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Esmeralda Cruz Espino, Youngstown, Ohio
Esmeralda Cruz Espino, Youngstown, Ohio

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Esmeralda Cruz Espino, Youngstown, Ohio

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (MyValleyTributes) – Dr. Esmeralda Cruz Espino, a respected Geriatric physician, Major in the U.S. Army Reserve and lifelong resident of Youngstown, Ohio, passed away peacefully on Monday, June 2, 2025, at the age of 83. Born on January 16, 1942, in San Miguel, Bulacan, Philippines, Esmeralda was the beloved daughter of Vicente and Angelina Espino. Find obituaries from your high school She earned her Doctor of Medicine and Surgery degree from the University of Santo Tomas in 1973 at just 21 years old. She was fluent in three languages and dedicated her life to the care of others. Esmeralda is survived by her loving son, Joseph Cruz Espino and his wife, Destiny Espino. She is preceded in death by her parents, Vicente and Angelina Espino and her grandchild, Baby Espino. A devoted mother, physician and woman of deep faith, Esmeralda was a member of the Franciscan Third Order and active in her church community. She was instrumental in forming several Filipino social and religious groups in Michigan and Northeast Ohio, including helping to establish the Michigan Santo Niño devotion and the early Youngstown Filipino-American Organization of Northeast Ohio. Esmeralda's kindness, spiritual devotion and commitment to community will be deeply missed by her family, friends, patients and all who knew her. Calling hours will be held on Friday, June 6, 2025, from 5:00 – 7:00 p.m., in Schiavone Funeral Home, 1842 Belmont Avenue, Youngstown, OH 44504 and on Saturday, June 7, 2025, from 12:00 – 12:45 p.m., in Saint Edward Catholic Church, 238 Tod Lane, Youngstown, OH 44504, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 1:00 p.m. and Military Honors. A Franciscan Wake Service will be held at the church at 11:45 a.m., Saturday morning, June 7. Please visit to share 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Is Hemp Too Big To Ban In Texas?
Is Hemp Too Big To Ban In Texas?

Forbes

time06-05-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Is Hemp Too Big To Ban In Texas?

A field of hemp plants Texas Farm Bureau Texas is not the first, nor is it the only state currently attempting to regulate or outright ban hemp, but the sheer size of Texas and its own hemp industry beg the question: Has hemp become too big to ban? The 2018 Farm Bill, once it was passed into law, removed intoxicating hemp from the Controlled Substances Act based on the measurement of one specific cannabinoid, delta-9 THC. Although delta-9 THC is the psychoactive agent in cannabis that can get users high, it is not the only one in cannabis. As a result, states across the country, especially those without legal cannabis markets, are now home to gas stations that sell vapes and THCA flower, and liquor stores that carry delta-8 weed drinks. State regulators across the country are attempting to reign in this wave of new hemp products that are flourishing. Calculating the size of hemp Grand View Research estimated that the industrial hemp market hit $1.63 billion in 2023, with an expectation that it will surpass $6 billion by 2030. The Food and Drug Administration estimated that by 2023 the legal hemp industry was worth $291 million, but nailing down a precise number is difficult because not every state tracks hemp sales in a way that makes it easy to assess the market's overall value, according to cannabis law firm Vicente. In a blog post, Vicente market analyst Andrew Livingston explained that only four states have special taxes on hemp, Minnesota, Tennessee, Louisiana and West Virginia. Tennessee alone experienced over $245 million in sales in 2024. 'I think we're close to the point where the hemp industry is too big to get rid of completely,' said Zachary Kobrin, a partner at Saul Ewing. 'I do think that there will be some kind of correction whether its codifying the total THC formula, or more strict on synthetic cannabinoids, maybe something lie that.' Texas is one of several states where lawmakers are attempting to shut down the hemp-derived intoxicants industry, despite the fact that hemp has grown into a multi-billion industry since the 2018. All eyes are on Texas Currently, the Texas House is considering whether or not it will go along with a hemp ban that has already passed the Senate. Texas hemp has reached $5.5 billion in annual sales, according to a recent market report developed by Whitney Economics and distributed by Hometown Hero CBD. The industry employs about 53,000 workers and operates about 8,500 storefronts across the Lone Star State. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who has been an outspoken proponent of banning intoxicating hemp, argued that the size of the Texas market is exactly the problem. "Who opens 8,000 locations in less than four years, most of them since 2023? What business starts out at $8 billion in revenue?" asked Patrick during a March 19 press conference, in support of the ban. 'This is a bill that we have to ban THC and shut all of these stores down. that includes THC being sold in liquor stores in drinks. there's no exception to this. this is a poison to our public.' Last week, a House subcommittee sent a competing hemp bill to the House floor that would still allow edibles and non-synthetic smokable flower as long as it was grown in Texas and not imported. 'If SB 3 ends up getting passed and the governor signs it, that's going to completely destroy the hemp industry in that state,' said Kobrin. 'At the same time, i think there are certain states that even as regulated, allow for a really interesting framework, such as Tennessee, Florida and Minnesota.' Michelle Bodian, a hemp beverage attorney, explained that total bans on hemp products are increasingly less likely in part because that industry has grown so large, but also because the hemp industry has thus far been nimble at maneuvering around state restrictions. 'We've seen prohibition doesn't work, maybe states are getting there faster on the hemp side of the plant. Regulation saying something is prohibited does not necessarily stop the industry from functioning, and I think states are being more strategic,' she said. 'Maybe there's an alternative to an outright 'no.'' Bodian also said that states are more likely to take a second look at the potential economic impact of a hemp ban. 'All the operators and all those selling via the internet, those all of a sudden within 24 hours shut down their business, lay off their entire teams and close their stores or close their businesses,' she said. 'So I do think states are taking a little bit different of approach and looking more at regulation rather than straight prohibition.' Some businesses are pivoting toward hemp Despite the increased scrutiny from state governments, larger companies such as multi-state operators in the cannabis space and even companies with no previous experience in cannabis are getting involved. Edible Arrangements recently announced that it would start offering delivered edible hemp products and beverages in select markets. Meanwhile, established cannabis companies, such as Curaleaf and Glass House Brands are getting into legal hemp. 'If you are a regulated THC company like Curaleaf, moving into hemp-derived products is a natural push. Most THC cannabis companies have been trying to set themselves up to create a national distribution network. Moving into hemp, it's obviously different, but you can do interstate commerce.' Despite the interest from large companies, Kobrin was not optimistic that hemp would remain a financial boon for very long. 'This kind of Wild West mentality, you're capitalizing on as much maximum revenue as quickly as you can, knowing that probably in the next three to five years, this is going to scale down, said Kobrin. 'There's going to be some kind of regulatory correction, but I don't think they're going to close the loop hole completely.' Drinks have especially been booming, in part because they do well in age-gated businesses such as liquor stores. "drinks are particularly interesting because that is an area where we're seeing a ton of growth, in terms of the hemp industry. Popularity is really booming," said Bodian. 'What's the outlook for them? Clearly things are doing great, but there are some states where it's gonna be more and more difficult to get into stores.' 'Whether or not you're an alcohol beverage producer, or a soft drink company, I think moving into that space is a natural movement,' added Kobrin. 'We're already seeing a lot of the beer distributor companies want to be involved in this space. I think the beverage market is a ripe opportunity for these traditional non-cannabis related companies to pivot over.'

Carlos Vicente: From rugby roots to a meteoric La Liga rise and being mesmerised by Yamal
Carlos Vicente: From rugby roots to a meteoric La Liga rise and being mesmerised by Yamal

New York Times

time20-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Carlos Vicente: From rugby roots to a meteoric La Liga rise and being mesmerised by Yamal

Carlos Vicente is not your average footballer, and it has been a far from conventional journey to the top for the 25-year-old red-haired Spaniard, who is being courted by clubs in the Premier League and beyond. Vicente plays for Alaves in La Liga — his twin, David, is with Murcia in Spain's third tier — and this season has faced Lamine Yamal, Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann. But only three years ago, he was playing in the fourth division of Spanish football. Advertisement And when he was a kid, he wanted to be a rugby player. In Spain. Carlos Vicente is different, as The Athletic found out. Alaves were one of the revelations of La Liga at the start of this season. After beating Sevilla at home in their sixth match, the team from the Basque city of Vitoria were in the European places. Now the reality is different — when this interview with Vicente took place, in the days before the 1-0 home defeat to Real Madrid this month, Alaves were 17th in the 20-team table and in a battle to avoid relegation. 'I don't like to say it because I don't believe in bad luck, but we've been unlucky,' the winger tells The Athletic. 'It's true that the objectives we set ourselves as a club are different to those from outside. We started well, but the objective is always to stay in the division. 'On a personal level, I feel good. I feel loved by the people in Vitoria, they let me know in the street, on social media. I do feel a bit like the leader of the team when it comes to setting the pace, being incisive, giving the team what it needs.' Vicente has been involved in eight goals this season (four goals scored and four assists), but it is a far cry from his childhood. When they were kids, he and his brother used to play rugby with their father, Jose Carlos, on the beach in the summer, where they would take on holidaying Frenchmen (the sport is much more popular in France than it is in southern neighbour Spain) and some days end up bleeding from the tackles and other collisions involved. But their father, who is also a rower and became Spanish veterans' champion with a team from Zaragoza, told his boys they had two options: go and cry under the family's beach umbrella or wash the blood off their faces in the sea and go back to playing. 'In my family, nobody was a football (fan). My father had played rugby for many years. We always say we played rugby before football,' Vicente says. 'He's always played football with us, but he played goalkeeper, so there was a time when my brother and I were hitting the ball so hard that he didn't want to play.' A post shared by Carlos Vicente Robles (@carlosvcnt_) Vicente has come a long way in the space of five years and there were moments in that time when he considered quitting football. Throughout his childhood, up to 2020, the winger grew up in the youth academy of Real Zaragoza, his hometown a near three-hour drive south-east from Vitoria, where he shared the right wing with twin brother David, a full-back. Advertisement Together, they were difficult to tell apart, but as teenagers, they managed to win the Spanish championship with the national team of Aragon, the Spanish region of which Zaragoza is the capital. However, in the middle of the pandemic in the summer of 2020, the two brothers decided to go their separate ways. David left to join the youth academy at Las Palmas, on the Canary Islands, and Vicente to try his luck at Nastic Tarragona, in Catalonia, south-west along the coast from Barcelona. 'I arrived late, I was out of form, I didn't feel like a player and it made me rethink things,' says Vicente. 'I decided to go home for two months, to rest my head a bit. I went to train with a fourth division team, Teruel (a small town near Zaragoza). 'I have no problem talking about it because I always say that bad things are good things with time. I thought that football wasn't for me, that I wasn't as good as I thought. 'Confidence is everything in football. When I was training with the fourth division team, little by little, I was enjoying football, I would come home and say, 'Damn, what a good time I had'. That made me come back.' After playing for modest fourth-division teams such as Ejea and Calahorra, in 2022, Vicente finally got his chance in professional football with Racing de Ferrol in the second tier. Despite moving up the ladder, Vicente adapted to Ferrol quickly, contributing 12 goals and 16 assists in just a season and a half. His form alerted clubs in Spain's top flight and he also drew interest from across Europe. 'It was difficult to manage — if it happens again, I'll manage it differently,' says Vicente. 'You play with the pressure of knowing that 10 teams are watching you and you want to be at your best.' In those weeks of December 2023, various Spanish media outlets were talking about Vicente as the great discovery of the season, creating a phenomenon unbefitting of a second division player. Advertisement Among the teams that sounded out his situation were Valencia and Celta Vigo, but he went for the more unheralded Alaves. Why? 'Luis Garcia (the Alaves coach at the time) called me, as did Sergio (Fernandez, the sporting director),' Vicente says. 'Players are always looking for that feeling of being told that the club, more than wanting you, needs you. They trusted me.' Vicente's boom continued with his debut on La Liga's fantasy gaming app, where he was coveted. At the beginning of September, his market value in the app shot up to €50million (42.8m/$57m) — although his market value in reality is €8m, according to the website. 'There were days when 200 people would write to me on Instagram. There can be a point where it stings because they tell you something (about how they've rated your game). It's clear that good players are going to score and give assists and it's going to be noticed, but football is much more than that.' 𝑷𝒆𝒍𝒐𝒔 𝒅𝒆 𝒑𝒖𝒏𝒕𝒂 𝒂𝒍 𝒓𝒆𝒄𝒐𝒓𝒅𝒂𝒓 𝒆𝒍 𝒈𝒐𝒍 𝒅𝒆 @carlosvcnt_ … 𝑨𝒍 𝒆𝒔𝒄𝒖𝒄𝒉𝒂𝒓 𝒆𝒍 𝒈𝒓𝒊𝒕𝒐 𝒅𝒆 𝒍𝒐𝒔 300 𝒅𝒆 𝑮𝒊𝒓𝒐𝒏𝒂 🔥#GironaAlavés | #GoazenGlorioso ⚪️🔵 — Deportivo Alavés (@Alaves) April 8, 2025 The Alaves forward has played 50 games in La Liga now and is enjoying discovering the talent of many players up close. '(Atletico Madrid winger) Griezmann knows where his team-mates are at all times, he doesn't need to watch the game. 'Another is Mikel Merino (who played at Real Sociedad last season and is now with Arsenal), who I think everyone knows is good, but technically he is much better than you might think. He simply doesn't miss, he is a physical beast and has a great goalscoring ability. He is a complete player. 'And then Isco at Real Betis, who everyone knows, but has different things. Advertisement 'The one who has impressed me the most is (Barcelona teenager) Lamine Yamal. He started at 16 and it seems crazy to me that such a young person is able to manage all that.' Vicente and his team-mates experienced Yamal in full flight when he dribbled past five of them. 'It's like he's floating down the pitch,' Vicente says. 'Sometimes you don't know what it is, he must have a special kind of intelligence. Players like that have to have a mentality that you don't care about anything, that you play, you take the ball and all other thoughts slip a little bit, but you go into a state of consciousness that you don't think, you just execute.' Accustomed to fourth-tier pitches and the slower defenders in those lower divisions, Vicente is aware of the general change in level, but especially two key issues: 'I have noticed above all the pace of play, which goes hand in hand with the physical condition of the players. There is not a single bad player. The other thing is that people don't miss. On a technical level, you don't have the option of missing a control or a pass because you lose the ball.' Vicente is no more than 5ft 9in (179cm) tall, but standing with him, you realise he takes up a lot of space. His muscles stand out under his short-sleeved shirt and his rugby past is evident. 'I'm a physical player with stamina. I have the ability to generate things with a dribble, but I'm disciplined for my team, too. I've always been a winger and I've played as an attacker. But thanks to my physical ability, I can hold up well in a wide position. I think I can adapt as a full-back, too. The style of play I have now is not the one I had when I was younger, when I looked at Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale. 'I watch Premier League games and I'm a profile that is seen and liked there. It tends to be a much more physical competition than here. Now we have a big challenge with Alaves, but it is clear that the Premier League is one of the best leagues in the world, it is very attractive.' Because of the way they understand sport, first David and then his brother got hooked on the NFL — they are fans of the Houston Texans. 'It's a sport where the millisecond matters a lot and where you see the weirdest stats. I really like how they prepare and the show they put on,' says Vicente. 'They're getting to that point (in football) in Europe, where everything is more of a show. Advertisement 'But there has to be a point where we are considered people. We are workers, just like everybody else. We have legs, we have health and sport is very demanding. Elite football is very demanding, but anything that makes people enjoy it more and is more of a spectacle. 'In the NBA, they are playing every other day (teams have an 82-game regular season); in the NFL, they are playing more and more games (once 10 games long, there is now talk of each team having an 18-game regular season) and with a tremendous risk, so it's important to find a balance between the two things.' The two brothers share a devotion to all things American and last year they travelled to New York, where they went to watch a baseball game at iconic Yankee Stadium. Vicente is keeping himself busy away from sport, too. He is finishing a degree in business administration and law at the University of San Jorge (Zaragoza) in preparation for life after football. 'To me, it has always seemed like something basic, not only as a plan B for the future, but to give me the tools to manage problems in the future,' says Vicente. Plan A is going pretty well.

Six years after mass shooting shook Aurora, legal battle continues for victims' families, witnesses: ‘I feel like it happened a week ago'
Six years after mass shooting shook Aurora, legal battle continues for victims' families, witnesses: ‘I feel like it happened a week ago'

Chicago Tribune

time15-02-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Six years after mass shooting shook Aurora, legal battle continues for victims' families, witnesses: ‘I feel like it happened a week ago'

Diana Juarez, 38, likes to tell stories about her father with her mother, her siblings and her own children. About how he loved to work on cars, how he would wear matching Cubs or Bears jerseys with his family when there were games going on, the little jokes and sayings he repeated to them. Juarez was close with her father, Vicente. She's a teaching assistant in Oswego, and lives in the house Vicente lived in, along with her kids, her mother and her younger brother. 'I had just texted my mom on Monday to tell her, like, I thank God every day for her being my mom and for her choosing my dad as my dad,' Juarez told The Beacon-News. This time of year is particularly difficult, as the anniversary of Vicente's death approaches. Juarez was one of five people killed in the Feb. 15, 2019, mass shooting at the Henry Pratt Co. in Aurora. 'It doesn't get easy,' Juarez said on Wednesday. 'I know people say that it gets easy. But as soon as February hits, it's like, I don't know, we still have that hope that we're still all dreaming, that this is just a big old nightmare.' For the victims' families and several witnesses, the nightmare is compounded by a protracted lawsuit against the Illinois State Police. The wrongful death suit, filed shortly after killings, blames the state police for allowing the shooter to possess a gun even though the agency knew he was a convicted felon and prohibited from owning a firearm. After nearly six years without significant movement in the case, the families recently filed court documents alleging the state was intentionally dragging out the proceedings and had failed to turn over evidence critical to their claim. Five Henry Pratt employees — including Juarez — were killed, another wounded, and five Aurora police officers wounded, after a disgruntled co-worker opened fire during a termination meeting inside the Pratt warehouse. The gunman was ultimately killed in a shootout with police. Those who were killed by the gunman included Juarez, a beloved father and grandfather; Josh Pinkard, who was a husband and Mississippi State sports fan; Russell Beyer, a union leader, and the son of a Vietnam War veteran; Clayton Parks, the company's human resources manager and an Elgin father with a young son; and Trevor Wehner, a student at Northern Illinois University on his first day of work as an intern at Pratt. One other employee, Timothy Williams, was shot, but managed to escape and flee. At least seven lawsuits have been filed against the state in relation to the shooting, according to past reporting. They accuse the Illinois State Police of negligence for improperly issuing a firearm owner's identification card — commonly called a FOID card — to the shooter, Gary Martin, and for not ensuring that he surrendered his weapon once his license was revoked. Martin had been convicted of felony aggravated assault in 1995 in Mississippi, which would have made him ineligible for a FOID card, but records show this conviction was not entered into national databases. He passed two background checks in 2014 — one to get his gun license, and another to purchase the handgun he later used to kill several of his colleagues. When Martin was later fingerprinted to apply for a license to carry a concealed weapon, the database had criminal records not included in other criminal databases, linking Martin with the 1995 felony. The Illinois State Police have said previously they notified both Martin and the Aurora Police Department that he was not able to possess a gun. He was given 48 hours to surrender his weapon to a qualified owner or to local authorities, but did not comply. Aurora officials have said they have no record of receiving notice from the Illinois State Police. The Illinois State Police declined to comment, citing a policy against discussing pending litigation. The Illinois attorney general's office also declined to comment due to the ongoing litigation. On Tuesday, in response to a motion to dismiss filed by the state in January, the witnesses of the shooting and families of the victims their individual pleadings into a single lawsuit in the Illinois Court of Claims, records show. The complaint continues to allege that the Illinois State Police improperly approved Martin's FOID card, failed to properly revoke it and through additional failures 'caused or substantially contributed to the mass shooting.' In Tuesday's joint motion, they reiterated their request for the state to turn over evidence relevant to the case. This includes, the motion says, 'documents and testimony directly related to the Illinois State Police's failures with respect to the FOID card process.' The lawyers and families have been 'met with constant delay tactics by the Illinois State Police and their representative counsel,' according to Martin Dolan, an attorney for the Juarez family and the two witnesses who are part of the lawsuit. 'It's getting to a point after six years where we have to do everything in our power to move this case to the point of justice.' 'The most recent motion (by the state) is just a continuation of the systematic tactics that we've been facing all along in this case,' Dolan told The Beacon-News. A 2019 Chicago Tribune investigation found that nearly 27,000 Illinois residents from 2015 to 2019 did not inform authorities about what they did with their guns after their FOID cards were revoked. That amounts to 78% of revoked cardholders during that time. Domestic violence-related infractions were the most common reason for a card to be revoked, the Tribune's analysis showed, followed by mental health concerns and felony convictions. From the records analyzed by the Tribune, there were just over 30,000 inquiries into purchasing a gun by Illinois residents with revoked cards who did not submit paperwork about what they did with their guns. These inquiries do not necessarily always result in the purchase of a gun, but the records also did not account for guns inherited or obtained in a private sale, nor did they reflect whether more than one firearm was purchased in a single sale. Illinois State Police Director Brandon Kelly made revocation compliance a priority when he took office, according to past reporting. And, since the Pratt shooting, Illinois State Police has since made Firearms Transfer Inquiry Program data available to local law enforcement via an internet portal. An analysis by the Cook County sheriff's office in 2024 found that more than 112,000 Illinois residents have had their FOID cards revoked, but the state has not accounted for whether 84,000 of them turned in their guns. The Pratt shooting drew attention to FOID revocation policy in the state, but it is not the only instance where a revoked cardholder committed an act of violence with a weapon they should not have possessed. In September 2019, a man with a revoked gun license killed his 18-month-old son in Joliet using one of at least three handguns he possessed and had been ordered to surrender in January 2018, after being charged with aggravated battery for brutally beating a man in a Naperville parking lot. Despite state lawmakers allocating $2 million for revocation enforcement efforts statewide in the years since, the state's statistics on accounting for revoked cardholders' guns have remained largely unchanged. And now, six years after the Pratt shooting and the subsequent public outcry about FOID card revocation procedures, the victims and witnesses — and the city of Aurora — are still trying to heal. Like Diana Juarez, this time of year is also hard for Gregory Sims, 58. He says his nightmares get worse as the date creeps closer to the anniversary of his co-workers' slayings. 'When it gets closer to this time, the nightmares just seem to … it keeps me from sleeping,' Sims said. 'I try to stay up late as I can so I try not to dream about what I witnessed that day.' Sims, of Aurora, said he missed his daughter's graduation, anniversary celebrations with his wife and family reunions in recent years because of the mental toll the shooting has taken on him. It's the same for Billy Dancy Jr., 54. 'I feel like it happened a week ago,' Dancy, who lives in Plainfield, said, adding that his nightmares get worse this time of year. 'Even my own mother says that she sees I'm different.' Both men were working in Pratt's warehouse when the shooting happened. Now, they are plaintiffs in the lawsuit against the state. The plaintiffs currently are waiting Illinois Court of Claims Commissioner Joseph Cavanaugh to rule on their evidence request. And, as the individuals affected by the shooting continue to wait for a resolution, they lean on family to get through these times and find ways to cope. 'We just kind of take it day by day,' Sims said of his family's support. 'When they notice that I'm kind of like, in those moments, you know they kind of give me the space to … work through it.' But it's hard not to imagine how things might be different. 'Six years of, like, memories that he can no longer have with us, and we can't have with him,' Diana Juarez said about her father. She said the whole family went to him for anything they needed — and that he was always ready to lend a hand. 'Now, we have to (do) hard stuff on our own,' she said. One of Diana Juarez's daughters is celebrating her 15th birthday this coming August. In Hispanic cultures, a girl's 15th birthday is an important milestone, Juarez explained. It symbolizes growing up. 'She would always say that when she turned 15, she was going to dance with her grandpa,' Juarez said about her daughter. Vicente was like a father figure to her children, Juarez explained. 'It's really hard for her to even want to celebrate it,' she said, 'because he promised her he was going to be here when she turned 15.'

Carlos Vicente vs. RC Celta de Vigo – Player props & odds to score a goal on January 27
Carlos Vicente vs. RC Celta de Vigo – Player props & odds to score a goal on January 27

USA Today

time27-01-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Carlos Vicente vs. RC Celta de Vigo – Player props & odds to score a goal on January 27

Carlos Vicente vs. RC Celta de Vigo – Player props & odds to score a goal on January 27 [gambcom-standard rankid="4130" ] For the upcoming match between Deportivo Alaves and RC Celta de Vigo, at 3:00 PM ET on Monday, January 27, is Carlos Vicente a good bet to score a goal? We offer anytime goalscorer odds below, along with the current stats and trends you should know. Deportivo Alaves earned a win on January 18 against Real Betis with the final score 3-1. The victorious Deportivo Alaves took five more shots in the game, 11 to six. Keep up with LaLiga action this season on Fubo! Carlos Vicente's Odds to Score a Goal vs. RC Celta de Vigo Odds to score a goal next game: +340 Soccer player prop odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Monday at 12:39 AM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. [gambcom-standard rankid="4142" ] Carlos Vicente's 2024-25 Stats This season, he has found the back of the net in three of the 20 matches he has appeared in. In terms of expected goals, Vicente (0.8 xG) is 2.2 lower than his actual goal tally (three). In terms of assists, he has picked up at least one in three of 20 games this season. So far in the 2024-25 season, he has taken 18 shots (0.9 per match), with seven being on target. Deportivo Alaves vs. RC Celta de Vigo Scoring Insights With 24 goals in 20 games, Deportivo Alaves is 11th in LaLiga. On the other side, Celta de Vigo has conceded 32 goals in 20 matches, 14th in the league. With 29 goals in 20 matches, Celta de Vigo is sixth in LaLiga. On the flip side, Deportivo Alaves has conceded 32 goals in 20 matches, 14th in the league. With 24 goals scored and 32 allowed, Deportivo Alaves is 15th in LaLiga in goal differential. In terms of goal differential, Celta de Vigo is 10th in LaLiga at -3. Deportivo Alaves vs. RC Celta de Vigo Match Info Matchup: Deportivo Alaves vs. Celta de Vigo Deportivo Alaves vs. Celta de Vigo Time: 3:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET Date: January 27, 2025 January 27, 2025 Venue: Estadio de Mendizorroza More Player Props: [gambcom-standard rankid="4338" ]

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