Archive

2025

Browsing

Andrew Novak and Ben Griffin emerged the winners of the only team play event of the 2025 PGA Tour.

The duo captured the title at one golf’s most unique events in the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on Sunday.

The stroke-play team event is the only such tournament on the calendar this year, and the team of Novak and Griffin not held onto two-stroke lead they had entering the final round at TPC Louisiana, but survived play getting suspended due to weather.

Novak and Griffin won with a final score of 28-under-par, narrowly beating the team of Nicolai Højgaard and Rasmus Højgaard by one stroke. After the second place finishers birdied on the 18th hole, Novak and Griffin just needed par to secure the title, and that’s exactly what they did.

Here’s the breakdown of the purse at the 2025 Zurich Classic of New Orleans, including payout in order of finish:

Zurich Classic prize money 2025: Winner payout, purse

This year’s total purse for the 2025 Zurich Classic is $9.2 million. Per the PGA, here is a breakdown of how that prize money will be doled out, from the winner to 90th place.

1st: Andrew Novak and Ben Griffin (-28), $1,656,000
2nd: Nicolai Højgaard and Rasmus Højgaard (-27), $1,002,800 
3rd: Jake Knapp and Frankie Capan III (-26), $634,800
T4th: David Lipsky and Dylan Wu (-25), $450,800
T4th: Taylor Dickson and Trace Crowe (-25), $450,800
T4th: Karl Vilips and Michael Thorbjornsen (-25), $450,800
T4th: Luke List and Henrik Norlander (-25), $450,800
T8th: Chad Ramey and Justin Lower (-24), $287,500
T8th: Isaiah Salinda and Kevin Velo (-24), $287,500
T10th: Jacob Bridgeman and Chandler Phillips (-23), $250,700
T10th: Hayden Buckley and Braden Thornberry (-23), $250,700
T12th: Matteo Manaseero and Cristobal Del Solar (-22), $213,900
T12th: Chris Gotterup and Quade Cummins (-22), $213,900
T12th: Nick Taylor and Adam Hadwin (-22), $213,900
T12th: Ryan Gerard and Danny Walker (-22), $213,900
T12th: Sepp Straka and Brice Garnett (-22) $213,900
T12th: Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry (-22), $213,900
T18th: J.T. Poston and Keith Mitchell (-21), $140,300
T18th: Ricky Castillo and William Mouw (-21), $140,300
T18th: Nate Lashley and Hayden Springer (-21), $140,300
T18th: Aaron Rai and Sahith Teegala (-21), $140,300
T18th: Trey Mullinax and Robby Shelton (-21), $140,300
T18th: Ryo Hisatsune and Takumi Kanaya (-21), $140,300
T24th: Steven Fisk and Tim Widing (-20), $88,504
T24th: Sam Stevens and Max McGreevy (-20), $88,504
T26th: David Skinns and Ben Taylor (-19), $73,692
T26th: Vince Whaley and Anders Albertson (-19), $73,692
T28th: Paul Peterson and Thomas Rosenmueller (-18), $68,080
T28th: Kevin Tway and Bud Cauley (-18), $68,080
T28th: Nco Echavarria and Max Greyserman (-18), $68,080
31st: Kris Ventura and Antoine Rozner (-17), $59,800
T32nd: Thomas Detry and Robert MacIntyre (-16), $57,040
T32nd: Davis Riley and Nick Hardy (-16), $57,040
T32nd: Cam Davis and Adam Svensson (-16), $57,040
35th: Brandt Snedeker and Chez Reavie (-15), $49,680
36th: Kevin Chappell and Tom Hoge (-14), $47,380
37th: $45,080
38th: $43,240
39th: $41,400
40th: $39,560
41st: $37,720
42nd: $35,880
43rd: $34,040
44th: $32,200
45th: $30,360
46th: $28,520
47th: $26,680
48th: $25,208
49th: $23,920
50th: $23,184
51st: $22,632
52nd: $22,080
53rd: $21,712
54th: $21,344
55th: $21,160
56th: $20,976
57th: $20,792
58th: $20,608
59th: $20,424
60th: $20,240
61st: $20,056
62nd: $19,872
63rd: $19,688
64th: $19,504
65th: $19,320
66th: $19,136
67th: $18,952
68th: $18,768
69th: $18,584
70th: $18,400
71st: $18,216
72nd: $18,032
73rd: $17,848
74th: $17,664
75th: $17,480
76th: $17,296
77th: $17,112
78th: $16,928
79th: $16,744
80th: $16,560
81st: $16,376
82nd: $16,192
83rd: $16,008
84th: $15,824
85th: $15,640
86th: $15,456
87th: $15,272
88th: $15,088
89th: $14,904
90th: $14,720

2025 Zurich Classic of New Orleans: How to watch, schedule, TV

CBS will carry live coverage of the final round of the 2025 Zurich Classic of New Orleans starting at 3 p.m. ET, as will the Golf Channel (1-3 p.m. ET).

Streaming options include ESPN+ and Peacock, while fans can catch the action with a free trial of Fubo.

Date: Sunday, April 27
Location: TPC Louisiana (Avondale, Louisiana)
TV channel: CBS (3-6 p.m. ET), Golf Channel (1-3 p.m. ET)
Streaming: Fubo, ESPN+, Peacock

Watch the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on Fubo

(This story was updated to add more information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The first round of the NFL draft is typically the most watched part of the league’s event, but plenty of people were still tuned into the weekend, likely because of Shedeur Sanders.

After the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft drew 13.6 million viewers across ESPN and NFL Network – second-highest ever – according to Nielsen, viewership remained strong on Day 2. There were 7.3 million viewers across rounds two and three on ABC, ESPN2 and NFL Network, according on Nielsen fast national figures.

It was the second-most watched second day of the NFL draft on record, and up more than 40% from 2024 viewership, NFL Media said.

There’s no definitive reason as to why viewership rose during the 2025 edition, but it can likely be pointed to the drama surrounding Sanders and his fall. He was projected to be a first-round pick, and possibly a top three selection by some experts. Instead, Sanders didn’t see his name get called in the first round as it was the biggest story of day one.

As people waited to see if Sanders’ name would be called on Day 2, Tyler Shough, Jalen Milroe and Dillon Gabriel were selected while the former Colorado quarterback didn’t get selected in the second or third round, creating further interest as to when Sanders would be selected. There was plenty of debate during the draft coverage as to what led to Sanders’ slide, resulting in some interesting speculation and fiery disputes.

Sanders ended up hearing his named called on the third day of the draft as he was the 144th overall pick, selected in the fifth round by the Cleveland Browns. Viewership numbers for day three haven’t been released yet, but given how there was an increase on Day 2, the figures could be higher for the final four rounds.

Even without the Sanders dilemma, the 2025 NFL Draft was still a success in terms of attendance. The three-day attendance for the draft was 600,000, shattering the pre-draft estimate of 250,000. It was equal to the 2019 draft in Nashville. The all-time record for draft attendance was set last year in Detroit with 775,000 attendees.

All the NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — If you’ve stumbled upon the new Netflix documentary series “Race for the Crown,’ which chronicles the lead-up to last year’s Kentucky Derby all the way through the Triple Crown, you’d get the sense that horse racing is a sport of private jets, eccentric billionaires and corporatized trainers collecting dozens of high-priced 2-year olds hoping just one will be good enough to get in the starting gate on the first Saturday in May. 

And that depiction is … not exactly wrong. 

Especially these days, the reality is that oil sheikhs, massive racing partnerships and ultra-wealthy American moguls buy up so much of the top-end horse flesh and send them to such a small handful of high-profile trainers that the odds are stacked almost impossibly against someone like Ethan West. 

Who is Ethan West? In more ways than one, he’s the ultimate Derby anomaly – but also the kind of personality that gives the race its mystique as the greatest two minutes in sports. 

Not only is West a relative unknown who races mostly at Turfway Park outside of Cincinnati and cheaper tracks in Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania, he’s a mere 32 years old, has only had a trainer’s license for seven years and is bringing a horse named Chunk of Gold to the Derby that was purchased for $2,500.

And here’s the best part: He actually has a decent chance to win. 

‘It’s a lot of hard work, even more luck,’ West told USA TODAY Sports after his horse drew the No. 19 post position. ‘It’s unbelievable. I really don’t have any other words to put into it.’

One of the great things about the Derby is that even if Chunk of Gold were to take the roses on Saturday, he wouldn’t be among the top handful of shocking winners in the 151-year history of the race. 

That bar has been set impossibly high by the likes of Rich Strike coming home at 80-1 three years ago, Mine that Bird emerging from New Mexico to win at 50-1 in 2009 or Canonero II coming out of Venezuela as a laughingstock before blowing past everyone to win by daylight in 1971. 

Coming off a pair of solid second-place finishes in the Louisiana Derby and Risen Star Stakes in New Orleans, the quickly-improving Chunk of Gold wouldn’t be a total stunner. 

But even Canonero II, who was famously sold to his Venezuelan owners as a yearling for $1,200, wasn’t as humbly priced when you consider that he would have cost around $9,000 in inflation-adjusted dollars today. 

When you consider the whole package – a relatively new trainer who has only won 168 career races at any level going up against multiple Hall of Famers and a $2,500 horse in the same starting gate as Derby favorite Journalism, who was purchased for $825,000 – that’s where the true magic of the Kentucky Derby resides. Not in a hedge fund guy who dresses for the race track like he’s headed to Studio 54 and has Ace of Spades bottles in his refrigerator to celebrate a seven-figure Thoroughbred purchase, as the Netflix show suggested by focusing on 2008 Derby-winning owner Michael Iavarone. 

‘People love our story,’ West said. ‘Young trainer, smaller owner. We’ve come a long way.’

Even the way West got into horse racing is pretty unusual. Whereas a lot of the successful young trainers like Chad Brown or Brad Cox entered the sport by doing low-level work around prominent barns and learned the craft by working their way up the apprenticeship ladder, West didn’t have an obvious path to a training career. 

Introduced to the game by his grandparents, who owned a couple horses that ran at the Indiana tracks near where he grew up, it was actually his older brother Aaron who first pursued training as they both picked up odd jobs around the local track to make some money. Then after he graduated high school, the brothers leased a training center in Russell Springs, Kentucky, where they started a business that focused on raising and training younger horses.

‘That grew, and one of us had to go back to the racetrack,’ West said. ‘That was me. I didn’t have a family at the time so I did the racetrack traveling back and forth and then in 2018 I took a license out on my own and started my own (stable). It’s unorthodox. Most kids have a foot into it, they have a dad in the business or a mentor they can follow under. We were just kind of winging it and now we both have our own productive businesses.’

While working in Russell Springs, West of course had heard about Terry Stephens, arguably the town’s most prominent resident and the owner of a steel manufacturing company that ranks among the country’s biggest chain-link fence distributors. 

West knew of Stephens but did not know him personally. It just so happened, though, that Stephens purchased a half-interest in the horse last year from Chris Melton, who also runs a Kentucky-based training center and had originally purchased him at a 2-year old auction for $2,500.  

Originally slated to go to a trainer in Maryland, Stephens preferred that the horse run in Kentucky and his advisor recommended West based on a prior relationship. After Chunk of Gold impressively won his debut, Stephens – who owned a piece of 2021 Derby fourth-place finisher O Besos – bought out the rest of the horse for $100,000. The first time West met Stephens in person was in February before Chunk of Gold ran second in the Risen Star, putting him in contention for the Derby. 

‘We’re so proud of the horse,’ West said. ‘He’s brought us a long way. It’s easy to say, ‘Oh, we’re going to get this horse to the Kentucky Derby, but now here we are. It’s cool. I really don’t know how to put it into words.’

Now a father of three whose wife, Paige, is a racetrack photographer, West’s life could change in significant ways over the coming weeks. Regardless of how Chunk of Gold performs on Saturday, just having this platform at the Derby will give him the kind of name recognition and credibility that could open doors into a level of horse racing that typically takes longer than seven years as a trainer to achieve. 

‘Whether you’re training horses down there or up here, the horse still comes first,’ he said. ‘It’s your responsibility to get them in the spot where they can compete whether they’re a mediocre horse or a notch below or above, turf, dirt, that’s our job to figure out. That’s all the same. But with the media, the publicity, it’s a whole new world.’

And then, of course, there’s the most important question: Can he win? That’s what the connections for all 20 horses have to figure out this week, but West thinks Chunk of Gold has a case. Though he’s won just once in four starts, he’s taken forward steps in each race and shown the ability to overcome some adversity in each of his three second-place finishes. That portends well for a Derby where it’s hard to avoid traffic trouble in a 20-horse field, and Chunk of Gold should be positioned somewhere in the middle of the pack early and give himself a chance coming around the final turn. 

Is he good enough? Time will tell. But the mere fact that a $2,500 horse and a 32-year old trainer who’s never won a Grade 1 stakes can compete for the sport’s most coveted prize shows another side – and arguably a better side – of horse racing that you’re not going to see on Netflix. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Austin Cindric held off Ryan Preece down the stretch to win the Jack Link’s 500 as the NASCAR Cup Series returned to action after a bye week on Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama.

The Fords of Cindric and Preece ran 1-2 side-by-side in front of the Chevrolets of William Byron and Kyle Larson with 17 laps to go. The pair raced tight but clean off Turn 4 for the final time, with Cindric’s No. 2 Team Penske car edging Preece’s No. 60 by 0.022 seconds for his third career win in his 125th start.

On the day’s final pit stop, Cindric’s crew turned in the quickest service on the No. 2 car, which gridded 25th as it hit pit road.

The victory was just Ford’s third in the past 10 Talladega events.

Larson and Byron finished third and fourth, while Joey Logano ended up in fifth.

Polesitter Zane Smith was 21st. Ryan Blaney, the 2023 series champion, wrecked out in the first caution and was 39th in his fourth DNF this season.

After Smith led them to green following his first career pole qualifying spot, his No. 38 Ford was quickly under attack for the lead by Austin Dillon, Michael McDowell and Kyle Busch.

However, the Toyota contingent soon formed on the top line of the 2.66-mile superspeedway and blew past the Fords and Chevys toward the front in the 60-lap Stage 1.

Two laps after pitting, Busch and Brad Keselowski wrecked coming toward pit road. Three-time Talladega winner Blaney and Alex Bowman also received damage.

With 10 laps to go in the segment, there was more trouble after Christopher Bell and Chris Buescher spun down to the apron while running side by side on the front row. Bell’s No. 20 crashed into the inside wall in the 188-lap race’s hardest hit.

In a four-car bowtie brigade, Larson recorded his first Talladega stage win, though he was soon sent to the back for speeding on pit road. The Chevys of Byron, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Chase Elliott took the next three spots.

Bubba Wallace maxed the bonus points by holding off Logano and Larson, who overcame his speeding infraction, to win Stage 2. Cindric was fourth.

With 50 laps to go, five Toyotas led five Fords and two Chevrolets as the manufacturers teamed up and went two-wide instead of three abreast.

Talladega race results

Results for the NASCAR Cup Series Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, via The Tennessean:

Austin Cindric, No. 2 Team Penske Ford
Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford
Noah Gragson, No. 4 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota
Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Austin Dillon, No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
Michael McDowell, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 HYAK Motorsports Chevrolet
Cole Custer, No. 41 Haas Factory Team Ford
Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Todd Gilliland, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Ford
Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Riley Herbst, No. 35 23XI Racing Toyota
Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
Justin Haley, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
Josh Berry, No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford
Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
Anthony Alfredo, No. 62 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet
Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
John Hunter Nemechek, No. 42 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
Cody Ware, No. 51 Rick Ware Racing Ford
JJ Yeley, No. 44 NY Racing Team Chevrolet
BJ McLeod, No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Chevrolet
Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford
Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford
Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

‘Simone never would have made it in my gym.’

Aimee Boorman has heard that line, over and over, from other coaches when they talk about the gymnast she helped lift to heights never seen within their sport.

‘They say it with a sense of pride,’ Boorman tells USA TODAY Sports, ‘and it’s like, ‘So you realize how many potential Simones you have pushed out of your gym?’ ‘

Biles was the kid who always loved the gymnastics part, but not the work that went into making her the best. Some days she just wanted to go home.

Those characteristics didn’t necessarily change as she grew into the decorated champion America knew. Boorman, though, was willing to manage them in a way others wouldn’t.

Biles’ coach from age 7 through her four-gold-medal performance at the 2016 Rio Olympics remembers her as one of her more challenging pupils.

‘If everybody is just strict and obedient, you grow stale as a coach,’ Boorman says. ‘So when you have somebody who’s throwing something new at you all the time, on an emotional level, on a personality level, you gotta grow. And I think some of those other coaches weren’t willing to grow.

‘When people say, ‘Well, there’s only going to be one Simone,’ I’m like, ‘That’s not true.’ You have to know how to manage that athlete to get them to the point they could be a Simone.’

Boorman’s approach – nurturing, forgiving, even relenting – was novel to coaching within a sport of forced discipline and regulation. She lays out her methodology, ingrained in her by a tumultuous childhood experience, in ‘The Balance: My Years Coaching Simone Biles.’

The book, which was released last week, reveals a back story of how athletes develop and mature but also how they can have giggles on their face before and after their most triumphant Olympic moments.

Boorman and co-author Steve Cooper spoke with us about facing unique challenges while coaching and parenting our athletes and how we can overcome them in unexpected ways.

‘Nothing about Simone’s greatness was inevitable,’ Cooper said during our Zoom interview. ‘It was a process. It wasn’t just luck.’

‘If it wasn’t fun, she wasn’t having any part of it’: Without love for a sport, it’s difficult to move forward

Boorman is often asked if she knew when Biles would become superstar. The answer: When she became one.

‘Up until that point, anything can happen,’ she says, ‘and any given day, if Simone didn’t have that passion and that love for gymnastics inside of her, she could be like, ‘I’m done. I’m gonna go run track.’ ‘

Boorman recalls the joy she felt as a young girl in the early 1980s, when she first flung herself from the bars of Lakeshore Academy in Chicago, but also how quickly a reckless coach drained it from her.

No matter how long she stood on the balance beam, her arms raised until they were numb trying to get Coach Jeremy’s attention, he wasn’t satisfied. His name is a pseudonym, but also an extreme archetype for an era of the sport: No positive reinforcement, no acknowledgement of effort and sometimes little hope.

‘That constant negative input made me have total lack of belief in myself,’ she says.

And yet, like most kids, Aimee yearned to please him. She arrived early one day, straining to grab his undivided attention by working out on her own. She broke her leg. Then he ignored her for months until she finally quit.

 ‘I was really useless to him because I couldn’t compete,” she says.

She was pulled back when she coached preschool kids after school a couple of years later. There was something bright within them that she used to feel, something we can so easily push out of young athletes if we don’t nurture it. It was a light she saw in a 7-year-old who bounced around Bannon’s, the gym north of Houston where Boorman started working as a young adult.

Simone Biles couldn’t sit still, but when she did, she pushed herself up off the ground with her arms and slid her legs from straight in front of her to a position in which she was lying on her stomach.

‘What she was doing is not normal,’ Boorman says. ‘We knew that she was going to be able to learn very quickly, but she was just a little girl, and she didn’t like to do the conditioning, and she didn’t want to have to take extra turns. She just wanted it to be fun. And when it wasn’t fun, she wasn’t having any part of it. She didn’t want to be involved at all.’

COACH STEVE: 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by 13. Why?

‘There is no possible way you could disappoint me’: Every day, even a bad one, is an opportunity to move forward

Like other kids, Biles had fears. One was a mental block on her beam series. Boorman would ask her to complete it three times, but would never leave her out there too long like Jeremy had done. They would just come back the next day and try again, a give-and-take that would continue throughout their time together.

‘There were times that she would come in the gym in the morning and she would have a sense of dread about what she was going to have to do based on what she did or didn’t finish the day before,’ Boorman says. ‘And I hope that when she walked in and saw me, and I was like, ‘Good morning,’ and I was very light with her, that then she could go, ‘OK, wait a minute. Maybe I’m not in trouble. Maybe I didn’t disappoint her.’ ‘

Boorman, through the torture, had felt like she was letting Coach Jeremy down. To this day, she tells her students, ‘There’s no possible way you could disappoint me.’

It’s up to them, not her, what they became. It’s her job to support what they want.

‘As a coach, you could never want it more than the athlete,’ she says, ‘and if you do want it more than the athlete, then there’s a problem. I know a lot of overzealous young coaches who are like, ‘Oh, but I want an Olympian,’ but you’re never going to have an Olympian because that’s what you want.

‘If we focus too much on the championship and on that win, then we’re losing the human in the process.’

She likes to live in a ‘compliment sandwich,’ where constructive criticism is surrounded by praise of effort, even on so-called bad days. Those are a matter of perspective, anyway.

‘I have an elite gymnast (who) had been out of the gym for a couple of months, not really training, and she came back in and successfully did a skill that she hadn’t done in two months, and she was like, ‘That was terrible,’ ‘ Boorman says. ‘And I was like, ‘You haven’t done it in two months, and you did it. We’re going to celebrate those wins, and it’s going to be better tomorrow.’

Boorman wanted her students to be comfortable around her so they would express themselves. That way, she could see deep inside and better understand them.

‘Simone’s not a person to go (in) the corner and go through her stuff in her head to get her in the zone,’ she would learn. ‘She has to be there, completely relaxed, cheering on other people. And then when the green light goes on for her to compete, she’s like, game on. But she doesn’t waste any of that in her mind. In her mind, that focus is a waste. Other athletes are completely different.

‘So it doesn’t say anything about what process is correct, but it’s what process is best for each athlete. So for younger coaches who are bringing up the athletes who are not elite yet, you have to give them all of the different tools, and they’re going to find out which process works best for them.’

‘Its just gymnastics’: The needs of the athlete – not those of the coach – have to come first

Biles realized her connection with ‘Coach Aimee’ at 13, when she was invited to a U.S. women’s national team development camp and saw teammates who weren’t as close with their coaches.

They all trained under the strict orders of the program, which wasn’t for Biles.

‘People who are ridiculously talented don’t have to work that hard,’ Boorman says. ‘So when she had to work hard because she was struggling with something, she was not the most pleasant to be around, because it was very frustrating for her and it was easy for her to give up. I can say she was incredibly dedicated. I can’t say she was an incredible hard worker. She knew it became the job that she chose to do and coming in and putting in the hours and everything. But I’ve known a lot of people who are much harder workers, I guess is the gentle way is to say it.’

Martha Karolyi, the program leader, called Biles sloppy and lazy at one of her early visits to camp. Boorman says that killed her confidence, and she declined their next invitation.

Biles didn’t start training a lot of hours until she was 16 or 17.

‘If we had focused on the refinement earlier, she could have been winning meets earlier, but there was also the risk of burnout,’ Boorman says.

Those mid-teen years coincided with what Boorman calls the toughest days coaching Biles.

‘It was never, ‘I don’t want to do this, I want to do this,’ ‘ Boorman says. ‘But there were the normal teenage antics, the head butting and things like that. And so I had to be very strategic about when I would push and when I would let go. I know this can be construed as you’re kicking somebody out of practice, but there would be days that I would say, ‘I think practice should be over for today because we’re not getting anywhere. Neither one of us is having fun.’

‘And sometimes she was like, ‘Bye,’ and other times she’s like, ‘No, I’m sorry. I want to get this done. I’m just frustrated.’ But no matter what every day was, we turned the page.’

Ahead of the U.S. Classic in 2013 in Chicago, Boorman says Biles intentionally fell off the apparatus, jumped off the beam and let herself fall on her vaults. It was her way, her coach said, of controlling an environment where she didn’t want to work.

Boorman wouldn’t force Biles through workouts, but she would let her fail in competition to make a point. When she took a nasty fall, they moved on to the next event.

‘I’ve always been a big supporter of family vacations and take the day off,’ Boorman says. ‘We need mental health days. When I was a gymnast, there was no such thing, and I think that there’s too many sports in general, they want you to come in when you’re sick, when you’re tired, when you’re mentally exhausted, because that’s going to build character. And I just disagree with it. I feel like, if you take one day off and you rest, you’re going to come back so much stronger.

‘It’s just gymnastics. You shouldn’t be risking your health just to achieve a sports goal.’

When she was no longer working with Boorman, Biles removed herself from the 2020 Games when she developed ‘the twisties.’ She had concluded, Boorman says, that ‘the Olympics were not more important than her life.’

‘I think somewhere in her she knew it was going to be OK, and I think that was probably because early on in her career, it was OK to just pull yourself from the competition,’ says Cooper, Boorman’s co-author.

Overcoming ‘the twisties’ in 2016: ‘You only have to live up to your own expectations’

The twisties occur when a gymnast can’t tell where he or she is in the air. Biles also beat them ahead of the Rio Olympics, which Boorman details in her book.

She was 19 and had won three all-around world championship titles in a row and feeling the weight of being the favorite in her first Olympics.

Instead of forcing twists, Boorman temporarily removed them from Biles’ routine, which relieved the pressure.

‘And each day I would say, ‘OK, do you feel like twisting today?’ And she’d be like, ‘Well, yeah, but I think I can only go off beam.’ And so she would only do her beam dismount.’ She wouldn’t twist off bars or floor or falls.

‘It would be baby steps from there. She might come in one day and say, ‘OK, I think I’m ready to do this today.’ And then she would start to do it and be like, ‘No.’ And I’m like, ‘OK, don’t worry about it. There’s so many other things we can do.’ And then instilling that confidence in her that she wasn’t going to lose her skills was important as well.’

They were relying on the repetition they had already done.

‘We had taken so many years to refine them that the muscle memory was there,’ Boorman says. ‘We just had to clear out her brain.’

They gradually noticed she was cured over time, like the way we notice other peoples’ children growing, then realize ours are, too.

‘I always told her that she wasn’t responsible for other people’s expectations of her,’ Boorman says. ‘That was their problem and shame on them for setting those expectations. She only had to live up to her own expectations.’

(This story was updated to add new information.)

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Just when it appeared like the New York Knicks would get hit — again — with the injury bug in the NBA playoffs, Jalen Brunson showed up.

And New York would need every bit of Brunson’s scoring.

Brunson returned from a right leg injury to help rally the Knicks past the Detroit Pistons Sunday in Game 4 of their first-round playoff series, 94-93, to take a 3-1 lead.

Brunson finished the day with a game-high 32 points on 13-of-26 shooting, including 4-of-7 from 3-point range, and added 11 assists and five rebounds. Fifteen of those points came after Brunson sustained the injury and struggled to put weight on his leg in the moments immediately after.

During the play, which came with fewer than three minutes to play in the third quarter, Brunson was battling with Pistons guard Dennis Schröder for the loose ball. As both players lunged for it, Brunson crumpled onto the floor and immediately grabbed his right leg. Brunson slid over to the scorer’s table and lay there for a moment, in obvious discomfort. Eventually, Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns helped Brunson get to his feet, but Brunson was unable to put weight on the leg, and immediately fell back to the court.

Brunson was subbed out of the game and immediately went into the locker room, limping significantly.

Prior to the start of the fourth quarter, Brunson returned to the bench and had his right ankle re-taped. He re-entered the game with 10:14 to play.

The injury came amid a furious Pistons run during the third quarter that erased a 16-point lead New York held. Detroit outscored the Knicks 28-14 in the period and took a 71-64 lead into the final frame.

The Pistons eventually opened up an 11-point lead on a Malik Beasley 3-pointer with 8:35 left to play in the game, but New York ramped up its defensive intensity down the stretch and Brunson and Towns each hit massive shots to close the gap.

It all set up a closeout opportunity for New York in Game 5 Tuesday at Madison Square Garden.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

When the slide was over, after he received the real call that he was finally selected in the NFL draft on Day 3, Shedeur Sanders took a plunge.

How fitting.

Sanders – chosen by the Cleveland Browns with the sixth pick of the fifth round on Saturday, 144th overall – dove into the swimming pool at his famous father’s house after experiencing the most dramatic plunge in NFL draft history.

And it was all joy.

“I’m extremely grateful for the opportunity, throughout everything,” the former Colorado quarterback said during a conference call with the Cleveland media. “I don’t ever focus on the negative or even think about the negative, because the positive happened so fast.”

So there. Sanders, pegged as a likely first-round pick when the draft began on Thursday night, took the high road in assessing the ebb and flow of his draft experience. If he is bitter about tumbling so far in the draft – and igniting so much debate to dominate the coverage of the event, as quarterbacks including Jaxson Dart, Tyler Shough and Jalen Milroe were picked ahead of him – he certainly didn’t put out that vibe.

Instead, he exhibited a glimpse of just how equipped he may be to handle adversity, with more likely coming as he tries to make it in the NFL.

“Nothing really affected me the last couple of days,” Sanders insisted. “It’s just understanding faith and that God really has me.”

Even the shameful prank phone call that he received during the draft, from some kid pretending to be New Orleans Saints GM Mickey Loomis with word that he was on the verge of being selected, seemed to roll off Sanders.

“Of course, I felt like it was a childish act,” he said. “Everybody does childish things, here and there.”

On Thursday night, when his draft night party fizzled, Sanders told supporters that being bypassed in the first round should not have happened under any circumstance. Yet as the draft unfolded and one team after another passed on him multiple times, the son of Hall of Famer Deion Sanders apparently refused to wallow in any sort of self-pity.

That’s healthy. There’s no reason to expend much energy on breaking down his draft slide. Not now. Now it’s a matter of focusing on what he can control – like being prepared to absorb coach Kevin Stefanski’s offense – while others debate exactly why so many teams in a quarterback-needy league wanted no parts of a highly-productive quarterback who last season passed for more than 4,000 yards and 37 touchdowns, while leading the NCAA with a 74% completion rate.

Sanders was the sixth quarterback drafted – and second one chosen by the Browns, who picked Dillon Gabriel from Oregon with a third-round pick.

Count me in the crowd who suspect that Sanders’ plunge in the draft was hardly about football. Not when reports that knocked Sanders was “arrogant” intensified for weeks, and rumblings about subpar interviews with NFL teams snowballed.

Of course, the decisions that each team makes in these cases – the New York Giants, who traded back into the first round to draft Dart from Ole Miss with the 25th pick, were reportedly split on their bottom-line assessment of Sanders – is their prerogative.

In time, there will be fodder for more debate about whether the same decision-makers who banked on since-discarded quarterback Daniel Jones got it right this time or blew it again. We’ll see.

Still, the “arrogant” narrative was particularly sensitive as it raised legitimate questions – especially on social media – about culture and race. Baker Mayfield, who has sparkled in his revival with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, wasn’t too “arrogant” that it prevented the Browns from choosing him No. 1 overall in 2018 – four years after Cleveland took Johnny Manziel, another white quarterback cast as high-strung with the 22nd pick overall.

Of course, it’s only conjecture to say that teams passed on Sanders because he rolls with gaudy jewelry, and even checked his designer watch during TD celebrations in the midst of games. No, Sanders doesn’t have any off-the-field conduct issues that NFL teams so often overlook or justify when it comes to certain talents, Black or white.

I’m not buying the theory that Shedeur’s slide was somehow part of a collective effort to send a message to Deion. And in a league with increasing media exposure, and with Hard Knocks shows part of the landscape with cameras behind the scenes, the theory that Sanders would generate too much attention as a backup quarterback doesn’t wash, either.

It was interesting, though, to take stock of what Browns GM Andrew Berry said about passing on Sanders, after Day 2 of the draft.

“Fit comes into play,” Berry said.

The next day, Berry drafted Sanders – although by the looks of the video from the Browns war room, the GM’s body language projected as the least-enthused in the room.

Nonetheless, Sanders is no ordinary fifth-round rookie as he lands with a franchise that has struggled for decades to secure its long-term answer at quarterback. He’ll join a quarterback room led by aging vet Joe Flacco and including former Pittsburgh Steelers first-rounder Kenny Pickett along with Gabriel. At least that’s a shot, and a decent opportunity to ultimately compete for the job. The picture doesn’t include DeShaun Watson, who is rehabbing from a torn Achilles tendon on top of the alleged sexual assault scandal that derailed his career.

Said Berry: “You have to come in and work and you have to come in and compete. That’s the message. Nothing’s given. It really doesn’t matter where you are picked, it’s what you do from that point forward. Because that’s the reality for all the guys we selected this weekend.”

It’s not how you start. The NFL has enough prime examples of that theme. Tom Brady was a sixth-round pick who became the GOAT with seven Super Bowl rings. Kurt Warner is a Hall of Famer who wasn’t drafted. Dak Prescott was a fourth-round pick. Two-time NFL MVP Lamar Jackson was the fifth quarterback drafted in his class, when some thought he’d be better off switching positions.

Now Sanders can get on with this NFL journey.

“What fuels me is my purpose in life and understanding the route we’re going to take,” he said.

Still, there should be no shortage of motivation in proving some teams wrong.

“There’ll be this huge chip on his shoulder,” Denver Broncos coach Sean Payton predicted after Sanders wasn’t picked on the first two days. Payton, whose first-round rookie last year, Bo Nix, was also the sixth quarterback drafted, first saw Sanders play in junior high school in the Dallas area and has followed him since.

“Beware,” Payton added, “because this guy is going to play in this league.”

Sanders has long promoted the “legendary” theme as part of his personal brand. Well, it would be just that if he ultimately rises from this point to achieve NFL greatness.

It’s no wonder that one of Sanders’ new teammates, Browns cornerback Denzel Ward, tweeted this encouraging message to the rookie, shortly after the pick came down: “Time to Be Legendary! Let’s do it!”

After all, there’s more to be written with this script.

Follow Jarrett Bell on social media: @JarrettBell

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Trump national security adviser Mike Waltz reiterated the administration’s support for Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Sunday, saying they ‘couldn’t be prouder’ of his early months in the role, despite a wave of high-profile controversies and resignations that have embroiled the department in recent weeks.

Speaking to Fox News host Maria Bartiromo on Sunday, Waltz was pressed about the alleged dysfunction inside the Pentagon’s top ranks— and whether, in his view, the current Pentagon is equipped to deliver on lofty foreign policy goals, including helping broker a negotiated settlement in Russia’s war in Ukraine.

‘Can you do this in what appears to be a chaotic, weakened Defense Department?’ Bartiromo asked Waltz on ‘Sunday Morning Futures,’ citing reports of chaos and dysfunction, including recent firings of Hegseth’s top aides, and reports he has been threatening polygraph tests for some staffers at the department.

‘I’ll tell you about a weakened Pentagon,’ Waltz fired back. ‘That was one that had a Defense Secretary that disappeared for two weeks just last year, and nobody knew about it.’ 

In contrast to his predecessor, Waltz said Hegseth is ‘leading from the front’ at the Defense Department, and praised what he described as Hegseth’s early efforts to reform the Pentagon.

‘He is leading the charge, and he has no tolerance for leaking,’ Waltz said, dismissing the alleged chaos or dysfunction as a ‘media narrative,’ and one he vowed they ‘are going to power through.’

Waltz also brushed off a question about the departures of senior aides, including Hegseth’s own chief of staff, Joe Kasper, last week.

The exodus of senior officials and other allegations of chaos from inside the Pentagon have prompted some Democrats to call for an investigation into his leadership.

But Waltz also brushed off these characterizations of dysfunction on Sunday. Asked by Bartiromo how he was going to replace the fired Pentagon officials, Waltz said in response: ‘Maria, there’s 20,000 people in the Pentagon.’

 ‘There is a record number of generals,’ he said. ‘And the other piece— there is accountability. We have had several general officers that weren’t getting the job done, and admirals get fired and get replaced… That’s what the Pentagon needs.’

Waltz argued that that is a stark contrast to the longtime culture at the Pentagon, where he said ‘no one ever gets fired, [and] there’s never a sense of accountability.’

‘And now there is,’ he told Bartiromo.

‘Whether it’s leaks, or not getting the job done, or failures in terms of procurement acquisition, now you have a leader that’s in charge,’ Waltz said. ‘And I couldn’t be prouder of Pete Hegseth.’

Waltz’s remarks come as Hegseth’s role has come under mounting scrutiny in recent weeks — both for his participation in at least one Signal group chat in March where he discussed a planned military strike against the Houthis, and the firing of several senior staffers earlier this month.

Hegseth earlier this month fired three top aides: including his aide, Dan Caldwell, his deputy chief of staff Darin Selnick, and the chief of staff to the deputy defense secretary, Colin Carroll. 

These oustings were described as both ‘baffling’ and alarming by John Ullyot, a former Pentagon communications official who resigned earlier this year.

‘The dysfunction is now a major distraction for the president — who deserves better from his senior leadership,’ Ullyot wrote in an op-ed for Politico.

The White House, however, has sought to emphasize its support for Hegseth in recent days, with both Vice President JD Vance and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt vehemently dismissing reports that the administration could be considering a possible replacement. 

‘Let me reiterate: The president stands strongly behind Secretary Hegseth and the change that he is bringing to the Pentagon, and the results that he’s achieved thus far speak for themselves,’ Leavitt told reporters at a briefing last week, describing the reports as a ‘smear campaign.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump’s 15th week in office will include his 100th day back in the White House, which he will celebrate by hosting a rally in Michigan – the last state he campaigned in before polls opened on Election Day of last year. 

‘President Trump is excited to return to the great state of Michigan next Tuesday, where he will rally in Macomb County to celebrate the FIRST 100 DAYS!’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in an X post announcing the rally. 

Trump’s presidential campaigns in 2016, 2020 and 2024 all ended with rallies in the battleground state of Michigan. Trump’s visit to Macomb County this week follows his final 2024 campaign rally in Grand Rapids, where he joined the crowds just after midnight in the final hours before his victory over then-Vice President Kamala Harris. 

The event is billed as a celebration of Trump’s ‘LEGENDARY start to his presidency,’ according to the Republican National Committee’s website. The rally will be held at Macomb Community College in Warren and will kick off at 6 p.m. ET on Tuesday. 

Trump wraps up his 100th day in office with more executive orders signed than any other president over the same period since President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Trump has signed at least 137 executive orders, ranging from dismantling the Department of Education, establishing the Department of Government Efficiency, and stripping diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives from the fabric of the federal government following the Biden administration. 

‘Very critical week’ for Russia and Ukraine peace talks 

Trump returned from Rome on Saturday after attending Pope Francis’ funeral mass at the Vatican with first lady Melania Trump. Trump met with Ukrainian President Vlodomyr Zelenskyy during the trip as the war between Russia and Ukraine continues to rage and negotiations for peace stall. 

‘There was no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns, over the last few days,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social, shortly after he met with Zelenskyy at the Vatican on Saturday. 

‘It makes me think that maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently, through ‘Banking’ or ‘Secondary Sanctions?’ Too many people are dying!!!’ he added.

While on the campaign trail, Trump vowed to end the war between Russia and Ukraine in a matter of 24 hours, but negotiations have proven difficult. Trump’s Truth Social post on Saturday followed Russia launching a missile strike on Kyiv that injured dozens and killed at least 12. 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Sunday during an appearance on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press’ that the coming week will be ‘very critical’ as the White House weighs whether it wants to continue working towards a peace deal. Rubio warned this month that the U.S. might ‘move on’ from trying to secure a deal between Russia and Ukraine if progress was not made. 

‘I think this is going to be a very critical week,’ Rubio said on Sunday. ‘This week is going to be a really important week in which we have to make a determination about whether this is an endeavor that we want to continue to be involved in or if it’s time to sort of focus on some other issues that are equally, if not more, important in some cases. But we want to see it happen. There are reasons to be optimistic, but there are reasons to be realistic, of course, as well. We’re close, but we’re not close enough.’

Trade talks expected to advance following reciprocal tariff pause 

Trump put a 90-day pause on reciprocal, customized tariffs he had imposed on dozens of nations this month, sparking a trade deal negotiation blitz as dozens of nations began knocking on the proverbial doors of the White House in the hopes of striking more favorable terms. 

The White House has met and spoken with a handful of nations looking to make deals, including South Korea last week. Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent said negotiations with the Asian nation have progressed quickly and that the two countries could reach a trade agreement as early as this week. 

‘We had a very successful bilateral meeting with the Republic of South Korea today,’ Bessent said from the White House on Thursday. ‘We may be moving faster than I thought, and we will be talking technical terms as early as next week as we reach an agreement on understanding as soon as next week.’

‘So South Koreans came early. They came with their A game, and we will see if they follow through on that,’ Bessent continued. 

Congress reconvenes with eyes on passing Trump-backed budget

Congress will reconvene on Monday following a spring recess, with Republican lawmakers expected to resume talks on a budget plan to advance Trump’s first-year agenda, including extending Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and carving out millions in funds for border security.

Democrats on Capitol Hill protested on Sunday ahead of Republicans returning to the table for budget plan talks. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker took to the steps of the Capitol on Sunday morning while flanked by supporters to protest the budget plan. 

‘Republican leaders have made clear their intention to use the coming weeks to advance a reckless budget scheme to President Trump’s desk that seeks to gut Medicaid, food assistance and basic needs programs that help people, all to give tax breaks to billionaires. Given what’s at stake, these could be some of the most consequential weeks for seniors, kids and families in generations,’ the two Democrat lawmakers wrote in a statement of the protests. 

Trump has repeatedly called on Republican lawmakers to pass the ‘big, beautiful’ tax and spending package to advance his first-year agenda. 

Trump to deliver University of Alabama’s commencement speech 

Trump is expected to travel to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on Thursday where he will deliver a commencement speech to graduating students at the University of Alabama. 

‘I have agreed to do the Commencement Address at two really GREAT places, the University of Alabama and, WEST POINT. Stay tuned for times and dates!!!’ Trump posted to Truth Social last week. 

Trump is expected to deliver his speech from the school’s Coleman Coliseum arena on Thursday evening. 

‘The University of Alabama is honored to have been selected as one of the universities President Donald J. Trump will visit to deliver a spring commencement address,’ the university said in a statement this month.

Trump-funded American flags to be installed at White House 

Trump previewed last week that his administration is in the midst of purchasing and installing massive flag poles to feature Ol’ Glory on both the north side lawn and south lawn of the White House. Trump told the media he will personally fund the flags and said they could be ready sometime this week. 

‘We’re putting up a beautiful, almost 100-foot-tall American flag on this side and another one on the other side, two flags, top of the line,’ he told reporters on Wednesday outside the White House, adding they will be ‘paid for by Trump.’

‘They needed flagpoles for 200 years. It was something I’ve often said, you know, they don’t have a flagpole per se. So we’re putting one right where you saw us, and we’re putting another one on the other side, on top of the mounds. It’s going to be two beautiful poles.’

Trump added on Wednesday that the flags will ‘arrive in about a week or so.’ An American flag is currently only flown from the White House roof. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

PHOENIX − What if he never hits a home run his entire major league career?

What if he never drives in more than 50 runs in a season?

But….what if  Chandler Simpson changes the complete baseball landscape, exploiting his surreal speed and uncanny ability to get on base, allowing us to view and appreciate the game as if we’re turning the clock back a quarter-century ago.

“That’s my dream,’’ Simpson, 24, tells USA TODAY Sports. “I feel like God gave me the gift to motivate and inspire other generations that come after me. I mean, I’ve heard it my whole life about the little power I have. But you don’t have to hit home runs in this home-run era. There’s other stuff that I can do well on the field that can make make up for it.

“I want to prove that you can make it to the big leagues, succeed in the big leagues, and that speed plays.’’

And, oh, does Simpson ever know speed. Simpson, called up to the major leagues with the Tampa Bay Rays last week, may be the fastest man in the game. He has two stolen bases in six games. He has already turned routine ground balls to second base and one-hoppers to first base into hits, hitting .304 entering Saturday. He once scored from second base on a routine sacrifice fly in college. He was timed running to first base in just 3.88 seconds by scouts last week.

He stole 104 bases last season in 121 attempts at Class AA and Triple-A, becoming the first player to steal 100 bases in a minor league season since 2012, and only the third to accomplish the feat in the last 20 years.

“I love stealing bases,’’ Simpson says. “It gets me real hyped because I know that when I get on, all eyes are on me. Everybody in the stadium, the pitcher, the catcher, the pitching coach, their manager, all of the fans in the stands, my manager, my teammates, they all know that I’m going to steal.

“It’s man vs. man, me vs. you, and I feel that nobody can stop me.’’

Well, there actually may be one way to keep him from stealing …

“We were sitting around talking about how we can keep him from stealing bases if he gets on,’’ Arizona Diamondbacks veteran reliever Shelby Miller said. “We decided the best way may be to just throw over to first base three times. That way, if you don’t get him, it’s just a balk and doesn’t count as a stolen base.’’

Says Diamondbacks starter Brandon Pfaadt, who faced him last week: “He’s an absolute game-changer with his speed. He’s like (three-time batting champion) Luis Arraez with speed. If Arraez could run like this guy, he’d probably hit .550. This guy is going to be pretty fun to watch, as long as you’re not facing him.’’

Next stop, to go where no player has gone since Vince Coleman in 1987, stealing 100 bases in the major leagues.

“I would love to see it,’’ Kenny Lofton, the six-time All-Star and five-time stolen base champion, tells USA TODAY Sports. “Finally, speed is starting to get back into the game thanks to him and people understanding just how important it is. Speed guys don’t get the glory. They’ve have never gotten the glory. Baseball doesn’t make it that important, they just keep talking about home runs.

“Well, if you want you to score runs, well, what better way than speed? Speed kills, but it’s never promoted. Hopefully, this young man can bring it back and show people just how important it is in the game. It’s time for baseball to praise and support guys like him, not just the home-run guys all of the time.’’

If baseball wants to only talk about home runs and power, Simpson may never have his name mentioned again the remainder of his career.

Simpson went to the plate 1,119 times during in his three-year minor-league career. He hit exactly one home run.

And, naturally, that one didn’t clear the fence, either.

It was an inside-the-park home run on June 7, 2024 against the Biloxi Shuckers. Simpson merely slapped a ball past third baseman Brock Wilken, which then got away from left fielder Zavier Warren. The ball rolled to the fence, and by the time Simpson sped around the bases and slid into home, he had his first professional homer.

It was his first home run since Feb. 25, 2022, when hit the only homer of his collegiate career, a grand slam against Gardner-Webb for Georgia Tech.

Well, that actually didn’t go over the fence, either.

“The right fielder went up to catch it,’’ Simpson said, “and it topped off his glove, and went over the fence.

“But, hey, it still counted.’’

Simpson, who entered high school at just 5-foot-5 and 130 pounds and is now 5-11, 170 pounds, proudly recalls that he did hit one home run at St. Pius X Catholic High School in Atlanta during his senior season where his mom is the principal.  Atlanta center fielder Michael Harris, who grew up playing against Simpson since they were 6-year-old kids in Little League, and played as rivals during their summer travel leagues, remembers being a witness for the historic moment, with Simpson sprinting around the bases so fast that his own teammates had to tell him to slow down.

So, considering Simpson’s absence of home-run power, pretty easy for the guys back home to provide good natured teasing?

“How can you tease him?’’ Harris says. “He hits .350 wherever he goes. He steals 100 bases. He knows his game. He’s not a guy who’s going to try to hit homers. He knows he can get on base and make an impact with his legs.’’

Says Rays reliever Eric Orze, who played with Simpson in the minors: “Dude is electric. It’s unbelievable what he does. He’s a threat just walking onto the field. He walks to the plate, can miss-hit a ball, and it’s a single. He hits the ball hard and it’s a double or triple. And as soon as he’s on first base, the pitcher is worrying because he’s going to take second base at some point. And once he does, he’s not stopping there.’’

St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Victor Scott, one of Simpson’s closest friends who also grew up in Atlanta, says their speed is nearly identical. They finished in a dead heat in a foot race in 2023 − the year Scott and Simpson each stole 94 bases in the minors.

Still, there’s a subtle difference.

Scott had a career .264 batting average and .344 on-base percentage with 17 homers in his three minor-league seasons.

Simpson has a career .324 batting average and .389 on-base percentage, with a strikeout rate of just 8.8%, with that one inside-the-park homer.

“When he got called up and he FaceTimed me,’’ Scott said, “I think I was more excited than when I got called up. He’s just an unbelievable person. He was willing to go up against anybody who went against the grain of what his ideology was, and his success. Not everybody is blessed with an insane amount of power, hitting the ball with an exit velocity of 110-mph-plus, and hitting 450-foot home runs.

“But guys like Chandler and myself can be trailblazers for the game. There’s more than one way to play this game, you can use your speed to bunt, steal bases, and impact games that way.’’

Besides, as Simpson will attest, creating havoc on the basepaths during an inning can be just as alluring, if not a whole lot more, than spending 20 seconds to round the bases after a home run.

“Whenever I step to the plate,’’ Simpson says, “I want to try to wreck havoc. They’re going to have to worry about putting me on base. They’re going to have to worry about me on base and its going to be a problem pitching to other people in the lineup. I want to be that guy who is feared by pitchers and fielders as well.’’

Simpson, who didn’t even play the outfield until he was drafted in the second round of 2022, playing shortstop and second base his entire life, doesn’t want to be known simply as a speedster. Speed can be negated in the big leagues if you can’t get on base and can’t play defense. He has much bigger aspirations than being the next Terrance Gore or Billy Hamilton.

He watches videotape of hitting champions Rod Carew, Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Wade Boggs and Arraez, and stolen base kings like Vince Coleman, Hamilton and Lofton. He examines tapes of sprinters, from everyone from Olympians Tyson Gay, Usain Bolt, Michael Johnson to determine what mechanics he can incorporate into his own game. He even talked to Gwynn’s son, Tony Gwynn Jr., seeking advice and what he learned from his father, the eight-time batting champion who died in 2014.

“I’ve studied Luis Arraez, his hitting drills, what he does in the off-season, all of his hitting mechanics to be a better hitter,’’ Simpson says. “I feel like (Arraez) definitely doesn’t get the recognition that he deserves, winning three batting titles in a row with three different teams. Putting the bat on the ball, not striking out, getting on base, and hitting for average. I want to be that guy, too.’’

And if Simpson is that guy, if he becomes a batting champion, steals 100 bases, or becomes a modern-day version of Ty Cobb who won five batting titles and led the league in stolen bases same season, look out world, a new brand of baseball could be coming.

“He plays differently than what people are accustomed to seeing in this modern era of baseball,’’ Rays pitcher Pete Fairbanks says. “I think in some ways it’s a breath of fresh air to see somebody that has tailored their approach to their skill set. I think that anytime you see somebody that has that unique of a skillset, and then is willing to play within it, that’s something that is admirable. If he’s successful, you’re going to see a lot of people buy into it.’’

Says Rays infielder Brandon Lowe: The Aaron Judges of the world are few and far between. But I think the Chandler Simpsons will probably be few and far between, as well. I mean, I don’t know that I’ve ever seen anybody float the way that he floats.’’

The only real question is whether he can terrorize the opposition in the big leagues just as he did in the minors? Simpson has no doubt he will, proving everyone wrong at each level he played, so what’s one more step?

“I think all of us have some questions about how’s his skill set going to play up here, right?’’ Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “People are curious to see how major league infielders again him. You can get a lot of infield hits in the minors, but can you do it up here?

“We’re about to find out.’’

Says Rays GM Eric Neander: The speed is top of the scale, but it’s that bat-to-ball skill that is unique. He doesn’t chase. He puts the ball in play at an extremely high rate. He controls the strikezone. There’s a reason he hit .355 last year, and it wasn’t just because he was fast.’’

If successful, who knows, Simpson says, maybe the best athletes may start turning to baseball again, and the increase in young Black players will finally start to rise after being stalled at 6% on this year’s opening-day roster.

“I feel like there were a lot of Black players, but then it kind of dropped off,’’ Simpson says. “But now I feel like change is coming.

“Believe me, I’m ready to be part of it.’’

Around the basepaths

≻ Walt Jocketty, who passed away Friday at the age of 74, was one of the most genuine, sincere and fabulous GMs of his era.

There have been few executives more beloved than Jocketty, the architect of World Series championship teams in Oakland and St. Louis while also leading the Cincinnati Reds to the postseason.

“He’s tied for first,’’ Hall of Fame manager Tony La Russa said, “with the finest person I’ve ever known.’’

≻ The San Diego Padres pulled off the best trade never made this winter.

The Padres told every team in baseball that closer Robert Suarez is available with their money crunch, wanting to shed his $10 million salary.

Well, they did not get one single trade offer.

Not one.

Suarez has been perfect this season, going 10-for-10 in save opportunities with a 0.00 ERA and 0.455 WHIP.

≻ It has finally happened. They have begun work on the Athletics’ $1.75 billion Las Vegas ballpark site, grading the 9-acre stadium site.

The groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for June. The stadium is scheduled to open before the 2028 season.

≻ What story evaporated more quickly this season? The torpedo bats or the Los Angeles Dodgers ruining baseball with their mammoth payroll.

The Dodgers are a sub-.500 team since opening the season 8-0 and the Yankees have discovered that it wasn’t the torpedo bats, but the Milwaukee Brewers pitching that caused their power surge.

≻ The Philadelphia Phillies, among other teams, already are keeping a close eye on Cardinals closer Ryan Helsley, who will likely be dealt by the trade deadline. Yet, the Phillies are adamant they will not include top prospects Andrew Painter or Aidan Miller in any trade.

The Arizona Diamondbacks, with lefty reliever A.J. Puk sidelined for the foreseeable future, also have interest in Helsley,

≻ Scouts have been in awe by Diamondbacks reliever Juan Morillo, who was discarded by the Dodgers and signed as a minor-league free agent by the D-backs. Morillo, who was just called up last week, has been lighting up the radar gun at 100-mph and has yet to give up an earned run.

“That will be the greatest minor-league free-agent signing of the year, hands down,’’ said one scout.

≻ The Brewers would love to have a mulligan and not expose pitcher Shane Smith to the Rule 5 Draft. The Chicago White Sox nabbed Smith with the first pick in December, and he is now their ace, going 1-1 with a 2.30 ERA and a 0.95 WHIP in his first five starts.

≻ The Yankees realized they have no choice but to take Devin Williams temporarily out of the closer’s role with his 11.25 ERA this season, but remain confident he’ll soon be back to being an All-Star caliber closer.

“When you go from a small market to New York, it’s a different animal,’’ one executive said. “It just takes awhile to get acclimated. He’ll be all right.’’

≻ The Brewers were planning to pounce on free agent first baseman Paul Goldschmidt this winter if Rhys Hoskins opted out of his contract, believing he’d have a huge bounce-back season. Hoskins elected to stay, and Goldschmidt, after having the worst season of his 15-year contract, signed a one-year, $12.5 million contract with the Yankees.

Goldschmidt has been everything the Yankees hoped for, and more, hitting .364 with an .877 OPS.

≻ You think the Dodgers’ new home clubhouse is fancy?

Well, it’s the first one that comes equipped with eight state-of-the-art, multi-function, heated-seat, bidet-equipped Japanese-style toilets.

The idea came from Roki Sasaki, who was trying to decide where to sign this winter, and told the Dodgers it would help persuade him to come their way with the new toilets.

“It sounds like a joke,’’ Sasaki told the Orange County Register, “but for me, it’s pretty important.’’

≻ No one has been crushed with more injuries to their outfield than the Tampa Bay Rays, who have four outfielders on the injured list and only three true outfielders on the roster with Christopher Morel and rookies Chandler Simpson and Kameron Misner. They acquired Travis Jankowski from the White Sox to give them a veteran reinforcement.

≻ The Toronto Blue Jays are still looking for a return on their 5-year, $92.5 million investment on outfielder Anthony Santander. He is hitting .182 with two homers and a .537 OPS.

≻ Remember when Kyle Tucker opened this spring by going 0-for-20 with the Chicago Cubs?

Neither does anyone else.

No one has made more money this first month of the season than Tucker, whose free-agent value has skyrocketed from $300 million to perhaps more than $500 million.

≻ Scouts are raving about D-backs prized infield prospect Jordan Lawler, who is lighting it up at Triple-A Reno, and predict that he could be their everyday second baseman next season while moving injury-prone Ketel Marte to first base.

≻ Atlanta is in no hurry to call up veteran closer Craig Kimbrel, whose fastball has been clocked at only 91-92 mph in his first two outings at Triple-A.

≻ Considering that Baltimore Orioles assistant GM Sig Megdal used to be an engineer at NASA, is it any surprise that the Orioles’ analytics department is working with engineering researchers to create AI technology to modify how pitchers are scouted and developed.

“We’re in the American League East with some very-large-market teams,’’ Mejdal told the Baltimore Sun, “and in order for us to succeed, we have to be very good at everything. To ignore a potential like this would be foolish.”

≻ Future Hall of Fame pitcher Justin Verlander, who’s 38 victories shy from 300, has gone six starts now without a victory, just one shy of the longest drought of his career.

≻ Kudos to veteran reliever Drew Pomeranz, who refused to give up after surgeries and injuries derailed his career since 2021, returning last week with the Cubs for his first MLB appearance since August, 2021.

≻ Prayers to Minnesota Twins legends Tony Oliva, 86, and Kent Hrbek, 64, who are recovering from having strokes within days of one another two weeks ago.

≻ It took 681 days, but there was Liam Hendriks finally stepping on the mound for the Boston Red Sox, after recovering from Stage 4 non-Hodgkins lymphoma and Tommy John surgery.

≻ The most emotional moment on the field this week came at Angel Stadium where Pirates starter Andrew Heaney, wearing No. 45 this season in honor of his late best friend, Tyler Skaggs, pitched six shutout innings in the Pirates’ 3-0 victory.

“It is a number that has meaning to me,” Heaney, who spent seven years with the Angels, told the Athletic. “But at the same time, it’s not my number. It’s my number. But I’m wearing it because it was his number.”

Skaggs died on July 1, 2019, after ingesting a lethal dose of fentanyl.

≻ While the Rays have no idea where they’ll be playing in a few years after pulling out of their deal in downtown St. Petersburg, the folks in Orlando announced they have received pledges of $1.5 billion towards a stadium project to lure the Rays.

≻ Has there been a better multi-year free agent signing than Nick Pivetta of the Padres, who is 4-1 with a 1.20 ERA and 0.767 WHIP? They signed him in spring training to a four-year, $55 million contract that is so backloaded that he’s making just $1 million this season.

You think the Baltimore Orioles, who have MLB’s worst ERA, and a whole lot of other teams wish they had taken the plunge?

≻ The scariest part of the New York Mets’ torrid start for the rest of the NL East is that they are doing this without starters Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas, and still have the lowest ERA in baseball.

≻ No one outside their own clubhouses believes the A’s or Marlins will be actual contenders in September because of their pitching flaws, but scouts have been quite impressed with their potent offenses, and firmly believe the A’’s will be in the postseason before they depart for Las Vegas in three years.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY