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Valerie Mahaffey, of Northern Exposure and Young Sheldon, Dead at 71

Valerie Mahaffey, of Northern Exposure and Young Sheldon, Dead at 71

Yahoo2 days ago

Valerie Mahaffey, a veteran actress whose myriad TV roles included Northern Exposure (for which she won an Emmy, Desperate Housewives and Young Sheldon, died on Friday after a battle with cancer. She was 71.
'I have lost the love of my life, and America has lost one of its most endearing actresses,' her husband, actor Joseph Kell, told Variety. 'She will be missed.'
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Mahaffey's first ongoing TV role was as Ashley Bennett in the NBC soap The Doctors, for which she earned a Daytime Emmy nomination in 1980. She went on to appear in the comedy miniseries Fresno in 1986, had one-offs on series such as Newhart, Cheers and Quantum Leap, and then played Caitlyn Van Horne in the Washington, D.C.-set 1992 sitcom The Powers That Be.
On Northern Exposure, she appeared in multiple episodes as hypochondriac Eve, earning her first Emmy win (in the Supporting Actress category).
Mahaffey finished out the 1990s with roles on Wings, The Client and ER, kept busy in the aughts with appearances on The West Wing, Frasier, CSI and Private Practice and many other shows, and then had an arc on United States of Tara.
In Season 3 of Desperate Housewives she played Orson Hodge's first wife Alma, after which she played Emma's mom on Glee, guested on Hart of Dixie, and had a run on Devious Maids.
Mahaffey's more recent TV roles includes The Man in the High Castle, Young Sheldon (as English teacher Victoria MacElroy), Big Sky, Dead to Me and Echo 3.
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Mariners slugger Cal Raleigh leads MLB in homers and is on pace to set a season record for catchers
Mariners slugger Cal Raleigh leads MLB in homers and is on pace to set a season record for catchers

Associated Press

time3 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Mariners slugger Cal Raleigh leads MLB in homers and is on pace to set a season record for catchers

SEATTLE (AP) — Just before Big Dumper put a thump into a soaring flyball, a smattering of 'MVP! MVP!' chants broke out from behind home plate Sunday. Given the way Cal Raleigh's season has started, perhaps the Mariners' catcher is wholly deserving of such high praise. With a solo shot during Seattle's latest victory, a 2-1 win over the Minnesota Twins, Raleigh upped his total to a major league-leading 23 home runs. 'He's having an excellent season, not only offensively but also defensively,' teammate Randy Arozarena said, with bench coach Manny Acta translating. 'What he's doing right now, it's great because he's carrying our offense pretty much.' That's no exaggeration on Arozarena's part. And what Raleigh is doing is also unprecedented. The 28-year-old backstop from North Carolina with the funny nickname became the first catcher in major league history to reach 20 home runs before the end of May. His 22 home runs entering June tied for the second-most in Mariners history behind only Ken Griffey Jr., who had 24 in 1997. 'He just continues to grow and mature in this game,' said Mariners manager Dan Wilson, a former catcher who was on that Seattle team in 1997. 'And the pace that he's on right now with home runs — and he's not just hitting home runs, he's still just hitting the ball hard. 'You add that to what he does behind the plate in a game like this — whew, he's a real special player and he's doing it all right now.' According to Baseball Savant, Raleigh ranks eighth among big league catchers in Fielding Run Value. He also has more home runs than Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge. So it's no wonder Raleigh has already been worth 3.3 Wins Above Replacement, per less than 60 games into the season for the AL West-leading Mariners. 'I just wish that he continues to stay healthy and (has) a very long career,' Seattle pitcher Luis Castillo said, with Acta translating. 'Because it's a lot of fun right now.' Salvador Perez of the Kansas City Royals holds the big league record for home runs in a season by a catcher with 48 in 2021. Raleigh is on pace for 64 this year, which would break the American League mark of 62 set by Judge in 2022. Sure, there's still a long way to go in 2025. But, awfully impressive for someone playing such a demanding and taxing position, where offense is often considered a luxury rather than a requirement. 'Sometimes it's not playing harder, it's playing smarter,' said Wilson, a major league catcher for 14 years. 'And he continues to play smart baseball whether it's behind the plate or at the bat. He's coming up huge for us all over the place.' ___ AP MLB:

Raleigh hits 23rd homer in Mariners 2-1 victory over Twins
Raleigh hits 23rd homer in Mariners 2-1 victory over Twins

CBS News

time4 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Raleigh hits 23rd homer in Mariners 2-1 victory over Twins

Cal Raleigh hit his major league-leading 23rd homer and Randy Arozarena singled home the winning run in the ninth inning to give the Seattle Mariners a 2-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Sunday. Arozarena grounded a base hit up the middle with one out to score Julio Rodriguez, who singled against Griffin Jax (1-3) leading off the ninth. Rodriguez stole second and advanced to third on a throwing error by catcher Ryan Jeffers. Raleigh walloped a curveball in the seventh from Twins starter Chris Paddack, who was otherwise brilliant for eight innings. He struck out 10, walked one and limited the Mariners to four hits. Paddack threw 75 of his 110 pitches for strikes. Luis Castillo pitched six shutout innings for Seattle, but the Twins tied it against closer Andrés Muñoz (2-0) in the ninth on Harrison Bader's sacrifice fly. As dominant as Castillo was, the Twins nearly broke through against him when they put runners at the corners in the third with two outs. Mariners third baseman Ben Williamson did an excellent job charging in on a chopper from Carlos Correa to end the inning. Raleigh was the first Mariners player with at least 10 home runs (10 in March/April, 12 in May) in multiple months since Nelson Cruz in 2016. The catcher became the first Seattle player to do it in back-to-back months since Alex Rodriguez in 1999. Twins right-hander Joe Ryan (5-2, 2.57 ERA) starts Monday night on the road against the Athletics. Following an off day, Mariners RHP George Kirby (0-2, 11.42) gets the ball Tuesday to begin a three-game series against Baltimore.

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