
Pedro Martinez says he has family unaccounted for in Dominican Republic nightclub roof collapse
Major League Baseball Hall of Famer and Boston Red Sox pitching legend Pedro Martinez says he has family members who were at at a nightclub in the Dominican Republic when the
roof collapsed
on Tuesday, killing more than 100 people.
"I still have family members that are still in the [rubble] and we don't know what happened to them but we just want to be strong, like we have always been," Martinez said in a
video
posted to his social media accounts.
Martinez said to those who lost family members in the roof collapse, "our hearts are with you."
"We're all sad, we're all affected by the tragedy," he said. "We're a country that prays a lot and remains united all the time."
Martinez, a Dominican-American, has maintained
strong ties
to his native country. The Pedro Martinez Foundation raises money for Dominican children in need and he is building a state-of-the-art charter school there that is set to open in 2026.
Authorities said Wednesday that at least 113 people died and more than 150 were hospitalized when the top of the Jet Set club in the capital city of Santo Domingo collapsed. Hundreds of people are still looking for potential survivors.
"We presume that many of them are still alive, and that is why the authorities here will not give up until not a single person remains under that rubble," Center of Emergency Operations Director Juan Manuel Méndez said.
Among the dead were former MLB pitcher
Octavio Dotel
and former MLB player Tony Blanco. Seven-time MLB All-Star Nelson Cruz said his sister Nelsy Cruz, a governor in the country, was also killed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
C. Notes: Christian Encarnacion-Strand leads Reds' sweep of Diamondbacks
CINCINNATI — Before Sunday's game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Cincinnati Reds utilityman Spencer Steer marveled at his teammate Christian Encarnacion-Strand. 'You just look at him,' Steer said, pointing across the clubhouse where the 25-year-old Encarnacion-Strand stood at his locker. 'He's a strong guy; he's going to hit the ball hard.' Advertisement A teammate walked by and made a comment about Encarnacion-Strand's physique, and Steer noted: 'Yeah, he's got a thick lower half. That's going to help him.' Beyond the physical traits, Encarnacion-Strand can not only put the bat on the ball regardless of where it's thrown, but also do damage on pitches other players can't. Sunday, Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen said he thought his fourth-inning 3-2 knuckle curve to Encarnacion-Strand was a 'pretty good pitch.' It was. The pitch was just below the strike zone on the outer third of the plate. Encarnacion-Strand went down to get the pitch and launched it 403 feet into the stands in left field for his third homer in as many games since coming off the injured list. 'He hits some balls where you go, 'How did you hit that one out?'' said Reds second baseman Matt McLain, whose two-run home run in the seventh inning gave the Reds a 4-2 victory over the Diamondbacks to complete the series sweep. McLain didn't even pick the pitch from Gallen as one of those, instead noting Encarnacion-Strand's homer Friday night when he hit a slider on the outside corner to straightaway center field for the tying home run. YUP CES IS STILL BACK — Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) June 8, 2025 Both Friday night's home run and Sunday's home run were on the edge of the strike zone. Since the Reds acquired Encarnacion-Strand (and Steer) from the Minnesota Twins at the 2022 trade deadline, the book on him is that he can hit just about any ball out of the park, but he needs to limit his swings to pitches in the zone. 'That can get him in trouble at times because he can hit those balls out, and he expands the zone a little too much at times,' Steer said. Reds manager Terry Francona has repeatedly said that when Encarnacion-Strand swings at strikes, he can be an integral part of the Reds lineup. Advertisement While the Reds had been dealing with offensive inconsistencies, the front office was patient in waiting for Encarnacion-Strand to be ready before bringing him back. It was tough not only for the front office, but also Encarnacion-Strand, who missed the vast majority of the 2024 season with injuries. But after going on the IL on April 17 with low back inflammation, Encarnacion-Strand started his rehab assignment on May 15 in Arizona and then went to Triple-A Louisville three days later. In all, he played 10 games with the Bats and got a total of 43 plate appearances. That, he said, was vital to the success he's had in his three games back, where he hit a home run in each game and went 7-for-13 in the three-game series against Arizona. 'It made it easier knowing that I'm starting to settle in, and when they call me up (to the big leagues), I'll be ready,' Encarnacion-Strand said. One of the reasons Terry Francona is so appreciated by those who have played for him is that he cares about his players as people, not just for what they can do for him professionally. Francona has spoken glowingly about backup catcher Austin Wynns since this spring, complimenting myriad qualities that made the 34-year-old catcher a valuable member of the Reds, from his preparation to his play to his attitude. When the Reds activated Encarnacion-Strand on Friday, the team designated Wynns for assignment. Wynns started 12 games when Tyler Stephenson was on the injured list but hadn't started a game since Stephenson was activated May 2. Before Friday's game, Francona was asked if he hoped Wynns would clear waivers and the Reds could keep him in the organization. He quickly answered, 'No.' Not because he didn't think he'd help the Reds, but because that's what was best for Wynns. Advertisement 'I'm not even comfortable saying 'fingers crossed' because the guy deserves to be in the major leagues,' Francona said. 'He handled a really (crappy) thing really well. He is (a pro). He was and is and will be.' The Reds were sure Wynns would be claimed, and while he was on waivers, he was traded to the Athletics for cash considerations. It was the second instance during the week that the Reds put a player's best interest over their own. Wade Miley opted out of his contract, and Reds president of baseball operations Nick Krall told him that the team wanted him, but at the time, there was no place in the rotation for him. He told Miley that if there wasn't a starting job out there that he wanted, the Reds would sign him to a big-league deal and he'd go to the bullpen. The way Miley was treated — not just this week but also following the 2021 season when his option wasn't picked up — with honesty and respect was a big reason he wanted to return to Cincinnati, he said. Miley's first start in more than a year will be at a place he has had success before, Cleveland's Progressive Field. Miley, who threw a no-hitter for the Reds against Francona's Guardians in 2021, will start for the Reds on Monday. The 38-year-old Miley had a hybrid Tommy John surgery in May 2024. Miley was signed to a big-league deal Wednesday and appeared in that night's game against his old team, the Milwaukee Brewers. Against the Brewers, Miley gave up four runs on six hits in just two innings. Miley said getting on the mound in a big-league game was such a big accomplishment that he wasn't really thinking as much about pitching as he was being in the game. 'I was appreciative of getting that opportunity to go back out there,' Miley said Sunday. 'It was a little more chucking and ducking than pitching, but I kind of forgot to pitch. I was just like, 'I'm out here throwing balls.'' Advertisement Even when Miley was younger, his success came from pitching, rather than overpowering hitters. If Miley isn't pitching, his 90 mph fastball isn't going to overpower big-league hitters. 'Now I can focus on pitching moving forward,' Miley said. As for his no-hitter in Cleveland in 2021, Miley said he doesn't think much about it. 'It was definitely a cool moment that happened,' Miley said. 'You can't get caught up in that too much, since it can be a slippery slope.' Nicolle Suárez, the daughter of Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suárez, got a chance to see her dad play against her favorite team this weekend. Nicolle, her sister and mother accompanied the former Red to the series at Great American Ball Park. Nicolle, 7, got to see three Reds victories and two home runs by her dad. Perhaps more importantly, she was reunited with the Reds' mascots, Rosie, Mr. Redlegs, Mr. Red and Gapper, whom her dad said she was the most excited to see. An All-Star — Arizona Diamondbacks (@Dbacks) June 8, 2025 Nicolle was born in Cincinnati in September 2017 when her dad was a member of the Reds. Suárez was traded to the Seattle Mariners before the 2022 season and then to the Diamondbacks following the 2023 season. Originally signed by the Detroit Tigers as an amateur in 2008, the Reds acquired him in a trade following the 2014 season. Suárez was with the Reds in 2017 when Scooter Gennett hit four home runs in a game, and earlier this season, he joined Gennett in the exclusive four-homer club. The two former teammates traded texts, which was not surprising considering they were two of the most friendly players in the history of the home clubhouse at GABP. 'I like Scooter a lot, he was one of my best teammates — he was always happy, always enjoyable,' Suárez said Friday, the anniversary of Gennett's four-homer game. 'He congratulated me and it was awesome. I never thought I'd hit four homers in a big-league game.' Advertisement Suárez's four-homer game came the day after former Reds general manager Walt Jocketty, who brought Suárez to Cincinnati, died. 'For me, Jocketty was a lot — he had a part of my heart because he was the guy who trusted in Eugenio Suárez,' he said. 'Not only that, he gave me the opportunity to build my career. He was the guy who asked for me from the Detroit Tigers. He asked the Detroit Tigers for me because he thought I was going to be a good player.' Saturday, Suárez hit his 100th home run at Great American Ball Park, and Sunday, he hit the 294th of his career, which tied him with Magglio Ordóñez for third most by a player born in Venezuela. Súarez trails only Miguel Cabrera (511) and Andrés Galarraga (399) on that list. It was walk-off week for the Reds, with TJ Friedl closing Tuesday night's game with a robbery of a tying homer, and then Saturday, Encarnacion-Strand singled in the winning run in the continuation of Friday night's game against the Diamondbacks for the Reds' first walk-off hit of the season and the fourth of his young career. The Reds' sweep of the Diamondbacks helped get them back to .500 (33-33) and gave them a winning week after dropping two of three to the Brewers. The Reds take a 3-0 lead into Cleveland for the conclusion of the Ohio Cup. There is a trophy, and the Reds haven't won it since 2014, Francona's second year at the helm in Cleveland. For those betting on the Frank Robinson Most Outstanding Player, former Guardian Will Benson is the favorite to claim one of baseball's highest honors after hitting four home runs in the Reds' three-game sweep of the Guardians in May. After the conclusion of that series, the Reds will stay in the American League Central, traveling to Detroit to face the Tigers for three games. • IF Jeimer Candelario (lumbar spine sprain) began his rehab assignment at Triple-A Louisville on Thursday after a pair of games in Arizona. He had at least one hit in each of his first three games with the Bats before going 0-for-3 in Sunday's second game of a doubleheader. With the Bats, he has gone 4-for-15 with a double, while striking out six times. • RHP Hunter Greene (right groin strain) went on the IL on June 4. An MRI showed no new injury. Advertisement • 3B Noelvi Marte (left oblique strain) started hitting drills in Arizona on Friday. • RHP Carson Spiers (right shoulder impingement) threw off the mound for the first time on Friday in Arizona. • Triple-A Louisville (26-36): The Bats snapped a nine-game losing streak on Saturday when RHP Chase Petty went six innings and allowed just one run, a home run to the second hitter of the game, on four hits with one walk and eight strikeouts. In a seven-inning game as part of a makeup doubleheader, Candelario hit a walk-off single to give the Bats a 2-1 victory. RHP Connor Phillips earned the win with a scoreless inning. The second game was postponed by rain and made up as a doubleheader Sunday. The Bats split that doubleheader with the Norfolk Tides. • Double-A Chattanooga (28-25): OF Hector Rodríguez hit his seventh home run of the season Saturday. The 21-year-old is hitting .277/.346/.456 in 217 plate appearances for the Lookouts this season. He has 29 strikeouts and 20 walks to go along with 10 doubles and a pair of triples. • High-A Dayton (18-39): IF Cam Collier's rehab assignment was transferred from Arizona to Dayton this week, and he had hits in four of the five games he played with the Dragons. Collier, who had surgery to repair a thumb injury suffered in spring training in March, played 10 games in Arizona before going to Dayton. In his five games with the Dragons, he's 5-for-17 with a double, four strikeouts and three walks. • Class-A Daytona (25-32): SS Sammy Stafura tripled in three straight games this weekend and has five on the season. The 20-year-old is hitting .259/.374/.416 with 12 doubles and three home runs. He also has 16 stolen bases. Over 240 plate appearances, he has 61 strikeouts and 33 walks.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
When SailGP came to New York City: Spectators, ‘storytelling' and star-studded investors
In New York City, there is never any shortage of sports and entertainment options. This weekend alone, the New York Yankees hosted the Boston Red Sox in front of a sellout crowd and more than 100,000 people attended the Governors Ball music festival. The battle for market share has rarely felt so fierce, yet a short ferry ride over the water to Governors Island and another live sports event was in demand: SailGP. Just under 10,000 people filled out a grandstand — at $85 (£63) per ticket for adults and $43 for kids — to watch a sport growing in appeal and increasingly marketed as the Formula One of the seas. Advertisement The product is increasingly straightforward: 12 nations compete in 12 destinations for $12.8 million worth of prize money across the season. They race in identical hydrofoil catamaran boats, which can go at speeds of over 60 miles per hour. During this weekend's event, racers navigated rainy conditions and choppy waters on the Hudson River, with the skyscrapers of Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty painting a picture-perfect backdrop. Spain took their second consecutive event win in the difficult conditions. After finishing the Fleet Races in third with 38 points, Los Gallos held off New Zealand and France to take home the victory in the three-boat final. 'Sailing used to be white triangles on a blue background way out at sea,' says Andy Thompson, SailGP's managing director. 'But that is very far from what SailGP is today. It's a racing property.' The past fortnight has offered further evidence that SailGP is captivating investors. First, the Italian team was acquired by the women-led investment firm Muse Capital at a valuation of $45 million in a consortium that includes the Hollywood actress Anne Hathaway. This represented considerable growth for teams that were selling for between $5m-10m only two years ago. The former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry has previously led a group which acquired the U.S. team for $35 million. In March, Real Madrid forward Kylian Mbappe bought into the France SailGP team. If we needed any more evidence that Sail GP is the en-vogue sporting investment, this came last week when Ryan Reynolds added to his growing sporting portfolio by teaming up with Hugh Jackman — yes, that's Deadpool and Wolverine — as the pair became controlling owners of the Australian SailGP team. The Aussies, who have now rebranded as the Bonds Flying Roos — yes, that's Bonds underwear as the title sponsor — won the first three Sail GP championships and were runners-up last season. Advertisement Their star sailor Tom Slingsby, an Olympic gold medallist and CEO of the Aussie SailGP team, says he became aware of visits to SailGP events by Reynolds' team at Maximum Effort, the production company and marketing agency founded by the actor ('maximum effort' being the catchphrase of Reynolds' movie Deadpool). Tentative discussions have already started about a possible docuseries, following on from Reynolds' investment in Welsh soccer club Wrexham and Colombian soccer team La Equidad. 'They bring star power,' Slingsby tells The Athletic. 'To have Deadpool and Wolverine, they're the 'it' people right now. They also bring an element of storytelling. We're seeing what Ryan's done with Wrexham. They're just going to be fun owners. Having chatted with Ryan, he is incredibly funny and he's going to fit really well with our team. 'Importantly, every discussion with them is, 'What do you guys need to do to be successful?'. Obviously there's talk of ways to promote our team in the league, but it all comes second to us being successful on the water. I was obviously pretty strong on us being athletes first, and if we can be entertaining for the public as well, that's great, but we want to win on the water.' The U.S. team's ownership group is similarly stacked with big-time investors and star names. Mike Buckley, the CEO and on-boat strategist for the U.S. team, says: 'We wanted the most diverse ownership group that we could possibly find. We want people who don't think like us and have different areas of expertise. 'I can pick up the phone and call Marc Lasry, who runs one of the most successful private equity firms in the world (Avenue Capital). He won the NBA championship and took the Bucks from the back to the front and the valuation from a few hundred million to three or four billion.' The U.S. ownership also features founding Uber engineer Ryan Mckillen and his wife Margaret, the Resy co-founder Gary Vaynerchuk, Hollywood actress Issa Rae, the NFL's DeAndre Hopkins and boxer Deontay Wilder. For sailors, SailGP provides game-changing security by providing year-round events beyond the America's Cup and Olympic Games. Advertisement 'Sailing used to jump on the radar every four years and then it just disappeared off the mainstream public's vision,' says Slingsby. 'After an Olympics, when you finish your event, you'd just be sitting there and there's no funding, you're out of a job for a while and you're waiting for the phone to ring. 'When I've been between Olympics, I've had other jobs — bartending and boat building, all sorts of things. You're doing anything you can to keep the money coming in. 'In 10 years, we'll definitely be seeing SailGP still here and racing in consistent events. It's going to be the backbone of sailing. It's five years old now, a lot of people were saying that it would be around for a year or two and disappear.' Founded by the billionaire Larry Ellison, the co-founder of tech firm Oracle, SailGP is discovering traction in what their executives describe as the crossover market between lifestyle and experiential sports. Slingsby notes there are markets such as New Zealand where the fandom is more intense, and athletes are approached at hotels and when out for dinner. SailGP's executive Thompson says the event's ratings 'regularly average around 20 million dedicated viewers around the world.' In the U.S., CBS and its Paramount+ streaming platform broadcast the event. Their highest-rated events — which bring in around 1.8 million viewers — have been intentionally scheduled to follow NFL games in order to capture audiences from America's most popular sport. SailGP's chief revenue officer Ben Johnson bristles at any suggestion sailing is a 'niche' sport, but the locations of some races — St. Tropez in France, Abu Dhabi and Dubai in the Middle East, or Manhattan — do lend themselves to an exclusive in-person audience. The aim is a vast broadcast audience and a hot-ticket live event. Johnson says they are taking learnings from events such as the Kentucky Derby, or the Indy 500, as well as F1, and 'leagues who are moving from traditional sports operators to more sports entertainment and even just broadly entertainment properties.' By attracting celebrity investors (or employing DJ Khaled as the league's 'Chief Hype Officer'), SailGP want to make their events, much like F1, a place to see and be seen. Advertisement Johnson says: 'It is very intentional. There are brands like (European soccer champions) Paris Saint-Germain, where they are more of a lifestyle brand than they are a traditional sports team. They are a perfect example of where we see the opportunity in the global sports space. 'We don't need to be a season-ticketed event. We don't need local media rights to validate our audience growth or our revenue model. We think the demand right now from an experiential standpoint is the highest it's ever been and will continue to grow. So we're focused on new fanbases and inspiring the next generation of lifestyle sports fans. 'People (are) looking for social, communal, family-friendly, brand safe moments where they can bring people together. And I think we're the perfect backdrop for that. It's new, it's novel, fast, you know, all the things that you need to really capture people's attention.' Sponsors are certainly discovering the appeal. SailGP's title sponsor is Rolex, but across the league and teams there are now investments or partnerships from sovereign wealth funds, such as Mubadala Capital (of Abu Dhabi), as well as Emirates airline sponsoring the league and Red Bull partnering with the Italian team, while the U.S. team have sponsorships with Tommy Hilfiger, Amazon, and T-Mobile. The British team is title-sponsored by Emirates and has a partnership with JP Morgan, while Deutsche Bank sponsors the German side. 'I would expect next year you (will) see all the teams somewhere close to commercial profitability,' says Buckley. When asked about profitability, Johnson said SailGP does not disclose its financials, but it is 'ahead of our own internal targets.' The growing investment in the sport is also accompanied by increased jeopardy. Only Spain have won more than one event this season, which may be one of the advantages of sailors racing on identical boats — meaning winning and losing come down to conditions on the day and the performances and skill of those on board. That is not to say there have not been challenges. May's SailGP event was supposed to be held in Rio de Janeiro for the first time but it was cancelled after a defect was found in some of the fleet's wingsails. Australia's wingsail collapsed in San Francisco in a moment Slingsby called a 'scary situation.' The 12 boats were all back on the start line in New York. With 12 teams and money swishing around the sport, talk invariably turns to expansion. Russell Coutts, SailGP CEO and an Olympic gold medallist with New Zealand, has previously spoken about expanding the number of events per season to as high as 20 or 24. Plenty of nations remain untapped, notably Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which has poured money into sports elsewhere. Advertisement 'I think the demand right now exceeds 12 teams,' Johnson says. 'We have an opportunity for us to announce expansion teams, continue to look at markets that we think are really additive.' Buckley says 'balance' is key, concluding: 'There are plenty of countries out there that aren't represented currently in the league. It would be great for all of us.'


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
MLB games today: Schedule, times, how to watch for June 9
MLB games today: Schedule, times, how to watch for June 9 Show Caption Hide Caption With the Dodgers favored to repeat, is the MLB becoming too top-heavy? Bob Nightengale and Gabe Lacques discuss whether or not the MLB is lacking parity and could be facing a potential problem in the future. Sports Seriously Here is the full Major League Baseball schedule for June 9 and how to watch all the games. Or see our sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division. MLB schedule today All times Eastern and accurate as of Monday, June 9, 2025, at 4:41 a.m. Watch MLB games all season long with Fubo (free trial). MLB scores, results MLB scores for June 9 games are available on Here's how to access today's results: See scores, results for all the games listed above. See MLB Scores, results from June 8