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The Sports Report: Clippers to add Bradley Beal to roster

The Sports Report: Clippers to add Bradley Beal to roster

From Broderick Turner: The Clippers continue to shape their roster to try to remain competitive in the uber-competitive Western Conference, their latest deal to come in the acquisition of sharpshooting guard Bradley Beal after he clears waivers following a buyout from the Phoenix Suns.
Beal's agent, Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports, confirmed to The Times on Wednesday that his client has agreed to a two-year, $11-million deal that includes a player option for the second season, allowing him to become a free agent after the 2025-26 season.
Beal became available for the Clippers after securing a buyout from the Suns on his current contract, that had two years and $110 million left. He gave back about $13.9 million for the buyout, according to people not authorized to speak on the matter.
Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank had repeatedly said this summer that the team wanted to create cap flexibility in order to be in position to go after free agents. By doing so, the Clippers were able to get Beal.
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From Dylan Hernández: There were no tears.
There were no tears when he addressed the crowd in a Fox interview that was played over the Truist Park sound system.
There were no tears when manager Dave Roberts removed him from the game in the top of the third inning so the fans could salute him one final time.
Freddie Freeman didn't cry Tuesday at the All-Star Game.
'I didn't know how it was going to go,' Freeman said.
This was the kind of setting that could have very easily turned the emotional Freeman into a sobbing mess, and he admitted as much the previous day. He was returning to the market in which he spent the first 12 years of his career to play in the kind of event that is often a source of reflection.
The absence of tears represented how much can change in four years, especially four years as prosperous as the four years Freeman has played for the Dodgers.
'Time,' Freeman said, 'heals everything.'
For both sides.
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From Thuc Nhi Nguyen: Chargers running back Najee Harris likely will begin training camp on the non-football injury list, general manager Joe Hortiz said Wednesday, after the running back suffered a minor eye injury during a fireworks incident on July 4.
As veteran teammates reported for camp Wednesday morning, Harris was still getting evaluated by doctors in the Bay Area and was expected to join the team later in the day.
'Everything that's been relayed to us has been positive,' Hortiz said.
Harris suffered a 'superficial' eye injury in a holiday weekend fireworks accident, according to a statement from his agent, Doug Hendrickson, and was 'fully expected to be ready for the upcoming NFL season.'
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Myrto Uzuni scored a goal in the 40th minute and added an assist, Owen Wolff scored his first goal of the season and Austin FC beat the Galaxy 2-1 on Wednesday night to snap the Galaxy's three-game home win streak.
Brad Stuver had three saves and his ninth shutout — second in MLS behind Vancouver's Yohei Takaoka (10) — this season for Austin (8-8-6).
Diego Rubio, on the counter-attack, played a ball-ahead to Uzuni, who cut back to evade a defender at the edge of the box and then blasted a shot inside the left post to open the scoring.
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Galaxy summary
MLS standings
Denis Bouanga scored on a first-half penalty kick and Hugo Lloris made it stand up for his third straight clean sheet as LAFC edged Minnesota United 1-0 on Wednesday night.
Bouanga scored his 11th goal when he sent a right-footed shot past Dayne St. Clair in the 42nd minute. The PK was awarded after Jeremy Ebobisse was fouled by defender Nicolás Romero, who received a yellow card.
Lloris finished with three saves for his league-high-tying ninth clean sheet of the season for LAFC (10-5-5).
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LAFC summary
MLS standings
We asked, 'Is Kobe Bryant one of the 10 best players in NBA history?' After 1,396 votes:
Yes, 75.7%No, 24.3%
1939 — Henry Picard beats Byron Nelson 1-up in 37 holes to win the PGA championship.
1955 — Beverly Hanson beats Louise Suggs by three strokes in a playoff to capture the first LPGA championship.
1966 — Jim Ryun becomes the first American to hold the record in the mile since 1937. With a time of 3:51.3 at Berkeley, Calif., Ryun shatters Michel Jazy's mark of 3:53.6 by 2.3 seconds.
1979 — Sebastian Coe breaks the world record in the mile with a time of 3:48.95 in Oslo, Norway. The time is rounded up to 3:49.
1983 — Bobby Hebert passes for 314 yards and three touchdowns to lead the Michigan Panthers to a 24-22 win over the Philadelphia Stars in the first USFL championship game.
1983 — Tom Watson wins his second straight and fifth career British Open title. Watson shoots a 9-under 275 at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England to finish one stroke ahead of Andy Bean and Hale Irwin.
1994 — Brazil wins a record fourth World Cup soccer title, taking the first shootout in championship game history over Italy.
2005 — Tiger Woods records another ruthless performance at St. Andrews, closing with a 2-under 70 to win the British Open for his 10th career major. He wins by five shots, the largest margin in any major since Woods won by eight at St. Andrews five years ago. He joins Jack Nicklaus as the only players to win the career Grand Slam twice.
2006 — Stacey Nuveman and Lovieanne Jung homer to power the United States to the World Cup of Softball title with a 5-2 victory over Japan.
2011 — Japan stuns the United States in a riveting Women's World Cup final, winning 3-1 on penalty kicks after coming from behind twice in a 2-2 tie. Goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori makes two brilliant saves in the shootout. Japan, making its first appearance in the final of a major tournament, hadn't beaten the Americans in their first 25 meetings.
2011 — Darren Clarke gives Northern Ireland another major championship, winning the British Open by three strokes over Americans Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson.
2016 — Henrik Stenson shoots an 8-under 63 to beat Phil Mickelson by three strokes, becoming the first man from Sweden to win the British Open.
1924 — Jesse Haines of the St. Louis Cardinals pitched a 5-0 no-hitter against the Boston Braves.
1925 — Tris Speaker is the 5th player to reach 3,000 hits.
1936 — Carl Hubbell's 24-game winning streak over two years began as he beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-0 on five hits.
1941 — Joe DiMaggio's hitting streak of 56 games was stopped by Al Smith and Jim Bagby of the Indians before 67,000 at Cleveland. The Yankees still won, 4-3.
1956 — In the second game of a doubleheader against Kansas City, Ted Williams hit his 400th home run. Williams connected in the sixth inning off Tom Gorman to give the Red Sox a 1-0 win over the A's.
1966 — Chicago's Billy Williams hit for the cycle to lead the Cubs to a 7-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in the second game of a Sunday doubleheader. Williams singled in the first inning, doubled in the third, had an RBI-triple in the fifth, homered to center in the seventh and popped out to third baseman in foul territory. The Cardinals took the opener 4-3 in 11 innings.
1969 — Jim Kaat, Gold Glove winner for seven straight years, was charged with three errors, leading to three unearned runs against the Chicago White Sox. Nevertheless, he won the game at Minnesota 8-5.
1974 — Bob Gibson struck out Cesar Geronimo of the Reds in the second inning to become the second pitcher in major league history to record 3,000 strikeouts. Cincinnati beat St. Louis, 6-4.
1978 — Doc Medich of the Texas Rangers saved the life of a 61-year-old fan who had a heart attack just before a scheduled game at Baltimore. Medich, a medical student, administered heart massage until help arrived.
1987 — Don Mattingly became the first AL player to homer in seven consecutive games as the New York Yankees disposed of the Texas Rangers 8-4.
1990 — Minnesota became the first team in major league history to pull off two triple plays in one game, but it wasn't enough to overcome Boston as the Red Sox beat the Twins 1-0.
2007 — Ryan Garko hit a tying pinch-hit home run in the ninth inning and singled home the winning run in the 11th to give Cleveland a 6-5 win over the Chicago White Sox.
2011 — Dustin Pedroia singled with two outs in the top of the 16th inning, snapping a scoreless tie and giving the Red Sox a 1-0 victory over the Rays. It was the longest 1-0 game in the major leagues since the Brewers at Angels on June 8, 2004 went 17 innings.
2016 — Starling Marte hit a solo home run in the 18th inning and the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Washington Nationals 2-1 in a marathon game that lasted almost six hours. Pinch-hitter Daniel Murphy homered with two outs in the ninth inning for Washington.
2022 — Second-generation players take the first two spots in the 2022 amateur draft as SS Jackson Holliday, son of Matt Holliday, goes first overall to the Orioles, while OF Druw Jones, son of Andruw Jones, is selected second by the Diamondbacks. P Kumar Rocker, who had been the #10 pick in 2021 but had failed to come to an agreement with the Mets following a disagreement over the health of his pitching arm, goes #3 to the Rangers, who sign him mere hours after his selection. Rocker is coming off a brilliant stint of pitching in the independent Frontier League.
Compiled by the Associated Press
That concludes today's newsletter. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you'd like to see, email me at houston.mitchell@latimes.com. To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.
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Atlanta Braves ‘Expected to Listen' On Trade Offers for 3 Star Players this Winter
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Atlanta Braves ‘Expected to Listen' On Trade Offers for 3 Star Players this Winter

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LA Galaxy executive shows how youth sports empowers you throughout life
LA Galaxy executive shows how youth sports empowers you throughout life

USA Today

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LA Galaxy executive shows how youth sports empowers you throughout life

It's not exactly a linear path to the LA Galaxy, Tom Braun will tell you. Play baseball as a kid in Houston. Get drafted by the Oakland Athletics as a pitcher. Pursue an undergraduate education and a Big East baseball career at Georgetown. Get into banking. He only moved west when his wife, Raquel, landed a job as a lawyer with Fox Sports. Tom got his MBA at the University of Southern California. Then, about a decade before he would become president of business operations and chief operating officer for one of Major League Soccer's flagship franchises in 2023, he took an unpaid internship at Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG). It led to a job in data analytics for the Galaxy and NHL's Los Angeles Kings, which AEG owns, and set him along his MLS journey. He laughs when he is asked if he imagined it would happen this way. 'You can have hope and dreams,' he tells USA TODAY Sports, 'that you can become fortunate to work for such a great company and such a great team and you work really hard, and you hope that that pans out. Luckily, I've been around really great people and I'm gonna take advantage of it.' The Galaxy have won a league-high six MLS Cup trophies, including one last season. Along the way, they averaged a near-capacity crowd at Dignity Health Sports Park on the campus of California State University, Dominguez Hills in Carson and have offered a family-friendly extravaganza. Braun, 42, has been a force behind the Galaxy's youth development programs. The Galaxy hold close to 200 classes a week. According to the team, its clinics will host more than 1,500 boys and girls this year, many of whom are new to soccer or are accessing structured play for the first time. A father of two boys (Jack, 5, and James, 2) who coaches his oldest son in the AYSO, Braun spoke with us about how his own experiences as an athlete, leader and dad can help other young athletes and their parents. His story shows how far you can go when a love for sports stirs a spirit within you that goes beyond just being a professional athlete. (Questions and responses are edited for length and clarity.) Just let them play: 'They're going to find their path' Braun started out in baseball because, like with many of us, it was the sport his dad knew best. He could play it year-round in Texas, and he learned to put everything he had into it. Realizing what it all meant, and where it might lead, though, came much later. USA TODAY: How about some general tips and observations you have for parents about getting their kids into sports and keeping them fun, not getting them so competitive so early? Tom Braun: I'm young into it and fortunately, my kids are really interested in playing sports. I think often parents think that they're gonna be a professional athlete at 5 or 6 years old and really, you just let 'em have fun. They're gonna find their path, they're gonna find what they're interested in, but I think even more at an early age, parents are looking for something to do. They're looking for an activity for their kids to do, where they can be outside or be active and sports, specifically soccer in our Galaxy Juniors program, gives parents an opportunity to put their kids in sports that they don't know if they're going to like or not like, but it's an easy sport to understand, and you can see they like it. But I wouldn't push them too hard. Let 'em enjoy it and pick what interests them as they get older. I don't think anybody can decide at 6 years old if they're gonna be a professional athlete. USAT: The most successful athletes will tell you that as kids, even in the Little League World Series, it's supposed to be just about fun as well. It's not a scouting opportunity. TB: I had a pretty good career in baseball, getting to play in college, but I actually did not start to realize I was good at baseball until I was about a junior in high school. So it takes some time to kind of develop and figure out what you're good at and what you're interested in. Our sports experiences, whenever they end, can help carry us throughout our lives Going into his senior year at Kingwood (Texas) High, Braun says, he threw hard enough that it became apparent pro baseball might be an option. The A's picked him in the 30th round of the 2001 Major League Baseball draft. He opted to pursue a business degree at Georgetown, giving him a background for what he would become. He realizes now, though, that what he accomplished on the field was at the center of that transformation, too. 'When I graduated, I worked for an investment bank for about six years,' he says. 'I ended up wanting to pursue a different passion, a passion more in sports. That's kind of where my interest lies.' USAT: Do you find just competing at the collegiate level has helped you in the real world? TB: Not a lot of people, I think, realize that being a college baseball player (is) a full-time job, being a college athlete is a full-time job, and going to school and really caring about your academics is a full-time job. I do think it makes a big difference for someone's work ethic and their passion to be able to accomplish those things and working as a team, I think it gives you a lot of characteristics and qualities that do make you better in the workforce, or to make you a better person. So, yeah, I think it's important. It also shows, I think, how you prioritize things in your life. USAT: Do you have a strategy in terms of building the right environment, interactions between parents and coaches, to kind of set the standard and expectations for the parents? TB: I think it depends on the age. If they're 2 years old, of course, the child will want to hold Mom and Dad's hand and have Mom and Dad on the field. But once they start to be about 4, we start to separate it out a little bit, where the parents aren't on the field, and the kids start to build that confidence to do things independently. And I think as it progresses, there's a different type of expectation as a kid gets older that the coach is caring for them in the right way, and that the parents are respecting the coach's ability to coach the child. We spend a lot of time making sure that the kids are cared for in the right way. Coach Steve: How do you deal with a bad coach? Here are three steps Sports can have unexpected benefits for kids Galaxy Juniors starts as early as 18 months old, and it runs through ages 6-7. As they get older, kids can graduate to MLS GO and try out for MLS NEXT, as they can in many other parts of the country. Braun remembers when he was young, it was hard to find soccer on television, and it wasn't always available to play on a team. It has exploded in popularity over MLS's 30 years of existence. 'The more accessible and inclusive it is for families, the more they fall in love with it,' he says. Since his sons were born, his perspective on what the sport can mean to a kid has dramatically changed. USAT: Could you just talk about how your youth development and training program works? TB: I'll give you a very specific, personal example of just my family and what sports meant to my now soon-to-be 6-year-old. So when my 6-year-old was 18-19 months old, he was having a hard time walking. For some reason, he just wasn't comfortable walking. And at that age, most kids are walking. We decided to try to figure out why, and eventually he started to walk. And right when he started to walk at 19 or 20 months, we put him into a Galaxy Juniors program, and we saw him go from having a hard time walking, period, to listening to coaches and following directions and moving in a way that he wasn't used to moving. He went from not walking to running and to being coordinated. And I think some of that development really had a huge impact on him and his own personal growth and his own confidence at that age. So personally, like even putting them in sports when they're that young, I think, makes a really big difference in just their confidence and their growth as a little kid. We have two facilities. One's called LA Galaxy Soccer Center. It's a 75,000-square-foot indoor facility that has five futsal and small-sided soccer courts, in Torrance, that I think, on a weekly basis, we get over 5,000 kids that go in and out of that facility just to play soccer. We also have an outdoor facility here on our campus, at Dignity Health Sports Park, called Galaxy Park, where we have a number of futsal and small-sized fields as well, where it's open to the public. And kids just come and play soccer, and they take clinics with us. They do pickup games. So it's a safe space for kids to come. Coach Steve: As MLS turns 30, where does your youth player fit into its programming? Your own professional development, and your relationship with your spouse, goes hand in hand with your kids' athletic prosperity A former colleague once told me she would wake up at 5 a.m. to have coffee and sit in the quiet of the morning to center herself before she gave her young kids her undivided attention. Just recently, a family friend of ours who is raising four active kids went back to work in an office setting after about 10 years away from it. As her children have become more self-sufficient, her new career has rejuvenated her. The process works similarly with our kids and our sports: We need to take care of ourselves as we take care of them. USAT: I know you and your wife both work, so how have you managed to juggle everything with the sports? TB: Raquel was a lawyer at Fox Sports, working on World Cups and NFL and Major League Baseball. She transitioned to (doing) talent and business development for EA Sports, the video game company, and now she's pursuing her own venture where she's a consultant. She started it with a partner. It's called Mulier Fortis, which has a heavy focus on women's sports, and the growth of women's sports. My wife and I share the responsibilities, as we should. I'm a very fortunate husband. She loves it as do my kids. And she works equally as hard as I do, if not more than I do. You have to have an understanding wife and understanding family and you gotta take advantage of those moments when you're not working to spend time with your kids. It's important to make sure you're balancing your home life and your work life. USAT: Do you have like a typical day in your life? Can you kind of detail that, or is every day completely different for you? TB: Well, I'm very much a routine guy, but every day, when I get to the office, is a little bit different. But I usually wake up between 4 and 4:30 every morning. I'll go for a jog or I'll work out. That's really my hour, hour and a half that I get to spend on my own before my kids start to wake up, usually about 6 or 6:30 my kids are getting up. I'm getting them ready for school, oftentimes taking them to school, getting their lunches prepared. And then I'm in the office, probably by 8:30 every day. And then once I get to the office, it really depends on the day, what meetings we have set up, what are the priorities? Oftentimes I'm engaging with my executive leadership team to understand what the priorities are for the day or for the week. I spend quite a bit of time understanding with my head coach (Greg Vanney) and my general manager (Will Kuntz), who I get to work with every day, what their priorities are during the week, leading up to what could be a game on the weekend. So at work, it's a little scattered but at home, it's pretty regimented. I get home about 6 every day, it's quality time with the family before bath time and bedtime, and then I usually crash myself. Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here. Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at sborelli@

Why Mic'd up Caitlin Clark booed her own team for All-Star gaffe
Why Mic'd up Caitlin Clark booed her own team for All-Star gaffe

USA Today

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Why Mic'd up Caitlin Clark booed her own team for All-Star gaffe

Despite the fact that Caitlin Clark was injured and couldn't play in the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game, it sure seemed like she was having a blast. That included her rooting on her teammates and pals on All-Star Friday and coaching her team on Saturday, both of which the Indiana Fever star did great jobs at. MORE CAITLIN CLARK: The 5 funniest moments from the All-Star Game There was one moment in particular that was hilarious. As her team's coach, she drew up a play for them to run to set up for a four-pointer (yes, there were spots deep that players could try to hit from for four). They executed it pretty well, but the shot was missed. So how did the competitive Clark respond? As we could tell from the mic'd up portion of the broadcast, it was by booing her own team. Too funny! What's the latest update on Caitlin Clark's injury? It appeared to be a groin injury that she suffered on Tuesday, but we have no word yet on when she's returning to play for the Fever after the All-Star break.

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