Marlins sweep Yankees for first time in franchise history in front of record crowd, move to .500New Foto - Marlins sweep Yankees for first time in franchise history in front of record crowd, move to .500

The Miami Marlins' red-hot summer just keeps coming. The Marlins powered to a 7-3 win over the New York Yankees on Sunday, completing a sweep of the Yankees for the first time in franchise history. Miami also hit the milestone in front of a big crowd, with aseries attendance of 101,545setting a franchise record. With the win, Miami moved to 55-55, hitting .500 for the first time since April. The teamdropped to 24-40in early June, but have won 31 games in the two months since to pull to even. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Did Miami get a dig in at New York in the run-up to the final out? You be the judge here over the Marlins' curious choice of playing "Sweet Caroline," a Fenway Park tradition, in the ninth inning. Marlins are blasting Sweet Caroline as they are three outs away from sweeping the Yankees for the first time in franchise historypic.twitter.com/yM3osdWfOW — Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia)August 3, 2025 Sunday's win came easily to the Marlins, who took a 3-1 lead after two innings. Then, in the fourth inning, Kyle Stowers hit a three-run homer to bring Miami's lead to 6-1. Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a two-run bomb in the seventh to help the Yankees cut into the deficit, but an RBI triple from Jakob Marsee secured the 7-3 win. The series was a poor showing from the Yankees, who dropped the first game 13-12 aftera trio of relievers blew a 9-4 lead in the bottom of the seventh. All three pitchers — Jake Bird, David Bednar and Camilo Doval — wererecent acquisitions ahead of the MLB trade deadline. The bad luck continued Saturday, as the Yankees werecaught sleepingwhile Miami powered to a 2-0 win. Then, on Sunday, the Marlins secured the historic sweep. Miami will keep trying to ride that momentum through the next series, a homestand against the AL West-leading Houston Astros. The Yankees, meanwhile, will lick their wounds on the way to playing the Texas Rangers in Arlington.

Marlins sweep Yankees for first time in franchise history in front of record crowd, move to .500

Marlins sweep Yankees for first time in franchise history in front of record crowd, move to .500 The Miami Marlins' red-hot summer just ...
Dolphins reach extension with DT Zach Sieler, make him their highest-paid defensive playerNew Foto - Dolphins reach extension with DT Zach Sieler, make him their highest-paid defensive player

The Miami Dolphins have locked down Zach Sieler and made him their highest-paid defensive player. The Dolphins reached a three-year, $67.75 million contract extension with the defensive tackle on Sunday afternoon, his agents announced. He will now earn $22.5 million a season, which is more than double what he is currently making, and will get $44 million guaranteed. Sieler, who was a former walk-on player at Division II Ferris State, was selected in the seventh round of the 2018 NFL Draft by the Baltimore Ravens. He was released by the team a year later, though, and the Dolphins picked him up off waivers during the 2019 campaign. He's been in Miami ever since. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] pic.twitter.com/aJLjhp9nxV — Miami Dolphins (@MiamiDolphins)August 3, 2025 The 29-year-old team captain has erupted over the past two seasons. He's recorded back-to-back seasons with 10 sacks for the Dolphins, which has been the team-high, while averaging 59 total tackles. Before the 2023 season, he had only made 3.5 sacks in a single season. Sieler had signed a three-year, $30.75 million extension with the Dolphins before the 2023 season, and was due to be a free agent in 2027. He is now among the top-10 highest-paid defensive tackles in the league. "[Sieler is] the heartbeat of our defense," Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver said,via the Palm Beach Post. The Dolphins went 8-9 last season and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2021, though the franchise still hasn't won a playoff game since the 2000 season. They'll open the season on Sept. 7 against the Indianapolis Colts.

Dolphins reach extension with DT Zach Sieler, make him their highest-paid defensive player

Dolphins reach extension with DT Zach Sieler, make him their highest-paid defensive player The Miami Dolphins have locked down Zach Sieler a...
Former Tennessee coach Derek Dooley announces 2026 Senate bid in GeorgiaNew Foto - Former Tennessee coach Derek Dooley announces 2026 Senate bid in Georgia

ATLANTA (AP) — Former University of Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley on Monday announced his 2026 Republican bid for the U.S. Senate in Georgia againstDemocratic incumbent Jon Ossoff. The 57-year-old Dooley is backed by Gov. Brian Kemp and has beenteasing a bidsince June. He joins a GOP field that includes U.S. Reps.Buddy CarterandMike Collins, as well as activist Reagan Box. Kemp turned to Dooley after decidingnot to run for the seathimself. Georgia Republicans are looking to topple Ossoff, considered the Senate's most vulnerable Democratic incumbent seeking reelection next year. "Professional politicians like Jon Ossoff are the problem," Dooley said in atwo-minute launch video"Lawlessness, open season on the border, inflation everywhere, woke stuff, that's what they represent. We need new leadership in Georgia. That's why I'm running for Senate." Kemp andTrumpmet and said they would try toagree on a preferred candidate. Anyone anointed by both would be stamped as the Republican front-runner. Kemp told Collins and others on July 24 that he would support Dooley, leading Georgia Insurance CommissionerJohn King to drop outof the race. But Trump isn't ready to endorse yet and Dooley is moving forward without Trump's blessing, an indication the joint effort may be faltering. Dooley has never held elective office before. He says he'll run as a political outsider, a laneDavid Perduetraveled in Georgia to win election to the Senate in 2014. Dooley said he would bring "good, old fashioned Georgia common sense," and "work with President Trump, fight for you and always put Georgia first." Dooley is the son of legendaryUniversity of Georgia coach Vince Dooleyand was a lawyer before he went into coaching. Derek Dooley was widely seen as a failure during his three years as head coach at Tennessee, compiling a 15-21 record with the Volunteers before he was fired in 2012. Since then, he has been an assistant coach with the Dallas Cowboys, the University of Missouri, the New York Giants and the University of Alabama. As a teenager, Kemp was a frequent guest in the Dooley home, and he roomed with Derek's older brother, Daniel Dooley, at the University of Georgia. Kemp has the most effectiveRepublican political organizationin Georgia, and Dooley has hired Kemp aides to run his race, including political strategist Cody Hall and fundraiser Chelsey Ruppersburg. But a number of Republicans endorsed Collins after he entered the field last week, including formerU.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Also backing the congressman are state senators including state Senate Majority Leader Jason Anavitarte. Even one of Kemp's official floor leaders in the state House, Rep. Matthew Gambill, parted ways with the governor to endorse Collins. Opponents have already lampooned Dooley for failing to publicly support Trump before now. Someone launched an anonymous University of Tennessee-themed website called"Dooley's Volunteers"that criticizes Dooley for a lack of conservative credentials, interspersed with quotes from sports reporters panning Dooley's coaching tenure. It's the latest high impact move to back a political novice for Kemp, whotapped Kelly Loeffleras a U.S. senator before she lost to Democrat Raphael Warnock in a 2021 runoff. Her campaign was plagued by conflict between Kemp and Trump, who preferredanother candidate. Losses by Perdue and Loeffler to Ossoff and Warnock, respectively,handed control of the U.S. Senateto Democrats. Then in 2022, Trump anointed Georgia football legendHerschel Walkeras the Republican nominee. Walker's candidacyproved flawedand Kemp only swung in to help in the runoff, whichWarnock won. Their effort to jointly screen 2026 candidates produced some results — U.S. Rep.Marjorie Taylor Greenedeclined a Senate run after pressure from other Republicans. Dooley would be far from the first football coach to run for office. His late father was frequently discussed as a possible candidate and his mother, Barbara Dooley, lost a Republican primary for Congress in 2002. Former Auburn University football coach Tommy Tuberville was elected to the Senate in 2020 from Alabama and is nowrunning for governor. University of Nebraska coaching legend Tom Osborne served three terms in the U.S. House. Dooley walked on at the University of Virginia and earned a scholarship as a wide receiver. He earned a law degree from the University of Georgia and briefly practiced law in Atlanta before working his way up the college coaching ladder, becoming head coach for three years at Louisiana Tech before Tennessee.

Former Tennessee coach Derek Dooley announces 2026 Senate bid in Georgia

Former Tennessee coach Derek Dooley announces 2026 Senate bid in Georgia ATLANTA (AP) — Former University of Tennessee football coach Derek ...
EPA administrator defends administration's move to revoke 2009 finding pollution endangers human healthNew Foto - EPA administrator defends administration's move to revoke 2009 finding pollution endangers human health

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin on Sunday defended the Trump administration's moveto repeal the so-called endangerment findingthatplanet-warming pollution from fossil fuelsendangers human health. "To reach the 2009 endangerment finding, they relied on the most pessimistic views of the science. The great news is that a lot of the pessimistic views of the science in 2009 that was being assumed ended up not panning out," Zeldin said on CNN's "State of the Union." "We can rely on 2025 facts as opposed to 2009 bad assumptions." The2009 scientific findingthat human-caused climate change endangers human health and safety, which has served as EPA's basis for many of its significant regulations aiming to protect the environment and decrease climate pollution. If successful, the repeal could strip away the federal government'smost powerful wayto control the country's planet-warming pollution and fight climate change. The text of the administration's proposal to repeal the 2009 endangerment finding said that while greenhouse gas emissions have continued to rise in the atmosphere, that rise has been "driven primarily by increased emissions from foreign sources," and has happened "without producing the degree of adverse impacts to public health and welfare in the United States that the EPA anticipated in the 2009 Endangerment Finding." The US is the world's second largest emitter of greenhouse gases, andhistorically has emittedmore planet-warming pollution than any other country. Many rigorous scientific findings since 2009 have showed both climate pollution and its warming effects arenot just harming public health but killing people outright. In the nearly 16 years since the EPA first issued the Supreme Court-ordered endangerment finding, the world has warmed an additional 0.45 degrees Celsius (or 0.81 degrees Fahrenheit) to 1.4 degrees Celsius, according to climate scientist Zeke Hausfather. "Both the scientific certainty around climate change and evidence of the dangers it is causing have grown stronger since 2009," Hausfather said in an email. "There is no evidence that has emerged or been published in the scientific literature in the past 16 years that would in any way challenge the scientific basis of the 2009 endangerment finding." Pressed on whether he's skeptical of the scientific consensus that greenhouse gas emissions are the overwhelming driver of man-made climate change, Zeldin said, "That might be your way to try to twist my words." The EPA is in a public comment period on its proposal to repeal all greenhouse gas emissions regulations for motor vehicles, since they stem from the 2009 finding. "We're going through a public comment period. We want to make the right decision afterwards. But for people who want to sum up the 2009 endangerment finding as if they study carbon dioxide as an endangerment on human health, they did not do that," Zeldin told CNN. Asked whether the EPA should have a role in trying to combat climate change, Zeldin said that the Supreme Court "made it very clear that I have to follow the law." "I have to follow the plain language of the law, and I can't get creative. So when you read through the 2009 endangerment finding, they say that where there's silence in the law, there's gaps that I should just be interpreting that as my own discretion. The Supreme Court has made it very clear that that is not what is a power that I have," he said, adding that drawing up such a regulation should be left to Congress. CNN's Ella Nilsen and Andrew Freedman contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

EPA administrator defends administration’s move to revoke 2009 finding pollution endangers human health

EPA administrator defends administration's move to revoke 2009 finding pollution endangers human health Environmental Protection Agency ...
NFLPA elects David White to serve as interim executive director after Lloyd Howell's resignationNew Foto - NFLPA elects David White to serve as interim executive director after Lloyd Howell's resignation

The NFLPA has elected an interim replacement for Lloyd Howell. The union announced late Sunday night that it had elected David White to serve as the interim executive director. White follows Howell,who resigned last month amid a scandal that rocked the union. pic.twitter.com/IpOrP8jX50 — NFLPA (@NFLPA)August 4, 2025 "I am grateful to the NFLPA's player leadership for entrusting me with the privilege and responsibility to guide their union as interim executive director," White said in a statement. "It's a duty I do not take lightly, and I'm committed to re-establishing trust and ensuring the union is serving its members best. "I look forward to working with the entire NFLPA team to prospect players' health and safety, secure their financial well-being and further strengthen their voice to shape their futures." [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] White was a finalist for the role in 2023 before losing to Howell at the time. He is the former executive director and chief negotiator of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA), worked as board chair of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and is a strategic adviser to a venture capital firm. He is also the CEO of 3CG Ventures, an executive coaching and strategic consulting firm. According to theNFL Network's Tom Pelissero, a voting player representative from all 32 teams participated in the vote to elect White on Sunday night. There were multiple interviews with internal and external candidates within the past few weeks. It's unclear how long White will stay in the role. "We have full faith in David to take the union forward and operate in the best interests of our membership," NFLPA president Jalen Reeves-Maybin said in a statement. "David has spent much of his career fighting for collectively bargained rights in the labor movement and is committed to putting players first in all the union does. We are confident that he will inspire solidarity and provide the necessary stability during this period of transition." White will take over for the NFLPA after multiple scandals rocked the organization this offseason. It started after a report fromPablo Torre and Mike Florio last month that detailed how the NFL and NFLPA burieda ruling on a collusion grievance. That reportedly showed that an arbitrator concluded that the league encouraged teams to reduce guaranteed money after Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson received an unprecedented, fully guaranteed contract when joining the franchise. The NFL won the grievance, as it wasn't proven that teams actually acted on the advice, but there was "little question" that they were encouraged to do so. Then, after Howell resigned, it was reported a day later that he hadexpensed more than $3,000 at strip clubs. He also resigned from his consulting position with the Carlyle Group over an apparent conflict of interest after the investment firm wanted minority NFL ownership. Former Browns center and union player presidentJ.C. Tretter also resigned as the union's chief strategy officerin the wake of the scrutiny. He took himself out of the running for the interim executive director position after he was apparently in a two-man race for the position. NFLPA chief player officer Don Davis was the other at the time. Tretter had played a central role in Howell's hire, which is widely seen as questionable now looking back. He had aconflict of interest as a Carlyle Group consultant, and players may not have known about asexual discrimination lawsuit against him at a former employer. There was also another grievance against Tretterthat the NFL and NFLPA reportedly didn't disclose.Tretter even went as far as tocompare himself to a "Game of Thrones" characterwhile defending his decisions.

NFLPA elects David White to serve as interim executive director after Lloyd Howell's resignation

NFLPA elects David White to serve as interim executive director after Lloyd Howell's resignation The NFLPA has elected an interim replac...
NFLPA hires David White as interim executive director, replacing Lloyd HowellNew Foto - NFLPA hires David White as interim executive director, replacing Lloyd Howell

The NFL Players Association has a new leader. The NFLPA on Sunday night announced the hiring of David White to take over as the interim executive director in a move that was necessitated by the stunningresignation of Lloyd Howell Jr. on July 17. pic.twitter.com/IpOrP8jX50 — NFLPA (@NFLPA)August 4, 2025 The Athletic's Dianna Russini reported that JC Tretter, the union's chief strategy officer, and Don Davis, the chief player officer,emerged as the lead candidatesfollowing Howell's departure. Tretter laterresigned from his position. NFLPA CONTROVERSY EXPLAINED:What to know about grievances, Lloyd Howell, next steps One union official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation, said that a voting player representative from all 32 teams participated in the Board vote. The person also said that on the final short list of candidates, there were multiple internal candidates and multiple external ones. The Board conducted interviews with each candidate over the last two weeks, and the process was player-led and voted on by the Board. The person also said that ultimately, the Board voted on their elected candidate this evening. NFLPA leadership initially expressed their supportfor Howell, but the fallout from the "Pablo Torre Finds Out" podcast's release of a 61-page arbitration report proved to be too much. The report revealed the NFLPA agreed to keep the arbitration decision from earlier this year about potential collusion by the league confidential – despite evidence that "commissioner Roger Goodell and former general counsel Jeff Pashinstructed teams at the March 2022 league meeting to limit guaranteed moneyin players' contracts." Howell was later found to be apaid, part-time consultantfor the private-equity firm The Carlyle Group since March 2023, as reported by ESPN. It highlighted a potential conflict of interest as the group was given approval by the NFL to seek a minority ownership stake in a team. More revelations regarding Howell's conduct have come to light following his resignation. On July 18, ESPN reported thatHowell submitted expense reportscharging the union for two visits to strip clubs. The former leader's controversial tenure was short-lived and came to an end just over two years following his hiring on June 28, 2023. Now White will be tasked with cleaning up the mess that was left behind in addition to restoring trust between the union and its membership. They won't have the luxury of time, however, as training camps are already underway and the regular season is fast approaching. NFL writer Chris Bumbaca contributed to this story. All the NFL news on and off the field.Sign up for USA TODAY's 4th and Monday newsletter. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFLPA hires David White to replace Lloyd Howell

NFLPA hires David White as interim executive director, replacing Lloyd Howell

NFLPA hires David White as interim executive director, replacing Lloyd Howell The NFL Players Association has a new leader. The NFLPA on Sun...
Tracking Trump's TariffsNew Foto - Tracking Trump's Tariffs

President Donald Trump at the White House after returning from a trip to Scotland, on July 29, 2025. Credit - Mehmet Eser—Middle East Images/AFP/Getty Images President Donald Trump'son-again, off-again approachto his signature tariff policy has takenglobal economies on a rollercoasterin just the first six months of his second presidential term. Trump slammed nearly every country in the world withtariffs as high as 50%on April 2, so-called "Liberation Day." A week later, he announced a temporary reduction that was meant to end July 9, during which time he said he'd negotiate "90 deals in 90 days" to re-balance U.S. trade relationships. But asthat deadline neared, Trump announced a new deadline of Aug. 1 and began unveiling a slate of new tariffs on more than a dozen countries. Throughout this all, Trump has also announcedsectoral tariffson cars,steel, aluminum, and copper, as well as threatened countries appearing to align against American interests, likemembers of the intergovernmental organization BRICS, with additional tariffs. Read More:Trump's Trade Deals, Negotiations, and New Tariffs for Each Country On the eve of Trump's Aug. 1 trade deal deadline, the White House once again unveiled new tariff rates on much of the world, most of which willtake effect Aug. 7. For countries with which the U.S. has a trade surplus—meaning that it exports more to those countries than it imports from them—the "universal" tariff is 10%, which remains unchanged from April 2. For countries with which the U.S. has a trade deficit, the new baseline rate is 15%, which will apply to around 40 countries. More than a dozen other countries will face higher tariff rates, either imposed by Trump in a more recent announcement or obtained through trade agreements with the U.S. The U.S. has reached trade deals or framework agreements with a number of countries: the European Union, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, the U.K., and Vietnam. The U.S. alsoreached an agreement with China, although the two sides are continuing to negotiate the details ahead of a later deadline of Aug. 12, which the White House has indicated could be extended. And Trump has granted Mexico a 90-day extension to facilitate further trade talks. The White House hasbraggedabout raising more than $150 billion from tariffs over the past six months, while Trump hassaid"tariffs are making America GREAT & RICH Again." (AMonthly Treasury Statementfrom June shows that the government has collected around $108 billion in customs duties since October 1, 2024, while the Treasury Departmentreportedthe collection of upwards of $28 billion in duties in July.) Revenue from tariffs is likely to increase as higher tariffs for dozens of countries go into effect. Many economists, however, say tariffs areeffectively a tax on American consumersand have warned that trade tensions could trigger aU.S.—or evenglobal—recession. Here's a breakdown of all Trump's tariffs. Trump has said his tariffs are aimed at balancing the U.S.'s trade relationships with the rest of the world in two main ways: firstly, by pressuring countries to negotiate trade deals more favorable to the U.S., and secondly by incentivizing firms tobring manufacturing back to the U.S. The President has railed against the country's trade deficits with much of the rest of the world, though he's also imposed tariffs on countries that the U.S. has a trade surplus with, like Brazil. It's true that the U.S. imports much more goods from most countries than it exports, but economists have pointed out that that's a position many other countries are striving to be in. The U.S. exports mainly services—like banking services, software, and entertainment—while many poorer countries have much larger and lower-paying manufacturing sectors. Economists have alsosaidtariffs aren't necessarily an effective way to address trade deficits and are instead likely tocause higher pricesforAmerican consumers,unsettle American businesses, anderode trust between the U.S. and its trading partners, leading trade and diplomatic partnerships away from the U.S. in the long term. Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs, imposed April 2, were "reciprocal" based on what he said were tariffs and other manipulations against the U.S. by other countries, although economists havecriticized his method of calculating those rates: each country's trade surplus with the U.S. was divided by its exports to the U.S. and then divided by two. It's not yet clear how the new rates, some of which Trump began announcing July 7 in "letters" sent to each country and shared on his Truth Social platform, were determined. Trump has said they are based on countries' "Tariff, and Non-Tariff, Policies and Trade Barriers." For certain countries though he cited reasons unrelated to trade. The 50% tariff onBrazil, for example, is based partly on what Trump called a "Witch Hunt" against the country's former President Jair Bolsonaro, a Trump ally who has been charged with attempting to launch a coup to stay in office in 2022. Trump has also imposed tariffs on specific sectors, includinga 25% tariff on cars and car parts and a 50% tariff on most foreign imports of steel, aluminum, and copper. Several more sectoral tariffs may be introduced pending Section 232 Commerce Department investigations, such as on semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, critical minerals, and commercial aircraft and engines. Importssubjectedto section 232 tariffsdo not always "stack"on top of other tariffs. For example, a car imported from overseas will be tariffed at 25%, but will not be subject to tariffs on aluminum, steel, or other "stacking" tariffs. Metals tariffs supersede country "reciprocal" tariffs but both steel and aluminum tariffs can apply to the same product. Some trade agreements, like the U.S.-E.U. deal, also cap sectoral tariffs at a lower rate. For example, the 15% "reciprocal" tariff on the E.U. also applies to cars and car parts. Some sectoral tariffs predate Trump's second term. Trump introduced tariffs on various sectors and countries in his first presidential term. In January 2018, he imposedtariffs on all solar panels, for which China is the world's largest producer, and washing machines. In June that year he also introduced 25% tariffs on over 800 products from China. Trump also imposed a25% tariff on steeland a 10% tariff on aluminum from Canada, Mexico and the E.U. These tariffs set offretaliatory movesfrom theimpacted countries, though most U.S. and retaliatory tariffs from Trump's first term eventually expired or wererolled back. The U.S. and China reached a truce in January 2020 afterescalating tit-for-tat tariffs, but former President Joe Bidenextended the solar panel tariffs in 2022. Some countries might also be subject to additional tariffs based on political reasons. Trump announced on July 6 that he would tariff countries aligning themselves with BRICS at an additional 10% rate. Among the countries whose new rates have been announced so far, that includes Brazil, South Africa, India and Iran. It's not yet clear whether it affects countries that the U.S. has cut a deal with, like China or Indonesia. Trump has also cracked down on what was known as thede minimisexemption, which exempted small shipments valued at $800 or less from customs duties and declarations. The tax provision, which was introduced in 1938, has largelybenefitted fast fashion giants like Shein and Temu, which have sent millions of packages a day to the U.S. Trumpclosed the exemptionfor shipments from China and Hong Kong in an April 2 executive order, tariffing the low-value shipments from those exporters effectively at a 120% rate from May 2 (after tit-for-tat tariff hikes). He thenreversed coursewith a May 12 executive order thateased levies on low-value imports. Then, he reversed course again with aJuly 30 executive order, ending the tariff exemption for all countries around the world. Contact usatletters@time.com.

Tracking Trump’s Tariffs

Tracking Trump's Tariffs President Donald Trump at the White House after returning from a trip to Scotland, on July 29, 2025. Credit - M...

 

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