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After recording the first triple-double in WNBA All-Star Game history on July 19, Seattle Storm guard Skylar Diggins made more history on Monday.

She became the second player in Storm history to record a triple-double — and she did it in three quarters. Diggins’s two free throws at the end of the third quarter gave her 11 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists in 22:51 of action, the lowest minute total for a triple-double in WNBA history.

Temeka Johnson recorded the Storm’s other triple-double with 13 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds in an overtime loss to the New York Liberty in 2014. Diggins is the fourth player in the league to amass a triple-double this season.

Diggins did not play in the fourth quarter as the Storm defeated the Connecticut Sun 101-85. Seattle had led by as many as 32.

Diggins’ triple-double the 46th in WNBA history. Alyssa Thomas has 16, the most in WNBA history. Only eight players have multiple triple-doubles in their careers.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Hall of Fame second baseman Ryne Sandberg, who was a fixture at the position for the Chicago Cubs for all but one of his 16 major-league seasons, has died at the age of 65, the team announced on Monday, July 28.

Sandberg publicly revealed on Jan. 23, 2024, that he had begun treatment for metastatic prostate cancer. That May, he announced that he was cancer-free before sharing on social media in December that the cancer had returned and spread to other organs.

A 10-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove award winner, Sandberg blazed a trail in the 1980s for a wave of power-hitting middle infielders who would come along later.

“Ryne Sandberg was a legend of the Chicago Cubs franchise and a beloved figure throughout Major League Baseball,’ MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement. ‘He was a five-tool player who excelled in every facet of the game thanks to his power, speed and work ethic.’

At the time he retired as a player (for the second time), Sandberg held the major league record for career home runs by a second baseman with 282. And his seven Silver Slugger awards are the most ever at the position. Sandberg finished his career with 2,386 hits, a .282 batting average and 344 stolen bases.

A native of Spokane, Washington, Sandberg was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies out of high school in the 20th round of the 1978 draft.

He made his MLB debut in 1981 as a September call-up, playing in 13 games and getting a total of six plate appearances. That winter he was involved in a trade that would change the course of baseball history.

With Sandberg seemingly blocked by veteran second baseman Manny Trillo and third baseman Mike Schmidt, the Phillies sent him, along with veteran shortstop Larry Bowa, to the Cubs for shortstop Iván de Jesús.

The next season, the 22-year-old Sandberg became the everyday starter for the Cubs at third base – before moving to second for good in 1983 and winning the first of his nine Gold Gloves.

Sandberg was the National League’s Most Valuable Player in 1984, hitting .314 with 19 homers, 32 stolen bases and a league-leading 114 runs scored as the Cubs won the NL East division title and reached the playoffs for the first time in 39 years.

That season also marked the first of 10 consecutive All-Star appearances for Sandberg.

His best was yet to come.

After leading the Cubs to another division title in 1989, Sandberg followed it up by hitting .306 and leading the NL with a career-high 40 home runs. He also led the league in runs scored (116) and total bases (344).

However, the Cubs fell back into their traditional state of mediocrity, and Sandberg never again played in the postseason.

After playing in just 54 games during the strike-shortened 1994 season, Sandberg announced his retirement at age 34.

But after sitting out the ’95 season, he returned to play two more productive but mostly uneventful seasons.

Perhaps the biggest highlight was surpassing Joe Morgan for the most home runs in baseball history by a second baseman, a feat he accomplished in his final year.

His career .989 fielding percentage was also a major-league record for a second baseman when he retired.

Sandberg was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame on his third try, joining Wade Boggs in Cooperstown as a member of the Class of 2005.

Even after his induction into the Hall, Sandberg remained connected to the game.

The following year, 2006, he began his career as a manager with the Peoria (Ill.) Chiefs, the Cubs’ Class-A affiliate in the Midwest League.

From there he moved up the organizational ladder and was a candidate to replace the retiring Lou Piniella as Cubs manager, but the job went to interim skipper Mike Quade.

Disappointed at not getting the job, Sandberg left the Cubs organization and caught on with the franchise that originally drafted him, the Phillies.

After two years managing in the minors, he was promoted to the major-league staff in 2013 and took over as interim manager when Charlie Manuel was fired.

Over parts of three seasons under Sandberg, the Phillies went 119-159 (.428) and never finished higher than fourth place. He resigned June 26, 2015, and eventually returned to the Cubs organization – where he served as a team ambassador and occasional color commentator on the team’s television broadcasts.

‘His many friends across the game were in his corner as he courageously fought cancer in recent years,’ Manfred said.  ‘We will continue to support the important work of Stand Up To Cancer in Ryne’s memory.’

(This story was updated to include video.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders told his father Deion that he didn’t want him to visit him at Browns’ training camp last week because he might only get three or four snaps at practice as a rookie fifth-round draft pick.

Shedeur Sanders has remained a low man on the Browns’ totem pole in a quarterback competition that includes veteran Joe Flacco, third-round draft pick Dillon Gabriel and former Pitt quarterback Kenny Pickett.

“Shedeur told me not to come,” Deion Sanders told his former Dallas Cowboys teammate Michael Irvin in a podcast interview posted Monday, July 28. “Let’s get that out. He didn’t want me to come. He’s like, ‘Dad I may get three, four reps at practice. I don’t want you seeing that. Like, c’mon… I’m not where I need to be. Let me get where I need to be.’”

Both of Deion Sanders’ youngest two sons are in NFL training camps as rookies after playing for their father at Colorado. Deion Sanders did visit his safety son Shilo at his training camp with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on July 23 before returning to Colorado.

It was part of his father’s plan to visit both after having his bladder removed and then recovering at his estate in Canton, Texas, in May and June. The father said he kept Shedeur and Shilo in the dark about his bladder cancer so they could focus on making their team’s rosters.

Shedeur Sanders tells father Deion ‘I got work to do’

The timeline of his cancer diagnosis also sheds new light on what the father was going through as he watched Shedeur’s disappointing NFL draft experience in late April after he had expected him to be a first-round pick. Deion Sanders was diagnosed with cancer on April 14, according to a video posted by his eldest son Deion Jr. He had surgery to remove his bladder on May 9. But none of that was publicly disclosed until July 28, when Sanders gave a news conference about it in Colorado.

“He’s dealing with it like a pro,” Deion said about Shedeur. “Like, he ain’t mad. He ain’t bitter. He’s like, `I got work to do, but I’m going to put in this work. One thing, they’re gonna have to let me play. Preseason gonna come. And when preseason come, watch me work.’ I’m like, ‘I already know what you’re gonna do. I ain’t worried about that. I know.’ But he didn’t want me to come. And Shilo’s totally the opposite.”

Deion Jr., the oldest son, was with him the whole time, the father said. His two daughters also visited him in Canton while he recovered.

“Every day that I’ve gone through what I’ve gone through, I’ve seen his face every day,” Sanders said of Deion Jr.

Deion Sanders Sr. is now cancer-free, according to his doctor. His Colorado team opens preseason training camp this week before its season opener Aug. 29 at home against Georgia Tech.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Police are still working to understand the motive of a 27-year-old Nevada man who opened fire at a midtown Manhattan skyscraper and killed at least four people before shooting himself.  

Toting a rifle, Shane Tamura walked into the lobby of 345 Park Ave., an office building that houses the NFL headquarters and major financial firms, on the evening of July 28, and “immediately” began shooting, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said at a news conference.    

One of the victims was a 36-year-old New York City Police Officer named Didarul Islam. 

Tisch said the suspect had a “documented mental health history.” Authorities believe he acted alone.  

Tamura left a note that appeared to blame the NFL for a brain injury, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said during a July 29 appearance on CBS.  

Here’s what we know so far about the suspect.  

Tamura’s car traveled across US before the shooting 

Surveillance footage showed Tamura exiting a double-parked black BMW outside of the Manhattan skyscraper. He then entered the lobby, turned right and began shooting. The vehicle was registered under Tamura’s name in Nevada, Tisch said.  

Police discovered the vehicle had traveled across the country, through Colorado on July 26, and through Nebraska and Iowa on July 27, Tish said. They tracked the vehicle in Columbia, New Jersey, a city about 70 miles west of New York City, at 4:24 p.m. on July 28, hours before the shooting. 

Inside the vehicle, officers found a rifle case with rounds, a loaded revolver, ammunition, magazines and a backpack with medication prescribed to Tamura. 

Tamura appeared to target NFL headquarters

Officials said Tamura immediately shot New York City Police Officer Didarul Islam after entering the building. He then shot a security guard behind a desk, a woman who took cover behind a pillar and another man in the lobby, Tisch said.

The gunman then entered an elevator and went to the 33rd floor, occupied by the building’s owner, Rudin Management, and fired several rounds. One person was shot and killed. Tamura then took his own life, Tisch said.

Public records show Shane Devon Tamura was issued a work card by the Private Investigators Licensing Board in Nevada, which regulates security guards and private investigators in the state. The card was active between December 2019 and December 2024. The card did not authorize him to carry a firearm.  

Preliminary investigations indicate the gunman intended to get to the NFL headquarters, but may have taken the wrong elevator, according to Adams.

‘That is where he carried out additional shootings and took the lives of additional employees,’ Adams said during his CBS interview.

Multiple news outlets have reported that Tamura left behind a three-page note that said he had CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy. The recovered note asked for his brain to be studied, according to the reporting. USA TODAY has reached out to the NYPD for comment.

An NFL employee was seriously injured in the mass shooting, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a memo to staff members.

‘We believe that all of our employees are otherwise safe and accounted for, and the building has nearly been cleared,’ Goodell wrote in the memo, obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

A high school football player

Tamura attended high school in Southern California and was a star football player.

Dan Kelley, a coach at Golden Valley High School, where Tamura played for three seasons before transferring to Granada Hills, told the Los Angeles Times only that he remembered Tamura as “a good athlete.”

An online video circulating from 2015 shows Tamura speaking after a game during his senior year at Granada Hills Charter School in Los Angeles.

‘We definitely had to stay disciplined,’ Tamura says in response to a question about the game. ‘Our coach kept saying, ‘Don’t hold your head down, don’t hold your heads down.’ We just had to stay disciplined and come together as a team.’

This is a developing story.

Eduardo Cuevas and Scooby Axson contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Kim Jong-Un’s powerful sister opened up about relations with the second Trump administration, warning the U.S. not to try to restart talks centered on getting North Korea to give up its nuclear program. 

Kim Yo Jong, in remarks blasted out by state media, said relations between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un are ‘not bad’ but added Pyongyang would view any attempt to pressure North Korea to denuclearize as ‘nothing but a mockery.’ 

She said that North Korea’s nuclear arsenal has sharply increased since Trump and Kim last spoke, and the pair would not meet for a summit again if denuclearization was on the table. 

The North Korean dictator’s sister did not rule out bilateral talks entirely — as she did with South Korea in a separate statement. 

‘If the U.S. fails to accept the changed reality and persists in the failed past, the DPRK- U.S. meeting will remain as a ‘hope’ of the U.S. side,’ Kim Yo Jong said, referring to the nation by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

She said it would be ‘advisable to seek another way of contact.’

Trump held three unprecedented summits with the North Korean leader he dubbed ‘Little Rocket Man’ during his first term: in Singapore in 2018, Hanoi in 2019 and the Korean Demilitarized Zone in 2019, becoming the first president to step foot on North Korean territory. 

None of the meetings resulted in any breakthroughs: North Korea kept its nukes, and the U.S. left sanctions that have isolated it from international markets in place. 

Kim Yo Jong is a top official on the Central Committee of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party and handles relations with the U.S. and South Korea.

Kim Yo Jong’s comments came after an article posted by Yonhap news agency cited an unnamed White House official as saying Trump ‘remains open to engaging with Leader Kim to achieve a fully denuclearized North Korea.’

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said last month Trump would like to see ‘progress’ this term on the summits he held during the first term. 

In a statement commemorating the 72nd anniversary of the end of the Korean War on Monday, Trump said, ‘I was proud to become the first sitting President to cross this Demilitarized Zone into North Korea.’

He underscored the U.S. alliance with South Korea. 

‘Although the evils of communism still persist in Asia, American and South Korean forces remain united in an ironclad alliance to this day.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Lawmakers on the House Homeland Security Committee met with stakeholders and law enforcement to address the rise of antisemitic violence in the U.S., during a closed-door congressional roundtable on July 22, Fox News Digital has learned. 

The roundtable comes amid growing concerns about antisemitic violence months after recent attacks in Boulder, Colorado, and Washington, D.C., along with growing fears surrounding the potential election of Zohran Mamdani, who has espoused anti-Israel viewpoints, as New York City mayor. 

‘Jewish communities across the country are living in fear, and I am committed to standing with them. This roundtable comes at a critical moment: a far-left activist who has defended the phrase ‘globalize the intifada’ is inching closer to leading a city home to one of the world’s largest Jewish populations,’ Rep. August Pfluger, the chairman of the Homeland Security Committee’s counterterrorism and intelligence subcommittee, said in his opening statement, obtained by Fox News Digital. 

‘Antisemitic and anti-Israel rhetoric is becoming dangerously mainstream. We must act now to expose and combat this vile hatred wherever it is spread,’ Pfluger said. 

The roundtable focused on improving interagency coordination, intelligence sharing, training, and enforcement to better prevent and respond to antisemitic violence, according to a House Homeland Security Committee aide.

In particular, the meeting addressed ways to bolster communication between the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, along with state and local law enforcement, according to Michael Masters, the CEO of the Secure Community Network, a non-profit organization focused on the safety of the Jewish community in North America. 

This interagency coordination is absolutely paramount as the Secure Community Network has flagged 500 credible threats to life this year – which all have required immediate law enforcement intervention, according to Masters. 

‘Bad guys don’t respect orders. Bad actors don’t respect jurisdictions, and that means that our intelligence can’t be siloed,’ Masters told Fox News Digital on Monday. 

 

Additionally, the roundtable’s discussion highlighted how extremist rhetoric can spread, especially on college campuses and via social media, the aide said. Since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023, student protests have erupted across college campuses in the U.S., including at Columbia University in New York. 

Likewise, those participating in the roundtable addressed the prevalence of homegrown and foreign-influenced extremism, when one participant highlighted instances where anti-Israel terrorist organizations have disseminated tool kits and talking points aimed at promoting attacks in the U.S., the committee aide said. 

The discussion is expected to inform legislative priorities centered around bolstering officer training, improving data collection, and ensuring ‘robust prosecution’ of antisemitic offenses, the committee aide said. 

Those who participated in the roundtable included representatives from the Secure Community Networks; the Anti-Defamation League, an organization dedicated to stopping the defamation of the Jewish people; the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence & Analysis; and law enforcement officials. 

Pfluger, a Republican from Texas, has spearheaded legislation that would bar any visa holders backing Hamas or other designated terror groups from staying in the U.S. 

He also led a hearing last month on the rise of antisemitic violence in the U.S., following a May shooting that killed two Israeli Embassy employees in Washington and a terrorist attack in Colorado targeting a grassroots group advocating for the release of Israeli hostages.

Antisemitic violence reached a new high in 2024, according to the Anti-Defamation League. 

The group recorded 9,354 antisemitic instances of harassment, assault, and vandalism in the U.S. in 2024 – a 5% increase from the 8,873 incidents recorded in 2023 and a 344% increase in the past five years. Likewise, the number of incidents is the highest the group has recorded since 1979, when the group first started tracking these cases. 

Incidents of antisemitic violence in 2024 were highest in the state of New York, where Mamdani is currently a state assemblyman. 

Mamdani has attracted scrutiny, including from Democrats, for initially failing to condemn the term ‘globalize the intifada,’ a phrase used to back Palestinian resistance against Israel. However, he has since said he will not use the term and will discourage others from using it as well. 

Still, concerns remain over what his potential leadership as mayor could mean for the Jewish community in New York City. Roughly 1.4 million people in the Greater New York Area identified as Jewish in 2023, according to UJA-Federation of New York. 

‘There’s a lot of fear in the Jewish community if this guy becomes mayor,’ New York City Republican councilwoman Inna Vernikov told Fox News Digital. 

‘This is a guy who wants to globalize the intifada,’ Vernikov said. ‘We’ve never seen anything close to this in New York City. We have the largest Jewish population in America, and I’ll tell you Jews are telling me they’re going to run away from New York City, and Jews have contributed a lot to the city and to this country, and the idea that they are now afraid to live here – it’s unacceptable and unprecedented really, this has never happened here.’

Fox News’ Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump addressed the ongoing hunger crisis in Gaza on Monday in Scotland, where he addressed the urgency of getting food into the enclave immediately, while doing it safely and securely. 

‘The United States recently, just a couple of weeks ago, we gave $60 million … No other nation gave money,’ as he urged other nations ‘to step up.’ 

$30 million in U.S. contributions to Gaza have been channeled through the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. 

Since the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) began its operations on May 27, the organization has partnered with local Palestinian aid workers and non-governmental organizations to deliver 97 million meals to date to Gazans.

GHF spokesperson Chapin Fay told Fox News Digital that GHF ‘has one exclusive mission: to feed the people of Gaza in a way that prevents Hamas from being able to steal or loot or divert the aid.’ In addition to having ‘zero diversion,’ Fay said GHF has ‘put [aid] directly into the hands of the people who need it the most.’ 

What is GHF providing the local population? 

At its four distribution sites in Gaza, it provides boxes of aid sufficient to provide 2,400 daily calories for 5.5 people over a total of 3.5 days. GHF’s sites are able to distribute, on average, 2 million total meals per day.

Fay said GHF has also started a potato pilot program which has seen ‘hundreds of tons of potatoes’ delivered into Gaza.

Another new pilot program in association with local Gazan NGO Al-Amal has allowed GHF to deliver 2,000 boxes of food to families in Gaza. Fay said that GHF is in the process of scaling up the operation, vetting hundreds of inquiries received since the program’s announcement and working on establishing additional local NGO partnerships.

Attacks on GHF’s aid model

The U.N. has lambasted GHF’s distributions, with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini calling the organization an ‘abomination’ that ‘provides nothing but starvation and gunfire to the people of Gaza.’  

Though media headlines are thick with accusations of violence at GHF sites, Fay said that the reality of GHF distributions ‘is almost the opposite of what you read about, what you see on TV.’ 

Though he admitted that ‘there’s some chaos when thousands of desperate, hungry people are trying to get aid,’ he claims that only two violent incidents have transpired at GHF distributions. A stampede and a grenade attack that harmed two American veteran employees were ‘Hamas-fomented terrorist attacks,’ he said.

The U.N. and many NGOs have also opposed GHF’s use of armed security to protect aid-seekers. However, U.N. data shows that only 8% of U.N. aid had reached its destination without being looted in the last 10 weeks, according to a Reuters report.

Fay says that GHF is ready and willing to provide security support for U.N. aid. ‘We need to stop pretending that there’s only one way to get aid into Gaza,’ he explained. 

GHF’s adaptations and improvements on the ground

As GHF continues to assist Gazans, Fay says the organization has ‘adapt[ed] in a dynamic environment, and our distributions seem to be going more smoothly every day.’ 

New adaptations include a red-light, green-light system to indicate whether distribution sites are open and a suggestion from aid-seekers. GHF has also added more shelf-stable onions to its aid boxes.

Fay said that workers are also holding back some aid to ensure that women and children receive needed assistance. Because of this change, Fay says he recently ‘saw women leaving and smiling at our personnel with their onions on their way home.’

GHF is set to deliver its 100 millionth meal to Gazans later this week. 

Reuters contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The man who walked into the New York City office building that houses the National Football League’s headquarters and opened fire might have been targeting the NFL when he shot and killed four people, including an NYPD officer, according to multiple reports including CNN, ABC and NY1, among others.

A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation tells CNN that papers found on the body of Shane Devon Tamura indicate he had grievances with the league over its handling of CTE, a brain disease linked to head trauma. Sources tell CNN that Tamura was a competitive football player in his youth.

Carrying an M4 rifle, the gunman walked into the building at 345 Park Avenue on Monday afternoon, July 28, and opened fire in the lobby, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said at a news conference. He then got on an elevator, got off at the 33rd floor and shot someone else before turning the gun on himself.

The NFL offices are located on the fifth floor of the building.

What is CTE?

CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy is a degenerative brain condition that happens after repeated head injuries. It has been commonly associated with football players, and can result even if they haven’t experienced a concussion.

According to the Concussion Legacy Foundation, symptoms do not generally begin appearing until years after the onset of head impacts. 

Symptoms are similar to those found in patients suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease, according to Dr. Ann McKee, director of the UNITE Brain Bank at Boston University and perhaps the foremost authority on CTE through her years of research on the subject.

NFL players diagnosed with CTE

In 2023, Boston University’s CTE Center updated the research it’s been conducting since 2008 to announce that 345 of 376 former NFL players whose brains it studied (91.7%) have been diagnosed with CTE.

Among the more prominent players to have been linked to CTE:

Hall of Fame linebacker Junior Seau
Pro Bowl offensive lineman Conrad Dobler
Tight end Frank Wycheck
Defensive back, TV analyst Irv Cross
Wide receiver Charles Johnson
Wide receiver Demaryius Thomas
Tight end Aaron Hernandez
Wide receiver Chris Henry
Wide receiver Vincent Jackson
Linebacker Jovan Belcher
Lineman Terry Long

(This story was updated with new information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Police are still working to understand the motive of a 27-year-old Nevada man who opened fire at a midtown Manhattan skyscraper and killed at least four people before shooting himself.  

Shane Tamura walked into the lobby of 345 Park Ave., an office building that houses the NFL headquarters and major financial firms, with an M4 rifle on the evening of July 28, and “immediately” began shooting, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said at a news conference.    

He shot and killed at least four people, including 36-year-old New York City Police Officer Didarul Islam. 

Tisch said the suspect had a “documented mental health history.” Authorities believe he acted alone.  

Tamura left a note that appeared to blame the NFL for a brain injury, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said during a July 29 appearance on CBS.  

‘He did have a note on him. The note alluded to that he felt he had CTE, a known brain injury for those who participate in contact sports,” Adams said. “He appeared to have blamed the NFL for his injury.’ 

Here’s what we know so far about the gunman.  

Tamura’s car drove across the U.S. before shooting 

Tamura was seen exiting a double-parked black BMW outside of the Manhattan skyscraper before he entered the lobby, turned right and began shooting. The vehicle was registered under Tamura’s name in Nevada, Tisch said.  

Police discovered the vehicle had traveled across the country through Colorado on July 26, and through Nebraska and Iowa on July 27, Tish said. They tracked the vehicle in Columbia, New Jersey, a city about 70 miles west of New York City, at 4:24 p.m. on July 28, hours before the shooting. 

Inside, officers found a rifle case with rounds, a loaded revolver, ammunition, magazines and a backpack with medication prescribed to Tamura in the vehicle. 

Tamura appeared to target NFL headquarters

Officials said Tamura immediately shot New York City Police Officer Didarul Islam after entering building. He then shot a security guard behind a security desk, a woman who took cover behind a pillar and another man in the lobby.

The gunman then entered an elevator and went to the 33rd floor, where the building’s owner, Rudin Management, is located and fired several rounds. One person was shot and killed, before Tamura took his own life, Tisch said.

Preliminary investigations show the gunman may have taken the wrong elevator and intended to get to the NFL headquarters, rather than Rudin Management, according to Adams.

‘That is where he carried out additional shootings and took the lives of additional employees,’ Adams said during his CBS interview.

An NFL employee was seriously injured in the mass shooting, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a memo to staff members.

‘We believe that all of our employees are otherwise safe and accounted for, and the building has nearly been cleared,’ Goodell wrote in the memo, obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

This is a developing story.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Major League Baseball’s single-game attendance record will fall on Saturday, Aug. 2, with more than 85,000 tickets sold for the Cincinnati Reds vs. Atlanta Braves contest at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennnessee, MLB announced.

The event at the famed auto racing track – the first AL or NL game ever played in Tennessee – is set to shatter the mark of 84,587 set on September 12, 1954, when Cleveland Stadium hosted the New York Yankees.

“It no doubt will be one of our most iconic days in baseball and one of the most special days of the 2025 season,” said Jeremiah Yolkut, the senior vice president of global events with Major League Baseball.

Here’s how to buy tickets for the for the 2025 MLB Speedway Classic:

Buy tickets for MLB Speedway Classic

When is the MLB Speedway Classic?

Date: Saturday, Aug. 2
Time: 7: 15 p.m. ET
TV channel: Fox

This post appeared first on USA TODAY