
Clemson running back Adam Randall talks about his new role

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San Francisco Chronicle
2 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Luke Keaschall drives in three runs as Twins beat Tigers 9-4
DETROIT (AP) — Luke Keaschall drove in three runs for the second straight game and the Minnesota Twins beat the Detroit Tigers 9-4 on Wednesday. Keaschell is hitting .393 in his nine-game major league career, which was interrupted in April by a broken arm. He returned on Tuesday and has four hits and six RBIs in his first two games back. Thomas Hatch (1-0) picked up the win with 4 1/3 scoreless innings of relief. He was claimed off waivers on Monday from the Kansas City Royals. Jack Flaherty (6-11) took the loss, giving up six runs in 4 2/3 innings. The Twins took a 2-0 lead in the first. Alan Roden and Matt Wallner started the game with singles, and Keaschall drove them in with a two-out double. Keaschall had three RBIs in Tuesday's 6-3 win, including his first career homer. Minnesota made it 3-0 in the second when Brooks Lee scored on a wild pitch, but Spencer Torkelson's 24th homer narrowed the game to two runs in the bottom of the inning. Zach McKinstry pulled the Tigers within one with a leadoff homer in the third and Kerry Carpenter's two-run shot put Detroit ahead 4-3 later in the inning. Lee homered in the fourth and the Twins took a 6-4 lead on RBI doubles by Ryan Jeffers and Keaschall in the fifth. Austin Martin and Roden homered off Tyler Holton in the sixth. Key moment The Tigers had runners on first and third with one out in the eighth and their 3-4-5 hitters due up. A.J. Hinch sent Jahmai Jones in to hit for Carpenter and Kody Funderburke got him to ground into an inning-ending double play. Key stat Keaschall has reached base in his first nine career games, the second-longest streak in Twins history. Glenn Williams reached in his first 13 games in 2005. Each team is off on Thursday before starting weekend home series on Friday. Twins ace RHP Joe Ryan (10-5, 2.83) is scheduled to start against the Kansas City Royals, while Tigers All-Star LHP Tarik Skubal (11-3, 2.18) will face the Los Angeles Angels. ___

Wall Street Journal
3 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
DraftKings Sales Jump As Bettors Spend More on Average
DraftKings' DKNG 0.93%increase; green up pointing triangle second-quarter revenue jumped ahead of expectations, thanks in part to favorable sports outcomes, and the betting platform is expecting full-year sales to be near the high end of its guidance. The Boston sports-betting company on Wednesday posted a profit of $157.9 million, or 30 cents a share, in the quarter ended June 30, compared with $63.8 million, or 10 cents a share, a year earlier.


Fox News
3 minutes ago
- Fox News
Seahawks legend predicts Sam Darnold will top his career-best 2024 season with Seattle
Sam Darnold is coming off his best year in the NFL by a mile, yet one Seattle Seahawks legend is confident he can top it in 2025. Darnold, who threw for 4,319 yards and 35 touchdowns for a 14-3 Minnesota Vikings squad last season, must prove himself yet again with a different team this season after joining the Seahawks in free agency. The expectations remain high for Darnold, but Shaun Alexander, the legendary Seahawks running back who won league MVP in 2005, thinks Darnold will check all the boxes this season. "I think he's going to be better this year than he was last year with us, and I think they got the right offensive coordinator for him," Alexander told Fox News Digital after his work with USAA's "Salute to Service NFL Boot Camp" Monday. "I think the system looks right for him. They look great at practice." Darnold reunites with Klint Kubiak, who served as offensive coordinator of the New Orleans Saints last season. They were together in 2023 with the San Francisco 49ers, where Kubiak served as pass game coordinator and Darnold was backing up Brock Purdy after a failed tenure with the Carolina Panthers. It's a new-look offense in all aspects for the Seahawks, including at wide receiver with DK Metcalf shipped to the Pittsburgh Steelers in an offseason trade. Metcalf was a constant in the pass game for Seattle, but with the rise of Jaxon Smith-Njigba last season, they moved on and brought in Cooper Kupp, a move Alexander doesn't mind. Combine the receiving weapons with the dynamic duo of Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet in the backfield, and Alexander went bold with his prediction for the Seahawks. "I'm still thinking that it's Seahawks 17-0," Alexander said, laughing. Realistically, Alexander believes this is a playoff team. They missed it at 10-7 last year, but Alexander has them getting in this time. "I think they're going to be 11-6," he said. "I think they're going to beat the right teams and shock somebody. I do know that it's going to be very hard to beat them at home. So, you get these things all equated, they're going to be a good team. "Both Kenneth and Charbonnet healthy, that's a good duo. I like how they're using Sam in the offense. They're coming up with their scheme that does what he does best. Defense, I think their secondary is wonderful. When you got all that — guys start making plays on the D-line — it's going to be hard to beat them." Darnold and the Seahawks will have a tough NFC West matchup against his former squad, the 49ers, Sept. 7 at home to kick off the 2025 campaign in front of "The 12s" for the first time. APPRECIATING THOSE WHO SERVE US While Alexander loved talking shop, he also loved meeting with men and women of the military through the USAA Salute to Service NFL Boot Camp, competing in drills similar to those the Seahawks Ring of Honor member did. Alexander admired the competitiveness during the 40-yard dash, broad jump and more drills at the NFL Combine, calling the day "special." He also has a special appreciation for the military given his own family ties. His second-oldest brother was a 22-year military veteran. "I just thought of him as a hero. Like I have an older brother who's a hero. He protects the country," Alexander said of his brother. "You can't undo what you were a part of. It's like, 'Man, I know what you're all doing, and I know you're grinding, and sometimes you want to stop and not do it. But you're a hero to somebody.' So, it's like a little 10-year-old kid that's like, 'Man, I'm going to give everything I got to go be great.' And thank you for doing that. Getting to share those kind of moments with the military is awesome."