Scuba diver reported missing in Laguna Beach dies in hospital
- March 26, 2023
A scuba diver reported missing off Shaw’s Cove Beach in Laguna Beach on Saturday was located in the ocean and rushed to a hospital, where he died.
Lifeguards were dispatched at 12:32 p.m. to the beach to search for the 46-year-old man, Marine Safety Captain Kai Bond said. They located him about 100 yards offshore after an extensive search.
“Lifeguards rescued the victim at 1:33 p.m. and provided lifesaving measures with paramedics from the Laguna Beach Fire Department,” Bond said. “The victim was transported to Mission Hospital in Laguna Beach and pronounced deceased at the hospital at approximately 2:30 p.m.”
The diver’s name was withheld until relatives could be notified, he said.
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Orange County Register
Read MoreBobby Wagner returning to Seahawks on 1-year deal
- March 26, 2023
By TIM BOOTH
SEATTLE — Bobby Wagner is headed back to the Seattle Seahawks to rejoin the team with which he became one of the top linebackers in the NFL.
The team announced Wagner’s return Saturday night, filling a major need on Seattle’s remodeled defense. It’s a one-year contract, according to a person who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because the team didn’t announce terms.
“BOBBY. IS. BACK,” the Seahawks posted on their Twitter account. “We’ve agreed to terms with the future Hall of Famer.”
Seattle teammates Quandre Diggs and Tyler Lockett first broke the news on Twitter, and NFL Network and ESPN said the deal was worth up to $7 million.
“Glad to be back in Seattle! It means a lot to be able to come back!” Wagner tweeted.
Wagner spent the first 10 seasons of his career with the Seahawks after being selected in the second round of the 2012 draft by Seattle. He became a six-time first-team All-Pro selection during his tenure in Seattle, where he was regularly regarded as one of the best middle linebackers in the league.
Wagner was released by Seattle just over a year ago in a salary cap move. Wagner was due nearly $17 million and Seattle wanted to give Jordyn Brooks the opportunity to step into the middle linebacker role
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But Brooks suffered a torn ACL late last season and is expected to miss a significant chunk of the 2023 season. Seattle signed Devin Bush to a one-year deal earlier in free agency, but still needed additional answers.
Enter Wagner, who was a second-team All-Pro selection last season playing for his hometown Rams. Wagner started all 17 games and had 140 tackles for the Rams, but was let go by the Rams earlier this offseason with Los Angeles entering a rebuild phase.
The Ontario Colony High alumnus is the latest addition to what will be a significantly altered defense in Seattle. The Seahawks have already signed Bush, defensive tackle Dre’Mont Jones and Jarran Reed, and safety Julian Love as part of their offseason makeover.
Orange County Register
Read MoreHoornstra: Shohei Ohtani takes center stage among 2023’s storylines to watch in MLB
- March 26, 2023
Baseball is Shohei Ohtani’s world and we’re all just living in it.
At least, that’s how it feels in the afterglow of the World Baseball Classic, which ended when Ohtani struck out teammate Mike Trout with a wicked slider to lift Japan past the U.S. to the WBC championship.
If he isn’t the best all-around player ever to wear a baseball uniform, Ohtani is at least the closest thing since Babe Ruth. Back-to-back seasons of dominance at the plate and on the mound have earned him that much.
But until he wins a championship and signs a highly anticipated free agent contract, some will be waiting for the other shoe to drop on Ohtani’s career. Aside from his raw talent, those questions will make Ohtani the face of baseball for at least the next year.
You’d think it would have made him the focus of the league’s preseason marketing campaign. But, alas, we begin our look at the most intriguing storylines of 2023 with …
The rules
Major League Baseball really wants you to know it’s speeding up the game, banning extreme infield shifts, and making it easier to steal bases. The new rules are the focal point of a newly released ad campaign (featuring Bryan Cranston watching baseball on television, defining the target demographic perfectly). The tagline ― “Three New Rules. More Great Action.” ― feels a bit self-congratulatory on the league’s part. But the rules appear to be delivering on their promise.
With the pitch timer in place, the average time of a spring training game is down nearly half an hour compared to last year. Pitch timer violations are down in general, and it’s been a month since one decided the outcome of a game. Batting average on balls in play is on the rise, likely because of the ban on infield shifts, and so are stolen bases. Don’t accuse MLB of false advertising.
Meanwhile, the league is asking umpires to more rigorously enforce the foreign substance checks that went into effect in 2021. Whether they work or not, at least the hand checks have begun in spring training, when pitchers have more time to adjust. Two years ago, at least one pitcher suffered an injury that he attributed to his inability to grip the baseball after the sticky-substance enforcement went into effect. We can only hope that doesn’t happen again.
Ohtani watch
The MVP of the World Baseball Classic (and the runner-up to Aaron Judge in last year’s AL MVP race) is entering his first contract year stateside. That’s a scary thought. Ohtani’s last two seasons are already unparalleled in major league history and, barring injury, he can look ahead to signing the largest contract in North American sports history.
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Unless the Angels race out to a big cushion in their quest to end their playoff drought, questions will persist until the trade deadline whether or not Ohtani will finish the season in Anaheim. Even if he stays put until the end of the season, speculation about his next team is already the subject of Las Vegas gambling odds.
Those in Ohtani’s circle believe the two-way superstar has come to feel at home in Southern California, which could matter more as he looks ahead to his future. Ohtani turns 29 in July.
Unfortunately for the Angels, winning a championship has come to matter more to Ohtani, too. The Angels have yet to win a playoff game since 2009. Southern California’s other MLB teams have the money (and in the Dodgers’ case, the prospect capital, if the Angels entertain a trade) to acquire the game’s best player.
In the meantime, try to enjoy what Ohtani is doing on the field. No one has done this before.
The nouveau riche
Speaking of the Padres and things no one has done before: San Diego’s $1.5 billion in salary commitments beyond 2023 already dwarf those of the Yankees and Mets. Can owner Peter Seidler spend his way to a title?
History isn’t on the Padres’ side, but it’s a remarkable experiment in how to do business. The Padres spent roughly five years amassing prospect capital before trading almost all of it away in pursuit of a championship-contending roster.
Now, even Three Finger Brown could count the number of homegrown Padres on one hand: only backup catcher Luis Campusano and reliever Steven Wilson were drafted into the organization. (Pitcher Adrian Morejon, signed as an international amateur, is expected to begin the season on the injured list.)
Milestone watch
Baseball is increasingly a young man’s game, but a few MLB veterans have hung around long enough to push their way into some prestigious leaderboards.
Craig Kimbrel (394) and Kenley Jansen (391) are poised to become the seventh and eighth closers to join the 400-save club. Clayton Kershaw (197) and Adam Wainwright (195) will likely become the fourth and fifth active members of the exclusive 200-win club. Justin Verlander, at 244, has two more years under his new contract with the Mets to convince us that 300 isn’t yet out of reach.
Albert Pujols’ retirement leaves Miguel Cabrera as the only active member of baseball’s 3,000-hit club. There’s quite a bit of daylight between Cabrera (3,088) and the number-2 player on the career hits list, Joey Votto (2,093). Cabrera’s next hit will tie him with Ichiro Suzuki for 24th all-time.
In fact, Cabrera is the torchbearer for persistence these days. He needs 75 RBIs this season to push his way into the top-10 all-time. No other active player is even in the top 100. He’s also the only active player in the top 100 all time in doubles (14th) and total bases (16th).
Orange County Register
Read MoreWhy I admire the GOATs of the business world
- March 26, 2023
Listen to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Elizabeth Warren, or former secretary of labor Robert Reich, and you’ll hear them attacking billionaire businesspeople, while their Twitter followers cheer. The takeaway is that such businesspeople are contemptible, if not worse.
But I hold the opposite view.
When I think of billionaires who earned their fortunes through creative work and exceptional ability, I’m filled with admiration. Just as we appreciate world-class athletes for their accomplishments, so I appreciate the GOATs of the business world for their extraordinary achievements.
Common to such billionaires and elite athletes is that they do their job at a superlative level. They are the best in the world at doing what they do, and only an infinitesimal number of people ever reach their level of performance. LeBron James, Tom Brady and Lionel Messi are some of the greatest in history. We know a bit about how they reach sporting excellence— dedication to continual improvement, perseverance, extraordinary skills— and so, they are a source of inspiration for millions of people. Likewise, I look at Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos with equal admiration for the virtues they’ve embodied to reach excellence in the world of business.
When I watched the documentary The Last Dance, I was in awe of Michael Jordan’s rise to the pinnacle of professional basketball and how he built his career from the ground up. I had a similar reaction when I read about Jobs’ story. He rose to the top of the business world by co-founding Apple in his garage with Steve Wozniak, with very little money. Today, Apple is worth over $2 trillion. Jobs managed to create an exceptional company that continued to thrive long after his death.
The iPhone has brought enormous value to my life. It has allowed me to instantly connect with family and friends all over the world, have immediate access to any information I want, work and play with a device that fits in my pocket, among other things. The iPhone pioneered an entire new category of mobile phones and revolutionized the way we use them by changing the way we collect, create and transmit information. It’s hard to overstate the impact that Jobs’ creation has had in the world—like it’s hard to exaggerate the immense influence that Jordan has had in basketball and on the millions of people he inspired throughout his career.
Building a company like Apple took extraordinary intelligence, independent vision, creativity and business acumen from Jobs. Hiring the right people to perform technical work to build Apple’s technology required an extraordinary mind. When I read about Jobs’ process, or when I watch his presentations, I can’t help but feel admiration for his ambition, his perseverance and commitment to bringing his vision to life. To me, watching a mind work at that level is even more fascinating and awe-inspiring than watching Messi score a goal at minute 107 in the World Cup final.
Another demonized businessman is Jeff Bezos, who built Amazon from the ground up with an initial investment of $10,000 of his own money. Amazon is now worth over one trillion dollars. Without Bezos’ unique vision, aptitude for logistics and independent thought, he could have never transformed an online used books store into the biggest online retailer in history with over one million employees—just like Tom Brady couldn’t have won the most Super Bowls in history without his superlative understanding of the game of football and his outstanding work ethic.
Bezos’ innovations have made my life so much better: for the most part, I no longer have the need to go out to several different stores to buy whatever items I may need: if it exists, Amazon will ship it to me in one or two days— and I have my groceries delivered weekly at my doorstep with Amazon’s grocery delivery service. Bezos has saved me an extraordinary amount of time with his company—time that has been freed to work, play, or spend it with loved ones.
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There’s something deeply valuable in watching humans perform at their best—whether they are the GOATs of sports or titans of industry. When I see an elite athlete perform, I am inspired to go a little harder at the gym, to eat a little better, to take better care of my body. I will never be a professional athlete, but with the right work and inspiration I can be the healthiest I can be and perform at my best. When I see an elite business person at work and see and use their creations, I am inspired to work a little harder, to be a little bit more productive, to be more ambitious. I may never be a billionaire, but with the right inspiration I can be the best and most productive version of myself.
James, Brady and Messi continually push the limits of what can be done at their sports. James is the all-time leading scorer in the NBA, Brady has won the most Super Bowls, and Messi holds several records himself. Like them, Bezos, Jobs, and other entrepreneurs push technological advancement forward and produce new life-furthering values on so vast a scale, it’s awe inspiring.
When they are taken for granted, or worse, attacked ruthlessly by Robert Reich and his ilk, I can’t help but think it is a real injustice: they deserve respect and recognition for the work they do. No one debates whether James, Brady or Messi deserve our respect for their work; why don’t productive geniuses get the same treatment? There is certainly a lot to admire in what these billionaire businessmen have achieved in their careers and the virtues they’ve embodied to do so.
Agustina Vergara Cid is a junior fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute. You can follow her on Twitter @agustinavcid
Orange County Register
Read MoreAngels lose to Cubs in final spring training game
- March 25, 2023
THE GAME: The Angels lost 7-5 to the Chicago Cubs in the final exhibition game in the Arizona portion of spring training. The Angels are 15-11-2 as they head back to Southern California for the three-game Freeway Series with the Dodgers.
PITCHING REPORT: Right-hander Sam Bachman, one of the Angels’ top pitching prospects, started and pitched two scoreless innings. Bachman worked around two hits and two walks, striking out three. He left the bases loaded in the second when he struck out Nick Madrigal. “Just to show that I can compete, you don’t want to roll over in that scenario,” Bachman said. “I’m glad I was able to do that and I’m happy with how it went.” Bachman’s fastball was 94-97 mph. … Left-hander Matt Moore did not get through an inning. He recorded two outs and was charged with four runs. Moore, who signed a $7.55-million deal at the start of spring training, has allowed nine runs in 7 2/3 innings in Cactus League games. … Right-hander Ryan Tepera struck out the side. … Right-hander Carlos Estévez gave up a run. He allowed a one-out single. The runner stole second, went to third on a grounder and scored on a wild pitch.
HITTING REPORT: Luis Rengifo had a pair of singles and a walk and he scored on a Taylor Jones hit. Rengifo is 13 for 31 (.419) with a 1.247 OPS this spring. Rengifo has three hits in his last five at-bats against left-handed pitchers. Rengifo was much better against lefties last season, so he is expected to start against most lefties this season… Matt Thaiss is hitless in his last 16 at-bats. He’s now 7 for 29 (.241), but his 10 walks helped lift his OPS to .746. Thaiss is out of options. He and Logan O’Hoppe are battling for the backup catcher spot, although the Angels still could keep them both. … Jordyn Adams pulled an RBI double down the left-field line. Adams, a 23-year-old former first-round pick, is 12 for 34 (.353) with a 1.005 OPS in the spring.
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DEFENSE REPORT: Rengifo quickly played a ball off the right-field fence and got it back in to the infield. On the next play, he got a late jump on a shallow pop and the ball dropped just out of his reach. Rengifo is normally an infielder, but the Angels are giving more reps in the outfield to make him an option when one of their starting outfielders needs a day off. … Second baseman Adrian Placencia was charged when an error when a ball hopped past him. … Thaiss, the catcher, threw a ball into center field on a stolen base attempt. … Left fielder Jeremiah Jackson sprinted into foul territory to make a catch.
UP NEXT: Angels vs. Dodgers, 6 p.m. Sunday, Dodger Stadium, Bally Sports West, 830 AM.
Orange County Register
Read More‘There’s nothing left’: Deep South tornadoes kill 26
- March 25, 2023
By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS, MICHAEL GOLDBERG and ROGELIO SOLIS
ROLLING FORK, Miss. (AP) — Rescuers raced Saturday to search for survivors and help hundreds of people left homeless after a powerful tornado cut a devastating path through Mississippi, killing at least 25 people, injuring dozens, flattening entire blocks and obliterating houses in at least one Mississippi Delta town as it carved a path of destruction for more than an hour. One person was killed in Alabama.
The tornado devastated a swath of the town of Rolling Fork, reducing homes to piles of rubble, flipping cars on their sides and toppling the town’s water tower. Residents hunkered down in bath tubs and hallways during Friday night’s storm and later broke into a John Deere store that they converted into a triage center for the wounded.
The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency announced late Saturday afternoon in a tweet that the death toll had risen to 25 from 23. Four people previously reported missing have been found, but dozens also were injured.
“There’s nothing left,” said Wonder Bolden, holding her granddaughter, Journey, while standing outside the remnants of her mother’s now-leveled mobile home in Rolling Fork. “There’s just the breeze that’s running, going through — just nothing.”
Other parts of the Deep South were digging out from damage caused by other suspected twisters. One man also died in Morgan County, Alabama, the sheriff’s department there said in a tweet.
“There’s nothing left,” said Wonder Bolden, holding her granddaughter, Journey, while standing outside the remnants of her mother’s now-leveled mobile home in Rolling Fork. “There’s just the breeze that’s running, going through — just nothing.”
Throughout Saturday, she and others walked around dazed and in shock as they broke through debris and fallen trees with chain saws, searching for survivors. Power lines were pinned under decades-old oaks, their roots torn from the ground.
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves issued a State of Emergency and vowed to help rebuild as he headed to view the damage in an area speckled with wide expanses of cotton, corn and soybean fields and catfish farming ponds. President Joe Biden also promised federal help, describing the damage as “heartbreaking.”
The damage in Rolling Fork was so widespread that several storm chasers — who follow severe weather and often put up livestreams showing dramatic funnel clouds — pleaded for search and rescue help. Others abandoned the chase to drive injured people to the hospital.
But it didn’t help that the community hospital on the west side of town was damaged, forcing patients to be transferred.
Sheddrick Bell, his partner and two daughters crouched in a closet of their Rolling Fork home for 15 minutes as the tornado barreled through. His daughters wouldn’t stop crying. He could hear his partner praying out loud beside him.
“I was just thinking, ‘If I can still open my eyes and move around, I’m good,’” he said.
Rodney Porter, who lives about 20 miles (32 kilometers) south of Rolling Fork and belongs to a local fire department, said he didn’t know how anyone survived as he delivered water and fuel to families there.
“It’s like a bomb went off,” he said, describing houses stacked on top of houses. Crews even cut gas lines to the town to keep residents and first responders safe.
The warning the National Weather Service issued as the storm hit didn’t mince words: “To protect your life, TAKE COVER NOW!”
Preliminary information based on estimates from storm reports and radar data indicate that it was on the ground for more than an hour and traversed at least 170 miles (274 kilometers), said Lance Perrilloux, a meteorologist with the weather service’s Jackson, Mississippi, office.
“That’s rare — very, very rare,” he said, attributing the long path to widespread atmospheric instability. “All the ingredients were there.”
Perrilloux said preliminary findings are that the tornado began its path of destruction just southwest of Rolling Fork before continuing northeast toward the rural communities of Midnight and Silver City before moving toward Tchula, Black Hawk and Winona.
The supercell that produced the deadly twister also appeared to produce tornadoes that caused damage in northwest and north-central Alabama, said Brian Squitieri, a severe storms forecaster with Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma.
In northern Alabama’s Morgan County, a 67-year-old man who became trapped beneath a trailer that flipped over during severe overnight storms was rescued by first responders, but he died later at a hospital, AL.com reported.
Even as survey teams work to assess how many tornadoes struck and their severity, the Storm Prediction Center is warning of the potential for hail, wind and possibly a few tornadoes Sunday in parts of Mississippi and Louisiana.
Cornel Knight told The Associated Press that he, his wife and their 3-year-old daughter were at a relative’s home in Rolling Fork when the tornado struck. He said the sky was dark but “you could see the direction from every transformer that blew.”
He said the tornado struck another relative’s home across a wide cornfield from where he was. A wall in that home collapsed and trapped several people inside.
Royce Steed, the emergency manager in Humphreys County where Silver City is located, likened the damage to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
“It is almost complete devastation,” he said after crews finished searching buildings and switched to damage assessments. “This little old town, I don’t know what the population is, it is more or less wiped off the map.”
In the town, the roof had torn off Noel Crook’s home, where he lives there with his wife.
“Yesterday was yesterday and that’s gone – there’s nothing I can do about it,” Crook said. “Tomorrow is not here yet. You don’t have any control over it, so here I am today.”
The tornado looked so powerful on radar as it neared the town of Amory, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southeast of Tupelo, that one Mississippi meteorologist paused to say a prayer after new radar information came in.
“Oh man,” WTVA’s Matt Laubhan said on the live broadcast. “Dear Jesus, please help them. Amen.”
Now that town is boiling its water, a curfew in effect.
More than a half-dozen shelters were opened in the state to house the displaced.
“It’s a priceless feeling to see the gratitude on people’s faces to know they’re getting a hot meal,” said William Trueblood, emergency disaster services director for the Salvation Army’s Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi Division, as he headed to the area, picking up supplies along the way.
He said they’re hearing at least 19,000 homes were impacted by the severe weather.
Still, there were signs of improvement. Power outages, which at one point were affecting more than 75,000 customers in Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama, had been cut by a third by midafternoon Saturday, according to poweroutage.us.
Meteorologists saw a big tornado risk coming for the general region as much as a week in advance, said Northern Illinois University meteorology professor Walker Ashley.
Tornado experts like Ashley have been warning about increased risk exposure in the region because of people building more.
“You mix a particularly socioeconomically vulnerable landscape with a fast-moving, long-track nocturnal tornado, and, disaster will happen,” Ashley said in an email.
___
Associated Press writer Emily Wagster Pettus in Rolling Fork, Mississippi; Michael Goldberg in Silver City, Mississippi; Jim Salter in O’Fallon, Missouri; Rick Callahan in Indianapolis; Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas; Lisa Baumann in Bellingham, Washington; Robert Jablon in Los Angeles; Seth Borenstein in Kensington, Maryland; and Jackie Quinn in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.
Orange County Register
Read MoreDodgers’ Jason Heyward calls revamped swing a ‘work in progress’
- March 25, 2023
GLENDALE, Ariz. — If the mechanic says your car needs an overhaul, you probably need an overhaul.
Jason Heyward has avoided using that term to describe the spring swing project. He has acknowledged the need to make changes after his offensive decline resulted in an unceremonious end to his time with the Chicago Cubs last year – “If you have the last year and a half the way I had, you’d expect to make changes,” he said early this spring.
But Heyward has characterized the swing changes he is incorporating into his offensive game as “nothing new,” more of a return to “things that I’ve seen myself do” in the past and a ripping off of “Band-Aids” that accumulated over the years.
“It felt like an overhaul for me. So maybe we have different definitions,” Dodgers hitting coach Robert Van Scoyoc said. “But from my perspective, it’s been an overhaul.”
How well that overhaul works will determine whether Heyward can revive his career with the Dodgers and write a better ending than the Cubs’ decision to move on without him despite owing Heyward $22 million this season.
Van Scoyoc said the project began the way they always do – with video study – and then progressed from there once Heyward signed with the Dodgers.
“Just kind of went back and saw when he performed in the big leagues what he was doing,” the hitting coach said. “When he was really solid, that was seven, eight years ago so we didn’t really use that as much of a model as we normally would. So we kind of just hopped in the cage, made observations and went from there. So it was a little different from other guys.”
The changes Van Scoyoc and Aaron Bates suggested were “from the ground up.”
“We worked on his lower half, his legs, how he uses his back side, hand position, bat path, sequencing – all of it,” Van Scoyoc said. “We kind of did everything.”
The changes were fundamental. Heyward had gotten “a little crashy,” diving out to meet the ball and hitting off his front leg, making him prone to chasing pitches. So the Dodger coaches worked with him on “kind of screwing into the ground and … getting into a position where he’s more balanced, more athletic, holds the ground with his back leg,” Van Scoyoc said.
Heyward has also changed his hand position in his setup, a change that long-time friend and reconnected teammate Freddie Freeman noted when the two worked out this winter. Heyward’s hands are away from his body more so than they had been in years, giving him “more freedom” to get to pitches.
“If you play for 15 years, you’re going to see over time some different setups, some different stances,” Heyward said.
“Working with Robert, working with Batesy and the rest of the group – I’m not doing stuff that I haven’t done before and they’re asking me to do something that’s a different language.”
The results this spring have been mixed. Heyward hit two home runs in the first week of Cactus League play but leveled off and finished 10 for 47 (.213) – disappointingly similar to Heyward’s average over those final two seasons in Chicago (.211).
“For as long as you play, it’s a work in progress. Just like life, right?” Heyward said.
“You get in spring training and you work on things and then you go face pitching. Guys are not going to be as good because it’s not the same preparation as in season when you’re studying and breaking down game plans.”
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts echoed the “work in progress” assessment, adding that it was never expected to be “linear.” With Heyward technically a non-roster invitee this spring, Roberts has already said he didn’t have to win a spot. But James Outman’s spring emergence has pushed Heyward into the trail position among the three left-handed outfielders that will be on the season-opening roster (David Peralta, Outman and Heyward).
“Jason made a bet on himself signing with us,” Roberts said this week. “With that, he’s going to be on our ballclub. That in itself proves something to himself. Now with that, how at-bats are distributed – that is yet to be determined.”
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Max Muncy, J.D. Martinez hit home runs as Dodgers tie Brewers
ALSO
Clayton Kershaw, Noah Syndergaard and Ryan Pepiot will start the three Freeway Series games against the Angels. …
Roberts estimated that Tony Gonsolin could rejoin the Dodgers’ rotation by the end of April. Gonsolin will go on a minor-league injury-rehabilitation assignment before rejoining the Dodgers. …
After Saturday’s Cactus League finale, the Dodgers sent right-hander Wander Suero and outfielders Bradley Zimmer and Steven Duggar to the minor leagues.
Orange County Register
Read MoreOrange County softball standings: Saturday, March 25
- March 25, 2023
Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now
Orange County high school softball standings through Friday, March 24.
TRINITY LEAGUE
League
Overall
JSerra
3-0
12-2
Orange Lutheran
2-0
8-4
Santa Margarita
1-2
10-4-1
Mater Dei
0-2
6-7-1
Rosary
0-2
5-6
SUNSET LEAGUE
League
Overall
Marina
4-0
14-1
Los Alamitos
1-0
7-2
Edison
1-1
9-5
Huntington Beach
1-1
5-3
Fountain Valley
1-3
5-6
Corona del Mar
0-1
1-7
Newport Harbor
0-2
4-6
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Overall
Aliso Niguel
11-3
Tesoro
6-3-1
Dana Hills
5-4
Mission Viejo
6-6-1
San Juan Hills
2-9
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Overall
Capistrano Valley
6-1
Trabuco Hills
10-5
El Toro
4-6-1
San Clemente
0-4
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Woodbridge
2-0
4-2-1
Irvine
2-0
6-4
Beckman
3-1
6-5
Northwood
2-1
5-3
Laguna Hills
1-4
5-6
Portola
0-1
0-3
University
0-3
0-4
CRESTVIEW LEAGUE
League
Overall
Esperanza
3-0
12-2
Villa Park
0-1
12-4
Canyon
0-1
8-4
El Modena
0-1
8-4
NORTH HILLS LEAGUE
Overall
Foothill
9-4
El Dorado
9-9
Brea Olinda
6-8
Yorba Linda
3-5
GOLDEN WEST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Westminster
1-0
10-5
Segerstrom
1-0
3-13
Garden Grove
0-0
8-2
Godinez
0-0
6-5
Katella
0-1
8-5
Ocean View
0-1
9-6
FREEWAY LEAGUE
Overall
Fullerton
12-1
Buena Park
6-3-1
Troy
7-6
Sunny Hills
3-4-1
Sonora
5-7
La Habra
4-6
GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE
Overall
Los Amigos
4-2-1
La Quinta
3-3
Bolsa Grande
2-5
Santiago
2-5
Rancho Alamitos
2-5
Loara
1-6
EMPIRE LEAGUE
Overall
Cypress
8-2-1
Pacifica
9-3
Crean Lutheran
6-2-1
Kennedy
6-4
Valencia
4-8-1
Tustin
0-2
ORANGE LEAGUE
League
Overall
Anaheim
1-0-1
3-9-2
Santa Ana Valley
0-0-1
5-0-1
Western
0-0
1-3-1
Savanna
0-0
2-8
Magnolia
0-0
0-6
Century
0-1
0-10
ORANGE COAST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Costa Mesa
1-0
6-1
Calvary Chapel
1-0
2-6
Orange
1-0
1-3
Estancia
0-1
3-3
Santa Ana
0-1
5-7
Saddleback
0-1
2-7
Orange County Register
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