
Report: Racing's Kayla Fischer suspended for hair-pulling foul
Racing Louisville midfielder Kayla Fischer received a three-game suspension for a hair-pulling incident, ESPN reported Thursday.
Fischer earned a red card and was ejected in the 67th minute of Saturday's 3-2 win against Angel City FC.
Replays showed her taking ACFC midfielder Madison Hammond to the ground by her hair during a corner kick.
The NWSL's disciplinary committee added two games to the automatic one-game red-card suspension after reviewing the event, ESPN reported.
A league spokesperson declined to comment on the report but Fischer issued an apology through ESPN.
"I would like to apologize to Madison Hammond and Angel City for my actions last weekend," Fischer said.
"It was never my intention to be overly aggressive while defending a corner, and I sincerely regret my behavior and letting my teammates down. I accept and understand the league's decision.
"When I return to the field later this season, I plan to show that I have learned from my actions and that this moment doesn't define me as a player or the respect I have for my opponents and the game."
Fischer, 25, has two goals and two assists in 10 starts this season. Louisville has three matches left before the league's summer break, leaving her out until Aug. 1.
--Field Level Media
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The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Why is LA protesting? 700 Marines set to be deployed on streets as curfew hits Los Angeles
More than 700 Marines awaited deployment in Los Angeles on Wednesday, marking the latest escalation of Donald Trump's response to the immigration raid protests. Demonstrations continued for a sixth day after a string of ICE raids on Friday sparked a wave of unrest in LA, with the battalion of Marines set to join 4,000 National Guard troops already mobilized in the city. The administration is now considering troop deployments to other cities as protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement intensify in New York, Chicago, Austin and Denver, an official told the New York Times. California Governor Gavin Newsom, who claims the presence of troops exacerbates tensions, has asked a judge for an emergency injunction, arguing it is 'unlawful.' A hearing is set for Thursday. LA Mayor Karen Bass placed a curfew into effect in a portion of downtown LA in response to looting and vandalism, with the Los Angeles Police Department stating that it made 'mass arrests' after the restriction was imposed. Here, The Independent breaks down what you need to know as LA experiences its fifth day of upheaval. How did the protest start? Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers conducted search warrants at multiple locations on Friday. One search was executed outside a clothing warehouse in the Fashion District after a judge found probable cause that the employer was using fictitious documents for some of its workers, according to representatives for Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S Attorney's Office. Crowds tried to stop ICE agents from driving away following the arrests. Another protest was sparked outside a federal building in downtown LA, after demonstrators discovered detainees were allegedly being held in the basement of the building. Protests then erupted in Paramount after it appeared federal law enforcement officers were conducting another immigration operation in the area. The protests also spread to the nearby city of Compton. LA County Sheriff Robert Luna stated that as many as 400 people were involved in the demonstration. The ICE operations in Los Angeles resulted in the arrests of 118 immigrants this week, including 44 people in Friday's operations, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The arrests led to protesters gathering outside a federal detention center, chanting, 'Set them free, let them stay!' Why did Trump first deploy the National Guard? On Saturday, Trump ordered the deployment of at least 2,000 National Guard troops to LA. 'If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' he wrote on Truth Social. Newsom responded on social media that the ' federal government is moving to take over the California National Guard and deploy 2,000 soldiers. That move is purposefully inflammatory and will only escalate tensions.' He added that the mobilization is 'the wrong mission and will erode public trust.' The state National Guard had not been federalized by a president – in doing so overriding a governor – since 1965. How have things progressed since? The first National Guard troops arrived in areas of Los Angeles on Sunday, including Paramount and the downtown area. Footage shared online showed an escalation in the clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement, with police in riot gear using tear gas to disperse people. Another video showed protesters throwing fireworks and other projectiles at officers. Vehicles have been set on fire and graffiti reading 'f*** ICE' has been sprayed in multiple locations. By Sunday morning, the LAPD had already made dozens of arrests, with law enforcement braced for 'several more protests' in the city throughout the day. Police said in the evening that there had been reports of looting in the city. After sharply criticizing Newsom and Bass, Trump continued his rebuke against protestors on the ground. Late Sunday, he wrote on Truth Social that it's 'looking really bad in L.A. BRING IN THE TROOPS!!' By Monday, Trump ordered the Defense Department to take control of an additional 2,000 California National Guardsmen to bolster efforts to quell demonstrations. They will join the 2,000 guardsmen already stationed throughout L.A. About 700 Marines were also mobilized by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, with Newsom deploying an additional 800 law enforcement officers in a bid to 'clean up President Trump's mess.' Protests on Monday were mostly quelled by the evening and remained less violent than Sunday's fiery clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement officers. On Tuesday, authorities enforced the curfew in a portion of downtown LA between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. Wednesday, with Bass warning that anyone who failed to comply would be detained. The LAPD said that it made 'mass arrests' after the restriction was imposed. Hours before the Marine battalion was scheduled to be deployed in LA on Wednesday, Newsom filed an emergency injunction in an attempt to block the troop deployment. The administration is now considering deploying troops to other cities to quell further protests, an official told the New York Times. Anti-ICE protests began sprouting up in broader parts of California and other major U.S. cities. Approximately 60 protesters, including juveniles, were arrested Sunday in San Fransico after a group began to vandalize property. Over on the East Coast, around 20 anti-ICE protesters were also led away by police in New York, following demonstrations in lower Manhattan. On Monday, multiple people were arrested near San Francisco's City Hall after two small groups broke off from thousands of protestors marching peacefully to commit 'vandalism and other criminal acts,' police said A peaceful protest in Santa Ana developed into violence with rocks thrown and fireworks set off at law enforcement officers, officials say. In Austin, police were forced to use pepper spray and tear gas to disperse protesters who had gathered at the Texas Capitol. By Tuesday, protests had spread to at least 10 cities with dozens of arrests made. The most hostile of which were in New York City, where, in the evening, clashes broke out between police and protesters near the ICE office. Protesters were thrown to the ground as police tried to handcuff them. Others lobbed water bottles at officers. More protests were scheduled for Wednesday in places like Seattle, St. Louis and Indianapolis. What has the reaction been? Newsom and Bass have both continued to speak out against the president's decision to deploy the troops, describing it as 'unnecessary' and an attempt by the administration to create 'chaos.' In a statement put out via email, the governor said that Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 'want a spectacle' and violence. Speaking to KTLA on Sunday, Bass said that Trump's decision was unnecessary and 'just political.' 'I'm very disappointed. To me, this is just completely unnecessary, and I think it's the [Trump] administration just posturing.' By Monday, Newsom rebuked Trump's 'blatant abuse of power.' 'We will sue to stop this. The Courts and Congress must act. Checks and balances are crumbling,' he said. 'This is a red line — and they're crossing it. WAKE UP!' In a televised address Tuesday, Newsom lambasted Trump for 'fanning the flames' of the LA protests, stating his 'brazen abuse of power' had 'inflamed a combustible situation.' Other Democrats, including Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and New Jersey Senator Corey Booker, backed Newsom and Bass, with Booker describing the president's actions as 'hypocritical at best.' Why has the Mexican flag become a symbol of the protest? A dramatic photograph showing a masked protester biking around a blazing car in Los Angeles has rapidly become a symbol of the anti-ICE riots. Drone footage of the masked protester, in the Hispanic-majority city, was shared on X and went viral. Many said it gave Trump a propaganda coup as he works to deport migrants from LA and said the photo of the Mexican flag-waving protester was undermining their resistance. Democrat supporter Armand Domalewski shared the video and claimed on X that the protester 'has to be a Republican plant'. 'This is like the perfect propaganda footage for Trump and Steven Miller. Why do people do this?' Australian political observer Drew Pavlou wrote in response.


Daily Mail
41 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
LA on lockdown as mayor enacts curfew and declares 'local emergency'
Los Angeles was put on lockdown after mayor Karen Bass finally declared a local after days of anti-ICE demonstrations. Parts of the downtown area will be a no-go zone from 8pm to 6am from Tuesday through Wednesday after violent protesters set fire to cars, looted buildings and attacked officers with rocks, fireworks, and cement bricks. Bass said the curfew is expected to last several days, adding: 'If you do not live or work in downtown LA avoid the area. Law enforcement will arrest individuals who break the curfew, and you will be prosecuted.' SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO Meanwhile, governor Gavin Newsom tore into President Trump for exacerbating the chaos. Less than an hour after the curfew was imposed, Newsom spoke out on national television, blaming the federal government for the ongoing crisis. He said: 'Authoritarian regimes begin by targeting people who are least able to defend themselves, but they do not stop there. 'This is a president who in just over 140 days, has fired government watchdogs that could hold him accountable, accountable for corruption and fraud. He's declared a war, a war on culture, on history, on science, on knowledge itself. Databases, quite literally, are vanishing.' Newsom claimed that 'when Donald Trump sought blanket authority to commandeer the National Guard, he made that order apply to every state in this nation', adding: 'This is about all of us. This is about you. California may be first, but it clearly will not end here. Other states are next. Democracy is next. 'Democracy is under assault before our eyes, this moment we have feared has arrived.' While Newsom did urge protesters to remain peaceful if they took to the streets, he encouraged Americans to stand up against Trump: 'What Donald Trump wants most is your fealty, your silence, to be complicit in this moment. Do not give in to him.' Trump also gave orders to send 700 Marines and 4,100 National Guard troops in to take over policing efforts and assist the LAPD. Bass revealed at least 23 businesses have been looted during the ongoing violence and condemned some of the horrifying images which have emerged from the days of carnage. But the mayor said the curfew was contained to where the violence was most apparent, noting: 'Some of the imagery of the protests and the violence gives the appearance as though this is a city wide crisis and is not.' She hopes that by imposing a curfew and declaring a local emergency, she can 'stop the vandalism, stop the looting'. Bass added: 'A curfew has been in consideration for several days, but clearly after the violence that took place last night and just the extensive widespread nature of the vandalism, we reached a tipping point.' While she refrained from locking down the entire downtown area, the LAPD issued alerts listing downtown Los Angeles as 'unlawful assembly' zones in an effort to rid the area of any and all protesters. The regions impacted by the lockdown span from the five freeway to the 110 freeway, and from the 10 freeway to the point where the 110 and the five merge. The development comes as Trump threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to stop the LA rioters, which authorizes the president to deploy military forces inside the United States to suppress rebellion or domestic violence or to enforce the law in certain situations. 'If there's an insurrection, I would certainly invoke it. We'll see. But I can tell you, last night was terrible. The night before that was terrible,' Trump said. He repeatedly referred to 'bad, sick people' and 'agitators' he said were paid to wreak havoc. A curfew is the natural next step in efforts toward regaining control of the city, as the LAPD ramps up arrests and cracks down on protesters breaching unlawful assembly orders. LAPD chief Jim McDonnell said protests had grown more violent as the week progressed. There were just 27 arrests on Sunday, with 40 on Sunday, 114 on Monday and nearly 200 by 6pm on Tuesday. He said public safety personnel, journalists and homeless people would be exempt from the order. The arrival of Trump's military reinforcements brought its own set of challenges on Tuesday, with furious Newsom filing an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order. The governor wrote on X: I just filed an emergency motion to block Trump's illegal deployment of Marines and National Guard in Los Angeles. Trump is turning the U.S. military against American citizens. The courts must immediately block these illegal actions.' A judge denied the motion and instead granted the Trump administration an extension of time to respond to Newsom's filing. The federal government now has until 2pm on Wednesday to file its response. Newsom will then have an opportunity to file its opposition ahead of a hearing at 1.30pm Thursday. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told lawmakers the deployment of National Guard troops and Marines to Los Angeles will cost at least $134 million and last 60 days. 'We stated very publicly that it's 60 days because we want to ensure that those rioters, looters and thugs on the other side assaulting our police officers know that we're not going anywhere,' he said.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Miovski open to Aberdeen return in future
"I do not rule out the possibility of wearing Aberdeen's shirt again one day," says former Pittodrie striker Bojan Miovski, who is 12 months into a four-year deal at Spanish club Girona. ( via Daily Record, external)