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Fans won't like WWE star Liv Morgan's shoulder injury surgery update

Fans won't like WWE star Liv Morgan's shoulder injury surgery update

Yahoo30-06-2025
The post Fans won't like WWE star Liv Morgan's shoulder injury surgery update appeared first on ClutchPoints.
More updates regarding WWE Superstar Liv Morgan's shoulder injury, and it appears she may require surgery, which would keep her out of action even longer than expected.
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PWInsider reports her 'separated shoulder will require surgery.' According to the report, this is the 'worst-case scenario,' and it will keep Morgan would for a 'lengthy amount of time.'
Unfortunately, this likely means she will be out for more than three months, which is what a previous report indicated. That would have been bad enough since she would have missed Evolution 2 and SummerSlam. Now, she could be on the sideline even longer.
PWInsider also previously reported that Morgan's injury was real. They called it a 'severe dislocation,' which they speculated could keep her out of the ring for four months.
Liv Morgan's WWE opponent breaks silence on shoulder injury
Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images.
Morgan's opponent during the match she got injured was Kairi Sane. Two days after the injury occurred, Sane took to X, formerly Twitter, to break her silence on the matter. She appears to be taking it hard, given she was part of the freak accident that resulted in Morgan's injury.
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'One of the most painful things for me is when a match is decided not by wrestling, but because of an injury,' Sane began. 'I always step into the ring with deep respect for my opponent, and I train hard every day to give the audience something they can truly enjoy. Even if it was never intentional, knowing that someone was hurt in a match with me is something I carry deeply. It breaks my heart. I hope with all my heart for a full and speedy recovery.
'I will continue to give my all, hoping to bring excitement—not pain—to the ring,' she concluded.
Of course, Sane did not intentionally injure Morgan. It occurred during the opening moments of their match. Sane dodged one of Morgan's kicks, throwing her to the mat.
Morgan landed awkwardly, and slow-motion replays show her expression change upon landing. She rolled out of the ring and was writhing in pain. WWE officials came to check on her at ringside, and she was escorted backstage.
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So, as Sane noted, she was named the winner since Morgan could not continue. We will see if they resume their feud whenever Morgan returns.
Related: WWE star Charlotte Flair can't believe we're getting NBA Finals Game 7 'on the Lord's day'
Related: Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton makes WWE exception to social media rule
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In 1969, after a career writing comedic novels and screenplays, William Peter Blatty wrangled a $10,000 advance to write a decidedly unfunny book, 'The Exorcist.' He wrote a manuscript so scary, he would later tell a British newspaper, that his secretary 'was too spooked to work on it when she was alone in the house.' Before the novel could be published, though, the finer points of plot, character and demonic possession had to be shaped by an editor. The job went to the fastidious Ann Schakne Harris, who in the 1960s was among a group of women to gain recognition for their burnishing skills at Manhattan's publishing houses. For six weeks, Mr. Blatty and Ms. Harris bivouacked at a hotel in New York to sculpt the novel that became the defining entry in a hybrid genre that The New York Times called 'theological horror.' 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Today, Ms. McCullough said, 'books that need that kind of intense attention tend to be farmed out to freelance editors, who can work on them full time.' The author Stephen Fried, who wrote four books for Ms. Harris, said her editing style was 'active but not aggressive' as she guided writers to make changes in their own voice. He called her nurturing and invariably excited about new ideas, even if trendiness was not immediately suggested by her schoolmarmish appearance. 'She was like if your grandma read everything and knew everything,' Mr. Fried said in an interview. Ann Schakne was born in Manhattan on Sept. 22, 1925. Her father, Harry Schakne, worked at his in-laws' dressmaking business and earlier ran a Jewish newspaper in Detroit. Her mother, Alice (Siegel) Schakne, was a schoolteacher. Ann's interest in medicine as a teenager was impeded by a lack of affinity for chemistry, putting her on course for publishing. She graduated from Hunter College in New York in 1946 with a bachelor's degree in English and received her master's degree from Radcliffe College in 1948, having taken its inaugural publishing course to learn the basics of editing, sales, cover design and publicity. In 1952, she entered the publishing business as a 'reader,' evaluating manuscripts. By the mid-1960s, she had become an editor. In 1980, Ms. Harris left Harper & Row and later that decade joined Bantam, where she edited Dr. Hawking's hugely popular, layman-accessible 'A Brief History of Time.' It sold 10 million copies but her working relationship with Dr. Hawking, the renowned University of Cambridge physicist who died in 2018 after a decades-long struggle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, was described by some as complicated. For a subsequent book, 'The Universe in a Nutshell' (2001), an apparently frustrated Ms. Harris sent 'a disorganized collection' of Dr. Hawking's writings to Kitty Ferguson, his biographer, asking if it could be assembled into a coherent manuscript, as recounted by Declan Fahy in 'The New Celebrity Scientists' (2015). For one of the Hawking books that their mother edited, Katherine and Nicholas Harris said, a disagreement arose between Ms. Harris and the physicist. A computational error was discovered when the book was sent for peer review, Katherine Harris said, and her mother insisted that it not be distributed until a correction was made. 'Hawking was furious,' she said in an interview. 'As far as I know, he never forgave her.' However, Beth Rashbaum, who edited Dr. Hawking after Ms. Harris left Bantam, and Leonard Mlodinow, a collaborator of Dr. Hawking's, said they did not recall any tensions between the two of them. So captivated was Ms. Harris by Dr. Butler's Pulitzer-winning book about aging in the mid-1970s, she left publishing briefly to work at a longevity clinic he established in 1990 at Mount Sinai Medical Center. (When Ms. Harris was in her 40s, Katherine Harris said, she scrubbed every public reference to her age that she could find. 'Her only plan for retirement was not to retire,' she said.) Along with her daughter and son, Ms. Harris is survived by three grandchildren. Her husband Cyril M. Harris, an acoustical engineer who shaped the sound of many important concert halls, died in 2011. They married in 1949. Her second Pulitzer-winning book, Mr. Fagin's 'Toms River,' was one she acquired, but she retired before it was published by Bantam in 2013. Still, Ms. Harris helped to define the book, Mr. Fagin said in an interview. As he wrestled with whether to tell a local story about chemical leaks, smokestack belches and cancer in a New Jersey town or to more broadly examine the environment and chronic disease, she urged him to 'think big.' 'She believed in the power of books to tell big stories and make a big difference,' Mr. Fagin said.

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