Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administrationNew Foto - Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration

Over the past six months, Vice President JD Vance has shown how much of a key player he has become in the Trump administration, serving as the president's most prominent advocate and advancing his agenda. The latest example came this week, when Vance helped push President Donald Trump's massive tax and spending bill through Congress. Vance held a series of meetings with conservative and moderate holdouts and Senate leadership last Saturday to help move the bill forward. A source with direct knowledge stated that Vance played a key role in talking with Senate holdouts throughout the bill before he ended up casting several tie-breaking votes as president of the Senate and move the spending bill along to the House. Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski,who had been critical of the bill's cuts to Medicaid and SNAP -- the food assistance program --met with Vance, where he thanked her for being a team player despite her concerns with the legislation, just before she voted for the bill. During the sprint to push the bill through, Vance was criticized for hissocial postaround concerns of the bill's impact on Medicaid, writing that "the minutiae of the Medicaid policy—is immaterial compared to the ICE money and immigration enforcement provisions." During all this, Vance was making phone calls to Trump and the two were updating each other on their talks with senators ahead of the bill's passage. The vice president attended Wednesday's meeting at the White House between Trump and several holdouts from the House as the president ramped up the pressure to vote for the bill. North Carolina GOP Rep. Greg Murphy, who had told reporters on Wednesday night that he was still undecided because of some of the health care provisions, said Thursday that he ultimately decided to support the package after speaking on the phone to Vance and the president. "I needed assurances," he said. A source close to Vance said that he continued to work the phones ahead of the floor vote on the rule, calling multiple House GOP holdouts to make the administration's case for them to support the bill. However, it's not just on the domestic policy front that Vance is having an impact. He has also been critical in supporting Trump's foreign policy. MORE: Holdouts say Trump promised he'd 'make the bill better' in the future While Trump was weighing the decision to strike Iran's nuclear sites, Vance came to the president's defense after supporters like Tucker Carlson and those in the MAGA base were outspoken against the U.S. getting involved in the conflict between Israel and Iran. "He may decide he needs to take further action to end Iranian enrichment. That decision ultimately belongs to the president," Vance wrote on X. "And of course, people are right to be worried about foreign entanglement after the last 25 years of idiotic foreign policy. But I believe the president has earned some trust on this issue. And having seen this up close and personal, I can assure you that he is only interested in using the American military to accomplish American people's goals. Whatever he does, that is his focus." Vance's comments were a departure from his prior statements that the U.S. should not get entangled in foreign conflicts. A prime example is the vice president's opposition to the U.S. providing more aid to Ukraine. "I gotta be honest with you, I don't really care what happens to Ukraine one way or another," Vance said in February 2022, amid an explosion of bipartisan support for the country following the aftermath of Russia's invasion. Most recently,Vance expressed concernsabout the president's decision to strike the Houthis in Yemen in a Signal group chat with other top administration officials. "I am not sure the president is aware how inconsistent this is with his message on Europe right now," Vance wrote in the chat. "There's a further risk that we see a moderate to severe spike in oil prices. I am willing to support the consensus of the team and keep these concerns to myself. But there is a strong argument for delaying this a month, doing the messaging work on why this matters, seeing where the economy is, etc." In the lead-up to the strikes, Trump was trying to engage the MAGA base with Vance to see what their reaction would be if he ordered the bombing. Prior to the strikes, Trump told reporters on Air Force One while flying back from the G7 summit in Canada that it was possible he could send Vance and special envoy Steve Witkoff to meet with Iranian negotiators. Vance's active role in moving Trump's agenda forward was always part of the plan. In November, following the election,a source close to the vice president told ABC Newsthat Vance had been tasked to ensure that all of the priorities of the Trump administration move forward and would work on any of the issues Trump needed him to further, signaling that the vice president would not be assigned one specific issue to work on, but would be involved in several policy issues. It was also expected that Vance would be Trump's "eyes and ears" in the Senate to ensure that his agenda moves forward, the source also said. It's familiar territory for Vance, who was elected to the Senate in 2022. All this comes as Vance is viewed by some as the MAGA heir apparent to Trump ahead of the 2028 election. At the same time, he is working to raise as much money as possible for Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterms as chair of the Republican National Committee -- the first time a vice president has ever held the role. Joel Goldstein, a vice-presidential scholar and former professor at Saint Louis University Law School, told ABC News that Vance is working in a different timeline compared to his predecessors, as he will serve only one term as vice president under Trump. "Every vice presidency is different and one of the things that is unique about Vance's is that every other vice president, you know, with the possible exception of Harris, entered office with the expectation that the president was going to run for reelection," Goldstein said. "I think he's in a very unique position in that his first term as vice president is his last, and so his presidential ambitions, the time for reckoning comes up, you know, much quicker than is normally the case." Following his tie-breaking votes in the Senate, several Democrats who might be opponents in the 2028 presidential election attempted to make Vance the face of Trump's spending bill. In a post on X, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg called out Vance for casting the tie-breaking vote to allow the bill to move forward. "VP Vance has cast the deciding vote in the Senate to cut Medicaid, take away food assistance, blow up the deficit, and add tax breaks for the wealthiest," Buttigieg wrote. "This bill is unpopular because it is wrong," he continued. California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsomtold Americans on Xto "bookmark" this moment, writing that "JD Vance is the ultimate reason why 17 million Americans will lose their healthcare." In an interview with NBC News, Trump pointed to Vance and Secretary of State and interim national security adviser Marco Rubio as possible successors, and said, when asked, that he believes his MAGA movement can survive without him. Asked about the president's comments, Vance said that if he does end up running for president, he's "not entitled to it."

Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration

Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration Over the past six months, Vice President JD Vance has shown how...
Budget bill includes $10B payday for states that spent on border securityNew Foto - Budget bill includes $10B payday for states that spent on border security

Tucked into the budget reconciliation bill is a Texas-sized golden nugget: $13.5 billion that could pay back what thestate spent on border securityduring the Biden administration. The bill – which passed Congress on July 3 – doesn't mention Texas by name. ButTexas Gov. Greg Abbott lobbied hardfor the line item's inclusion, and the state's Republican Sens.Ted Cruzand John Cornyn fought for the reimbursement. "Under Operation Lone Star, Texas allocated more than $11 billion of Texas taxpayer money for border security, and earlier this year I requested Congress reimburse Texas for these costs in full," Abbott said in a May statement, after an initial version of the bill passed in the House of Representatives. The new "State Border Border Security Reinforcement Fund" earmarks $10 billion for grants to states that paid for border barriers or other security measures beginning Jan. 20, 2021 – PresidentJoe Biden's inauguration day. Notably, during the Biden administration, no other state spent more than Texas on border security measures. Under Operation Lone Star, the state deployed thousands of Texas National Guard troops to the border, placed controversial buoy barriers in the Rio Grande and paid tobus more than 100,000 migrantsto Democrat-led cities around the country. Abbott was one of Biden's leading critics on the border during a period when the Border Patrol was registering more than 2 million migrant encounters a year – many of them lawful asylum-seekers. The "reinforcement" provision "just says 'states can apply.' But what states incurred expenses? Texas and Arizona," said Adam Isacson, director of defense oversight for the Washington Office on Latin America. Early during the Biden administration, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, sought to build a makeshift border barrier out of old shipping containers. But legal challenges forced his administration to remove the barrier, and his Democratic successor, Gov. Katie Hobbs, had previously asked the Biden administrationto reimburse the state for border securityfunding totaling $513 million. The budget reconciliation bill includes an additional $3.5 billion under a fund whose acronym spells BIDEN: "Bridging Immigration-related Deficits Experienced Nationwide." That money can be disbursed to states that aid the federal government in its immigration crackdown. In an emailed response to questions, Abbott Press Secretary Andrew Mahaleris declined to say how much money Texas will apply for but told USA TODAY the governor "will continue to work closely with the Trump administration to secure the border. " This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Budget bill includes $10B for states that spent on border security

Budget bill includes $10B payday for states that spent on border security

Budget bill includes $10B payday for states that spent on border security Tucked into the budget reconciliation bill is a Texas-sized golden...
Paintsil scores 2 goals, Nascimento adds 1 goal, Galaxy beat Whitecaps 3-0New Foto - Paintsil scores 2 goals, Nascimento adds 1 goal, Galaxy beat Whitecaps 3-0

CARSON, Calif. (AP) — Joseph Paintsil had two goals, Matheus Nascimento also scored a goal and the LA Galaxy beat the Vancouver Whitecaps 3-0 on Friday night to snap a three-game winless streak. LA (2-13-6), the defending MLS Cup champion, won for the first time since it beat Real Salt Lake 2-0 on May 31 to snap a 16-game winless streak to open the season. The Galaxy went into the game with 13 points, fewest in all of MLS. The Whitecaps (11-4-5) have lost three of their last four. Vancouver is second in the Western Conference with 38 points, behind San Diego (39). Edwin Cerrillo flicked a shot from 30 yards outs that was deflected by goalkeeper Yohei Takaoka and Nascimento put away the rebound with afirst-touch finishto open the scoring in the second minute. Paintsil made it 2-0 in the 60th. Gabriel Pec played an long arcing ball to the top of the penalty box, where Marco Reus tapped a first-touch pass to a wide-open Paintsil, who calmly flicked a shot inside the back post from the left side of the area. Paintsil converted from the penalty spot in the 77th minute for his first career multi-goal game. The 27-year-old forward has three goals and one assist this season after he finished with 10 goals and 10 assists last season, his first in MLS. Takaoka had five saves for Vancouver. Jayden Nelson was shown a yellow card in the 55th minute and another in stoppage time as the Whitecaps played a man down for the final few minutes. Novak Micovic had a save for LA. The Galaxy had 55% possession and outshot Vancouver 12-6, 8-1 on target. The Whitecaps beat the Galaxy 2-1 at home on March 2. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Paintsil scores 2 goals, Nascimento adds 1 goal, Galaxy beat Whitecaps 3-0

Paintsil scores 2 goals, Nascimento adds 1 goal, Galaxy beat Whitecaps 3-0 CARSON, Calif. (AP) — Joseph Paintsil had two goals, Matheus Nasc...
Spanish coach of India's soccer team leaves. Sport is also troubled at the club levelNew Foto - Spanish coach of India's soccer team leaves. Sport is also troubled at the club level

Manolo Márquez has left his position by mutual consent as head coach of India's soccer team after just one win in eight games and less than a year in the job. The Spanish coach's only victory was in a 3-0 friendly over the Maldives in March. More important is qualification for the 2027 Asian Cup but a draw with Singapore and a 1-0 loss in Hong Kong in June has put India's chances of a third successive appearance at the tournament in doubt. "After careful evaluation, both coach Márquez and the federation recognized that the objectives we had set out to achieve a year ago were not progressing as intended," Kalyan Chaubey, president of the All India Football Federation (AIFF), told The Associated Press on Saturday. "Out of mutual respect and understanding, we agreed it was best to part ways. This decision was taken in the larger interest of Indian football." Held two jobs As well as being in charge of the national team, Márquez is also head coach of FC Goa, a leading club in the Indian Super League (ISL), and signed off with a Super Cup win with the club in May. Although there has been criticism of Márquez holding both jobs, Chaubey the situation was not without precedent. "I understand why that perception exists, but globally coaches like Alex Ferguson, Guus Hiddink, Dick Advocaat, and many others have held club and national roles simultaneously," Chaubey said. Shaji Prabhakaran, former general secretary of the AIFF, said that if India does not qualify for the Asian Cup, "it would be catastrophic for the development of Indian football." India, ranked 127th by FIFA, is at the bottom of its group behind Singapore, Hong Kong and Bangladesh. "We are the highest-ranked team of the four, but we are last and need to win all four of the games left," Prabhakaran said. Prabhakaran disagreed with Chaubey and said Márquez should not have held both national and FC Goa jobs. "The responsibility for this situation lies with the people who took the decision to hire a coach with dual responsibilities," Prabhakaran said. "No coach can do two jobs at the same time, he has to work for the national team all the time and for the future of Indian football." Issues also at club level That immediate future in India is looking uncertain at club level, too. The ISL, the top tier of the country's domestic system, was set to start its 12th season in September, but that has been put on hold. The 15-year contract between AIFF and commercial partner Football Sports Development Limited, which runs the ISL, is due to expire at the end of 2025 but there has, as yet, been no agreement on a new deal. India's Supreme Court is expected to make a ruling on AIFF's constitution later in July, and has told the federation not to enter into negotiations until then. Amid such uncertainty, only six of the 13 ISL teams have confirmed participation in the upcoming Durand Cup, Asia's oldest knockout competition, that starts later this month. "Most of the ISL teams have declined to play because they are not ready," Arshad Shawl, chief executive of Real Kashmir FC, a club in the second tier I-league said. "There is no clarity about next season and it is affecting the entire ecosystem." Prabhakaran believes that the ISL deal should not have been allowed to reach this point. "This should have been sorted a year ago," he said. "Why wasn't it concluded? I don't know a country can be in a situation where we don't know if the league will happen." ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Spanish coach of India's soccer team leaves. Sport is also troubled at the club level

Spanish coach of India's soccer team leaves. Sport is also troubled at the club level Manolo Márquez has left his position by mutual con...
How Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is standing out from her liberal colleaguesNew Foto - How Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is standing out from her liberal colleagues

WASHINGTON − After Supreme CourtJustice Amy Coney Barrettannounced from the court's mahogany bench last month that lower court judges hadgone too farin pausingPresident Donald Trump's changes to birthright citizenship, the court's liberals got their turn. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the most senior of the three justices appointed by Democratic presidents, read parts of the trio's joint dissent for about twice as long as Barrett had described the conservative majority's opinion. She even added a line that doesn't appear in thewritten version. "The other shoe has dropped on presidential immunity," Sotomayorsaid, referencing the court's landmark2024 decisionlimiting when presidents can be prosecuted for actions they take in office. But it was a separate written dissent fromJustice Ketanji Brown Jacksonthat reverberated the most, in large part because of Barrett's scathing reaction to it. "We will not dwell on Justice Jackson's argument, which is at odds with more than two centuries' worth of precedent, not to mention the Constitution itself," Barrett wrote. More:Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson can throw a punch. Literally. It wasn't the first time in recent months that Jackson's words drew attention. In a case about air pollution rules, Jacksonsaidthe case "gives fodder to the unfortunate perception that moneyed interests enjoy an easier road to relief in this Court than ordinary citizens." When her conservative colleagues gaveElon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency complete access to the data of millions of Americans kept by the U.S. Social Security Administration, Jackson said the court wassending a "troubling message"that it's departing from basic legal standards for the Trump administration. Speaking at a judge's conference in May, Jacksoncondemnedthe attacks Trump and his allies were making on judges who ruled against his policies. Her warning that the "threats and harassment" could undermine the Constitution and the rule of law was stronger than concerns expressed by Sotomayor and by Chief Justice John Roberts. And during the eight months that the justices heard cases, Jackson – the court's newest member in an institution that reveres seniority – once again spoke by far the most. "I definitely do think Justice Jackson really prioritizes developing her own jurisprudence and thoughts and voice," said Brian Burgess, a partner at the law firm Goodwin who clerked for Sotomayor. "I can see Justice Jackson evolving into someone that wants to speak directly to the public to express the concerns of that side of the court." A clock, a mural, a petition:Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's chambers tell her story Nominatedby PresidentJoe Bidenin 2022 to succeed Justice Stephen Breyer, Jackson wasted no time being heard. During her first two weeks on the court, shespoke more than twice as many wordsas any of her colleagues. When asked about her volubility, Jackson has said she became used to operating solo on the bench during her eight years as a federal trial court judge. She hasn't shown many signs of adjusting. Since October, Jackson spoke 50% more words on the bench than Sotomayor who was the next talkative, according to statistics compiled by Adam Feldman and Jake S. Truscott for theEmpirical SCOTUS blog. "She's the only one that has ever done what she's doing in terms of total volume of speech in her first few terms," said Feldman, a lawyer and political scientist. Jackson has been working on her communications skills since elementary school when her mother enrolled her in a public speaking program. "She wanted me to get out there and use my voice," Jacksonsaidduring an appearance at the Kennedy Center last year to talk about her memoir. And it's not just her voice. Jackson wrote more – either opinions, concurrences or dissents – this term than anyone except Justice Clarence Thomas, according to EmpiricalSCOTUSblog. Steve Vladeck, a professor at Georgetown University Law Center, said he is going to add her dissent in the air pollution case to his course on federal courts. "She is calling things as she sees them," Vladeck said on the liberalStrict Scrutinypodcast. Jackson went further in that case, and in some others, than her liberal colleagues. Sotomayor wrote her own dissent of the majority's ruling that fuel producers can challenge California emissions standards under a federal air pollution law. And Kagan was in the 7-2 majority. In fact, Kagan was in the majority more often this term than all but Roberts, Barrett and Justice Brett Kavanaugh – the three conservatives who often control the direction of the court. Jackson was in the majority the least often. "You see Justice Kagan really shifting away from Justices Sotomayor and Jackson," legal analyst Sarah Isgur said on the podcastAdvisory Opinionwhere she dissects the court with fellow conservatives. Burgess, the former Sotomayor clerk, disputed that. He said the times Kagan voted against both Sotomayor and Jackson were not high-profile defections. For example, in the air pollution case, Burgess suspects Kagan agreed with Jackson that the court should not have heard the fuel producers' appeal in part because their underlying complaint was likely to be addressed by the Trump administration. But once they took the case, the justices decided the legal issue in a way that didn't break a lot of new ground, he said. "I think she seems to be more interested in coalition building and finding ways to eke out wins," Burgess said of Kagan's overall style. "That's one way to be influential. Another way to be influential is to try to stake out different views and hope that history comes along to your position over time." In one of Jackson'sstrong dissents, in acaseabout whether the Americans with Disabilities Act protected a disabled retiree whose health benefits were reduced, Sotomayor was on board – except for a footnote. In that lengthy paragraph, Jackson criticized her conservative colleagues' use of "pure textualism" as "certainly somehow always flexible enough to secure the majority's desired outcome." "She's saying what I think so many of us have been thinking," Vladeck said on the podcast. He wondered whether Sotomayor didn't sign onto that footnote because she didn't agree with it or because she wanted to "let Jackson have it for herself and not take credit for what really is an unusually strong accusation of methodological manipulation by one of the justices." Strong accusations flew in both directions about the court's ruling limiting the ability of judges to pause Trump's policies. In her solo dissent, Jackson called the majority's "legalese" a smokescreen obscuring a "basic question of enormous legal and practical significance: May a federal court in the United States of America order the Executive to follow the law?" "The very institution our founding charter charges with the duty to ensure universal adherence to the law now requires judges to shrug and turn their backs to intermittent lawlessness," she wrote. "With deep disillusionment, I dissent." Barrett said there's no dispute that presidents must obey the law. "But the Judiciary does not have unbridled authority to enforce this obligation – in fact, sometimes the law prohibits the Judiciary from doing so," she wrote. Jackson, Barrett said, would "do well to heed her own admonition" that everyone from the president on down is bound by the law. "That goes for judges too," she wrote. Legal commentator David Lat said Barrett's response departed from her usual "rather restrained rhetoric." In aSubstack article, Lat noted that Barrett oncedescribedherself as a "one jalapeño gal" compared to the late Justice Antonin Scalia, for whom Barrett clerked, who had a "five jalapeño" style. Feldman said it's possible that Jackson's willingness to vocalize her disagreements with her conservative colleagues is getting under their skins. In aFebruary articleabout how Barrett and Jackson are shaping the future of constitutional law, Feldman said the two sharp legal minds approach cases from strikingly different angles on how the law should function and who it should protect. Barrett prioritizes legal precision and institutional boundaries while Jackson focuses on real-world impact and individual rights, he wrote. When people look back at the Trump case, he told USA TODAY, they will be talking about Jackson's dissent. "That's probably the one from the term," he said, "that will last the longest." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is speaking up and standing out

How Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is standing out from her liberal colleagues

How Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is standing out from her liberal colleagues WASHINGTON − After Supreme CourtJustice Amy Coney Barrettannou...
3 mayors arrested in southern Turkey as part of crackdown on oppositionNew Foto - 3 mayors arrested in southern Turkey as part of crackdown on opposition

ISTANBUL (AP) — The mayors of three major cities in southern Turkey were arrested Saturday, state-run media reported, joining a growing list of opposition figures detained since themayor of Istanbul was imprisonedin March. Abdurrahman Tutdere, the mayor of Adiyaman, and Zeydan Karalar, who heads Adana municipality, were detained in early morning raids, according to Anadolu Agency. Both are members of the main opposition Republican People's Party, or CHP. The CHP mayor of Antalya, Muhittin Bocek, was arrested with two other suspects in a separate bribery investigation by the Antalya Chief Public Prosecutor's Office, Anadolu reported. Karalar was arrested in Istanbul and Tutdere was arrested in the capital, Ankara, where he has a home. Tutdere posted on X that he was being taken to Istanbul. Ten people, including Karalar and Tutdere, were arrested as part of an investigation by the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor's Office into allegations involving organized crime, bribery and bid-rigging. Details of the charges against them were not immediately released by prosecutors but the operation follows the arrests of scores of officials from municipalities controlled by the CHP in recent months. Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, widely considered the main challenger toPresident Recep Tayyip Erdogan's 22-year rule, was jailed four months ago over corruption allegations. The former CHP mayor of Izmir, Turkey's third-largest city, and 137 municipal officials weredetained earlier this weekas part of an investigation into alleged tender-rigging and fraud. On Friday, ex-mayor Tunc Soyer and 59 others were jailed pending trial in what Soyer's lawyer described as "a clearly unjust, unlawful and politically motivated decision." Also Friday, it was reported by state-run media that the CHP mayor of Manavgat, a Mediterranean resort city in Antalya province, and 34 others were detained over alleged corruption. CHP officials have facedwaves of arreststhis year that many consider aimed at neutralizing Turkey's main opposition party. The government insists prosecutors and the judiciary act independently but the arrest of Istanbul's Imamoglu led to thelargest street protestsTurkey has seen in more than a decade. Imamoglu was officially nominated as his party's presidential candidate following his imprisonment. Turkey's next election is due in 2028 but could come sooner. The crackdown comes a year after the CHP made significant gains in local elections. Adiyaman, which was severely affected by the 2023 earthquake, was among several cities previously considered strongholds for Erdogan to fall to the opposition.

3 mayors arrested in southern Turkey as part of crackdown on opposition

3 mayors arrested in southern Turkey as part of crackdown on opposition ISTANBUL (AP) — The mayors of three major cities in southern Turkey ...
Athletics cruise past Giants 11-2 with six scoreless innings from SearsNew Foto - Athletics cruise past Giants 11-2 with six scoreless innings from Sears

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — JP Sears pitched six scoreless innings, Nick Kurtz and Denzel Clarke hit home runs, and the Athletics cruised past the San Francisco Giants 11-2 on Friday night. Jacob Wilson and Brent Rooker both drove in two of six early runs off Justin Verlander as the Athletics took a 6-0 lead after three innings. Sears (7-7) allowed three hits and two walks, striking out six. Rookie Jack Perkins gave up two runs — one earned — in three innings for his second save in his third appearance. Verlander (0-6) was tagged for six runs on seven hits in three innings but fanned five. After Lawrence Butler singled in the first and scored on Rooker's single, theAthletics used four doublesin the second to score four times. Tyler Soderstrom and Max Muncy had two straight leading off for the first run. Wilson followed with a two-out, two-run double before scoring on a double by Rooker for a 5-0 lead. Zack Gelof — on the injured list since spring training — hit a sacrifice fly in the third. The game was delayed in the middle of the sixth when home plate umpire Andy Fletcher left after taking an earlier foul tip off his mask. Tripp Gibson finished behind the plate. Clarke tripled when play resumed and scored on Butler's single. Two outs later rookie Kurtz hit his 13th home run for a 9-0 lead. Clarke's two-run shot in the seventh capped the A's scoring. Brett Wisely homered in the eighth and the Giants got an unearned run in the ninth. Key moment Wilson's two-out double to left in the four-run second came on a 0-2 pitch from Verlander. Key stat Verlander is 262-152 in his career but winless in his first 14 starts with the Giants. He hasn't won since his final start for the Astros last season, beating the Guardians 4-3 on Sept. 28. Up next Giants RHP Logan Webb (7-6, 2.61 ERA) starts Saturday opposite Athletics RHP Luis Severino (2-9, 5.09). ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Athletics cruise past Giants 11-2 with six scoreless innings from Sears

Athletics cruise past Giants 11-2 with six scoreless innings from Sears WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — JP Sears pitched six scoreless inning...

 

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