The NBA Finals are set: It'll be Thunder vs. Pacers, starting Thursday nightNew Foto - The NBA Finals are set: It'll be Thunder vs. Pacers, starting Thursday night

The seeds for the 2025 NBA Finals began getting planted unknowingly in 2017, back when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was about to enroll at Kentucky and Tyrese Haliburton was getting ready for his senior year of high school in Wisconsin. That was the year the Indiana Pacers traded Paul George to the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Pacers landed Domantas Sabonis out of that deal. The Thunder would trade George in 2019 to the Los Angeles Clippers for a package that included Gilgeous-Alexander. The Pacers would trade Sabonis in 2022 to Sacramento for a package that included Haliburton. And here we are. Gilgeous-Alexander is the NBA's MVP and Oklahoma City's best player. Haliburton is an Olympic gold medalist and Indiana's best player. They'll lead their teams into Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night — Indiana at Oklahoma City, the start of a series that will decide who hoists the Larry O'Brien Trophy. "Man, I'm just so proud of this group," Haliburton said in the on-court televised interview with TNT after the Pacers' 125-108 victory over the New York Knicks on Saturday in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals. "I don't even have words right now. It's really exciting. We'll enjoy this one for now. There's four more, there's a lot more work to do, against a really tough team." The Thunder — depending on how you count — are in the finals for either the second time or the fifth time. The franchise, when it was in Seattle, lost what was then called the NBA World Championship Series to Washington in 1978, then won the title in a rematch against the then-Bullets in 1979 and lost in the NBA Finals to Chicago in 1996. Oklahoma City got to the finals in 2012, losing to Miami. The Thunder are 80-18 this season, after going 68-14 in the regular season and then 12-4 in the playoffs — sweeping Memphis in Round 1, surviving seven games against Denver in Round 2 and then ousting Minnesota in five games for the Western Conference title. "When you win, that's a special thing," Thunder forward Chet Holmgren said. "It's not guaranteed in this league. If everybody was guaranteed to win, it'd be a participation trophy instead of a Larry O'Brien. So, you have to kind of take it in and understand what you've accomplished to that point, but then the next day you have to start turning the page, get rid of the emotions and start focusing on preparation and what you have to do to conquer the next step. And that's where we're at." Indiana is in the NBA title round for the second time, having lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in 2000. The Pacers franchise won ABA titles in 1970, 1972 and 1973. They got out of the Eastern Conference as the No. 4 seed, beating Milwaukee in five games in Round 1, beating top-seeded Cleveland in five games in Round 2 and then beating New York in the conference finals. The Pacers were 10-15 through the first 25 games of the season — then went 40-17 to finish the regular season. They are the fourth team to start 10-15 or worse and go on to win a conference title, joining Seattle in 1977-78 (8-17), the 1956-57 St. Louis Hawks (10-15) and the 1958-59 Minneapolis Lakers (10-15). None of those teams went on to win the NBA title. "In 49 states, it's just basketball," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. "But this is Indiana. ... Our guys earned this. Congratulations to our guys." Oklahoma City swept the season series with Indiana 2-0, part of a regular season where the Thunder — who finished with the NBA's best record — went 29-1 against the Eastern Conference. That doesn't include a loss to Milwaukee in the NBA Cup final, a game that didn't count in any standings. So, the matchup is set. It's the Paul George finals, albeit without Paul George — who had arguably the best season of his career with the Thunder, averaging 28 points and finishing third in the MVP voting for 2018-19 — starting at OKC on Thursday. "Obviously, he wasn't here long but he had great years here," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said Saturday when asked about George's impact. "I mean, one of the best years of his career was here, one of the best individual seasons a player's had here — which is saying something here with the guys they've had. So, I have a lot of respect for him." ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/nba

The NBA Finals are set: It'll be Thunder vs. Pacers, starting Thursday night

The NBA Finals are set: It'll be Thunder vs. Pacers, starting Thursday night The seeds for the 2025 NBA Finals began getting planted unk...
'It'll be good for us': Chiefs using Super Bowl 59 defeat as fuelNew Foto - 'It'll be good for us': Chiefs using Super Bowl 59 defeat as fuel

Super Bowl 59 was a bit of an anomaly for some of the Kansas City Chiefs' younger players. The blowout loss was the first time the Chiefs 2022 draft class − players such as Trent McDuffie, George Karlaftis and Isiah Pacheco − had ended the season in a defeat. "It definitely serves as motivation going into the season. You never want to end the season like that," Karlaftis said to reporters at OTAs this week. "It's gonna be motivation for this year for sure." Winning has become part of the norm during the Patrick Mahomes era in Kansas City. The franchise has won seven straight AFC West titles and three Super Bowl titles since Mahomes officially became the starter in 2018. (Last year was also theninth consecutive division titlecaptured by the team.) The franchise was a win away from an historic three-peat before it all came crashing down in New Orleans on Feb. 9. As the Chiefs take part in OTAs this offseason, they areusing Super Bowl 59 loss as fuel. "When you lose a Super Bowl, I think there's sometimes in those workouts, you may be a little tired, you have that extra added motivation to finish even harder, finish even stronger. I think it'll be good for us at the end of the day," Mahomes explained. "I mean, obviously looking back, you want to win the game. But a lot these guys hadn't lost one (Super Bowl), hadn't ended the season on a loss that are on this team now. So, I'm sure they'll be motivated to go back out there and try to find a way to get to the Super Bowl and win it this year." Kansas City's offensive woes were a big reason why they were denied a third-straight Super Bowl title. Mahomes was sacked a career-high 36 times (including asingle-game most six times in the Super Bowl), he averaged a career-low 245 passing yards per game and his 26 touchdowns passes equaled a career-low since he became the team's starter. But like any good franchise, the Chiefs responded accordingly. The Chiefs revamped their offensive line by signing tackle Jaylon Moore in free agency, they moved Kingsley Suamataia inside to left guard and drafted tackle Josh Simmons in the first round. Simmons, who suffered a knee injury during his final season at Ohio State, is ahead of schedule in his rehab and is expected to be ready by training camp. The Ohio State product didn't allow a sack before he went down and has impressed thus far in Kansas City. "He's actually further ahead than I thought he was," Chiefs coach Andy Reid said this week of Simmons. "He's done a good job with what we've seen. We just got to get him in with the defense against him." On the outside, wide receiver should get a major boast by Rashee Rice's return to health. When Rice was injured in Week 4, he entered the week as the NFL's leader in catches and was second in yards. Rice worked out with Mahomes before OTA's kicked off and is back to looking like a No. 1 wide receiver. "He looks like Rashee (Rice). Obviously having the injury, it sucked," Mahomes said of Rice. "Happening so early in the season, he was back like right when the offseason started and so he was up here working hard – extremely hard and he was back home working extremely hard. I was throwing with him in Dallas a little bit and then getting him back out here, there's no limitations. He's out there playing, he's making plays on the football field, he's explosive, he looks fast. "I think he can be one of the best receivers in the league. Just to have him, to add with Xavier (Worthy) and Hollywood (Brown) and all these other guys that we have, it's another position I think (general manager Brett) Veach has done a great job of bringing in competition so that we can go out there and make a lot of plays happen." The Chiefs want to make more big pays happen through the air this season. Mahomes told reporters Reid's advised him to push the ball downfield more this season after averaging a career-low 6.8 yards per pass attempt last year. Rice's return to action, alongside of speedsters Worthy and Brown should help the Chiefs become more explosive on offense. "We're fast. I think that's probably the thing that stands out the most," Mahomes said. "Our job is to test the defenses down the field, and we have to get back to doing that if we want to open up other guys underneath. I think coach Reid has challenged me this offseason to push the ball down the field, let guys have chances to make plays and then once we get that back to where we want to in our standard that we believe we should have, then we can come back to the underneath stuff." The Chiefs' leaky O-line and stagnant passing attack are the preeminent reasons why they lost Super Bowl 59. The team's making it known they are motivated to fix the areas this offseason. Follow USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon on X@TheTylerDragon. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Chiefs using Super Bowl 59 loss as fuel for 2025

'It'll be good for us': Chiefs using Super Bowl 59 defeat as fuel

'It'll be good for us': Chiefs using Super Bowl 59 defeat as fuel Super Bowl 59 was a bit of an anomaly for some of the Kansas C...
Seven killed by bridge blasts in Russian regions bordering Ukraine on eve of peace talksNew Foto - Seven killed by bridge blasts in Russian regions bordering Ukraine on eve of peace talks

At least seven people were killed and 69 injured whentwo bridges were blown upin separate Russian regions bordering Ukraine ahead of planned peace talks aimed at ending thethree-year-old war in Ukraine, Russian officials said on Sunday. A highway bridge over a railway in theBryansk regionwas blown up at 10:50 pm on May 31 night just as a passenger train carrying 388 passengers to Moscow was passing underneath, Russian investigators said. Just four hours later, a railway bridge over a highway was blown up in theneighboring Kursk regionshowering the road with parts of a freight train, the investigators said. Russia's Investigative Committee, which probes serious crimes, linked the incidents and said explicitly that both bridges were blown up. In the Bryansk region, social media pictures and videos showed passengers trying to climb out of smashed carriages in the dark. Part of the passenger train was shown crushed under a collapsed road bridge and wrecked carriages lay beside the lines. "The bridge was blown up while the Klimovo-Moscow train was passing through with 388 passengers on board," Alexander Bogomaz, the region's governor, told Russian television. TheRussian regions bordering Ukrainehave been subject to frequent attacks by Ukraine since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. Both sides accuse the other of targeting civilians, and both deny such accusations. There was no immediate comment from Ukraine on the incidents, which took place just a day before the United States wants Russia and Ukraine to sit down to direct talks in Istanbul to discuss apossible end to a warwhich, according to Washington, has killed and injured at least 1.2 million people. Ukraine's HUR military intelligence agency said on June 1 that an explosion had derailed a Russian military train hauling cargo and fuel trucks near the settlement of Yakymivka, in a Russian-controlled part of Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region. The agency did not claim responsibility or attribute the explosion to anyone, though Ukraine has in the past claimed a series of attacks deep into Russia. Russian politicians lined up to blame Ukraine, saying it was clearly sabotage aimed at derailing the peace talkswhich the United States has demanded. "This is definitely the work of the Ukrainian special services," the chairman of the defence committee of the lower house of the Russian parliament, Andrei Kartapolov, told the SHOT Telegram channel. "All this is aimed at toughening the position of the Russian Federation and stoking aggression before the negotiations. And also to intimidate people. But they won't succeed." PresidentVladimir Putinwas briefed on the bridge blasts by the Federal Security Service (FSB) and the Emergency Ministry throughout the night, the Kremlin said. Putin also spoke to the governor of Bryansk, Alexander Bogomaz. U.S. PresidentDonald Trumphas demanded the sides make peace and he has threatened to walk away if they do not - potentially pushing responsibility for supporting Ukraine onto the shoulders of European powers. But as politicians talk of peace negotiations, the war is heating up, with swarms of drones launched by both Russia and Ukraine and Russian troops advancing at key points along the front in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainehas not committedto attending the talks in Turkey, saying it first needed to see Russia's proposals, while a leading U.S. senator warned Moscow it would be "hit hard" by new U.S. sanctions. (Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne and Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow, and reporters in Kyiv; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Saad Sayeed and William Mallard) This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Seven killed by bridge blasts in Russia on eve of Ukraine peace talks

Seven killed by bridge blasts in Russian regions bordering Ukraine on eve of peace talks

Seven killed by bridge blasts in Russian regions bordering Ukraine on eve of peace talks At least seven people were killed and 69 injured wh...
Tim Walz Tells Democrats to 'Be Meaner,' Calls Trump 'Cruel'New Foto - Tim Walz Tells Democrats to 'Be Meaner,' Calls Trump 'Cruel'

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks to delegates at the South Carolina Democratic Party Convention on Saturday-May 31, 2025. in Columbia, South Carolina. Credit - Meg Kinnard—AP Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz shared some stark words for Democrats on Saturday, calling for his fellow party members to "be a little meaner" in the pushback against President Donald Trump. "It's because he is," Walz said at the South Carolina Democratic Party Convention, addressing why he called Trump a "wannabe dictator." Walz ran as the Democratic Vice Presidential nominee with then-Presidential candidate Kamala Harris against Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance in 2024. Theformer public school teacherwas initially praised during the election for hisrelatabilityandMidwestern appeal. "'Oh, the Governor's being mean,' well, maybe it's time for us to be a little meaner, maybe it's time for us to be a little more fierce," Walz said. "We have to ferociously push back on this…the thing that bothers a teacher more than anything is to watch a bully." When the bully is a child, you teach them why bullying is wrong, Walz explained, but when the "bully is an adult like Donald Trump, you bully… him back." "At heart, this is a weak, cruel man," Walz said of Trump. Walz's comments come amid wider efforts among the Democratic Party to step toe-to-toe with Trump's far-reaching and sweeping changes at the federal government, which have seen him attempt to flex hisexecutive power in unprecedented ways. Other efforts from the Democratic Party and beyond include work by progressives like New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat, and Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who are currently holding rallies across the U.S. as part of their "Fighting Oligarchy" tour, in an attempt to push back against and highlight the growingpower of wealthy individualsin and around Trump's government. Read More:Sen. Bernie Sanders Issues Stark Warning About Trump During Surprise Coachella Appearance Meanwhile, leaders like Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy are looking for ways torebuild the Democratic Party, leaning further into economic populism in order to win elections, especially after the economy loomed so large during the 2024 campaigns. As the left is rocked by just the first few months of Trump's second term at the White House, Democratic leaders seem eager to embrace new ideas in the hope they can rebound in 2026 and—eventually—2028. Contact usatletters@time.com.

Tim Walz Tells Democrats to 'Be Meaner,' Calls Trump 'Cruel'

Tim Walz Tells Democrats to 'Be Meaner,' Calls Trump 'Cruel' Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks to delegates at the South Caroli...
The Memorial Tournament purse, payout: See prize money for every player, winnerNew Foto - The Memorial Tournament purse, payout: See prize money for every player, winner

TheMemorial Tournamentis in the final round at the esteemed Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, where the clash of the best golfers in the world is underway. The Memorial Tournament, a beacon of philanthropy, extends its support to numerous charities in collaboration with organizations like the Nicklaus Children's Healthcare Foundation, Nationwide Children's Hospital, and Stephen and Ayesha Curry's Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation. Despite this noble focus, the tournament offers a substantial prize purse for the top finishers at Muirfield Village Golf Club. The prize purse for the Memorial Tournament is an impressive $20 million, with the winner receiving $4 million. The second-place finisher will earn $2.2 million, while the third-place finisher will take home $1.4 million. Let's delve into the prize money distribution, shedding light on the substantial rewards that await the top finishers at the Memorial Tournament. More:When is the Ryder Cup 2025? Dates, time and what to know The total purse for the 2025 Memorial Tournament presented by Workday is $20 million. The first place winner will take home $4 million of the prize purse. Money amounts don't include ties. All figuresaccording to the PGA Tour First place: $4 million Second place: $2.2 million Third place: $1.4 million Fourth place: $1 million Fifth place: $840,000 Sixth place: $760,000 Seventh place: $700,000 Eighth place: $646,000 Ninth place: $600,000 10th: $556,000 11th: $514,000 12th: $472,000 13th: $430,000 14th: $389,000 15th: $369,000 16th: $349,000 17th: $329,000 18th: $309,000 19th: $289,000 20th: $269,000 21st: $250,000 22nd: $233,000 23rd: $216,000 24th: $200,000 25th: $184,000 26th: $168,000 27th: $161,000 28th: $154,000 29th: $147,000 30th: $140,000 31st: $133,000 32nd: $126,000 33rd: $119,000 34th: $114,000 35th: $109,000 36th: $104,000 37th: $99,000 38th: $94,000 39th: $90,000 40th: $86,000 41st: $80,000 42nd: $78,000 43rd: $74,000 44th: $70,000 45th: $66,000 46th: $62,000 47th: $58,000 48th: $56,000 49th: $54,000 50th: $52,000 This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:The Memorial Tournament purse, payout: 2025 prize money for PGA Tour

The Memorial Tournament purse, payout: See prize money for every player, winner

The Memorial Tournament purse, payout: See prize money for every player, winner TheMemorial Tournamentis in the final round at the esteemed ...
Exclusive: How ex-MLB player Eric Anthony learned his dad was Dodgers legend Willie DavisNew Foto - Exclusive: How ex-MLB player Eric Anthony learned his dad was Dodgers legend Willie Davis

LOS ANGELES —Eric Anthonywas always curious, but never obsessed, to learn the family secret. He grew up asking his mother about the identity of his biological father, but always received vague answers, saying it was a man who was briefly stationed at a San Diego Naval base. It didn't really matter. Anthony was surrounded by love in the family with three brothers, food on the table, clothes in the closet and a ballfield nearby. He was a star baseball player growing up in San Diego, drafted in 1986 by theHouston Astros, making his major-league debut three years later, and spending nine years in the big leagues. He lead the Astros with 19 homers and finished second with 80 RBIs in 1992 on a star-studded team that featured Hall of Famers Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio, along with Ken Caminiti, Steve Finley and Luis Gonzalez. It wasn't until eight years ago – Oct. 10, 2017 to be exact – that his oldest daughter, Erica, asked him if he would do a genealogy test. "She goes, 'Dad, I've been watching some of these ancestor DNA commercials,'" Anthony tells USA TODAY Sports. "She's always been curious who was on both sides of the family. ... "I spit in the bottle, sent out the DNA, and when it came back, I started getting all of these Davis' showing up in my profile. I had to investigate." He made a series of calls and wound up contacting a woman that showed up as one of the Davis relatives in Phoenix named Martha Burt Sells. He identified himself, and they figured out together they were cousins. Anthony explained his background and sent pictures of him in his baseball uniform where he played for Astros, Mariners, Reds, Rockies and Dodgers – when Sells stopped him cold. "Oh, so you're the second-most famous baseball player in our family," said Sells, who discovered two years earlier in a DNA test that her biological father and Davis' mother were brother and sister. "Who's the first?" Anthony said. "Well, my first cousin," Sells said. "Willie Davis." Yes,that Willie Davis. "My wife Googled him,'' Anthony said, "and then she started screaming, 'Oh my God, that's your father!'" Yes, the two-time All-Star, three-time Gold Glove winner and two-time World Series champion with the Los Angeles Dodgers. He still holds Dodgers franchise records since their move to Los Angeles for hits and triples. His 31-game hitting streak still remains the all-time Dodgers record. "I grew up loving Wally Moon and Duke Snider, and then Willie Davis came along," said Dodgers All-Star outfielder Rick Monday, who grew up in Santa Monica and became the first player selected in the history of the MLB draft in 1965. "Being a center fielder, I watched Willie really close because I was in awe of the way he ran after a ball and the way he ran the bases. His strides, he was like an antelope. He just devoured ground with every long stride that he took." Said Dusty Baker, who grew up in Riverside and won a World Series with the 1981 Dodgers: "We all wanted to be Willie Davis. He ran like a gazelle the way he would fly around the bases. We all tried to imitate him. We thought he was the coolest dude ever." Oh, could Davis run. He twice led the National League in triples. He stole 398 career bases, including 42 in 1964, and stole three bases in one game during the 1965 World Series. He was nicknamed "3-Dog" with his blazing speed. "He was such an important part of Dodger history," said former Dodgers GM Fred Claire, who spoke at Davis' memorial service in 2010. "He was so full of life, with such high energy and so extremely talented. Nothing was too big for him. There was no intimidation. Great speed. A very good arm. No one ran from first to third like Willie. Three steps between bags. What an athlete." Anthony, now 57, couldn't believe it. Everyone always wanted to know where he got his athleticism. Why did he gravitate towards baseball and not another sport? Why did everything seem so natural to him as a left-handed hitter? And, of course, why didn't his mother ever tell him the truth? "She could never give me a detailed answer," Anthony said. "You don't want to disrespect your parents. Just one of those things I kept inside. I thought maybe one day I'd find out. "And I did." Anthony confronted his mom, Jo Carole Ighner-Phillips, who died at the age of 82 in February, and she confirmed his dad indeed was Davis. She certainly didn't mean any harm in keeping the secret. She was a proud woman. She wasn't looking for a handout from a baseball star. She was just fine raising four boys by herself. "I wasn't angry with my mother or was I angry with Willie," said Anthony, who retired from baseball in 2001, after also playing in Japan and Mexico. "I think my mother was protecting all of us from any scandal and did the best thing for all parties involved. She was protecting me. And she was protecting Willie." Anthony's oldest brother, Michael Phillips, 66, knows that while Eric is now at peace, he can't hide the desire to have known when Davis was still alive. "My Mom was private as Eric, but she wanted to keep it away from everyone," Phillips said. "She was devastated that Eric found out the way he did. There was some tension there. It took a few weeks. "I can't imagine it happening to me. Willie Davis being your actual father, that's a little bit of a shocker." Anthony discovered that few people ever knew the identity of his father. No one knew on the Davis side. So, he started making calls. He introduced himself to family members he didn't know existed. He soon discovered he had two new half-sisters and a half-brother. "It was really strange, and just never connected the dots," said Thomas Davis, 87, Willie's oldest brother, who still lives in Los Angeles and struggles with his brother's death. "When we talked, I believed Eric. If someone was that interested in reaching out, and going through all that trouble, why wouldn't I believe him? "I just had no idea. I really wish we had known him growing up." Anthony, who lives in Houston with his wife, Robin and is now a proud grandparent, met Thomas Davis and three cousins in a Mexican restaurant in Irvine, California. They shared pictures and gasped at the resemblance. He couldn't believe how warmly he was embraced. "My uncle grabbed me and hugged me," Anthony said, "and said, 'You're giving me a piece of my little brother back.' "Of course, it was a shock to that side of the family at first since Willie was married. I was a love child. But now, it's like one big family." The families started reminiscing, and Anthony was reminded by his brother that Davis actually was at their house. In those days, everyone in the neighborhood were San Diego Padres fans, and when Davis was traded before the 1976 season to the Padres, he became a household name. "I remember there was this beautiful blue Corvette parked outside our apartment one afternoon," Phillips said, "and a kid runs up to me and says, 'Why is Willie Davis at your house?' I ran upstairs, and there he was sitting on the couch. "I didn't even put two and two together until later. I started playing everything back in my head. 'Oh my God, that's why he was at the house.' Said Anthony: "So, it looks like I did meet him twice. That day, and when my Mom took me to watch the Dodgers play the Padres when I was two years old." Anthony has since tried to learn as much about Davis as possible, collecting old photographs, jerseys, hats, magazine covers, everything relating to his dad. He has a small shrine to Davis at his Houston home. "When Eric reached and told me about the connection," Claire said, "I wanted to put Eric in touch with players that knew Willie. I reached out to Tommy Davis, Maury [Wills] and others. I wanted to give him the opportunity to know as much as he could about his dad. I sent him pictures I had of Willie. "He was quite fascinated by it." Anthony began sharing his discovery with Baker and Bill Russell, his former Dodgers manager who also played with Davis. He remembers the day he telephoned his close friend, actor Kenny Medlock, whom he met in 1992, to share his discovery. Medlock played nine years in the minor leagues before going Hollywood, appearing in 55 movies including "Moneyball." It was Medlock who telephoned Dodgers hitting coach Reggie Smith one day to recommend Anthony. "You talk about going full circle," Medlock said. "I met Willie Davis, got him into a bunch of movies, meet Eric, get Eric a job with the Dodgers, and then find out that Willie is his biological dad. "When Eric told me that was his father, it was just such a bombshell. I mean, this guy was special. He heard a different drummer drumming. He was not somebody you could control. He would have probably been a hippy if he wasn't a baseball player." Anthony, who started his own technology company, relishes hearing from his father's old friends and acquaintances. He loves hearing the stories, especially from Davis' brother, Thomas. Thomas told him that Willie's first love was basketball, but it was Dodgers scout Kenny Myers who saw his blazing speed as a track-and-field star, and was the one converted him into a left-handed-hitting outfielder, just like Anthony. "Eric is a very quiet guy, he doesn't say much," Phillips said, "but I think Eric finding out about his father is a turning moment in his life. It's important just for Eric to understand what happened. He's still in a fog, but in a euphoric way. This will help bring some closure and some openings too." Now that Anthony knows that Davis is his father, his would love to honor his legacy by correcting a wrong. Strangely, Davis has never appeared on a single Hall of Fame ballot. Not on the Baseball Writers' Association of America ballot. Not on a veterans committee ballot. Davis, who accumulated 2,561 hits and stole 384 bases to go along with his three Gold Glove awards, has the highest career WAR (60.7) never to appear on a Hall of Fame ballot. The 1985 BBWAA ballot included 41 players – with Lou Brock and Catfish Hunter each elected in their first year of eligibility – but Davis never appeared, despite his 2,561 hits, 398 stolen bases and 182 home runs. He is one of only 10 players in baseball history who has achieved those numbers, and seven are in the Hall of Fame. "Willie has not been given the respect he deserves in his career," Anthony said. "Look what he has done. He ranks first in all-time hits in [Los Angeles] Dodgers' history. He helped them win two World Series titles. It's just baffling to me that he never appeared on a Hall of Fame ballot." The biggest hindrance to Davis' candidacy in his first year of eligibility in 1985 that 11 players who had been previously dropped off the ballot, were reinstated by a special committee that year. They added Dick Allen, Ken Boyer, Clay Carroll, Ron Fairly, Curt Flood, Harvey Haddix, Denny McLain, Dave McNally, Vada Pinson, Ron Santo and Wilbur Wood, dramatically reducing the first-year eligible players. "I mean, at the very least," Anthony said, "he should have his number retired by the Dodgers. Nobody should be wearing No. 3 again.'' The last Dodger to wear No. 3 is Chris Taylor, who was just released last week. Anthony can't help but wonder, too, if his baseball career might have been different if he had known Davis was his father. What if Davis had reached out and accepted him as his son while he was growing up. They lived only 100 miles away from one another with Davis in Los Angeles and Anthony in San Diego, later playing for the same team 24 years apart. Just how cool would it have been to have father-son pictures at Dodger Stadium? "I often think about that, having my father in my life," Anthony said. "This guy was a major-league legend, no way around it. To have a conversation with him, asking him certain questions, to have that knowledge and experience, I'm sure it would have improved my career. "I wish I would have had my dad around, but you can't be stuck in life with what-ifs. I have a new brother, two sisters, and a host of uncles and aunts. "My life is complete. It's like being on a deserted island all of these years, and then somebody found you. "I know who I am now." – The Pittsburgh Pirates are flatly rebuking all interest from teams wanting to engage in trade talks for ace Paul Skenes, but will listen to offers on every other player but him and outfielder Oneil Cruz. Two intriguing players are third baseman Ke'Bryan Hayes and outfielder Bryan Reynolds. They were each expected to become cornerstone pieces of the franchise and both have struggled, with the Pirates expected to put them on the market at the trade deadline. Reynolds is in the third year of an eight-year, $106.75 million deal, the largest in club history. Hayes is in the fourth year of an eight-year, $70 million extension. – The Miami Marlins' plan to enhance ace Sandy Alcantara's trade value by hanging onto him until the deadline has backfired – at least in the early-going. Alcantara, who's returning from Tommy John surgery, is yielding a hideous 8.47 ERA, allowing the most earned runs of any pitcher in baseball. – It looks like the ABS challenge system will be on hold for another year after feedback MLB received from players this spring. It will likely be implemented for 2027. – The Arizona Diamondbacks are resisting any urge to make a rash move and dismiss manager Torey Lovullo, who suddenly is drawing the ire of their fanbase with their recent struggles. They dropped to 27-30 after losing eight of their last nine games entering Saturday. "These are very challenging times, I'm not going to lie," Lovullo said. "We're in a huge grind, every one of us. We're a really good baseball team, and we should not be three games under .500." The Diamondbacks' pitching and sloppy defense have been the culprits. They scored six or more runs 23 times this season, but have lost a major-league leading 10 of those games, including three games in which they've scored 11 runs. – Phillies All-Star first baseman Bryce Harper echoed the Phillies' front-office sentiments when hetold the Philadelphia Inquirerthat he can't imagine Kyle Schwarber not coming back to Philadelphia as a free agent this winter. "I don't see him playing anywhere else," Harper said. "Obviously I don't make those decisions. But as a team leader and a captain and everything else, he brings so much value to our team." Schwarber, signed to a four-year, $79 million contract before the 2022 season, has hit 149 home runs, third behind only Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani in that time. "He's just learned such a good way of bringing a team together," Harper said. "He does such a great job of that." – The Dodgers are scouring the market these days for a left-handed hitting bat off the bench. – The Cincinnati Reds' patience with former All-Star closer Alexis Diaz evaporated when they sent him to the Dodgers this past week for minor-league pitcher Mike Villani, with the Dodgers picking up the remaining $3 million in Diaz's contract this year. The Reds became exasperated with Diaz, and he was showing no signs of getting back to his All-Star form at Class AAA Louisville. "I felt it was the best thing for everybody involved just to have a change of scenery," Nick Krall, Reds president of baseball operations, told reporters. The Dodgers, who will work with Diaz at their minor-league camp in Arizona, have suddenly become desperate for bullpen help. Former closer Evan Phillips is undergoing Tommy John surgery this week, and they still are without Blake Treinen, Kirby Yates, Michael Kopech and Brusdar Graterol. The Dodgers shelled out a four-year, $72 million contract for closer Tanner Scott last winter, but he has struggled, blowing five saves with a 4.62 ERA. He had only six blown saves the past two seasons combined with Miami and San Diego. "I think, performance-wise, he hasn't performed the way any of us expected, him included," manager Dave Roberts said. – Scouts already are keeping an eye on Boston Red Sox reliever Aroldis Chapman, who will be a hot commodity at the trade deadline if the Red Sox fall out of the AL East race. – Cool moment at the Yankees-Dodgers epic weekend series when Yankees manager Aaron Boone spotted Dodgers Hall of Fame broadcaster Jaime Jarrín, pulled a cell phone from the back picket of his uniform, and snapped a selfie. "Hey, he's a legend," Boone said. – Pirates manager Don Kelly is drawing rave reviews from his players, and is showing why the Boston Red Sox nearly hired him after the 2020 season. He was one of three finalists with Alex Cora and Sam Fuld. Kelly has since turned down several job interviews, including the Chicago White Sox, Cleveland and New York Mets, to remain in Pittsburgh with his family before being promoted. – Toronto Blue Jays slugger Anthony Santander has looked nothing like the man they signed to a five-year, $92.5 million contract during the winter. He's now on the injured list with left shoulder inflammation after hitting just .179 with six homers and striking out a career-high 26.3% of the time. He looks like a shadow of himself after hitting 44 homers a year ago for Baltimore. – The Houston Astros and Billy Wagner are taking no shortcuts celebrating his Hall of Fame induction ceremony this summer with friends and family. They have sent out invitations for Wagner's closest friends and family for two seats on the Astros' team charter to Cooperstown, including a hotel room and ground transportation for the weekend to be at Wagner's celebratory party. – Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo openly roots for Paul Skenes in every game he doesn't pitch against him, forming a relationship at last year's All-Star game when he made Skenes the starting pitcher after just 11 starts. "I spent a little bit of personal time with him, and I don't think a lot of people get to do that that aren't inside of his organization or his circle," Lovullo says. "I will always treasure those times. Special kid, great for the game. 'When we're not facing him, I am a fan." – Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts, who broke his toe walking to the bathroom at his home last Wednesday night, is expected to return to the lineup this week. There has been no temptation to move him back to right field as the Dodgers did a year ago. "He's a major league shortstop, on a championship club …" Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told reporters. "He looks like a major league shortstop right now, where last year there were many times I didn't feel that way." – Classic response by Atlanta ace Spencer Strider when Hall of Fame writer Jayson Stark asked him about pitching in Philadelphia's raucous environment. "I love pitching here," Strider said. "I mean, where else do they chant your name and ask you how your family's doing? They seem very interested in my well-being, and I appreciate that." – So much for that feel-goodTim Anderson comeback story. He was released last week by the Angels after an ugly slash line of .205/.258/.241 in 90 plate appearances. This is the second time the former batting champion has been released in the last nine months. – Just in case Mets owner Steve Cohen didn't have a big enough checking account, his hopes for an $8 billion casino next to Citi Field moved ever so close after a bill in the state Senate approved the project, now needing only Gov. Kathy Hochul's signature. – Cal Raleigh of the Seattle Mariners is resurrecting memories of Hall of Fame catcher Mike Piazza. Raleigh, who already has the most homers by an catcher through the first four seasons of their career, is now having an MVP season in the non-Aaron Judge division. He already has 21 homers, the most by a catcher before June in history. He's on pace for 57 home runs this season, which would shatter Salvador Perez's record of 48 homers in 2021 with the Royals. – Remember when the Boston Red Sox gave second baseman Kristian Campbell an eight-year, $60 million deal and looked like geniuses when he hit .301 with four homers and an .902 OPS through April? Well, he has crashed down to earth in May, hitting .137 with just one extra base hit and a .368 OPS. – The Houston Astros say they are on the lookout for starting pitching after losing Ronel Blanco. He is the third Astros' starter to go down in the season's first two months, joining Hayden Wesneski who underwent Tommy John surgery last week, and Spencer Arrighetti (broken thumb). – Rough week for Marlins second baseman Ronny Simon. He committed three errors in three innings, ran off the field in tears while teammates and coaches tried to console him, and then was designated for assignment two days later. – The Yankees plan for Jazz Chisholm to return to third base when he returns from the IL with DJ LeMahieu playing second. – Phillies ace Zack Wheeler can blame Atlanta if he's not in the Cy Young debate at the end of the season. He as a 9.28 ERA in two starts against Atlanta this year and a 1.93 ERA in his 10 starts against everyone else. – What's it like being Shohei Ohtani's teammate? "You don't want to miss any of his at-bats," new Dodgers outfielder Michael Conforto said. "You want to be in the dugout. You want to see it in person. That's kind of what it is being his teammate. You want to be there." – Congratulations to Atlanta's Chris Sale who recorded his2,500thstrikeoutfaster than any pitcher in history, accomplishing the feat in 2,206 innings, eclipsing Hall of Famer Randy Johnson, who achieved the milestone in 2,107 innings. Sale idolized Johnson growing up, and still cherishes the text message he received from Johnson last winter when he won the Cy Young award. – TheColorado Rockies, if you can believe it, are now on pace to go 26-136. Follow Nightengale on X:@Bnightengale This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How ex-MLB player learned his dad was Dodgers legend Willie Davis

Exclusive: How ex-MLB player Eric Anthony learned his dad was Dodgers legend Willie Davis

Exclusive: How ex-MLB player Eric Anthony learned his dad was Dodgers legend Willie Davis LOS ANGELES —Eric Anthonywas always curious, but n...
Stonewall veterans sound alarm over Trump's attempt to erase trans historyNew Foto - Stonewall veterans sound alarm over Trump's attempt to erase trans history

NEW YORK – Out of nowhere, through the open back door of the police van, came a rhinestone-studded high heel. The drag queen rocking the pump kicked an officer in the shoulder, knocking him to the ground and sending him skidding across the pavement. The growing crowd outside theStonewall Innhowled as he got up, dusted himself off and charged into the back of the van with such ferocity that the door slammed behind him. Then ghastly noises exploded from inside the vehicle – "bone against metal, flesh against metal, and a dreary, dreary liquid sound that shocked everybody, I mean,shockedus," recalled Martin Boyce, a Stonewall regular who witnessed the events unfold in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969. The role of transgender people in theStonewall riots– a monumental moment in the fight for LGBTQ+ equality – is undisputed and well documented. A police raid on the popular gay bar in New York's Greenwich Village, amid the tumultuous events of the late 1960s, touched off six days of rioting considered the spark that ignited the modernLGBTQ+ rightsmovement. The bar's patrons – a colorful cocktail of gay men, lesbians, trans people, bikers and street kids – had survived police harassment and similar raids many other times. By the time police barged into the bar that unusually hot summer morning, they'd had enough. They fought back, with the fists and fury of a people tired of being targeted and condemned for who they are. The Stonewall riots represent such a significant chapter in American history that PresidentBarack Obamadesignated the bar's exterior, an adjacent park and the surrounding streets a national monument in 2016 so that what happened there, and the people involved, would never be forgotten. Less than a decade later, PresidentDonald Trumpwants Americans to remember only part of the story. In February, theNational Park Servicestripped references to transgender people from the monument'swebsite. The move was part of Trump's broader campaign to recognize the existence of just two sexes – male and female – and combat what he calls "gender ideology." Trans people who battled police alongside gay men and lesbians at Stonewall have now been erased from the government's official history of that event. "That's just wrong," said Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, who participated in the riots and now lives in Little Rock, Arkansas. Miss Major, as she is known, is a transgender activist who has argued for years that trans Americans' involvement in Stonewall has never been fully acknowledged. Mark Segal, a gay rights activist from Philadelphia who was inside Stonewall the night of the raid, is appalled by Trump's attempt at trans-washing LGBTQ+history. "I am a witness to history, and my trans brothers and sisters were with me that night," Segal said. "I won't allow him to censor history. I want people to realize that when a government tries to erase a group of people, that's dangerous." Segal was at the back of the bar, near the dance floor, where other young people hung out, when police came barreling through. It was 1:20 a.m., a Saturday. Segal, then 18, had been in New York for just six weeks. Growing up in Philadelphia, he had felt as if he were the only gay man in the world. Gay men were practically invisible in 1969. He had heard that Greenwich Village was a place where people could be themselves, so he headed to New York and found his way to Christopher Street in the heart of the city's gay scene. There, he found a circle of friends like himself. He found Stonewall. Fredd "Tree" Sequoia had discovered Greenwich Village a few years earlier. He had heard about it from a friend. So one day, while he was a teenager, he snuck off from his home in Brooklyn and boarded a train to the city. He was so taken by the neighborhood's thriving mixture of clubs, coffee shops and easy sex that he moved there and never left. Stonewall opened in early 1967 and quickly became his main hangout. He was there, along with Segal and others, dancing at the back of the bar, when the police charged in. What happened next is legend, one that has been repeated and embellished so often that it can be hard to separate fact from fiction. About 200 people were inside the bar that morning. Some, like Sequoia, were dancing. Others were just standing around, talking to friends, openly flirting, something that could have gotten them arrested in an era where same-sex relations were considered deviant and criminal. Suddenly, the lights in the bar blinked on, and the music stopped. Sequoia heard a friend known as Gypsy scream at the top of his lungs, "Don't touch me!" Then, pandemonium. A dozen or so police officers moved swiftly through the bar. They justified the raid by saying they were investigating the illegal sale of alcohol. Until 1966, New York had barred the sale of booze to known or suspected homosexuals. Gay bars like Stonewall had tried to get around that rule by operating as private clubs, but with homosexuality a crime, they were still easy targets and often subjected to police raids and brutality. Officers smashed bottles of liquor against the bar, shattered the jukebox and cigarette machine and shoved people up against the wall. "I was scared out of my mind," Segal said. "I had never seen such violence in my life." Police demanded to see IDs. Most patrons, including Segal and Sequoia, were eventually allowed to leave. Trans people were isolated in a back room so police could examine them to verify their gender. Some refused to cooperate. Lesbians in the front of the bar recoiled at what they considered unnecessary frisking. One reportedly punched a cop. Honoring the past:10 great places where LGBTQ history was made Out on the street, rumors of the raid spread. A crowd gathered in front of the bar and watched as police officers yanked drag queens and trans people through the door, some kicking and screaming, and shoved them into the back of a waiting van. "They were just rude," said Miss Major, who was in the crowd. "They put their hand where it didn't belong. They shoved them and pushed them around and then they didn't help us when we had to go up the steps to the paddy wagon." Boyce and a friend, Robert "Birdie" Rivera, were on their way to Stonewall when the raid happened. They were dressed in "scare drag" – a looser gender-bending style that would later be popularized by the singer Boy George – instead of full drag, which could have gotten them thrown in jail. Police were known to arrest anyone who wasn't wearing at leastthree items of clothingthat corresponded to their gender at birth. Losing the rainbow:National brands used to celebrate Pride Month. Then came the DEI backlash. All at once, Boyce, then 21, felt a surge of people behind him that seemed unusual, even for a weekend. He looked toward Stonewall and could see the police cars' red bubble lights, twirling and brightening up the night sky. The crowd was pushing toward the bar. Boyce and Rivera headed in that direction. By the time they got to Stonewall, the number of onlookers had grown and formed a semi-circle outside the bar's doors. Boyce watched as an officer dragged the skinny queen in the rhinestone-studded pumps out the door. The bystanders giggled as she fought back and the officer struggled to get her into the police van. They laughed harder when she kicked him to the pavement with her sparkly footwear. He got up and bolted into the vehicle. When the beating was over, he stepped back onto the sidewalk, jaws clenched, Boyce recalls, and barked at the crowd: "You faggots! You saw what you came to see. Now get out of here!" Instead of scattering, the onlookers moved in his direction. Boyce could see the officer's anger rise as he commanded the crowd to disperse and ducked back inside the bar. Exactly what turned the resistance into a riot remains an open debate. By some accounts, the tipping point was the lesbian punching the officer. Boyce suggests it was the officer's menacing response after he was kicked to the ground. Whatever the cause, the crowd's frustration gave way to fury. "People started throwing things at the door, whether it be coins from their pockets or a stone they picked up, or an empty can of soda," Segal said. Segal saw drag queens, loud and boisterous, hurl anything that wasn't fastened to the street. "Whoever assumes that a swishy queen can't fight should have seen them, makeup dripping and gowns askew, fighting for their home and fiercely proving that no one would take it away from them," he would write in amemoirpublished in 2015. Sequoia observed rioters pull a parking meter out of the ground and use it to batter the doors of the bar, where the police had barricaded themselves. Others watched the rioting from the windows of nearby apartments and encouraged the queens to keep fighting back. "You heard people in the buildings around there yelling out their windows at the girls beating the police up," Miss Major said. "Some people yelled out, 'Go get 'em, girls!' The fact that we were attacking the police was a big deal." The rebellion spread to the surrounding streets. Police called in the riot squad for reinforcements. As they advanced in line formation, wearing riot helmets and holding shields, they were taunted by a group of young men who locked arms and formed a Rockette-style kick line, chanting to the melody of the vaudeville tune "Ta Ra Ra Boom-de-Ay": "We are the Stonewall girls. "We wear our hair in curls ..." By 4:30 a.m., the rioting had died down. Thirteen people were arrested, including Stonewall employees and customers. At least two of those arrested were drag queens, according to an account provided by theLibrary of Congress. The next afternoon, Karla Jay, a feminist activist who lived nearby, heard about the uprising on the radio and headed over to check out the scene. Police barricades were stationed at each end of the street. Empty cans and debris were everywhere. Knots of people gathered along Christopher Street, furious about what had happened and insisting that something had to be done. Visibility:Portion of US adults identifying as LGBTQ has more than doubled in last 12 years For the next five days, spontaneous outbursts and demonstrations continued, involving several thousand people at times. Groups like theGay Liberation Frontformed, demanding an end to police brutality and equality for all. A month later, a small but boisterous group of protesters marched to Stonewall from nearby Washington Square Park, halting traffic and shouting "gay power" and other slogans. "We felt it was a great victory," Jay recalled. "We had walked that far, and nobody had attacked us. There we were, out in the daylight. It was very liberating." That demonstration, on July 27, was New York's first openly gay pride march. A movement had been born. Today, June is celebrated asPride Monthin the United States and many other countries because of the trans, lesbian and gay activists who rose up at Stonewall. The history of the LGBTQ+ rights movement is often told in two parts: before and after Stonewall. The bar, still operating from the same Christopher Street location, is now a mecca for LGBTQ+ people from around the world and anyone concerned about equality. Next door, avisitors centeroccupies space that was once part of the bar. Tour guides include Stonewall among their stops at important New York City landmarks. Men and women too young to remember a time when same-sex relations were a crime pose for photos in front of the red-brick facade, with its arched doorway and neon sign in the window. "This is the home to everybody who is gay," said Sequoia, now 86, who works at the bar on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays as the host and resident storyteller. "They all know about it – all over the world. Even in countries where it's illegal to be homosexual, people know about Stonewall, and they come here to see it." Inside, the dark-paneled walls are decorated with memorabilia reflecting the bar's history. A framed newspaper clipping from July 6, 1969, recounts the raid, beneath a derogatory headline from the New York Sunday News: "Homo Nest Raided, Queen Bees Are Stinging Mad." At the entrance hangs the placard that police placed on the front door following the events of that summer nearly six decades ago. "THIS IS A RAIDED PREMISES," it announces in all caps. Just across the street, black-and-white photos hanging on the wrought-iron fence surrounding Christopher Park show prominent figures and moments in the push for LGBTQ+ equality. At the center of the park, white-finished "Gay Liberation" sculptures by the artist George Segal depict two men standing next to each other, the hand of one resting on the other's shoulder. Two other life-size figures are of women seated on a bench, one's hand resting on the other's lap. The park, with its brick paving and benches, is part of theStonewall National Monument, a 7.7-acre site that includes the bar's exterior and the surrounding streets where much of the rioting happened. Keeping Stonewall's legacy alive and educating younger generations is important because "if you don't know your past, you may not have a future," said Stacy Lentz, one of the bar's current owners. Stonewall veterans, members of the community and Americans across the country are infuriated by the elimination of trans people from the National Park Service's website. The White House did not respond to a request for comment. But the Park Service said in a statement to USA TODAY that references to transgender people were removed to align with Trump's executive orders recognizing just two genders and targeting diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Lentz said she was stunned by the Trump administration's decision. "In the days right after (the riots) and in terms of keeping the movement alive, when a lot of other gay and lesbian and bi people were more and more scared, a lot oftrans folks were more vocal– maybe because they felt like they had nothing to lose." In the decades since, they continue to face threats. Trans women, in particular, have remained easy targets for criminals and politicians. More than 2,800 hate crimes were recorded against LGBTQ+ people in 2023, according to areportby the Human Rights Campaign, a gay rights advocacy group. Of those, nearly 550 were committed against transgender people or people whose gender identity fell outside traditional gender norms and roles, the report said. In 2024, more than 500 anti-LGBTQ+ bills were introduced in state legislatures, and more than 40 became law in 14 states, the report said. The previous year, lawmakers approved more than 85 anti-LGBTQ+ laws. Most of them specifically targeted trans people, limiting their access to gender-affirming medical care, public restrooms and school sports. Study:LGBTQ youth, family relocate amid increasing anxiety over laws directed at them Stonewall is the only federal monument dedicated to LGBTQ+ history, which makes its preservation all the more meaningful, Segal said. "If you want to feel proud of the civil rights movement that was led by numerous people throughout the years, you might go to thePettus Bridge(in Alabama)," he said. "You might come toIndependence Hall(in Philadelphia) if you want to feel proud about patriotism in America. If you want to feel proud about the building of the LGBTQ community and where that started, you come to Stonewall." That's why it's so important to tell the uncensored story of Stonewall, the movement it started, and the people involved, including those who are trans, Segal said. "We had to fight back (at Stonewall), and we will continue to fight back now against this administration," he said. He's confident that, just like on that hot summer morning in 1969, they will prevail. Follow Michael Collins on X @mcollinsNEWS. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Stonewall vets sound alarm over Trump attempt to erase trans history

Stonewall veterans sound alarm over Trump's attempt to erase trans history

Stonewall veterans sound alarm over Trump's attempt to erase trans history NEW YORK – Out of nowhere, through the open back door of the ...

 

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