Yankees designate DJ LeMahieu for assignment, will eat nearly $22M in salaryNew Foto - Yankees designate DJ LeMahieu for assignment, will eat nearly $22M in salary

In a move that figured to eventually arrive the moment theNew York Yankeessigned a 32-year-old infielder to a six-year contract, the club designatedDJ LeMahieufor assignment, cutting him loose on July 9 with nearly two years remaining on that deal. LeMahieu, who turns 37 on July 13, re-signed with the club on a six-year, $90 million deal in January 2021. He was coming off a two-year run with the Yankees during which he batted .336 - including a majors-best .364 during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season - with a .922 OPS and amassed 8.6 WAR. Given their druthers, the Yankees probably didn't want to grant a six-year contract at that point, but spreading the $90 million over six years greatly lessened their luxury tax commitment, to just $15 million per year. But the end came quickly. LeMahieu struggled greatly with injuries during the course of the deal, playing in 150 games just once and seeing his availability shrivel with each passing year, from 136 games played in 2023 to 67 last season and just 45 this year before the Yankees cut bait. They certainly saw a large enough sample last season, when LeMahieu produced a .204/.269/.259 line and a -1.6 WAR. He found a window for playing time this year when Jazz Chisholm missed time with an oblique injury, but manager Aaron Boone indicated on July 8 that LeMahieu likely would be the odd man out for playing time going forward - and that he didn't handle it particularly well. The Yankees will owe LeMahieu roughly $21.6 million - his $15 million salary next season and what's owed him this year. Despite his struggles, it's likely LeMahieu will find a new club once he passes through waivers and can be paid the pro-rated league minimum by the acquiring team. LeMahieu became the first player in the modern era to win batting titles in both leagues, with a .348 average for Colorado in 2016 and .364 for the Yankees in 2020. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Yankees' DJ LeMahieu designated for assignment

Yankees designate DJ LeMahieu for assignment, will eat nearly $22M in salary

Yankees designate DJ LeMahieu for assignment, will eat nearly $22M in salary In a move that figured to eventually arrive the moment theNew Y...
Valkyries rout the Fever as Caitlin Clark struggles in her return from injuryNew Foto - Valkyries rout the Fever as Caitlin Clark struggles in her return from injury

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Veronica Burton had 21 points, eight rebounds and six assists, Kayla Thornton added 18 points and eight boards, and the Golden State Valkyries beat the Indiana Fever 80-61 on Wednesday to spoil Caitlin Clark's return. The Valkyries held Clark to just 10 points on 4-of-12 shooting as the Fever scored their second-fewest points of the season. Clark returned after missing the past five games with a left groin injury. TheAll-Star captainparticipated in practice Monday — the first time she'd done that since getting hurt on June 26. Golden State led 41-32 at halftime and Kate Martin scored five consecutive points in the third for a 15-point lead. SUN 93, STORM 83 UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) —Tina Charles set season highs with 29 points and 11 reboundsto help Connecticut end a 10-game losing streak with a victory over Seattle. Connecticut (3-16) won its first game since June 6. Charles made a baseline jumper with 5:36 left in the fourth quarter to give Connecticut its first lead of the game at 79-77. Charles also made two layups in eight seconds — following a steal by Saniya Rivers — for a 91-81 lead. The Sun pulled away by scoring 11 straight points late in the fourth. Charles finished 11 of 22 from the field for her sixth 20-point game of the season. Jacy Sheldon added 16 points and Bria Hartley had 15. Rivers scored all 11 of her points in the opening five minutes of the third. Skylar Diggins led Seattle (13-7) with 23 points and seven assists. Gabby Williams added 21 points and Nneka Ogwumike had 12 points and 12 rebounds. MERCURY 79, LYNX 71 PHOENIX (AP) — Alyssa Thomas scored 12 of her career-high 29 points in the fourth quarter and Phoenix closed on a 19-4 run to beat Minnesota. Thomas, who was coming off her 16th career triple-double on Monday, was 14 of 24 from the field to top her previous high of 28 points. She also had eight rebounds and five assists. Phoenix tied it at 69 and 71 before Thomas scored on back-to-back possessions to take a 75-71 lead. She scored 10 points during the Mercury's game-closing run. DeWanna Bonner, Thomas' fiancee and former Connecticut Sun teammate, signed with Phoenix as a free agent on Tuesday and played her first game since June 10. Bonner, who spent the first 10 years of her career with the Mercury and helped them win titles in 2009 and 2014, finished with seven points and six rebounds in 26 minutes. Monique Akoa Makani added 13 points and Sami Whitcomb, coming off a career-high 36 points, scored 10 for Phoenix (14-6). The Mercury were without Satou Sabally (right ankle) and Kahleah Copper (right hamstring) for a second straight game. Courtney Williams led Minnesota (17-3) with 21 points. Napheesa Collier added 18 points and Bridget Carleton scored 10.

Valkyries rout the Fever as Caitlin Clark struggles in her return from injury

Valkyries rout the Fever as Caitlin Clark struggles in her return from injury INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Veronica Burton had 21 points, eight rebou...
New lawsuit seeks to redraw Wisconsin's congressional maps before 2026 midtermsNew Foto - New lawsuit seeks to redraw Wisconsin's congressional maps before 2026 midterms

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A new lawsuit seeking to redraw Wisconsin's congressional district boundary lines was filed on Tuesday, less than two weeks after the state Supreme Courtdeclined to heara pair of other lawsuits that asked for redistricting before the 2026 election. The latest lawsuit brought by a bipartisancoalition of business leaderswas filed in Dane County circuit court, rather than directly with the state Supreme Court as the rejected cases were. The justices did not give any reason for declining to hear those cases, but typically lawsuits start in a lower court and work their way up. This new lawsuit's more lengthy journey through the courts might not be resolved in time to order new maps before the 2026 midterms. The Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy argue in the new lawsuit that Wisconsin's congressional maps are unconstitutional because they are an anti-competitive gerrymander. The lawsuit notes that the median margin of victory for candidates in the eight districts since the maps were enacted is close to 30 percentage points. "Anti‐competitive gerrymanders are every bit as antithetical to democracy, and to law, as partisan gerrymanders and racial gerrymanders," the lawsuit argues. "This is because electoral competition is as vital to democracy as partisan fairness." The lawsuit alleges that an anti-competitive gerrymander violates the state constitution's guarantees of equal protection to all citizens, the promise to maintain a free government and the right to vote. The lawsuit was filed against the state's bipartisan elections commission, which administers elections. Commission spokesperson Emilee Miklas declined to comment. The Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy had attempted to intervene in one of the redistricting casesbrought by Democratswith the state Supreme Court, but the justices dismissed the case without considering their arguments. Members of the business coalition include Tom Florsheim, chairman and CEO of Milwaukee-based Weyco Group, and Cory Nettles, the founder of a private equity fund and a former state commerce secretary. Republicans hold six of the state's eight U.S. House seats, but only two of those districts are considered competitive. In 2010, the year before Republicans redrew the congressional maps, Democrats held five seats compared with three for Republicans. The current congressional maps, which were based on the previous ones, were approved by the state Supreme Court when it was controlled by conservative judges. The U.S. Supreme Court in March 2022declined to blockthem from taking effect. Democrats had wanted the justices to revisit congressional lines as well after the court ordered state legislative boundaries redrawn before last year's election. Democrats thennarrowed the Republican legislative majoritiesin November, leading to abipartisan compromiseto pass a state budget last week. Democrats are pushing to have the current maps redrawn in ways that would put two of the six seats currently held by Republicans into play. One they hope to flip is the western Wisconsin seat of Republican Rep. Derrick Van Orden, who won in 2022 after longtime Democratic Rep. Ron Kind retired. Von Orden won reelection in the 3rd District in 2024. The other seat they are eyeing is southeastern Wisconsin's 1st District, held by Republican Rep. Bryan Steil since 2019. The latest maps made that district more competitive while still favoring Republicans. The two rejected lawsuits were filed by Elias Law Group, which represents Democratic groups and candidates, and the Campaign Legal Center on behalf of voters. Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy are represented by Law Forward, a liberal Madison-based law firm, the Stafford Rosenbaum law firm in Madison and Election Law Clinic at Harvard Law School.

New lawsuit seeks to redraw Wisconsin's congressional maps before 2026 midterms

New lawsuit seeks to redraw Wisconsin's congressional maps before 2026 midterms MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A new lawsuit seeking to redraw Wis...
Trump says the president of Liberia speaks 'good English,' the country's official languageNew Foto - Trump says the president of Liberia speaks 'good English,' the country's official language

During a meeting with the leaders of several African nations at the White House,President Donald Trumptook a pause Wednesday to compliment Liberian President Joseph Boakai's command of English. "Well, thank you," Trump said after Boakai spoke. "And such good English, that's beautiful. Where did you learn to speak so beautifully?" "Where were you educated? Where? In Liberia? Well, that's very interesting. It's beautiful English," he added. "I have people at this table can't speak nearly as well." English is Liberia's national language. Reached for comment, White House spokesperson Anna Kelly called Trump's remarks "a heartfelt compliment during a meeting that marked a historic moment for U.S.-Africa relations." Follow live politics coverage here Though Liberia has a sizable Indigenous population, many who live there are descendants of freed American slaves who were sent to Africa in the early 19th century. The country's capital, Monrovia, was named for James Monroe, the fifth U.S. president and a supporter of the effort to establish Liberia as a state for freed American slaves. (Monroe himselfwas a slave owner.) Liberia was founded as both American abolitionists and slaveholders sought to resettle the rising number of free Black people in the early 1800s. Black and white Americans debated whether people of all races could integrate in the U.S. TheAmerican Colonization Societypurchased a strip of land on Africa's west coast and began shuttling Black people from the U.S. to the colony in the 1820s. In 1847,Liberia established a Constitutionmodeled after America's and declared independence. In its Declaration of Independence, Liberiacharged the U.S.with racism, violence and inequality that forced them to leave and create a new nation. It is now Africa's oldest modern republic and the second-oldest Black-led republic in the world, following Haiti, which was founded in 1804 after overthrowing the French. Trump's comments to Boakai sparked some backlash online. "Trump never misses an opportunity to be racist and wrong, and every day he finds a new way to be embarrassing,"Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, wrote on X."Asking the President of Liberia where he learned English when it's literally the official language is peak ignorance. I'm pretty sure being blatantly offensive is not how you go about conducting diplomacy…" "Absolutely the dumbest man in govt,"said former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a prominent Trump critic. "This is just ridiculous. In his first term, Trump faced criticism from African and Haitian officials when he referred to Haiti and African nations as "shithole countries" during a 2018 meeting with a bipartisan group of senators.

Trump says the president of Liberia speaks 'good English,' the country's official language

Trump says the president of Liberia speaks 'good English,' the country's official language During a meeting with the leaders of ...
Wimbledon fines players for swearing, abusing rackets and unsportsmanlike conductNew Foto - Wimbledon fines players for swearing, abusing rackets and unsportsmanlike conduct

LONDON (AP) — Tennis players atWimbledonhave been racking up fines for swearing too loudly, unsportsmanlike conduct and "abuse of rackets or equipment." An updated list of fines released Wednesday by the All England Club showed that 2024 men's doubles champion Henry Patten received the biggest fine — $12,500 — in the category of verbal abuse. The British player and doubles partner Harri Heliovaara wontheir their first Grand Slam titlea year ago at Wimbledon. Patten was fined on June 29 for what multiple British media outlets described as alleged verbal abuse of a staff member at an off-site practice ground. Patten told local media that he has filed an appeal that will be handled after the tournament. Patten and Heliovaara were eliminated in the quarterfinals on Wednesday. Amanda Anisimova, who plays top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals on Thursday, picked up a $4,000 fine for unsportsmanlike conduct during her fourth-round victory over Linda Noskova. French doubles player Theo Arribage was fined $7,500 fine for unsportsmanlike conduct during his second-round loss on Saturday, and next highest was compatriot Adrian Mannarino's $6,000 fine, also for unsportsmanlike conduct during his second-round win last week. Is all, seven men have been fined so far. Their total is $36,000. The total for the eight women who have been fined so far is $29,500. The highest single fine on the women's side is $5,000 — imposed on Elena Pridankina for unsportsmanlike conduct during the singles qualifying tournament in late June. Chloe Paquet, Hailey Baptiste and men's players Alex Bolt and Zizou Bergs were all handed fines for "audible obscenity." Colton Smith of the United States was fined $2,000 for abuse of rackets or equipment. ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Wimbledon fines players for swearing, abusing rackets and unsportsmanlike conduct

Wimbledon fines players for swearing, abusing rackets and unsportsmanlike conduct LONDON (AP) — Tennis players atWimbledonhave been racking ...
Houser tosses 7 solid innings as White Sox end Blue Jays' 10-game winning streak, 2-1New Foto - Houser tosses 7 solid innings as White Sox end Blue Jays' 10-game winning streak, 2-1

CHICAGO (AP) — Adrian Houser tossed seven solid innings, and the Chicago White Sox stopped Toronto's 10-game winning streak, beating the Blue Jays 2-1 on Wednesday. Houser (5-2) won his third straight start. Edgar Quero hit an RBI double and scored in a two-run fourth against Toronto starter Eric Lauer (4-2), and Chicago stopped the Blue Jays one win shy of their franchise record. Toronto has won 11 straight five times, most recently in August 2015. Houser, who gave up one run and seven hits, has a 1.56 ERA through nine starts. The right-hander has allowed two earned runs in 26 innings over four outings at Rate Field. Grant Taylor pitched around a two-out double by Bo Bichette in the eighth, getting Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to ground out. Jordan Leasure struck out the first two batters in the ninth before Alejandro Kirk singled. The right-hander then retired Myles Straw on a fly to center for his second save in five chances, and the White Sox came away with the win after losing nine straight at home against Toronto. Lauer struck out seven in four innings, allowing two runs and four hits. Key moment Chicago scored two in the fourth, after Austin Slater led off with a single. Quero drove him in with a one-out double and came around on a single by Lenyn Sosa, giving the White Sox a 2-1 lead. Key stat Both teams were 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position. Up next Blue Jays: Three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer (0-0, 4.76 ERA) makes his fifth start of the season when Toronto opens a three-game series against the Athletics in Sacramento on Friday. RHP Luis Severino (2-10, 5.30) pitches for the Athletics. White Sox: RHP Jonathan Cannon (3-7, 4.50) gets the ball as Chicago opens a four-game series against Cleveland on Thursday. LHP Logan Allen (5-7, 4.07) pitches for the Guardians. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Houser tosses 7 solid innings as White Sox end Blue Jays' 10-game winning streak, 2-1

Houser tosses 7 solid innings as White Sox end Blue Jays' 10-game winning streak, 2-1 CHICAGO (AP) — Adrian Houser tossed seven solid in...
After voting for Trump's megabill, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley wants to reverse a key Medicaid cutNew Foto - After voting for Trump's megabill, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley wants to reverse a key Medicaid cut

HAZELWOOD, Mo. — Four days after President Donald Trumpsigned his "big, beautiful bill" into law, one of the Republicans who voted for it wasn't interested in touting the measure's high-profile tax, immigration or health care provisions. Instead, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., held an event here Tuesday centered on a less-noticed part of the nearly 1,000-page bill: an expanded fund for victims of nuclear waste, a bipartisan issue he worked for years to get across the finish line. And when asked about the steep Medicaid cuts in the bill, Hawley continued to criticize them. Hawley said his "goal" is to ensure the provider tax changes, which will limit state reimbursement for Medicaid, don't go into effect in Missouri in 2030 — even as he helped to pass a piece of legislation that will do just that. It illustrates the challenges Republicans face as they turn their attention to selling to the public the massive bill they've been working on for months,ahead of next year's midterm elections. "I think that if Republicans don't come out strong and say we're going to protect rural hospitals, then, yeah, I think voters aren't going to like that," Hawley told NBC News in an interview at St. Cin Park. "The truth of the matter is, we shouldn't be cutting rural hospitals. I'm completely opposed to cutting rural hospitals period. I haven't changed my view on that one iota." Hawley suggested he would work with Democrats to cut prescription drug pricing, a priority Trump has said he wants Congress to focus on, to pay for the tax cuts made permanent by the new law. Ultimately, Hawley — who is seen as a potential future presidential candidate — chose to stay in Trump's good graces and vote for the bill despite his reservations, while managing to score victories for his constituents. "Gotta take the wins that you can," Hawley told NBC News when asked about voting for a bill he admitted he didn't like. Defending his vote for the package that the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected will cause nearly 12 million people to lose their health care coverage by 2034, Hawley said the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA), as well as the rural hospital fund included in the bill at the eleventh hour to appease GOP holdouts in the Senate, would expand health care in Missouri. But for the hospitals and social safety net administrators in Missouri, the law's changes — even if not fully implemented until later — bring uncertainty to a community dependent on funding from expanded Medicaid access. The Missouri Hospital Association estimates the state will lose hundreds of millions of dollars in funding from the provider tax changes alone. Federally qualified health centers, which rely on government funding to function and provide health care to underserved populations, are already facing shortfalls and budget cuts. An administrator at such a health center in the rural Missouri Highlandstold NBC News last month that the impacts from Trump's megabillwill lead to death in her community. The issue is already impacting states across the country. Hundreds of rural hospitals could close and many more will lose billions of dollars in funding over the next decade, according to ananalysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation. From a political standpoint, Republicans will need to defend policy choices that Democrats are already attacking as they seek to hold onto their congressional majorities in 2026. Hawley joined many GOP lawmakers in gaining private assurances from leadership early on and securing priorities in the sprawling legislation. He worked with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., "early in the year" to attach RECA to the package. RECA, a federal law that provided financial compensation to individuals who developed certain diseases as a result of exposure to radiation, expired last year. "For me, it was key to my vote," Hawley said. The expanded fund will accept new claims from "downwinders" and uranium workers until Dec. 31, 2027 and covers more cities and states, including zip codes in Missouri. Joining Hawley at the news conference Tuesday were advocates for victims of nuclear radiation from all over the country dating back to the Manhattan Project, including Sherrie Hanna from Prescott, Arizona. Hanna lost her father and her husband to cancers that were later linked to nuclear waste in the area. "They both succumbed to painful deaths," Hanna said. "I know how important the RECA compensation is." Hanna said she was "devastated" when RECA expired in June 2024. "I thought we would never get the program back. But we kept fighting." The event was also bipartisan in nature: Hawley embracedformer Democratic Rep. Cori Bush— who was a member of the progressive "squad" in Congress — and showered her with praise. "So Cori, thank you. We would not be here without you and your work," Hawley said. Also joining Hawley was Rep. Wesley Bell, D-Mo., who defended his support for the provision even as he and every other Democratic member of Congress voted against the Big Beautiful Bill. "There are some concerns and issues that many of us have with this budgetary bill. But at the same time, the folks who have been waiting a long time for compensation, to be acknowledged for the pain and suffering, that's one thing that I can rejoice in," Bell said. Some of the advocates who fought for RECA's passage acknowledged the bill's double-edged sword, like Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren, who traveled from Arizona to praise Hawley's efforts in securing compensation for indigenous communities impacted by the government's nuclear programs. "It's difficult to celebrate," Nygren told NBC News, acknowledging the bill's negative consequences on renewable energy and health care coverage for the Navajo nation.

After voting for Trump's megabill, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley wants to reverse a key Medicaid cut

After voting for Trump's megabill, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley wants to reverse a key Medicaid cut HAZELWOOD, Mo. — Four days after President D...

 

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