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    Tegan Andrews gets out of the rough, on and off the course
    • June 20, 2023

    “The cup’s the same size. …”

    Throughout his life, Tegan Andrews kept hearing those five words. Never mind the golfing element they obviously played into as a way for Andrews to center himself. Those five words would serve as a way for Andrews to handle obstacles on and off the golf course. They’d get him through obstacles, big, small, real or imagined.

    Growing up playing on a grubby, goat track of a course because that’s all he could afford?

    “The cup’s the same size.”

    Playing a U.S. Open qualifier on the edge of an Alaskan glacier pass? On a course he had seen for the first time only two days earlier?

    “The cup’s the same size.”

    Playing in the toughest of 10 36-hole U.S. Open sectional qualifiers, one festooned with PGA Tour pros seeking the same rare ticket to the U.S. Open?

    “The cup’s the same size.”

    Coping with temper issues and seeking to harness his demons — on and off the course?

    “The cup’s the same size.”

    After a 2022-23 school year that, first, nearly got him kicked off the Cal State Fullerton golf team, then nearly killed him when he blacked out driving home one night on the 60 Freeway and came to sitting next to the center divider, Andrews’ cup currently runneth over.

    His golf game is back to where his awe-inspiring length off the tee is dismantling courses again, his once atrocity-bordering-on-war-crime wedge game has never been better, and the rough edges of his temperament are sanded into an even rhythm through breathing techniques that allow him to keep a calm heart rate — even when he’s triple-bogeying holes.

    It served Andrews well during his recent U.S. Open qualifying adventures — adventures that took him from winning an 18-hole local qualifier at an anything-but-local course in Palmer, Alaska, to diving into the deep end of the 36-hole sectional qualifying pool in Columbus, Ohio.

    “I’ve never been happier,” he said.

    To understand how Andrews’ cup runneth over, it’s important to understand what went into creating the once-volatile cocktail that is Andrews’ game and demeanor. And to understand that, we begin with an introduction to Gene Andrews — Tegan’s grandfather.

    One of the top amateur golfers in the middle of the 20th century, the winner of the 1954 U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship and the 1970 U.S. Senior Amateur, Gene Andrews is a name largely known only to golf geeks. But Andrews revolutionized the game by inventing a device used by amateurs and pros alike — the yardage book.

    “He died 27 days before I was born, in 2001. My dad always joked that as he was going to heaven, I was coming down and he tossed me the keys to his golf game and basically told me to carry on his legacy,” Andrews said.

    This is where the cup comes in — and the legacy follows. Andrews’ dad, Geno, put a club in his son’s hand when he was 2. He didn’t start playing the game for keeps until he was 12 and hasn’t taken more than a week off from the game since. Not that it was financially easy.

    “My parents were supportive of me, but not as financially as they wanted to be,” he said. “I used to take a bus to the course when (other guys) were driving up in Teslas. I’d be scraping balls off the side of the range at 9:30 at night when everyone else left for a pool party four hours earlier.”

    Andrews would play nearby Westlake Golf Course and Rustic Canyon in Moorpark. But most of his teeth-cutting was done at Penmar Golf Course, a scruffy, executive course four blocks from the Pacific in Venice. The first time his dad took him there, Andrews wondered why it hadn’t been given back to the goats.

    “My dad told me, ‘The cup’s the same size, kid. The greens are just greens,’ ” he said. “I do feel there is a huge sense of entitlement when it comes to golfers. When there’s something to complain about, that’s the first instinct for golfers: to sit there and whine. The cup’s the same size anywhere.”

    Play courses like Penmar and you develop a well-rounded game that travels. This is one of the things that led him to Cal State Fullerton, which had the film program he craved, and — in head men’s coach Jason Drotter — a coach who would push Andrews and make him laugh at the same time. Seeing Andrews’ wedge game was holding the rest of his considerable game down, Drotter told Andrews, “You are probably the worst wedge player I have ever coached. No, you’re the worst wedge player in Division I.”

    But Drotter’s dry sense of humor has its limits. And those limits ran up into Andrews’ volatile temper, which featured one of Drotter’s unforgivable sins: club tossing. At the beginning of the 2022-23 fall season, Andrews’ game was a mess. He was battling an arm injury and his awful wedge game was torpedoing his progress. He was at a team qualifier at Coto de Caza fighting his entire game when he airmailed a green with a wedge from 140 yards out. At that point, something snapped.

    “I launched my club probably 70 yards. I could have gotten an NFL contract,” Andrews said. “I had forgotten that nine months earlier, Coach said if you throw another club, you’re done. Well, he found out two days later and came up to me on the second tee of qualifying at South Hills and said, ‘Tegan, you’re done. Go home.’

    “I walked off the course knowing I did this to myself. Jason had given me so much grace over the years, but this was his last straw in terms of my temper. He told me, ‘I don’t want to hear anything about how you’ll stop this. I want you to show me.’ He told me I have the highest ceiling of anyone in this program, but when it comes to my temper, that has to be fixed.”

    Andrews redshirted this season, which cleared his head and prepared him for his U.S. Open adventures, which started with 18-hole local qualifying in Palmer, Alaska, — an hour north of Anchorage. That’s where Andrews found himself after all the other local sites were full: a course that had tarps on it just three weeks earlier due to the frost, a course on the edge of a glacier pass that sent biting wind down the pass and onto the course. And a course where Andrews figured the competition, only 15 players for one spot, would be easy.

    He was right. Andrews laughed as his competitors complained about the brutal conditions, thinking to himself “the cup’s the same size.” He bogeyed 16 and double-bogeyed 18, yet his 72 was good enough to win the qualifier. He was the last one into sectional qualifying.

    “Growing up at Penmar prepares you for a course like Alaska,” he said. “How bad of a player do you have to be to have everything perfect for you to play good?”

    Now, Andrews found himself in the most difficult of the 10 U.S. Open sectional qualifiers: the one in Columbus, Ohio. Andrews was competing with 102 others for 11 spots in this week’s U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course. On what’s called “Golf’s Longest Day,” Andrews was in the deep end of the golfing pool, a minnow in a pond teeming with PGA Tour professional sharks — including three past major champions. Andrews shot 73-73 and — let down by his usually reliable putter — didn’t earn a spot in a field where 2009 U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover shot 8-under-par and was an alternate.

    He did, however, beat 2006 U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy and PGA Tour winners Nick Watney and Kyle Stanley.

    “It felt like playing a Tour event. It was really cool,” he said. “(The Golf Channel’s) Todd Lewis came up to me on the putting green at 6 a.m. and said ‘You’re Tegan Andrews.’ He did a spot on me. Nobody else had a better experience than I did. I can tell you that.”

    Andrews has a full summer of tournaments, starting with winning a Southern California Golf Association Amateur qualifier in Ojai last week. Then, there’s the Cal Amateur and U.S. Amateur qualifying. His wedge game is vastly improved, his head controlling his emotions.

    His cup runneth over.

    “I feel like I’m on tour: Alaska, Ohio, Rustic Canyon, Ojai. I’m enjoying every minute of it,” he said.

    Of course, he is. After all …

    “The cup’s the same size.”

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    ​ Orange County Register 

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    Assemblyman Corey Jackson’s reckless ‘white supremacist’ smear of colleague
    • June 20, 2023

    Last week, the Assembly’s Judiciary Committee considered Assembly Constitutional Amendment 7, which would allow the state to explicitly fund programs based on “race, color, ethnicity, national origin, or marginalized genders, sexes, or sexual orientations.”

    Under Proposition 209, approved by voters in 1996 and upheld by voters in 2020, California state government cannot consider these factors when allocating public funds.  Defenders of Prop. 209 argue that it is essential for government to treat all individuals equally and without respect to such immutable characteristics.

    But the debate over ACA 7 got heated when one of the proponents of the constitutional amendment, first-term Assemblyman Corey Jackson, D-Perris, decided to personally attack and smear his colleague, first-term Assemblyman Bill Essayli, R-Riverside, as a “white supremacist” for opposing ACA 7.

    In the committee hearing, Essayli, a Muslim born to Lebanese immigrants, said this about ACA 7,  “I believe it is a mistake in the United States of America go to backwards and inject race into government policy. I think that all people are created equal and the government should treat people equally. And we can provide services to disadvantaged communities without making race a factor. I support that.”

    What Essayli said is perfectly sensible, perfectly rational and perfectly inclusive. It’s also consistent with the perspectives of the majority of Californians.

    Even so, the committee voted to advance ACA 7, with Essayli voting against it.

    After the hearing, Essayli reiterated his opposition to ACA 7 on Twitter, tweeting, “The judiciary committee just voted to allow government to discriminate based on race when providing services, as proposed by #ACA7. I fundamentally disagree with this backwards policy as do 57% of Californians who voted to prohibit Affirmative Action when they adopted #Prop209.”

    In response, Jackson tweeted,  “This is a perfect example how a minority can become a white supremacist by doing everything possible to win white supremacist and fascist affection. History will judge him poorly. His politics is dangerous and should be combated at every turn.”

    If we are to believe Jackson’s thought process, it is “white supremacist” to argue, “that all people are created equal and the government should treat people equally.”

    This might pass for enlightened in extremist and bizarre corners of far-left Twitter, but it doesn’t pass even minimal scrutiny. Corey Jackson’s thoughtless smear of Bill Essayli is plainly disreputable.

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    It’s one thing to disagree with Essayli’s position on ACA 7 and affirmative action, it’s another to shamelessly attack a minority lawmaker as a “white supremacist” for believing in equality.

    It’s also historically ignorant and even reckless to associate the position of Essayli with fascism. Jackson might want to read up on what fascist regimes actually entailed as far as treatment of racial and ethnic minorities by government. If Jackson remotely cared about history, Essayli’s position of support for equality under the law and providing services for disadvantaged communities regardless of race would have been denounced as liberal or even communist under the regimes of Adolph Hitler, Benito Mussolini or Francisco Franco.

    Alas, Corey Jackson chose to smear a colleague for taking a position shared by a majority of Californians. Jackson’s irresponsible and extremist demagoguery should not be tolerated.

    ​ Orange County Register 

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    2023 NBA mock draft: Will Brandon Miller or Scoot Henderson go No. 2?
    • June 20, 2023

    By BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer

    Brandon Miller and Scoot Henderson have made their cases to be the No. 2 pick in the NBA draft.

    With Victor Wembanyama long expected to be chosen first by the San Antonio Spurs, the first bit of uncertainty Thursday could arrive once the Charlotte Hornets are on the clock.

    The Hornets have taken a look at both players. Henderson worked out for Charlotte last Sunday and Miller visited two days later, according to a person with knowledge of the details. The person spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity because neither workout was publicly announced, and neither player spoke to reporters.

    Charlotte went 27-55 last season as one of the lowest-scoring teams in the NBA. The Hornets got only 36 games from star point guard LaMelo Ball because of injuries, but return of the former Chino Hills High standout could make them more interested in Miller, a versatile forward, rather than another guard in Henderson.

    That’s the way the AP continues to lean, keeping Miller at No. 2 in the third version of its 2023 mock draft.

    1. SAN ANTONIO SPURS: VICTOR WEMBANYAMA, FORWARD, FRANCE

    His combination of a center’s size and a guard’s shooting and dribbling make the 19-year-old a prospect perhaps unlike any other the NBA has seen, and should end the 13-year streak of the No. 1 pick being a college freshman. The Spurs won five NBA titles after taking Tim Duncan in 1997, the last time they had the No. 1 pick and their fan base is already dreaming of a similar impact from Wembanyama.

    2. CHARLOTTE HORNETS: BRANDON MILLER, FORWARD, ALABAMA

    At 6-foot-9, the SEC Player of the Year and tournament MVP as a freshman has the size, versatility and 3-point stroke to make him an ideal player for the modern NBA game. But the Hornets, who played without Miles Bridges last season after an arrest for a domestic violence incident against the mother of his children, might have to weigh a negative reaction if they add Miller, who delivered the gun used in a fatal shooting.

    3. PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS: SCOOT HENDERSON, GUARD, G LEAGUE IGNITE

    Henderson worked out for the Trail Blazers and showed the athleticism and ability to do it all from the guard spot that might have made Henderson the No. 1 pick in many years. This time, he could be part of a trade if the Blazers decide they’d prefer to acquire more veteran help around Damian Lillard – or perhaps Lillard’s replacement if they instead decide to build around youth.

    4. HOUSTON ROCKETS: AMEN THOMPSON, GUARD, OVERTIME ELITE

    At 6-7, Thompson has great size for a guard and the 20-year-old showed the ability to step up when it matters most, averaging 17.2 points, 9.2 assists and 7.2 rebounds in the playoffs to lead the City Reapers to the championship last season. The Rockets, after adding Jalen Green and Jabari Smith Jr. in the last two drafts, are positioned to get another good one.

    5. DETROIT PISTONS: CAM WHITMORE, FORWARD, VILLANOVA

    The Pistons fell to the lowest spot possible in the lottery after finishing with the NBA’s worst record and sharing the best odds of landing the No. 1 pick. But getting Whitmore, a versatile wing with a strong build, to add to young pieces such as Cade Cunningham and Jaden Ivey under new coach Monty Williams would help ease the sting.

    6. ORLANDO MAGIC: AUSAR THOMPSON, FORWARD, OVERTIME ELITE

    Amen Thompson’s twin brother has been the Overtime Elite regular season and finals MVP the last two seasons and the 6-7 swingman plays big on defense, twice blocking seven shots in a game. The Magic were a team on the rise in the second half of last season and Thompson could help ensure that continues.

    7. INDIANA PACERS: JARACE WALKER, FORWARD, HOUSTON

    Coming from Houston’s rugged program means Walker already plays NBA-ready defense, and the offensive end could come along quickly under Coach Rick Carlisle. At 6-8 and 240 pounds, he already has the size and strength to deal with anyone he could face in the frontcourt.

    8. WASHINGTON WIZARDS: ANTHONY BLACK, GUARD, ARKANSAS

    The 6-7 guard seems to have endless energy, playing nearly 35 minutes per game to lead the SEC and all 20 minutes in a half 19 times. That included 37 minutes on an injured left ankle in the Razorbacks’ NCAA Tournament upset of top-seeded Kansas, when he helped hold expected lottery pick Gradey Dick to seven points.

    9. UTAH JAZZ: TAYLOR HENDRICKS, CENTRAL FLORIDA

    The 6-9 freshman makes an impact inside and outside on both ends of the floor. He led the American Athletic Conference in blocked shots and shot 39% from 3-point range, becoming the only Division I player last season with at least 60 3-pointers, 55 blocked shots and 35 dunks.

    10. DALLAS MAVERICKS: GRADEY DICK, GUARD, KANSAS

    Dick made 83 3-pointers, the most in Kansas history by a freshman, and the 6-8 forward could get plenty of open looks when Mavericks opponents focus their attention on Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving – if Irving remains in Dallas. The Mavs went to great lengths to protect their chances of keeping this pick, tanking their final couple of games to boost their lottery odds while still in play-in contention.

    11. ORLANDO MAGIC (from Chicago Bulls): BILAL COULIBALY, FORWARD, FRANCE

    Wembanyama’s teammate with Metropolitans 92 is a 6-6 swingman whose stock has risen as their team reached their French League finals. He hasn’t reached his potential yet as a scorer, but his 7-3 wingspan allows him to impact the game on both ends even without doing so and could make him a good fit with 2022 No. 1 pick and Rookie of the Year Paolo Banchero.

    12. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER: DERECK LIVELY II, CENTER, DUKE

    Is still limited offensively, but the 7-1 Lively shows promise as a rebounder and shot blocker, highlighted by 14 boards and eight blocks in a game against rival North Carolina.

    13. TORONTO RAPTORS: JALEN HOOD-SCHIFINO, GUARD, INDIANA

    The Big Ten Freshman of the Year has great size in the backcourt at 6-6 and could help the Raptors guard against a potential loss of Fred VanVleet in free agency, but needs to become a better shooter after hitting only 40% from the field in his lone college season.

    14. NEW ORLEANS PELICANS: KEYONTE GEORGE, GUARD, BAYLOR

    The highest-ranked recruit in program history lived up to the billing in his lone college season, scoring 20 or more points 12 times and averaging 15.3 en route to Big 12 Freshman of the Year honors. The 6-4 guard could provide scoring punch on a team that just missed the postseason.

    15. ATLANTA HAWKS: KOBE BUFKIN, GUARD, MICHIGAN

    Bufkin made a massive leap during his second season with the Wolverines, averaging 14 points as a sophomore after not starting a game while averaging 3.0 points as a freshman. His next leap is to the NBA, where the 6-4 lefty could quickly be a change-of-pace guard off the bench.

    16. UTAH JAZZ (from Minnesota): CASON WALLACE, KENTUCKY

    A point guard who takes care of the ball and takes it away from opponents, Wallace was fourth in the SEC in both steals per game and assist-to-turnover ratio. At 6-4, he has the size and strength to defend some of the marquee guards in the Western Conference.

    17. LAKERS: NICK SMITH JR., GUARD, ARKANSAS

    After mixed results with Russell Westbrook and D’Angelo Russell last season, the Lakers’ search for guard help could lead to Arkansas, where the 6-5 Smith played in just 17 games in his lone college season after recovering from a right knee injury but showed the ability to play either guard spot.

    18. MIAMI HEAT: JORDAN HAWKINS, GUARD, UCONN

    Hawkins’ ball handling still needs improvement, but his catch-and-shoot ability was one of the biggest reasons the Huskies stormed through the NCAA Tournament to their fifth national title. That’s something the Heat were missing during their five-game NBA Finals loss to the Denver Nuggets.

    19. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: KRIS MURRAY, FORWARD, IOWA

    After averaging 20.2 points – with a 30-point, 20-rebound game in one outing – Murray will try to make a similar first-year NBA impact as twin brother Keegan, who after leaving the Hawkeyes became an immediate starter for Sacramento last season and was an All-Rookie first-team selection.

    20. HOUSTON ROCKETS (from the Clippers): MAXWELL LEWIS, FORWARD, PEPPERDINE

    The 6-7 Lewis made nearly 80% of his free throws and 36% of his 3-point attempts in his two seasons with the Waves, and he improved his ability to score off the dribble while averaging 17.1 points last season.

    21. BROOKLYN NETS (from Phoenix): JETT HOWARD, GUARD, MICHIGAN

    His willingness to fire from behind the arc makes the freshman a perfect fit for the 3-point-happy NBA. The 6-8 freshman made multiple 3-pointers in 24 of his 29 games for Juwan Howard, his father, and hit three or more in almost half of them. Howard made 36.8% of his attempte while averaging 14.2 points

    22. BROOKLYN NETS: LEONARD MILLER, FORWARD, G LEAGUE IGNITE

    The Nets have needed more scoring punch since trading Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving, and Miller looks capable of providing it after averaging 18 points last season. The 6-10 Canadian also averaged nearly 11 rebounds, another area Nets leadership has identified as a priority.

    23. PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS (from New York): NOAH CLOWNEY, FORWARD, ALABAMA

    Clowney put up nearly eight rebounds and one blocked shot per game in his lone college season. With just 210 pounds on his 6-10 frame, he will need to add strength for the battles inside against NBA big men.

    24. SACRAMENTO KINGS: BRICE SENSABAUGH, FORWARD, OHIO STATE

    Sensabaugh averaged 16.3 points and shot better than 40% from 3-point range during one strong season with the Buckeyes, when he was the first freshman to lead the team in scoring since D’Angelo Russell in 2015.

    25. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES: G.G. JACKSON, FORWARD, SOUTH CAROLINA

    Would have been heading to college now – perhaps as the No. 1 prospect – before reclassifying last summer to enter a year earlier. Instead, the 6-9 Jackson is on his way to the NBA after scoring in double figures in 25 of his 32 games, averaging 15.4 points.

    26. INDIANA PACERS (from Cleveland): JAIME JAQUEZ JR., GUARD, UCLA

    The do-everything swingman led the Bruins with 17.8 points and 8.2 rebounds, becoming their first Pac-12 Player of the Year since Kevin Love in 2008. At 6-7, Jaquez does everything well – he’s No. 8 in UCLA history in both points and steals – but maybe not any of them at the top NBA level.

    27. CHARLOTTE HORNETS (from Denver via New York and OKC): AMARI BAILEY, GUARD, UCLA

    Bailey had a strong finish to his lone college season, averaging 16.7 points on 56% shooting during the Bruins’ run to the Sweet 16. The Hornets struggle when LaMelo Ball is out, so the 6-5 guard could be appealing to a team that was fourth-worst in the NBA in scoring.

    28. UTAH JAZZ (from Philadelphia via Brooklyn): COLBY JONES, GUARD, XAVIER

    With three picks in the first round, the Jazz are positioned to bolster a team that hung around the playoff race much longer than expected. The 6-6 Jones, who made 18 of 21 shots in one torrid stretch last season and shot 9 for 10 on 3-point attempts in another, could be a nice late addition.

    29. INDIANA PACERS (from Boston): TRAYCE JACKSON-DAVIS, FORWARD, INDIANA

    Jackson-Davis had more than 2,200 points and 1,100 rebounds in one of the most decorated careers in Hoosiers history. But in the one-and-done era, the 23-year-old All-American’s age might work against the son of former Pacers forward Dale Davis.

    30. CLIPPERS (from Milwaukee via Houston): DARIQ WHITEHEAD, FORWARD, DUKE

    Whitehead arrived at Duke as the Naismith High School Player of the Year, but a foot injury led to a delayed start to his college career followed by shooting struggles after it finally began. But the 6-7 forward showed enough defensive and 3-point abilities in his limited time to make himself worthy of a first-round spot.

    AP Basketball Writers Aaron Beard, John Marshall and Tim Reynolds, and AP Sports Writer Steve Reed in Charlotte, North Carolina contributed to this report.

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    2023 NBA Draft: Alabama’s Brandon Miller tops talented group of forwards
    • June 20, 2023

    By AARON BEARD AP Basketball Writer

    Brandon Miller rapidly became an elite NBA draft prospect in his lone season at Alabama.

    He headlines The Associated Press’ list of forwards and could go as high as second overall behind presumptive No. 1 pick Victor Wembanyama. There are other one-and-done prospects such as Villanova’s Cam Whitmore, Houston’s Jarace Walker and Central Florida’s Taylor Hendricks as potential top-10 picks.

    Here’s a look at the top forwards in the draft:

    BRANDON MILLER, Alabama

    STRENGTHS: Miller, 20, went from McDonald’s All-American to AP first-team All-American. The 6-foot-9 forward averaged 18.8 points and 8.2 rebounds while shooting 38.4% from 3-point range and 85.9% from the foul line. He also showed the ability to play off the dribble or attack the rim, along with quality play on the defensive end behind the length to chase multiple positions. It adds up to a mix of shooting, athleticism and size that is well-suited for today’s NBA game, which demands versatility on the wing.

    CONCERNS: He needs bulk on a 200-pound frame to handle bumps and physical play at both ends. He faded late after dealing with a groin injury, including averaging 9.3 points on 8-for-41 shooting (19.5%) and going 3 for 19 from 3-point range in three NCAA Tournament games as the Crimson Tide fell in the Sweet 16 despite being the top overall seed.

    There’s also his ties to a significant off-court issue: A murder case that led to former Tide player Darius Miles and another man being indicted on capital murder charges. A police investigator testified in February that Miles texted Miller to bring him his gun that night. Miller hasn’t been charged with wrongdoing and continued to play, though the ongoing case brought intense scrutiny through the second half of the season on Miller and the Alabama program.

    CAM WHITMORE, Villanova

    STRENGTHS: The McDonald’s All-American got a late start to the season due to thumb surgery, but became the Big East Freshman of the Year. Whitmore, who turns 19 in July, has an NBA-ready frame (roughly 6-6 without shoes, 235 pounds) and athleticism to attack off the dribble. He ranked tied for third at the NBA combine in max vertical leap (40.5 inches). And he shot 37.3% from 3-point range after becoming a starter for the final 20 games.

    CONCERNS: He shot just 65.9% at the foul line as a starter and didn’t consistently create opportunities, having nearly as many games with no attempts (six) as those with three or more (seven).

    JARACE WALKER, Houston

    STRENGTHS: The McDonald’s All-American joined Kelvin Sampson’s Cougars program built on defense, rebounding and toughness – a formula typically better suited to older players. Yet the 6-7 forward fit right in as a 250-pound presence. He measured with a better than 7-2 wingspan at the NBA combine, ranked tied for third in standing vertical leap (34.5 inches) and tied for ninth in max vertical leap (38.0). Walker, 19, is strong enough to tussle with bigger opponents and nimble enough to switch onto wings.

    CONCERNS: Walker’s stroke is still developing. He shot 34.7% from 3-point range and just 66.3% from the foul line.

    TAYLOR HENDRICKS, Central Florida

    STRENGTHS: The four-star recruit was a surprise, averaging 15.1 points and 7.0 rebounds while shooting 47.8% from the field and 78.2% from the line. Notably, he shot 39.4% from behind the arc and had only four games out of 33 in which he failed to hit a 3-pointer. Measuring slightly taller than 6-8 without shoes at the combine, Hendricks has athleticism and length (better than a 7-foot wingspan) that could help him become a two-way power forward for today’s floor-spaced game.

    CONCERNS: The 19-year-old needs to add strength to a slender 213-pound frame. He also faced an AP Top 25 opponent just twice all season, offering only a glimpse of how he handles top competition.

    OTHERS OF NOTE

    GRADEY DICK: The Kansas one-and-done wing made 40.3% of his 3-point attempts as a potential lottery pick who can space the floor and potentially play as a guard. The 19-year-old measured at better than 6-6 without shoes at the NBA combine, though his minutes could depend on how he holds up defensively.

    BILAL COULIBALY: Wembanyama’s teammate in France offers his own intriguing skillset. Still just 18, the athletic 6-8 wing is a first-round prospect with disruptive-defender potential and the potential to be a quality 3-point shooter.

    G.G. JACKSON: The 18-year-old was set to be the nation’s No. 1 recruit for this season at North Carolina. Instead, he reclassified to enroll early and played a sometimes-frustrating season at South Carolina. The first-round prospect has a 6-8 frame with a nearly 7-foot wingspan, athleticism and shot-creating potential.

    KRIS MURRAY: The twin brother to Sacramento Kings rookie Keegan Murray more than doubled his scoring at Iowa last season (20.2, up from 9.7). The wing – who measured nearly 6-8 with a nearly 7-foot wingspan at the combine – turns 23 in August, hit 35% of his 3-point attempts over the past two seasons and could go in the back half of the first round.

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    2023 NBA Draft: Scoot Henderson headlines top guard prospects
    • June 20, 2023

    By AARON BEARD AP Basketball Writer

    In most years, Scoot Henderson would be discussed as the potential No. 1 overall NBA draft pick.

    Instead, the explosive point guard who bypassed college is among the top talents lined up behind generational prospect Victor Wembanyama. He’s also the top guard in AP’s NBA Mock Draft, a position featuring plenty of athleticism and upside with lottery prospects including twins Amen and Ausar Thompson.

    Here’s a look at the position:

    SCOOT HENDERSON, G League

    STRENGTHS: The 19-year-old from Georgia has athleticism that jumps out immediately, drawing comparisons to Russell Westbrook after spending two years with the G League Ignite program. The 6-foot-2, 195-pound Henderson forcefully attacks the paint, making him capable of highlight-reel finishes or pulling up off the dribble. He has an aggressive edge as a playmaker and in transition, and he offers the potential to disrupt defensively with deflections and activity.

    CONCERNS: Few considering he’s been long mentioned possibly to go 1-2 behind Wembanyama. His shot selection could improve along with his outside stroke after he hit 27.5% of his 3-point attempts in 19 regular-season games last year.

    THOMPSON TWINS. Overtime Elite

    STRENGTHS: The 20-year-olds boast similar explosive athleticism out of Overtime Elite after skipping college basketball. Both have smooth games with quick first steps, the ability to finish at the rim and often-tenacious defense.

    Amen – older by 1 minute – is considered the more developed passer and playmaker, while Ausar has shown a range of shots from a hook to a mid-range floater and might be the better defender. Ausar was also named league MVP. Both measured around 215 pounds and roughly 6-6 without shoes at the NBA combine.

    CONCERNS: They’re still honing their outside shots to become more consistent, and they’re preparing to be truly separated for the first time in their basketball careers. Their father, Troy, said about the twins: “Wherever they have a deficit, they will work tirelessly to try to get it right or fix it. Almost to a perfectionist point, which I wish they could pull back a little bit sometimes.”

    ANTHONY BLACK, Arkansas

    STRENGTHS: A top-15 national recruit, the 19-year-old started all 36 games for Arkansas. He’s a playmaker with size, measuring nearly 6-6 without shoes and 210 pounds at the NBA combine. He averaged 12.8 points, 5.1 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 2.1 steals while playing a Southeastern Conference-high 34.8 minutes to contribute in multiple areas as a lottery prospect.

    CONCERNS: The freshman shot 30.1% from 3-point range and made 70.5% of his free throws, areas to improve ahead of taking on significant ball-handling duties as a creator.

    CASON WALLACE, Kentucky

    STRENGTHS: The No. 5 overall recruit for last year’s incoming freshman class is a combo guard with two-way potential. The 6-2, 195-pounder is Kentucky’s latest one-and-done prospect, standing out by disrupting defensively and harassing ballhandlers. He showed that in three nonconference games against marquee programs: he tied a program record with eight steals against Michigan State, had four against Gonzaga and five against Kansas. Wallace, 19, also finished with a 2-to-1 assist-to-turnover margin to highlight playmaking skills.

    CONCERNS: There aren’t glaring holes for the lottery prospect. It would help to improve on 34.6% shooting from 3-point range, and he doesn’t possess game-breaking athleticism.

    JORDAN HAWKINS, Connecticut

    STRENGTHS: The 6-4 sophomore helped Connecticut win the program’s fifth NCAA championship this spring. He’s adept in catch-and-shoot, pull-up and off-screen situations, shooting 38.8% from behind the arc – including going 21 for 42 from 3-point range (.500) during the six-game NCAA Tournament run. The 21-year-old also made 88.7% of his free throws, showing a touch that could land him late in the lottery.

    CONCERNS: He’ll need more strength on a 186-pound frame to handle physical play. Roughly 60% of his baskets came from behind the arc, so it could help to develop more off-dribble production toward the rim, too.

    OTHERS OF NOTE

    KEYONTE GEORGE: The 6-4 combo guard could crack the lottery after showing his scoring punch (15.3) as a Baylor freshman. His foul shooting (79.3%) offers optimism he can improve his 3-point percentage (33.8%). He also had more turnovers (96) than assists (91).

    NICK SMITH JR.: The top-ranked recruit for 247sports was limited by a knee injury for much of his lone season at Arkansas. The 6-5, 185-pound guard averaged 12.5 points while missing 19 of 36 games, but his scoring potential makes him a first-round prospect.

    KOBE BUFKIN: The 6-4, 187-pound Michigan sophomore could develop to impact both ends of the court. The first-round prospect made significant gains last year, including scoring (14.0, up from 3.0), 3-point shooting (35.5%, from 22.2%) and free-throw shooting (84.9%, from 77.3%).

    JALEN HOOD-SCHIFINO: The Big Ten Freshman of the Year averaged 13.5 points, 4.1 rebounds and 3.7 assists for Indiana. The first-round prospect brings size to the point, measuring better than 6-4 without shoes and 217 pounds at the combine.

    DARIQ WHITEHEAD: The one-and-done Duke guard battled multiple injuries but flashed signs of being a powerful driver and athletic scorer. He could deliver value in the back half of the first round.

    AP Sports Writer Pat Graham contributed to this report.

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    ​ Orange County Register 

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    2023 NBA Draft: Victor Wembanyama isn’t the only French prospect worth watching
    • June 20, 2023

    By KEN MAGUIRE AP Sports Writer

    PARIS — Victor Wembanyama wasn’t the only young French prospect turning heads overseas.

    Granted, fans would have had to look much farther to find Rayan Rupert, who played for the New Zealand Breakers. He is among the international prospects expecting to hear their names called at the NBA draft on Thursday in New York. They don’t possess Wembanyama’s size and skills, but they’re confident they can make an impact.

    There’s a distinct French flavor in this year’s draft class. Wembanyama and Rupert are French, as is Bilal Coulibaly, Wembanyama’s teammate with Metropolitans 92.

    Here’s a look at some of the top international prospects other than Wembanyama:

    RAYAN RUPERT, NEW ZEALAND BREAKERS

    STRENGTHS: Rupert is a tenacious defender with a 7-foot-2 wingspan who likens his game to Mikal Bridges of the Brooklyn Nets. Standing 6-6 without shoes, the 193-pound swingman was part of the National Basketball League’s Next Stars program and just turned 19. He averaged 5.9 points and 2.1 rebounds per game. After breaking his right wrist early in the season, he used the time to improve his left-handed skills. His sister, Iliana Rupert, was drafted by the WNBA’s Las Vegas Aces in 2021.

    CONCERNS: Rupert shot 23% from 3-point range in 28 games played and acknowledges that he needs to improve his consistency from behind the arc. His overall field-goal percentage was just 35%, though he says his jump shot is underrated.

    BILAL COULIBALY, METROPOLITANS 92

    STRENGTHS: The 6-6 swingman uses his length effectively on both ends, slashing and finishing above the rim while also being a disruptive defender. The 18-year-old Coulibaly is projected to be the 11th pick in the AP’s NBA Mock Draft. He’s a pest defensively, using his 7-3 wingspan to harass ball handlers and shooters. Super athletic, makes smart cuts and can finish in traffic. Delivered some strong performances in the playoffs for Metropolitans 92 in the French league.

    CONCERNS: Not a pure shooter. Even benefitting from extra space with Wembanyama on the floor, he shot just under 24% from 3-point range through nine playoff games – down from 36% during the regular season. Here’s what Wembanyama thinks: “By now, everyone knows he deserves to be top 10. But not enough realize he deserves to be top 5.”

    JAMES NNAJI, BARCELONA

    STRENGTHS: The 6-11 Nigerian center with a 7-5 wingspan is a rim protector and pick-and-roll lob threat for Barcelona, one of the best teams in Europe. The 249-pound Nnaji has averaged 9.3 minutes, 2.2 rebounds and 0.6 blocks per game over 53 games – with Barcelona currently in the Spanish league playoffs and facing Real Madrid in the finals.

    CONCERNS: Lacks shooting touch when defenders keep him away from the rim. Can be prone to turnovers – 0.8 per game in limited minutes – due to unrefined post moves. He’s shooting 51% from the free-throw line. He’s seen as a developmental prospect – he turns 19 in August.

    KEEP AN EYE ON

    Tristan Vukcevic: The 20-year-old center impressed at the NBA draft combine, scoring 21 points with 3-for-3 shooting from behind the arc in one game, and standing just over 6-11 without shoes. Vukcevic has moved all around Europe, playing in Olympiacos’ youth system before joining Real Madrid and ultimately Partizan Belgrade in Serbia, where he shot 37.3% from 3-point range this season.

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    ​ Orange County Register 

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    Disciplinary hearing against Trump attorney John Eastman begins in California
    • June 20, 2023

    By STEFANIE DAZIO AND MICHAEL R. BLOOD

    LOS ANGELES — An effort to disbar conservative attorney John Eastman, who devised ways to keep President Donald Trump in the White House after his defeat in the 2020 election, will begin Tuesday in Los Angeles.

    Eastman, a former Chapman University law dean, is expected to spend the day testifying before the State Bar of California in a proceeding that could result in him losing his license to practice law in the state. He faces 11 disciplinary charges stemming from his development of a dubious legal strategy that was aimed at helping Trump remain in power by disrupting the counting of state electoral votes.

    The State Bar’s counsel will seek Eastman’s disbarment during a hearing before the State Bar Court that’s expected to last at least eight days. If the court finds Eastman culpable of the alleged violations it can recommend a punishment such as suspending or revoking his law license. The California Supreme Court makes the final decision.

    Eastman is scheduled to testify in his own defense Tuesday. The proceedings will feature witnesses such as Greg Jacob, a former attorney for then-Vice President Mike Pence who pushed back against Eastman’s plan to have Pence stop the certification of Joe Biden’s victory.

    Eastman was one of Trump’s lawyers during the election. He argued, in a memo, that Pence could keep Trump in power by overturning the results of the election during a joint session of Congress convened to count electoral votes. Critics have likened that to instructions for staging a coup.

    Eastman violated California’s business and professions code by making false and misleading statements that constitute acts of “moral turpitude, dishonesty, and corruption,” the State Bar alleges, and in doing so he “violated this duty in furtherance of an attempt to usurp the will of the American people and overturn election results for the highest office in the land — an egregious and unprecedented attack on our democracy.”

    Eastman’s attorney previously said his client disputes “every aspect” of the allegations.

    The State Bar’s action “is part of a nationwide effort to use the bar discipline process to penalize attorneys who opposed the current administration in the last presidential election. Americans of both political parties should be troubled by this politicization of our nation’s state bars,” Eastman’s attorney, Randall A. Miller, said in a statement when the charges were announced in January.

    Eastman has been a member of the California Bar since 1997, according to its website. He was a law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and a founding director of the Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, a law firm affiliated with the Claremont Institute. He ran for California attorney general in 2010, finishing second in the Republican primary.

    Eastman retired as dean of the Chapman University law school in Southern California last year after more than 160 faculty members signed a letter calling for the university to take action against him.

    The California State Bar is a regulatory agency and the only court system in the U.S. that is dedicated to attorney discipline.

    Eastman’s disciplinary hearing comes as special counsel Jack Smith continues his investigation into efforts by Trump and his Republican allies to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

    A federal grand jury in Washington has been meeting behind closed doors for months to hear testimony from witnesses, including Pence, who has publicly described a pressure campaign by Trump aimed at getting him to halt Congress’ certification of the election results and the win by Biden, a Democrat.

    Federal agents seized Eastman’s cellphone last summer as he was leaving a restaurant, he said in a court filing. That day, law enforcement officials conducted similar activity around the country as part of their probe.

    Since Smith’s appointment in November, he has cast a broad net in demanding interviews and testimony related to fundraising, Trump’s rally that preceded the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, and communications between Trump associates and election officials in battleground states. Eastman spoke at the rally.

    In December, Smith subpoenaed local election officials in Wisconsin, Michigan, Arizona and Pennsylvania, asking for communications with or involving Trump, his 2020 campaign aides and a list of allies — including Eastman — who were involved in his efforts to try to overturn the results of the election.

    The investigation is separate from another probe by Smith into classified documents found at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, that led this month to felony charges against Trump. Trump pleaded not guilty last week to 37 felony counts, including conspiracy to obstruct justice.

    Associated Press writer Alanna Durkin Richer contributed from Boston.

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    ​ Orange County Register 

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    SETI Institute trustee, billionaire explorer, famed French diver among 5 on board the missing sub
    • June 20, 2023

    A billionaire father and son duo, a wealthy explorer and a diver with decades of experience exploring the Titanic are among the five people on board the submersible that has disappeared en route to view the world’s most famous shipwreck.

    Authorities said the small vessel – roughly the size of a minivan – was carrying five people when its mothership lost contact with it on Sunday morning, about 1 hour and 45 minutes into its descent to explore the Titanic wreckage.

    While the names of those on board have not been released by the authorities, British businessman Hamish Harding, Pakistani billionaire Shahzada Dawood and his son Sulaiman Dawood, and French diver Paul-Henry Nargeolet have been confirmed to be on board the craft.

    The fifth person on board has been identified only as the vessel’s pilot.

    Harding, who has an impressive list of extreme expeditions under his belt, is based in the United Arab Emirates and is a trained jet pilot. He is the chairman of Action Aviation, an aircraft brokerage. The company said in statement posted on social media that Harding was on board the submersible.

    He made headlines in 2019 for being part of a flight crew that broke the world record for the fastest circumnavigation of the globe via both poles.

    In 2020, Harding became one of the first people to dive to Challenger Deep in the Pacific Ocean, widely believed to be the deepest point in the world’s oceans. Last year, he paid an undisclosed sum of money for one of the seats on Blue Origin’s space flight.

    He has also been part of two record-breaking trips to the South Pole: in 2016, he accompanied the astronaut Buzz Aldrin when he became the oldest person to reach the South Pole. In 2020, he went there with his son Giles, who, at 12 years old, became the youngest person to get to the spot.

    Harding is also a founding member of the board of trustees of The Explorers Club, a New York-based group that has been involved in many of the world’s most prestigious discoveries.

    The day before the vessel went missing, Harding wrote on social media that he was “proud to finally announce that I joined OceanGate Expeditions for their RMS TITANIC Mission as a mission specialist on the sub going down to the Titanic.”

    Father and son

    Shahzada Dawood and his son, Sulaiman Dawood, have also been confirmed to be among the five people aboard the submersible.

    A statement from their family said the duo had embarked on the “journey to visit the remnants of the Titanic in the Atlantic Ocean.”

    “As of now, contact has been lost with their submersible craft and there is limited information available,” the statement added.

    The Dawoods are a prominent Pakistani business family. Dawood Hercules Corporation, their business, is among the largest corporations in the country, with a portfolio spanning energy, petrochemicals, fertilizers, IT and food and agriculture.

    The business is headed by the family patriarch Hussain Dawood, with his sons Shahzada and Abdul Samad leading various divisions and his daughter Sabrina Dawood in charge of the charitable arm of the business, according to the Dawood Hercules Corporation’s website.

    Shahzada Dawood is also trustee of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, a research organization, and a number of other foundations.

    Harding said in a social media post on Saturday that diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet, was scheduled to be on the dive with him.

    “The team on the sub has a couple of legendary explorers, some of which have done over 30 dives to the RMS Titanic since the 1980s including PH Nargeolet,” he wrote in a Facebook post.

    Nargeolet’s family confirmed to CNN affiliate BFMTV that he was aboard the vessel.

    The diver has decades of experience exploring the Titanic. He serves as the director of underwater research at RMS Titanic Inc., the company that has exclusive rights to salvage artifacts from the ship.

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    According to his biography on the company’s website, Nargeolet completed 35 dives to the Titanic wreck and supervised the recovery of 5,000 artifacts. He spent 22 years in the French Navy, where he rose to the rank of a commander, the website says.

    David Gallo, senior adviser for strategic initiatives at RMS Titanic Inc. and a colleague of Nargeolet, told CNN the French diver is “the best” at deep-sea searching. He said that “everything that can be done, is being done.”

    “Something we always think about as explorers and scientists … we’ve always known something like this could happen and now it’s happened. But we’re still pretty much in shock, the community is. I hope it has a good ending,” he said.

    The-CNN-Wire & © 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

    ​ Orange County Register 

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