MLB power rankings: Marlins' wild run as baseball's best team continuesNew Foto - MLB power rankings: Marlins' wild run as baseball's best team continues

We're not going to mince words here: TheMiami Marlinsare for real. We can talk about it now, because the Marlins, arguablyMajor League Baseball's most forgotten franchise, have reached the .500 mark after arousing weekend sweepof the New York Yankees, who have their own issues to worry about. But there's one team – theMilwaukee Brewers– that's played as well as the Marlins since June 13, when they began a roll that's now at 30 wins in 44 games and resulted in them being very much alive rather than a carcass to be picked over at the July 31 trade deadline. Heck, they evenheld onto franchise bulwark Sandy Alcantara, which may or may not portend positive things for a winter to build upon this surprise season. Miami's pitching staff leads the majors in WHIP (1.06) and the NL in ERA (3.16) since June 27, a 31-game stretch. For now, though, the Marlins have zoomed up four more spots in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings – and are even loitering on the fringes of the NL wild-card race, six games out but with three teams to pass. But if they keep up this pace, there's no ceiling that can stop them. A look at our updated rankings: Banged out a franchise-record 56 hits in three-game sweep of Nationals. All-Star Game headed to Wrigley in 2027. Which uniform will Kyle Tucker be wearing? Don't look now, but Max Scherzer has struck out 16, walked none and won each of his past two starts. Can they unlock a closer-like performance from newly acquired Kyle Finnegan? Jhoan Duran's dominant stuff accompanied his personal intro on trip from Minnesota to Philly. Max Muncy is ready to return, with Tommy Edman likely replacing him on the IL. Cedric Mullinswill fit very snugly on their playoff roster. Has anyone ever rebuttedA.J. Prellerwhen he simply asked, "Why not?" Carlos Correa still eight days away from playing his first home game at Minut-, errr, Daikin Park since Game 6 of the 2021 World Series. Once again, a pretty lame deadline, but Steven Matz is low-key a useful bullpen piece. Big series win against a Rangers team suddenly right in their way. Hard for Brian Cashman to blame Aaron Boone when the players he acquired blew up in the skipper's face. Survived the Speedway semi-debacle. Will rest of season be a red flag? Jacob deGrom the fastest to 1,800 strikeouts in both innings (1,493 ⅓) and games (240). A "soft sell" at the deadline, if you will, but now they're back at .500. One more run in 'em? Kyle Stowers with a shot at 40 homers. You'd think Emmanuel Clase would be the cautionary tale that gets ballplayers' attention. .500 looking like their destiny. Mike Yastrzemski kind of a nice "Why the hell not?" pickup. Have now lost 11 of 16 since break. Taylor Ward now with a career-high 26 home runs, his latest a walk-off. The Jordan Montgomery Era really was something. Like many Americans, they're struggling to be debt-free. The deadline decimated entire roster, but lineup has responded; bullpen has not. Don't think anyone will complain if someone calls the Speedway trophy "a piece of metal." Just 23 wins in Yolo County; only Rockies, Nationals have fewer at home. The trade of moderate success story Bailey Falter was moderately depressing. Run differential now minus-134; only Rockies (-277) are worse. Luis Robert is still here. At least a few of their bros on the Yankees give them something to root for. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB power rankings: Marlins have been best team in baseball

MLB power rankings: Marlins' wild run as baseball's best team continues

MLB power rankings: Marlins' wild run as baseball's best team continues We're not going to mince words here: TheMiami Marlinsare...
Driver, 60, Dies After Crashing at Nearly 280 mph While Attempting to Set New Land Speed RecordNew Foto - Driver, 60, Dies After Crashing at Nearly 280 mph While Attempting to Set New Land Speed Record

Facebook A 60-year-old man has died after losing control of his land speed vehicle while attempting to set a new record Chris Raschke was taking part in the annual "SpeedWeek" event in Utah on Aug. 3 Rashke reached almost 280 mph before crashing, race director Keith Pedersen told local media outlet KUTV A man has died after losing control of his vehicle while attempting to set a new land speed record at the annual "SpeedWeek" event in Utah. Chris Raschke, 60, crashed his land speed vehicle on the Bonneville Salt Flats in northwestern Utah's Tooele County on Sunday, Aug. 3. "At approximately 3:03 p.m. Mountain Time today, driver Chris Raschke. age 60, was attempting a speed record and lost control of his land speed vehicle at approximately the 2 1/2 mile," the event's organizer Southern California Timing Association (SCTA), shared in a statement onFacebook. "Chris was treated by medical professionals at the scene. Unfortunately, Chris passed away from his injuries." "The cause of the incident is currently under investigation," the post concluded. Getty SpeedWeek began on Saturday, Aug. 2 and will end on Friday, Aug. 8, local media outletFox 13reported. PEOPLE has contacted the Tooele County Sheriff's Office for comment. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Facebook Race director Keith Pedersen revealed that Raschke almost reached 280 mph before crashing. "It's much more of a camaraderie and community, and that builds a lot of friendships and trust. He's a big part of it, and he will be sorely missed," Pedersen told local media outletKUTV. He added that the event will continue on Monday. Raschke's team Speed Demon 715 paid tribute to their late driver on social media. "At this time, we ask everyone to please respect Chris's family, friends, and the Speed Demon team. We are deeply devastated," a statement read on theirFacebook page. "If you come across any inappropriate comments on our pages, please let us know so we can address them. Thank you for your understanding." Read the original article onPeople

Driver, 60, Dies After Crashing at Nearly 280 mph While Attempting to Set New Land Speed Record

Driver, 60, Dies After Crashing at Nearly 280 mph While Attempting to Set New Land Speed Record Facebook A 60-year-old man has died after lo...
Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican partyNew Foto - Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party

Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the most prominent voices in Donald Trump's Maga movement, has declared in an interview that she feels that the Republican party has lost touch with its base, and suggested she may abandon the party entirely. The Georgia congresswoman told theDaily Mailthis week she was questioning whether she still belongs in the Republican fold and expressed resounding frustration with GOP leadership. "I don't know if the Republican party is leaving me, or if I'm kind of not relating to Republican party as much any more," Greene said. "I don't know which one it is." Greene, who boasts 7.5 million followers on X and commands one of the largest social media audiences of any Republican woman, accused party leaders of betraying core conservative principles. She did not criticize Trump himself, instead preferring to express her ire for what she attempted to paint as political elites. "I think the Republican party has turned its back on America First and the workers and just regular Americans," she said, warning that GOP leadership was reverting to its "neocon" past under the influence of what she termed the "good ole boys" network. The 51-year-old lawmaker, in the roughly six-month mark following Trump's return to the White House, said she was particularly frustrated with the House speaker, Mike Johnson, saying: "I'm not afraid of Mike Johnson at all." Her remarks reflect a broader pattern of voter dissatisfaction with traditional party structures. Americans appear to also be holding deeply unfavorable views of both major parties: a JulyWall Street Journal pollfound 63% view the Democratic party unfavorably, its worst rating in 35 years, while Republicans fare only marginally better in most surveys. Independent or independent-leaning Americans now account for nearly half the electorate, according toJuly Gallup polling, and public support has increasingly shifted toward Democrats through those leaners in recent months. On Monday, Greene used social media tocriticizethe lack of accountability over what she deems key issues to the base, sharing a table showing no arrests for the "Russian Collusion Hoax", "Jan 6th", and "2020 Election". "Like what happened all those issues? You know that I don't know what the hell happened with the Republican Party. I really don't," she said in the interview. "But I'll tell you one thing, the course that it's on, I don't want to have anything to do with it, and I just don't care any more." Her recent bills have targeted unconventional Republican territory: preventing cloud-seeding, making English the official US language, and cutting capital gains taxes on homes. She is also the first Republican in Congress to label the crisis in Gaza a genocide, and has called for ending foreign aid and using the so-called "department of government efficiency" (Doge) to cut down fraud and waste in the government. Greene acknowledged her isolation within the party, saying: "I'm going alone right now on the issues that I'm speaking about."

Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party

Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the most prominent voices in Donald Trum...
Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfireNew Foto - Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire

When authoritarianism encroaches, apologists often present a strongman's power grabs as rational — even imperative for the national good. Top Trump administration aides followed that playbook on Sunday, justifying the president's abrupt firing of the government's top labor official in charge of employment statistics over jobs numbers that dented his proclamation of a new "golden age." But theouster of Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, taken alongside President Donald Trump's concurrent bid to destroy the independence of the Federal Reserve, threatens the US economy's reputation as a bulwark of stability and integrity that has undergirded generations of prosperity. Such political interference might bolster Trump's ever-growing power. But it could backfire by eroding the trust of investors, companies and organizations that depend on accurate and truthful statistics on the economy's health to make major decisions that can impact the lives of millions of people. Even the Federal Reserve uses it to decide on monetary policy. And when countries don't firewall official data, they risk ending up like Argentina or Greece, where the invention of rosy statistics masked economic malaise and sparked financial crises. Or China, where fantastical official figures designed to bolster the regime's credibility fostered corruption — and benefited the US by comparison. Trump's assault on the BLS is also more than a narrow economic question. It's the latest erratic move by a president who believes he has total power and is immune from consequences, and who has become increasingly hubristic following a string of political wins this summer. Trump's domination of Congress and testing of constitutional limits have compromised constraints on presidential authority in a nation founded on the rejection of punitive and impetuous economic decisions by an all-powerful ruler. His quest for omnipotence across society can also be seen in his successful attempts to impose his ideology on top universities, his coercion of big-time law firms and his attacks on the media. Mirroring his assault on economic data, Trump and his aides have launched a purge of government scientists and experts whose findings conflict with the MAGA movement's doctrine on climate and vaccines. And while Republican presidents have sometimes had a point in arguing that their goals can be thwarted by a bureaucracy that they regard as overly liberal, Trump's assault on the federal government that he leads has funneled ever more unaccountable power into the Oval Office. But the president is taking a big economic risk. In the short term, his attack on the credibility of government data may exacerbate the economic uncertainty already gathering around the White House and darkening GOP prospects in next year's midterm elections. "BLS is the finest statistical agency in the entire world. Its numbers are trusted all over the world," former Commissioner for the Bureau of Labor Statistics William Beach told Kasie Hunt on CNN's "State of the Union." "I do believe, though, that the president's attack on the commissioner and on the bureau is undermining that infrastructure, could undermine that trust over the long term." Senior Trump aides went onto Sunday shows to make a case for his volatile reaction to the jobs numbers that subverted his own version of reality. "The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they're more transparent and more reliable," Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House Economic Council,said Sundayon NBC's "Meet the Press." On Monday, Hassett went even further, making a remarkable statement for someone in his position. Without offering any evidence, Hassett alleged in a CNBC interview that the jobs numbers could be "politically manipulated because they're so untransparent." "There's a black box system out there making the jobs numbers that needs to be improved," Hassett continued. Senate Democratic Minority leader Chuck Schumer responded to Hassett's defense of Trump's move by demanding his dismissal. "Kevin Hassett should be fired. He is defending Trump's lies about the jobs report and the firing of Erika McEntarfer," Schumerwrote on XMonday. "The business community should demand a flack like him has no role at the Fed." Another top Trump official, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, argued on Sunday that "you want to be able to have somewhat reliable numbers." He said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that "there are always revisions, but sometimes, you see these revisions go in really extreme ways. … The president is the president. He can choose who works in the executive branch." Trump was irked by job data that showed the economy created only 73,000 jobs in July. The monthly totals for May and June were also revised downward by a combined 258,000 jobs. Such recalculations are integral to the bureau's task of presenting an accurate picture of the economy over the longer term, and not just month to month. In this case, the jobs numbers appeared to confirm other indicators that contradict Trump's claims the economy is roaring, amid data showing slowing growth and a rise in inflation last month. One big danger now is that Trump's economic fabulism will gather its own momentum and infect confidence in government statistics that will long outlive his presidency. Employment data is published as part of a multilayered process that would be almost impossible for one official to corrupt. But if Trump appoints a politicized official to head the BLS with an incentive to please him, the pressure on officials to produce corrupted data would be intense. If jobs numbers are worse next month, will he fire someone else? And if the numbers improve, will anyone believe in their integrity? "Suppose that they get a new commissioner, and this person, male or female, are just the best people possible, right? And they do a bad number. Well, everybody's going to think, 'Well, it's not as bad as it probably really is,' because they're going to suspect political influence," Beach said on "State of the Union." The president's turn against his own government's nonpartisan number-crunchers when they produced a report that he didn't like was rather predictable. In 2018, he coaxed supporters from the real world into his illusory political environment,saying, "Just remember, what you're seeing and what you're reading is not what's happening." This mantra was borne out during his first term. In his first hours in office, Trump furiously ignited a controversy over the size of the crowd at his inauguration, which he claimed, despite photographic evidence, was the biggest ever. At the time, this seemed an absurd sideshow. But it turned out to set the stage for an entire presidency of fabricating facts. His attempt now to invent jobs numbers that fit with his version of reality recalls his negligent handling of the Covid-19 pandemic. Trump frequently claimedthat if the US stopped testing for the virus, it would simply have no more cases. And Trump's claim that Friday's jobs numbers were "rigged" recalls his greatest-ever attack on truth: his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. When voters produced a result that he didn't like, he attempted to destroy the credibility of the system that produced it and to fix the outcome. Memories of 2020 are especially sobering in the light of Friday's developments because of the way Trump's personal embarrassments often lead him to pursue authoritarian outcomes. Often, Trump's critics have proclaimed that authoritarianism is on the march whatever he does. There's an entire political and media industrial complex devoted to the idea that Americans are already living under a dictatorship. There's no comparison to the one-party police state endured by citizens of China. The dynastic tyranny of North Korea has no echoes in the United States, and this country is far short of the psychological torture suffered by the people of Myanmar, who live under a pervasive, repressive state. But Trump's actions are adding to growing evidence that he is engineering a degradation of democratic and pluralistic institutions. Comparisons between the president and populist authoritarian strongmen leaders such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán or Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan look increasingly apt. The new controversy over jobs numbers comes at a moment when the second Trump administration is acting almost without restraint. Trump single-handedly remade the global trading system byimposing tariffs, apparently according to his whims, while completely bypassing a genuflecting GOP Congress that has done nothing to defend its constitutional authority to dictate policy in that area. His transformation of the intelligence services into a vessel for his political convenience has led to false claims and probes accusing President Barack Obama's administration of treason over Russian election meddling in 2016. Trump's weaponization of the Justice Department is creating immense suspicion after Ghislaine Maxwell was moved to a more lenient prison after two days of talks with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. Trump is struggling to end a political crisis over his ties to her late associate Jeffrey Epstein, an accused sex trafficker and convicted sex offender. And on Sunday, Trump's demands fora rewriting of congressional districts in Texasto make it easier for Republicans to cling onto the House next year precipitated a political crisis that is now having national implications. Trump's second term has often seemed like an attempt to recast the world as he'd prefer it to be. He's pardoned or released criminals convicted in connection with the Capitol riot on January 6, 2021. The Pentagon has removed photos of top brass who contradicted him from its walls. And Trump has repeatedly attacked judges and claimed their actions are illegal as part of a pattern of behavior that CNN's Aaron Blake hasjustifiably called Orwellian. An apparent sense that there's no restraint on his power now seems to be feeding into Trump's foreign policy. Angered by Russia's failure to sign up to his Ukraine peace plan, Trump last week reacted to threats by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev by saying he'd repositioned US nuclear submarines. Medvedev is now mostly known as an online troll and has only a minor position in Russian politics, so it's hard to understand why Trump was so easily goaded. And Trump's reaction ignored the fact that submarines that prowl the oceans in silence, carrying the second tier of the US nuclear deterrent, are constantly in position to fire off their missiles. But the spectacle of an American president indulging in nuclear saber-rattling, just before this week's 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, was chilling. Meanwhile, Trump had a volcanic reaction following a rare show of dissent from Capitol Hill when Democrats, using their minority privileges in the Senate, blocked an attempt to ram through his conservative judicial nominees before the summer recess.Trump on Saturday told Schumerto "GO TO HELL!" after the collapse of a deal to swap some nominee confirmations for the restoration of some government funding cuts. Such an extreme reaction to a rather routine example of congressional gridlock only underscores how Trump has become used to getting his way. And he's determined that no one will stop him. This article has been updated with new details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire

Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire When authoritarianism encroaches, apologists often prese...
Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boonNew Foto - Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon

WASHINGTON – There's very little, it seems, that can harsh theMilwaukee Brewers' vibe these days. From offseason talent-shedding to an in-season cycle of constant roster churn torobust competitionin theNational League, it's almost impossible to puncture both thepower of friendshipand theleague-leading prosperitythe Brew Crew enjoys. Heck, at this point, even an injury to a prized young pitcher that would otherwise portend storm clouds can be viewed positively. Oh, we won't know for sure until Aug. 15, whenJacob Misiorowski, the right-handed comet best known for earning anAll-Star Game nod just five games into his career, is scheduled to come off the injured list. The Miz, as he's known from Menomonie to Muskego and points beyond, has a tibia contusion on his left shin, the result of a very real line drive that came off the bat of theChicago Cubs' Seiya Suzuki at 102.9 mph, coincidentally about as hard as Misiorowski's nastiest fastball comes out of his hand. Misiorowski received X-rays after that and additional imaging this weekend at Nationals Park before the Brewers scratched him roughly three hours before his Sunday, Aug. 3 scheduled start. The Miz is fully ambulatory, has been throwing and will continue to throw, probably could've one hundred or so times Sunday but instead, gave way to rookie Logan Henderson against theWashington Nationals. "They had an idea for me," Misiorowski said Sunday morning, "and it's basically, this is what it's going to be. Obviously, I tried to fight it a little bit, trying to throw, but I understand and they're looking out for me." It sounded like a rather tepid "fight," and it also sounds like a very good "idea." See, Henderson had few problems suppressing the moribund Nationals, pitching into the fifth inning in a 14-3 victory that capped a three-game sweep. Aggregate score: 38-14. While The Miz is hardly a luxury item, if you can avoid bringing Gucci luggage on a camping trip, why not? After all, when the Brewers placed Misiorowski on the IL, seven of their next 10 games would come against the last-place Nationals, the 46-63 Atlanta Braves and the last-place Pittsburgh Pirates. When he returns, Misiorowski's first two starts would be against the wild-card contenderCincinnati Redsand those second-place, 64-46 Cubs, part of a five-game series at Wrigley Field that marks the last meeting between the teams this season. And Misiorowski's 96 ⅔ innings pitched this season almost exactly matches his professional high of 97 ⅓ innings, reached last year. Sounds like a perfect time to pump the brakes on the kid a little bit. For competitive and, you know, other reasons. "He's had a lot coming at him," says Brewers manager Pat Murphy. "He came to the big leagues, the great start, the All-Star Game, line drive off the leg, hyperextended knee. "That's all part of your first five, six games." Now the 23-year-old has seven whole big league starts under his belt, during which he's struck out 47 batters in 33 ⅓ innings, riding a fastball whose 99.3 mph velocity is tied for eighth in the majors – including relievers. While Misiorowski insists there is no hard ceiling on his innings count, there is a concept of how many bullets – especially of the 100-mph variety – a guy has in a season. The Brewers, now 67-44, are in an absolute dogfight in the Central and, more broadly, in an NL with a half-dozen teams playing at least .550 ball. Much bigger fights almost certainly remain for a club with a 97.3% chance of making the playoffs, per FanGraphs. "The kid is special," Brewers veteran right-hander Brandon Woodruff tells USA TODAY Sports. "We've kind of seen here early on what he can do. He's just scratching the surface for what he can become. "Take care of this, have him fully ready to go for the stretch and the end of the year – probably be a good thing." Especially when there's plenty of infrastructure to support it. Murphy is well-versed at roster juggling – the Brewers used 36 pitchers last season and have already called upon 28 this season. Henderson has shown well in his five starts – he now has a 1.78 ERA and 0.99 WHIP after getting into the fifth Sunday – yet is simply another next-man-up in the Brewers' world. It's all by design, the pieces well-prepared. "Everyone in our (spring training) room last year pitched for us," says Murphy. "I let them know, if you have options, you're going to be up and down. Because we need that flexibility. Anybody with options, you might be optioned. "And probably will be." Saturday night, Henderson heard his name called in this version of Brewers bingo, scratched from his start with Class AAA Nashville at Scranton-Wilkes Barre, told to scramble to Washington to fill in for Misiorowski. After an evening drive south with his family at the wheel, he shut down the Nationals and now, the Brewers are 5-0 in his starts. A lot of Logan Hendersons add up to 67-44. "I did not expect it," says Henderson of his emergency assignment, "but I was ready for it. We're all in Nashville watching the boys win up here and it's been really fun and we all want to contribute. "I think that's the toughest battle, to be quite honest, trying to feel a part of the team up here when you're down there. It fuels you more. It makes you want to get back up here and be ready for any opportunity." It's all part of the Brewers' grand maneuvering, a place where a given winter might see them shed an All-Star piece like closer Devin Williams, or where the biggest trade deadline addition (upright division) might be reserve catcher Danny Jansen. The deadline is past them and the maneuvering can begin, but Murphy realizes the Milwaukee mojo is a delicate brew. "It works both ways. You get so myopic about all that and forget that these are still people," says Murphy. "It's got to be fun. If all of a sudden, these guys start taking on expectations that are different from the normal expectations of playing in the big leagues and playing as a team, if they start letting their energy and focus go toward something different, then it can screw everything up. "You've got to keep their focus and their energies just on how we do it. And let it all play out." Since 2018, that more likely means a taste of the postseason but not much more. The Brewers lost Game 7 of the 2018 NLCS to the Dodgers, then bowed out as a wild card the next two seasons. They won the Central in 2021, '23 and '24 but lost in the first round each time, the past two seasons in the wild card round as they failed to secure a first-round bye. If nothing else, they're a worthy steppingstone. The Brewers lost to the eventual World Series champion in 2019, 2020 and '21, while Arizona won the NL pennant after dispatching them in '23 and the New York Mets made a startling NLCS run last season. Not that there's any satisfaction in that. "We've had a good run here the last eight years. In '18, one game away from getting to the World Series," mused Woodruff, who has pitched excellently – a 2.01 ERA in four starts – in his return from shoulder surgery that cost him all of 2024. "Ever since then, it's been a battle. We've made the playoffs, but it's like we can't get over that hump. "You keep knocking on the door, knocking on the door and hopefully one of these years, you get over the hump. Hopefully this year is the year." That's a question the next three months will answer. They'll bid the Cubs farewell in three weeks, left to battle apart the remainder of the year. Beyond that, many of the Brewers' old tormentors will lurk in the postseason bracket. Carrying a bye beyond the wild card round would give Milwaukee an advantage it's never enjoyed. "There's some really good teams out there, with a lot more experience. Teams with a lot more physical talent," says Murphy. "But we're pretty good as a team. "We have to stick with that, and really understand that. If we think we're not going to go through bumps, we're crazy. There's going to be bumps." Yet in the case of Misiorowski, the Brewers hope to turn a bump into a boon. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jacob Misiorowski injury is bump for Brewers in NL Central standings

Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon

Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon WASHINGTON – There's very little, it seems, that can harsh...
Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics ChampionshipsNew Foto - Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships

Summer McIntoshwon her fourth gold medal of theWorld Aquatics Championshipsin Singapore with a dominant performance in the 400-meter individual medley. The Canadian teenagerfinished in 4:25.78to set a new championship record and cap off a near-perfect meet with five medals across her events. American superstarKatie Ledeckyis the only other woman to win as many golds at a single World Championships, while only Sweden's Sarah Sjöström has matched McIntosh's tally of five medals. With her bronze medal in the 800-meter freestyle on Saturday, McIntosh fell just short of matching Michael Phelps' record of five gold medals at a single World Championships. "Overall, I'm happy with this World Championships," McIntoshtoldCBC News. "I have to be, four golds is something that I've never achieved at the world stage before. "I broke my kind of curse of three – everything comes in threes but now everything comes in fours, and hopefully, I can push for everything to come in fives." In Sunday's 400-meter individual medley, the 18-year-old finished more than seven seconds clear of Australia's Jenna Forrester and Japan's Mio Narita, who tied for silver with a time of 4:33.26. China's 12-year-oldYu Zidi, who previously became the youngest medalist at the World Championships, was half a second outside the medals in fourth. McIntosh now has 13 medals from the World Championships, including eight golds. In Singapore, she also took victories in the 400m freestyle, the 200m butterfly, and the 200m medley. In the men's 400m medley, France'sLéon Marchandwon his second gold medal of the championships by completing a medley double. Hiswinning time of 4:04.73saw him finish ahead of Japan's Tomoyuki Matsushita and Russian Ilia Borodin in second and third respectively, claiming his seventh career gold at the World Championships. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships

Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships Summer McIntoshwon her fourth gold medal of theWorld Aquatics Champions...
Chris Christie likens Trump to 'petulant child' over labor statistics chief's firingNew Foto - Chris Christie likens Trump to 'petulant child' over labor statistics chief's firing

WASHINGTON −Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christiecalled PresidentDonald Trump'sfiring of the Bureau of Labor Statistics chief"irresponsible" and likened his response to weaker-than-anticipated jobs numbers to "the action of a petulant child." The Trump ally turned critic saidin an appearance on ABC Newsthe firing was classic Trump. "When he gets news he doesn't like, he needs someone to blame because he won't take the responsibility himself, and this is the action of a petulant child. Like, 'You give me bad news, I fire the messenger,'" Christie told "This Week" host George Stephanopoulos. Trump ordered the removal of Erika McEntarfer, the U.S. commissioner of Labor Statistics, on Aug. 1 after the Labor Department said the U.S. economy added a mere 73,000 jobs in July. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also revised down totals for May and June by a combined 258,000 jobs. The president accused McEntarfer, a 20-year veteran of the federal government appointed to the position by Biden, of politically driven data manipulation. He did not provide evidence for the charge. Trump said she would be replaced by "someone much more competent and qualified" in a Truth Social post announcing the firing. "Important numbers like this must be fair and accurate, they can't be manipulated for political purposes." President Trump orders firing:Labor statistics chief removed after weak jobs report He wrote in another post, "In my opinion, today's Jobs Numbers were RIGGED in order to make the Republicans, and ME, look bad." Christie invoked his eight years as New Jersey governor, and said in his experience, "it would be almost impossible for anyone to try to rig these numbers because so many people are involved in putting them together." "All she's doing is being a conduit of the information," he said. "So it's irresponsible, from a position of facts, but it also shows you the way he manages." Trump economic advisers defended the president's decision elsewhere on television, with National Economic Council chair Kevin Hassett arguing on NBC News that the bureau needs a "fresh set of eyes." "There have been a bunch of patterns that could make people wonder. And I think the most important thing for people to know is that it's the president's highest priority that the data be trusted and that people get to the bottom of why these revisions are so unreliable," Hassett said on"Meet the Press." Trump also went on the attack, allegingin a post on Aug. 3that McEntarfer "did the same thing just before" the 2024 presidential election − inflating and then revising down former PresidentJoe Biden's jobs numbers. "I then won the Election, anyway, and she readjusted the numbers downward, calling it a mistake, of almost one million jobs. A SCAM!" he claimed. Revisions to monthly estimates are common, andin December 2024,the Labor Department said 15,000 fewer jobs were created in the month of Novemberthan its initial estimate.BLS said 7,000 more jobs than it projected were created in October. Trump appeared to be referencing an announcement BLS made in August 2024, three months before the election, when the agencyreduced its estimateby 818,000 for jobs created between April 2023 and March 2024. It was the largest downgrade in 15 years. In an interview on CBS News' "Face the Nation," U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greerdid not repeatTrump's claim that the data was "rigged" but argued that "there were enormous swings in the jobs numbers" during last year's presidential campaign. "And so it sounds to me like the president has real concerns," he said in the interview that taped Aug. 1. "There are always revisions, but sometimes you see these revisions go in really extreme ways. And it's, you know, the president is the president. He can choose who works in the executive branch." Trump told reporters later, as he prepared to return to Washington after a weekend at his New Jersey golf club, that he would be announcing a new statistician this week. Contributing: Joey Garrison This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Christie likens Trump to 'petulant child' after jobs data firing

Chris Christie likens Trump to 'petulant child' over labor statistics chief's firing

Chris Christie likens Trump to 'petulant child' over labor statistics chief's firing WASHINGTON −Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Ch...

 

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