has not yet responded to inquiries Friday from USA TODAY about the refund process.

The Copa America final, which saw Lionel Messi and Argentina win 1-0 against Colombia after an initial game delay lasting an hour and 20 minutes, was played last Sunday at the stadium.

Stadium officials, in conjunction with CONMEBOL and Concacaf and local law enforcement, decided the best course of action against eager fans crowded outside the stadium gates would be to let everyone in.

But after the mass entrance, the stadium gates remained closed, disappointing some ticket-paying fans who missed the rush and the Copa America final as a result.

Still, it’s a step in the right direction after the ugly scenes in which fans were among a crowd crush outside the stadium gates in the South Florida heat before the Copa America final.

At least three lawsuits seeking more than $100,000 in damages and an aspiring class-action lawsuit were filed against stadium officials and event organizers this week.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Biden’s top campaign advisors both weighed in on Friday to comment on widespread speculation surrounding the 2024 presidential race.

The first clarification came from Campaign Chair Jen O’Malley Dillon, who left no room for question during an interview with MSNBC’s ‘Morning Joe.’

‘The president’s in this race,’ O’Malley Dillon told the hosts. ‘You’ve heard him say that time and time again, and I think we saw on display last night exactly why, because Donald Trump is not going to offer anything new to the American people. He’s the same person he was in 2020. He’s the same person he was at the debate stage.’

O’Malley Dillon made clear there was no question that Biden is ‘more committed than ever to beat Donald Trump’ — pushing back yet again on weeks and weeks of leaks and speculation claiming the president was close to pulling out of the race.

‘We believe in this campaign we are built for the close election that we are in, and we see the path forward,’ O’Malley Dillon continued. ‘The president is the leader of our campaign and of the country, and he is clearly in our impression, and what we’ve built, and in our engagement with voters, he’s the best person to take on Donald Trump and prosecute that case and present his vision versus what we saw last night.’

This rock-solid statement of commitment was slightly complicated just hours later by Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del. — co-chair of Biden’s re-elections campaign — who said the president is ‘weighing what he should weigh.’

Coons told the press during a panel at the Aspen Institute’s Aspen Security Forum that Biden is considering ‘who is the best candidate to win in November and to carry forward the Democratic Party’s values and priorities in this campaign.’

He noted that Biden attended the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit in Washington, D.C., this month after a ‘very bad debate performance’ and that the president ‘Did a press conference. Did campaign events. Did campaign rallies.’

‘And there are folks still saying he is not strong enough or capable enough to be our next president,’ he continued. ‘I disagree.’

According to Coons, ‘There is a lot of concern and anxiety about this because the stakes are so significant. The consequences of this election are profound.’

Coons walked back this somewhat shaky comment just hours later with a post to social media professing total support for Biden’s re-election effort.

‘I fully support the President. He’s told me he’s in it to win it,’ Coons wrote on social media platform X. ‘I’m with him 100% because I know he can beat Trump just like he did last time.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The S&P 500 remains in a primary uptrend, as confirmed by a fairly consistent pattern of higher highs and higher lows. But what would confirm that a top is in place for our major equity benchmarks? To answer that, it may be helpful to review other charts that have recently experienced tops, as the technical configurations are often quite similar.

Today, we’ll review the recent price action in Domino’s Pizza Group (DPZ), identify the key technical characteristics that define its recent downswing, and relate that to what we may see on the S&P 500 chart.

An Accumulation Phase Occurs When Buyers Outweigh Sellers

Before we can confirm a bearish rotation on a chart like DPZ, we first need to clearly define the uptrend phase that happens beforehand. This goes back to classic Dow Theory, and also combines technical indicators like moving averages to track the upward pace of price action.

After many months of underperformance, small caps are starting to thrive again. How should investors think about small cap stocks, what factors are contributing to this outperformance, and what does all this tells us about leadership rotation in the coming months? Join me for my next FREE webcast, Small Caps, Big Dreams: The Great Rotation of 2024, as we answer these questions and more! Sign up today and mark your calendar for Wednesday, July 24th at 1pm ET.

From the October 2023 low through the end of April 2024, Domino’s experienced a classic Dow Theory uptrend formed by a pattern of higher highs and higher lows. Each move higher shows that buying power is overcoming any selling pressure that develops, and the higher lows show that dip buyers are interested in accumulating shares on short-term weakness. The price remained above two upward-sloping moving averages, and the RSI remained in a bullish range, generally above the 40 level.

The Checklist to Identify a Distribution Phase

Note how all of those factors changed in May and June. Instead of making another new 52-week high in June, the price stalled out at its previous peak. Instead of achieving another higher low on the next pullback, the price broke below the May swing low around $500. The RSI broke below 40 soon after, indicating a rapid deterioration in price momentum.

So while this week’s gap lower surprised many market practitioners, mindful investors would have recognized all the classic signs of distribution before this week’s sudden drop.

The Signs to Watch for the S&P 500

How does this relate to the S&P 500 chart? For now, the SPY is still in a primary uptrend of higher highs and higher lows. The price remains above two upward-sloping moving averages, and the RSI remained above 40 even after Friday’s drop.

What would tell us that the S&P 500 has rotated to a distribution phase?  Simply follow the playbook that DPZ displayed in recent months. Look for a failed attempt at a new high, which would suggest an exhaustion of buyers. Note if the subsequent pullback is unable to hold the late June low around $540, which would mean that dip buyers are no longer willing to buy on short-term weakness. And pay attention to the RSI, because if it breaks below 40 on a pullback, that is often a predecessor of much weaker price action.

No one knows what will happen next for the S&P 500. But the good news is that we can review the lessons of market history and notice what consistent patterns have occurred at previous market topics. As I was often reminded in my early days in the industry, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes!”

RR#6,

Dave

P.S. Ready to upgrade your investment process? Check out my free behavioral investing course!

David Keller, CMT

Chief Market Strategist

StockCharts.com

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.

The author does not have a position in mentioned securities at the time of publication. Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.