
High school football live updates: Friday’s games for Week 7 in Southern California
- October 7, 2023
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Follow along tonight, Friday, October 6, as our Southern California News Group reporters provide scores, stats, videos and much more from the sidelines at tonight’s Week 7 games.
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FRIDAY
CIF-SS
ALMONT LEAGUE
Bell Gardens at Schurr, 7 p.m.
Keppel vs. Alhambra at Moor Field, 7 p.m.
San Gabriel at Montebello, 7 p.m.
ANGELUS LEAGUE
Crespi at Cathedral, 7 p.m.
St. Francis at Paraclete, 7:30 p.m.
St. Paul at Loyola, 7 p.m.
BASELINE LEAGUE
Damien at Chino Hills, 7 p.m.
Etiwanda at Rancho Cucamonga, 7 p.m.
BAY LEAGUE
Culver City at Redondo, 7 p.m.
Palos Verdes at Mira Costa, 7 p.m.
Santa Monica at Peninsula, 7 p.m.
BIG WEST-LOWER LEAGUE
Corona Santiago at King, 7 p.m.
Temecula Valley at Murrieta Mesa, 7 p.m.
BIG WEST-UPPER LEAGUE
Eastvale Roosevelt at Corona Centennial, 7 p.m.
Murrieta Valley at Norco, 7 p.m.
Vista Murrieta at Chaparral, 7 p.m.
CAMINO REAL LEAGUE
Bishop Montgomery at Mary Star, 7 p.m.
Cantwell-Sacred Heart at Salesian, 7 p.m.
Verbum Dei vs. St. Monica at Santa Monica College, 7 p.m.
CANYON LEAGUE
Agoura at Newbury Park, 7 p.m.
Moorpark at Royal, 7 p.m.
Thousand Oaks at Camarillo, 7 p.m.
CHANNEL LEAGUE
Buena at Rio Mesa, 7 p.m.
Channel Islands at Oxnard Pacifica, 7 p.m.
Dos Pueblos at Oxnard, 7 p.m.
Ventura at San Marcos, 7 p.m.
CITRUS BELT LEAGUE
Beaumont at Citrus Valley, 7 p.m.
Redlands East Valley at Yucaipa, 7 p.m.
CITRUS COAST LEAGUE
Hueneme at Nordhoff, 7 p.m.
Santa Paula at Carpinteria, 7 p.m.
COTTONWOOD LEAGUE
Santa Rosa Academy at Bermuda Dunes Desert Christian, 7 p.m.
Vasquez vs. Whittier Christian at Whittier College, 7 p.m.
DEL REY LEAGUE
St. Genevieve vs. La Salle at Valley College, 7 p.m.
DEL RIO LEAGUE
Whittier at California, 7 p.m.
DESERT EMPIRE LEAGUE
Palm Desert at Xavier Prep, 7 p.m.
Palm Springs at La Quinta, 7 p.m.
Shadow Hills at Rancho Mirage, 7 p.m.
DESERT VALLEY LEAGUE
Cathedral City at Desert Mirage, 7 p.m.
Coachella Valley at Yucca Valley, 7 p.m.
Twentynine Palms at Indio, 7 p.m.
EMPIRE LEAGUE
Cypress vs. La Palma Kennedy at Western HS, 7 p.m.
Garden Grove Pacifica at Crean Lutheran, 7 p.m.
Placentia Valencia at Tustin, 7 p.m.
FOOTHILL LEAGUE
Golden Valley at Canyon Country Canyon, 7 p.m.
Hart vs. Saugus at College of Canyons, 7 p.m.
West Ranch at Valencia, 7 p.m.
FREEWAY LEAGUE
Sonora at Buena Park, 7 p.m.
Sunny Hills at Fullerton, 7 p.m.
Troy at La Habra, 7 p.m.
GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE
Garden Grove Santiago at Bolsa Grande, 7 p.m.
Loara vs. Westminster La Quinta at Garden Grove HS, 7 p.m.
GATEWAY LEAGUE
Downey at Dominguez, 7 p.m.
La Mirada vs. Mayfair at Excelsior HS, 7 p.m.
Norwalk at Warren, 7 p.m.
GOLD COAST LEAGUE
Campbell Hall at Viewpoint, 7 p.m.
GOLDEN LEAGUE
Antelope Valley at Highland, 7 p.m.
Lancaster at Knight, 7 p.m.
Palmdale at Littlerock, 7 p.m.
INLAND VALLEY LEAGUE
Canyon Springs at Valley View, 7 p.m.
Moreno Valley at Hemet, 7 p.m.
IRONWOOD LEAGUE
Cerritos Valley Christian at Ontario Christian, 7 p.m.
Village Christian vs. Big Bear at Glendale City College, 7 p.m.
IVY LEAGUE
Elsinore at Orange Vista, 7 p.m.
Riverside North at Rancho Verde, 7 p.m.
Temescal Canyon at Heritage, 7 p.m.
MANZANITA LEAGUE
Nuview Bridge at Temecula Prep, 7 p.m.
Silver Valley at California Military, 3:30 p.m.
MARMONTE LEAGUE
Bishop Diego at Oaks Christian, 7 p.m.
Simi Valley at Calabasas, 7 p.m.
St. Bonaventure vs. Westlake at Ventura College, 7 p.m.
MESQUITE LEAGUE
Arrowhead Christian vs. Linfield Christian at Redlands HS, 7 p.m.
MID-CITIES LEAGUE
Firebaugh at Bellflower, 7 p.m.
Paramount at Lynwood, 7 p.m.
MISSION LEAGUE
Alemany at Chaminade, 7 p.m.
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame at Serra, 7 p.m.
Sierra Canyon at Bishop Amat, 7 p.m.
MISSION VALLEY LEAGUE
Arroyo at El Monte, 7 p.m.
Gabrielino at Mountain View, 7 p.m.
MOJAVE RIVER LEAGUE
Oak Hills at Serrano, 7 p.m.
MONTVIEW LEAGUE
Duarte vs. Azusa at Citrus College, 7 p.m.
MOORE LEAGUE
Lakewood at Millikan, 7 p.m.
Long Beach Jordan at Compton, 7 p.m.
Long Beach Wilson vs. Long Beach Poly at Veterans Stadium, 7 p.m.
MOUNTAIN PASS LEAGUE
Liberty at Citrus Hill, 7 p.m.
San Jacinto at Tahquitz, 7 p.m.
West Valley at Perris, 7 p.m.
OCEAN LEAGUE
Hawthorne at Compton Centennial, 7 p.m.
Leuzinger at Morningside, 7 p.m.
ORANGE LEAGUE
Anaheim at Santa Ana Valley, 7 p.m.
Magnolia at Century, 7 p.m.
ORANGE COAST LEAGUE
Saddleback at Estancia, 7 p.m.
PACIFIC-UPPER LEAGUE
Arcadia at Pasadena, 7 p.m.
Burbank Burroughs at Muir, 7 p.m.
Crescenta Valley vs. Burbank at Glendale HS, 7 p.m.
PIONEER LEAGUE
Lawndale at West Torrance, 7 p.m.
South Torrance at North Torrance, 7 p.m.
Torrance vs. El Segundo at Zamperini Stadium, 7 p.m.
RIO HONDO LEAGUE
South Pasadena at Monrovia, 7 p.m.
RIVER VALLEY LEAGUE
Arlington vs. Patriot at Rubidoux, 7 p.m.
Hillcrest at Ramona, 7 p.m.
La Sierra at Norte Vista, 7 p.m.
SUNBELT LEAGUE
Paloma Valley at Vista del Lago, 7 p.m.
SUNSET LEAGUE
Corona del Mar vs. Fountain Valley at Newport Harbor HS, 7 p.m.
Edison at Huntington Beach, 7 p.m.
Newport Harbor vs. Los Alamitos at Westminster HS, 7 p.m.
TRINITY LEAGUE
Mater Dei vs. JSerra at Santa Ana, 7 p.m.
Santa Margarita vs. Lutheran at Saddleback College, 7 p.m.
Servite at St. John Bosco, 7 p.m.
NONLEAGUE
Anaheim Canyon at Brea Olinda, 7 p.m.
Beckman at Portola, 7 p.m.
Capistrano Valley at Aliso Niguel, 7 p.m.
Cerritos at Gahr, 7 p.m.
Claremont at Chino, 7 p.m.
El Modena at Yorba Linda, 7 p.m.
Glendale at Rowland, 7 p.m.
Hoover at Temple City, 7 p.m.
Irvine at Dana Hills, 7 p.m.
Los Altos at Nogales, 7 p.m.
Northwood vs. Irvine University at Irvine HS, 7 p.m.
Pioneer at Bassett, 7 p.m.
Riverside Poly at Rancho Christian, 7 p.m.
San Clemente at Ayala, 7 p.m.
Sierra Vista at Bonita, 7 p.m.
South Hills vs. Don Lugo at Covina District Field, 7 p.m.
Trabuco Hills at Tesoro, 7 p.m.
Villa Park vs. Esperanza at El Modena HS, 7 p.m.
Woodbridge at Laguna Hills, 7 p.m.
Eureka St. Bernard’s at Segerstrom, 7 p.m.
Grace Brethren at Rancho Dominguez, 6:30 p.m.
L.A. CITY
COLISEUM LEAGUE
Crenshaw at Dymally, 7:30 p.m.
Dorsey at Fremont, 7:30 p.m.
Washington vs. King/Drew at Los Angeles Southwest College, 7:30 p.m.
EAST VALLEY LEAGUE
Arleta at Grant, 7 p.m.
Monroe at North Hollywood, 7 p.m.
Verdugo Hills at Chavez, 7 p.m.
EASTERN LEAGUE
Bell at Los Angeles Roosevelt, 7:30 p.m.
Legacy at Huntington Park, 7:30 p.m.
South Gate at South East, 7:30 p.m.
EXPOSITION LEAGUE
Maywood CES at Manual Arts, 2:30 p.m.
Santee at Marquez, 7:30 p.m.
MARINE LEAGUE
Carson at San Pedro, 7:30 p.m.
METRO LEAGUE
Locke at Hawkins, 7 p.m.
View Park at Los Angeles Jordan, 7:30 p.m.
NORTHERN LEAGUE
Eagle Rock at Torres, 7 p.m.
Franklin at Lincoln, 7 p.m.
Los Angeles Marshall at Los Angeles Wilson, 7 p.m.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Angelou at Los Angeles, 7 p.m.
West Adams at Rivera, 7:30 p.m.
VALLEY MISSION LEAGUE
Canoga Park at Granada Hills Kennedy, 7 p.m.
Sylmar at San Fernando, 7 p.m.
Van Nuys at Reseda, 7 p.m.
WEST VALLEY LEAGUE
Birmingham at Chatsworth, 7 p.m.
El Camino Real at Taft, 7 p.m.
Granada Hills at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
WESTERN LEAGUE
Fairfax at Palisades, 7:30 p.m.
Venice at Los Angeles Hamilton, 3 p.m.
Westchester at Los Angeles University, 7:30 p.m.
8-MAN
L.A. CITY
Discovery at Sherman Oaks CES, 7 p.m.
North Valley Military Institute at Fulton, TBA
Valley Oaks CES at East Valley, 7 p.m.
CIF-SS
Lucerne Valley at PAL Academy, 3 p.m.
University Careers and Sports Academy at Hesperia Christian, 7 p.m.
Coastal Christian at Coast Union, 7 p.m.
Calvary Baptist at California Lutheran, 7 p.m.
Cornerstone Christian vs. Southlands Christian at Los Altos, 7 p.m.
Academy of Careers & Exploration vs. Lancaster Desert Christian at Lancaster, 7 p.m.
Avalon at Chadwick, 2 p.m.
New Designs Watts at Chula Vista Victory Christian, 7 p.m.
Football
— James H. Williams covers UCLA football (@JHWreporter) September 1, 2023
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Experimental first week for CARE courts comes to a close
- October 7, 2023
No one was sure exactly what would happen on Monday, Oct. 2. Would there be a trickle or a flood?
It was the first day of California’s “paradigm shift” on how it treats severely mentally ill people, many of whom are homeless. The CARE Act — for Community Assistance, Recovery, and Empowerment — kicked off in Orange, Riverside and five other counties, allowing doctors, licensed therapists, first responders and family members to file petitions with the court, asking for housing and services for people who are gravely mentally ill.
It appears folks are proceeding cautiously. Orange County Superior Court’s CARE court received four petitions as of mid-day Friday, said spokesman Kostas Kalaitzidis. Riverside County Superior Court received two petitions, but has gotten eight referrals to its Behavioral Health CARES line, said spokeswoman Brooke Federico.
Details on who filed the petitions — medical professionals? social workers? parents? — were not yet available, and CARE court proceedings are not matters of public record.
The counties will, however, compile detailed reporting for the state, which will guide the program as it rolls out in Los Angeles County in December, and in the rest of the state next year.
Orange County expects some 1,400 petitions to be filed the first year — about 27 a week — while Riverside anticipates some 450 to 800 petitions the first year, or some eight to 14 a week.
Screengrab from Riverside County video explaining the CARE Act, designed to provide support, medication and housing to the severely mentally ill
The program has been deeply controversial. Opponents argue that people should be free to chart their own course without government intervention. Supporters argue that civilized societies don’t allow mentally ill people to live and die on public streets.
Officials insist that no one will be treated against their will.
What happens now that petitions have been filed? They’ll be reviewed by a judge, and an evaluation by mental health experts may be ordered.
To qualify, the ill person must be at least 18 years old, experiencing severe untreated mental illness (diagnosed as a schizophrenia spectrum disorder or other psychotic disorder), not clinically stabilized or in ongoing voluntary treatment, and in deteriorating condition, unlikely to survive safely without supervision.
What happens if the ill person qualifies? A CARE plan will be drafted and must be approved by the court. It would furnish medical treatment, stabilizing drugs, counseling, psychotherapies, peer support and, crucially, a housing plan, or whatever pieces of that are needed.
CARE plans can last up to 12 months, and be extended for another 12 months if necessary. The idea is to head off stints in jails and psychiatric hospitals, loss of legal rights through conservatorship and, ultimately, death. The goal is recovery and independence, officials have said.
There are some 7,000 to 12,000 people in California who have severe psychosis, officials said.
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Prime Healthcare workers to strike the week of Monday, Oct. 9
- October 7, 2023
An estimated 1,800 workers across four local Prime Healthcare facilities plan to wage a five-day strike Monday, Oct. 9, claiming management refuses to address unsafe working and patient-care conditions caused by a short-staffing crisis.
The unfair labor practices strike will affect operations at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, Centinela Hospital Medical Center in Inglewood, Garden Grove Hospital and Medical Center and Encino Hospital Medical Center if the two sides fail to reach a labor agreement.
Also see: Day 3: Kaiser unions threaten another strike if demands aren’t met
The licensed vocational nurses, certified nursing assistants, medical assistants, ER techs and others are represented by SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West. Their contracts expired in June and August and no additional bargaining sessions have been scheduled.
At St. Francis, 600 registered represented by the United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals will join in for their own week-long strike. Their contract expired Aug. 14, but labor negotiations are scheduled for Oct. 12 and 17.
Bernie Espinoza, an ultrasound tech at the Garden Grove facility, said he and his coworkers are exhausted and overworked.
“Staffing has been so critically low that many caregivers have left,” Espinoza said. “The remaining workers are stretched thin and rushed. We’re forced to take on more patients with less staff, which leaves much less time for quality one-on-one patient care.”
In a statement issued Friday, Prime spokeswoman Elizabeth Nikels said the company continues to bargain in good faith with the unions to reach an agreement that’s in the best interests of hospitals, employees and patients.
“Proposals have been delivered to the unions that would increase wages and provide comprehensive benefit programs, including healthcare, that is among the best in the nation at little to no cost to employees,” she said.
Nikels added that every health system across the nation is facing staffing challenges due to the national nursing and healthcare worker shortage.
“Despite this, enormous efforts have been made to hire, recruit and retain our valued staff and create a workplace that feels like community,” she said.
Ontario-based Prime Healthcare bought St. Francis through bankruptcy in 2020, and nurses say management terminated 20% of the experienced nurses, cut the pay of those who remained by 12% and instituted a three-year wage freeze during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prime Healthcare operates healthcare facilities in 14 states nationwide.
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Alexander: Can these Dodgers subdue the ghosts of Octobers past?
- October 7, 2023
See if this sounds familiar.
The Dodgers win the National League West title easily, again reaching triple-digits in victories. It earns them five days off, and then a series against the second-place NL West team, which they pretty much had their way with during the season.
Nervous yet, Dodger fans?
There are reasons to believe this will not be like 2022, when the Dodgers finished 22 games ahead of the Padres during the regular season and lost to San Diego in four games in an NL Division Series. (Keeping geese out of the stadium, or at least off the field, would be a good start.)
But there are also reasons to worry, and that seldom requires much effort on the part of Dodger fans, even in what has been a tremendously successful 11-season span. Octobers, the decisions made during them and the ultimate results provide fodder for plenty of anxiety, or flat-out fatalism, among the fan base.
We won’t go into all of the gory details through the years. Suffice it to say a good number of them have involved massive overthinking on the part of those in charge, and that means those well above Manager Dave Roberts on the organizational chart.
In this particular case, the makeup of a starting rotation seemingly held together with chewing gum and baling wire over the last few months might lend itself even more to the Dodgers’ traditionally unorthodox strategies in the season’s most important moments.
So before anyone proclaims that they’re a lock to win the franchise’s eighth World Series – and yeah, those thoughts are out there – some caution is in order. This could end spectacularly or it could go down in flames, again.
Consider the opponent. The Arizona Diamondbacks basically got back to the postseason a year ahead of schedule. They were 16 games above .500 on July 1 and three games ahead of the Dodgers in the division, went 7-25 to tumble to third place and lose 15½ games in the standings by Aug. 11, and then won 10 of 13 to get back into the wild card hunt.
Then they swept the 92-win Milwaukee Brewers this week to get to the next round, a testament to either the Diamondbacks’ resilience or the weakness of the NL Central. Or both.
If you really want to dig into historical precedent, consider the 2019 Washington Nationals. They were 19-21 on May 13 of that season and the job of Manager Dave Martinez was in jeopardy. They finished 93-69 and second in the East, rallied in the ninth to beat Milwaukee in the wild card game, took out the Dodgers in Game 5 of an NLDS in The Ravine – we won’t relive those crushing home runs, thank you – and went on to win the World Series.
None of that will be pertinent once Clayton Kershaw throws his first pitch at around 6:20 on Saturday evening in Dodger Stadium, but it’s eerie enough to scare the heck out of the faithful.
The original thought was that the series schedule – with the TV schedule dictating a day off Sunday between Games 1 and 2 and travel days Tuesday and, if necessary, Friday – should be a break for the Dodgers. They’re still sorting through how to deploy a collection of starters that includes a physically compromised Kershaw, rookies Bobby Miller, Ryan Pepiot and Emmet Sheehan and home run machine Lance Lynn, in order to get the games into the hands of what has become an exceptional bullpen over the last three months.
But those days off work for the D-Backs as well, because they can run aces Merrill Kelly (12-8) and Zac Gallen (17-9) out there in four of the five games if needed, none on short rest.
Then again, each is 0-2 against the Dodgers this season, Gallen with a 9.90 ERA and an opponents’ OPS of 1.079 in three starts and Kelly with a 3.98 ERA and a .873 opponents’ OPS in four. When Gallen faced the Dodgers on Aug. 28 at Dodger Stadium, he gave up four homers in 5⅓ innings, all to lefties: Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy, Jason Heyward and James Outman.
(And for those who haven’t been paying a lot of attention to the D-Backs, no, there will be no Madison Bumgarner sightings this week. He was released by Arizona on April 26, was not signed by anyone else and could be at the end of the line at age 34, with 134 career victories in 15 seasons, 2,070 career strikeouts and three World Series rings, all with San Francisco.)
The overriding point: Little of what happened earlier this season matters now, beyond the idea that a deciding fifth game would be played in Dodger Stadium a week from Saturday if it came to that.
Is this Dodgers team capable of exorcising those ghosts of Octobers past and winning its second championship in four seasons, and its first in a non-COVID season since 1988? Certainly.
This club scored 906 runs in the regular season, second in the majors only to Atlanta’s 947. It’s capable of maintaining that pace even against postseason pitching and has cashed in two-out opportunities at a pace resembling October of 2020. If the pitchers – be it with piggyback usage, an opener-bulk format or even a traditional starter on a good night – can get a lead to the seventh, they’ll hand it to what seems to be as close to a lockdown bullpen as this club has had in a long time. The relievers will benefit from the extra off days, too.
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The players who suffered through that mad celebration last October in San Diego – not only inside Petco Park but throughout the Gaslamp Quarter – remember the feeling. Roberts acknowledged earlier this season that there was a lack of urgency in that series with the Padres, maybe because of the five days off before Game 1 but more likely because they’d won 14 of 19 from the Padres in the regular season.
Significantly, newcomers Heyward, Miguel Rojas and David Peralta have helped create a team chemistry that Roberts said made this his “most joyful” season of managing.
“This is a closer team,” Roberts told reporters Friday at Dodger Stadium, adding: “With what happened last year and how quick the exit was, I still think that looms with a lot of guys.”
We’ll find out in this series if last year’s lessons took hold. Then again, for the Dodgers to get to where they and their fans really want to go, the road gets a lot tougher after this.
Way too soon, in other words, to plan a parade.
jalexander@scng.com
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Why the NFL cares about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce
- October 7, 2023
By HOWARD FENDRICH | AP National Writer
Eager as the National Football League has been to cater to the recent public fixation with Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, it’s certainly not taking any credit for creating the outsized storyline that has emerged around the pop superstar and the Kansas City Chiefs tight end.
“Not orchestrated by the NFL,” league spokesman Brian McCarthy assured The Associated Press with a chuckle during a chat on the phone about what is becoming known as “ Tay Tay and Trav,” a topic few seemed to be able to get enough of initially, whether football diehards or Swifties, whether via TV or TikTok.
The protagonists largely have remained mum about their actual status since Swift began attending Kelce’s games 1½ weeks ago, though Kelce did admit after practice Friday in Kansas City that “everybody is having fun with it.”
“You’ve got a lot of people that care about Taylor and for good reason,” he said, without getting into the details of their budding relationship.
FILE – Taylor Swift, right, takes selfies with fans as she arrives at the MTV Video Music Awards at the Prudential Center on Monday, Aug. 26, 2019, in Newark, N.J. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have remained mum about their status since the pop superstar began attending the Kansas City Chiefs tight end’s football games. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File)
But the sport providing the backdrop, and its TV partners, have not been shy about trying to capitalize on the “situationship” and gain new fans, particularly members of Gen Z and more women — although marketing experts are skeptical there will be much of a bump in the long run.
“There is not going to be a ‘Pre-Taylor Swift Era’ and a ‘Post-Taylor Swift Era’ for the NFL. … It’s a momentary fascination,” said Rebecca Brooks, founder and CEO of Alter Agents, a consulting firm.
“I believe in love and I wish Taylor luck. But … it’s very unlikely people would go to a game to see Taylor and be like, ‘Oh, I had no idea this is what football was about! My gosh! I love it now!’” Brooks said. “Or let’s say they get married: Taylor is going to show up at games and it’s going to become routine.”
Still, naturally, the league wants in on the fun. A team of folks monitoring social media see where it could be part of the phenomenon as various memes and trends took off after Swift watched a game in Kansas City alongside Kelce’s mom on Sept. 24.
FILE – Fans cheer after Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) scored a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers Sunday, Nov. 7, 2021, in Kansas City, Mo. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have remained mum about their status since the pop superstar began attending the Kansas City Chiefs tight end’s football games. Still, the NFL wants in on the fun, with a team of folks monitoring social media to see where it could be part of the phenomenon as various memes and trends took off. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
“It was a perfect storm of pop culture and sports colliding in a really positive way, with two incredibly passionate fan bases merging together and interacting in ways that they hadn’t before. So for us, it’s fantastic,” said Ian Trombetta, the NFL’s senior vice president of social, influencer and content marketing.
“Hopefully those — especially the young women — that have now gained an interest in not only Travis Kelce, but the NFL more broadly, can stay with us throughout the year and years to come,” Trombetta said.
Not that the NFL thinks there’s a ton of room for improvement: It says 47% of its fans are women, and it’s the No. 1 sport among people ages 8 to 24.
Fans hold signs during an NFL football game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the New York Jets, Sunday, Oct. 1, 2023 in East Rutherford, N.J. Eager as the National Football League has been to cater to the recent public fixation with Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, it’s certainly not taking any credit for creating the “situationship” between the pop superstar and the Kansas City Chiefs tight end. (AP Photo/Vera Nieuwenhuis)
The league has worked for several years to court women, including by promoting flag football or touting female hires for teams’ coaching staffs, as negative developments turned people off: domestic violence cases involving players; misogyny and sexual harassment during former Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder’s tenure; an investigation launched in May by New York and California prosecutors into accusations of sexual harassment and racial discrimination at NFL corporate offices.
“Those are each individual situations,” Trombetta said. “We’ve got amazing women throughout the league … and at the end of the day, we’re proud of where we’re going as a league and the values that we try to uphold each and every day.”
Yet it certainly can’t hurt to have Swift, an icon of female empowerment, bringing people to the party.
FILE – Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) celebrates with fans as he walks off the field after an NFL divisional round playoff football game against the Buffalo Bills, Sunday, Jan. 23, 2022, in Kansas City, Mo. Eager as the National Football League has been to cater to the recent public fixation with Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, it’s certainly not taking any credit for creating the “situationship” between the pop superstar and the Kansas City Chiefs tight end. (AP Photo/Colin E. Braley, File)
A year ago, she became the first artist with songs in each of the top 10 spots on the Billboard 100. Overwhelming demand to see her current tour — which resumes in two weeks — resulted in a Ticketmaster debacle. Her Instagram following of more than 270 million is nearly 10 times the NFL’s 28.4 million; Kelce’s has approached 4 million lately, thanks to a boost from the recent publicity.
This celebrity-athlete pairing is more powerful than many that preceded it. Attribute that to Swift’s broad appeal, not just in the U.S. but globally, and to Kelce’s status as the NFL’s best player at his position and the second-best player, behind quarterback Patrick Mahomes, on the reigning Super Bowl champions. Add the current state of non-stop coverage via cell phones, and the hype surely surpasses Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe (go ahead and Google them, kids), David Beckham and Posh Spice, the now-divorced Tom Brady and Giselle Bundchen, and so on.
This time, there also was a vacuum of viewing choices because of Hollywood strikes.
FILE – Singer Taylor Swift watches during the first half of an NFL football game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Chicago Bears Sunday, Sept. 24, 2023, in Kansas City, Mo. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have remained mum about their status since the pop superstar began attending the Kansas City Chiefs tight end’s football games. Swift’s broad appeal, not just in the U.S. but globally, and Kelce’s status as the NFL’s best player at his position and the second-best player, behind quarterback Patrick Mahomes, on the reigning Super Bowl champions, along with the current state of non-stop coverage via cell phones, make this celebrity-athlete pairing more powerful than the many preceding it.(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
“There’s always a ‘story of the week’ now, and no matter what it is, you have to figure out how to fit into it. It was ‘Barbie’ for a while. It was Beyoncé over the summer,” said marketing guru Joe Favorito, who counts NFL Media among his past clients.
“If you are in professional sports, that’s what you want,” he said. “You want to be not just for the core fans. You want to be for everyone, anywhere, who has to talk about this the next day, because they don’t want to feel like they’re missing out.”
One issue with courting the Gen Z cohort (11 to 26), Brooks said, is that it’s a group more openly concerned with authenticity than earlier generations. So the NFL can be “seen as self-serving,” Brooks said, and “risk looking kind of pathetic and cringy.”
Indeed, the oversaturation already is starting to bother some.
The NFL’s Instagram feed, for example, briefly placed Swift lyrics in its bio and noted the Chiefs are 2-0 with her on hand. Even Kelce and his brother, Philadelphia Eagles center Jason, noted how many times NBC cameras cut to Swift at Sunday night’s game between Kansas City and the New York Jets — sometimes celebrating, sometimes interacting with famous friends and sometimes, well, just standing there.
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“Is the NFL overdoing it?” Jason asked Travis on an episode of their podcast released Wednesday. “What is your honest opinion? Take away your feelings for Taylor.”
That drew a chuckle from Travis, who said it can be fun for viewers when celebrities are shown at games but agreed with his brother’s premise, saying: “They’re overdoing it a little bit, especially my situation.”
On the other hand, as former CBS Sports president Neal Pilson put it: “You ride the horse as long as it’s available. We show (Dallas Cowboys owner) Jerry Jones more than we probably need to during TV broadcasts, so why not show Taylor Swift?”
Pilson noted that NFL TV contracts already worth billions aren’t going to be renegotiated any time soon, but an uptick in ratings could be presented to advertisers to seek higher prices for commercials.
“I’ve been asked the question more than once: `What happens when and if they break up?’” the NFL’s Trombetta said. “I have no idea. But I hope they can stay together as long as possible.”
AP Sports Writer Dave Skretta in Kansas City, Missouri, contributed.
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Galaxy is running out of time following late loss to Seattle
- October 7, 2023
As the minutes dwindled down Wednesday night, the Galaxy figured that one point would be better than nothing, especially considering the location and opponent.
“It was literally one play left to get out of there with something,” Galaxy coach Greg Vanney said Wednesday.
Just before the final whistle sounded, Seattle had taken advantage of a slight header off of a throw-in leading toward the winning goal in the late stages of stoppage time, handing the Galaxy a 2-1 loss and another gut punch in a season full of them.
“We put in the work and sometimes it’s not about playing good football,” Galaxy defender Kelvin Leerdam said. “Sometimes it’s about energy and fight. I think we’ve done all of that today (Wednesday) and then it hurts in the end if you see it go away like that. It’s just one play. One final play and we didn’t make it.”
The loss leaves the Galaxy (8-12-11, 35 points) six points out of a playoff spot with three games remaining, starting Saturday against Minnesota United FC (5:30 p.m., Apple TV+).
Before the start of the road trip, Vanney said he believed that nine more points would put the team in playoff contention, but that they would still need some help.
The final nine points are now crucial for the Galaxy.
“We’re just super thin on the margins,” he said. “We don’t have any margins. We have to win all three games. And that’s the only hope if everything goes right for us on the other side.”
Considering the Galaxy hasn’t had a three-game winning streak since the 2020 pandemic-shortened season.
“For me, it doesn’t matter who is in front of us,” Leerdam said. “We know what we have to do. We have to win all our games.
“So, I’m not looking at which team we’re playing, where we’re playing. I’m only thinking about winning. I think everybody in the locker room thinks that way.”
The trip to Minnesota is the final road game of the season. The Galaxy will conclude the season with home games against Real Salt Lake (Oct. 14) and FC Dallas (Oct. 21).
“I’m really proud of this group the way they kept fighting, and we’re going to go into Minnesota and work our butts off there and we’re going to go for three points, because we know that’s what keeps us in it.
“But the way to get to three points is to execute every play over the course of the game and not allow ourselves to get burned on one of these plays. Making sure we’re marking our guys and making sure we’re making sound decisions. … Again, I’m proud of this group. I can’t tell you how proud I am of their work. We just haven’t been able to see out some of these draws that we would have liked to be three points and some of these, like tonight, where we would have liked to have been one point.”
INJURY UPDATES
Mark Delgado (concussion symptoms), Eriq Zavaleta (back spasm) and Riqui Puig (ankle) all missed Wednesday’s game.
Vanney said he was “optimistic” that Delgado would be ready for Saturday and “hoped” Puig would be ready. He didn’t have a timetable for Zavaleta.
GALAXY AT MINNESOTA UNITED FC
When: Saturday, 5:30 p.m.
Where: Allianz Field, St. Paul, Minn.
TV/radio: Apple TV+, 1330 AM (delayed, 8:15 p.m.)
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Former soldier charged with trying to pass secrets to China
- October 7, 2023
By Holmes Lybrand and Hannah Rabinowitz | CNN
A former US Army sergeant who allegedly lived in China for several years was arrested Friday on charges of keeping national defense information and attempting to share it with the Chinese government.
According to court filings, Joseph Daniel Schmidt was an active-duty soldier in the US Army from 2015 to 2020, where he served as a team leader on a Human Intelligence squad – eventually supervising the “collection operations and the production of intelligence reporting, analysis, and the dissemination of intelligence products.” In his role, Schmidt had access to classified intelligence, as well as a top-secret security clearance, prosecutors say.
Schmidt is scheduled to make his initial appearance in a California federal court on Friday, according to a Justice Department news release.
If convicted, the two charges Schmidt faces – attempting to deliver national defense information and retention of national defense information – each carry up to 10 years in prison. No attorney is listed for Schmidt on the public docket.
After transitioning to inactive duty in January 2020, Schmidt allegedly made trips to Beijing and Turkey and searched on Google phrases including “turkey extradition military defection,” “soldier defect,” “chinese embassy,” “iranian embassy,” and “can you be extradited for treason.”
In February 2020, Schmidt sent an email to the Chinese Consulates’ public email address in Turkey, saying that he was looking to move to China and “share information I learned during my career as an interrogator with the Chinese government,” according to court documents.
“I have a current top secret clearance, and would like to talk to someone from the Government to share this information with you if that is possible. My experience includes training in interrogation, running sources as a spy handler, surveillance detection, and other advanced psychological operation strategies,” he allegedly wrote.
Schmidt then created a document titled “Important Information to Share with Chinese Government,” federal investigators said, which the US Army later determined contained classified national defense information.
In March 2020, Schmidt traveled back to China after spending a few days in the US following his Turkey trip, court documents say. He hadn’t returned to the US until Friday, according to the Justice Department, and was arrested at an airport in San Francisco.
While in China, Schmidt allegedly created other documents detailing US Army intelligence practices over training, intelligence collection, interrogations methods as well as a hand-drawn diagram of an Army computer network.
The former Army sergeant allegedly contacted Chinese companies run by the government there to advertise his services and access to sensitive material. In one such email, Schmidt allegedly wanted to “reverse engineer” an encryption key used to access a classified network in the Army “to give to the Chinese government.”
He allegedly wrote in an email to an associate that he was motivated to leave the US after learning “some terrible things about the American government” while serving in the Army.
The arrest comes after several members of the US armed forces have been charged this year with retaining or sharing military information with others, including China.
In August, two US Navy sailors were charged with sharing sensitive military information with the foreign country, one of whom allegedly sent blueprints of a US radar system in Japan, and a National Guardsman was arrested in April after allegedly posting a trove of classified documents on social media.
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McCarthy denies report he is stepping down from Congress
- October 7, 2023
By Melanie Zanona, Pamela Brown and Heley Talbot | CNN
Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is denying reports that he is expected to step down from Congress before the end of his term – telling reporters on Friday that he still has “work to do,” after sending signals in private conversations that he could step down early from Congress.
“No, I am not resigning,” he told reporters.
“We are going to keep the majority. I am going to help the people I got here, and we are going to expand it further.”
Earlier Friday, multiple sources familiar with McCarthy’s thinking told CNN that he was expected to step down at some point after the House speaker’s election. And sources said McCarthy has been seriously considering the move.
Pressed on whether he has considered stepping down early, he said, “I look at it every time I have to decide whether I am going to run for reelection or not.”
After the House voted to oust McCarthy, the California Republican did not say whether he would remain in Congress. “I’ll look at that,” he said when asked at a press conference following the vote.
Politico was first to report that McCarthy was considering resigning.
House Republicans are still reeling after McCarthy was ousted from the speakership in a historic vote. Following the vote, McCarthy opted not to run again for the gavel, setting off a race for a new speaker.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise and GOP Rep. Jim Jordan have both launched bids to be the next speaker, though it is unclear if House Republicans will be able to coalesce around a candidate given the deep divisions within the conference.
On Friday, McCarthy added that he has talked to both Scalise and Jordan but would not endorse anyone when pressed.
Asked about former President Donald Trump’s endorsement of Jordan, McCarthy said: “Only members vote, and I think members sit down and can make their decision.”
This story has been updated with additional information.
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