NEW YORK’S H O M E TOW N N E WS PA P E R FACEBOOK AP Melee outside illegal bash in Bronx leaves elee outside illegal bash in Bronx leaves ma of 3 who faced new beginning dead ma of 3 who faced new beginning dead SEE PAGE 8 $3.00 - NYDailyNews.com SPORTS FINAL Monday, June 10, 2024 STABBING TABBING KILLS FRESH START Ashley Smith had a job and was leaving shelter for new apartment when her throat was slit, leaving her the only fatality in a pointless scrap. DANCE TO PUERTO ANCE TO PUERTO RICO IN PARADE ICO IN PARADE WEATHER CLEARED JUST IN TIME WEATHER CLEARED JUST IN TIME SEE PAGES 6-7 SEE PAGES 6-7 Women dance as flags fly in annual parade.
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Those terms can be found at NYDailyNews.com/terms under “User Content.” Monday, June 10, 2024 Vol. 105 — No. 352 NEW YORK LOTTERY Evening: 326 Win 4: 5254 Midday: 968 Win 4: 4741 Pick 10: 4-14-16-20-24-33-35-37-38-42- 43-44-53-54-56-57-65-67-74-78 Cash 4 Life: 35-39-41-50-53 Cash Ball: 1 Take 5 Evening: 19-20-25-37-39 Midday: 6-17-20-23-27 NEW JERSEY LOTTERY Evening: 777 Pick 4: 6002 Midday Pick 3: 472 Pick 4: 4773 Cash 5: 14-22-33-36-38 Xtra: 3 105 YEARS BOLD BY JOHN ANNESE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS The NYPD released surveillance footage Sunday of a suspect wanted for stabbing an MTA bus driver in the neck with a bottle in Brooklyn. The attacker got into a quarrel with the 60-year-old driver operating a B99 bus near Pitkin and Alabama Aves. in East New York about 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, cops said. The assailant struck the driver with a bottle and then stabbed him in the neck with it. The crazed passenger then hopped off the bus and ran off west on Pitkin Ave., cops said. Medics took the victim to Brookdale University Hospital in stable condition. Cops are asking the public’s help identifying the suspect and tracking him down. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential. Vid released of suspect in stab of B’klyn bus driver BY NICHOLAS WILLIAMS AND JOHN ANNESE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Horror broke out on a quiet Queens street over the weekend when a gunman shot his brother dead and wounded their mother before running off and fatally shooting himself, police sources said Sunday. The brothers got into a quarrel in the family’s home on a sleepy block in Richmond Hill about 10:30 p.m. on Saturday, cops said. As the spat escalated, the 33-year-old elder brother, identified by police as Karamjit Multani, pulled out a gun and fired several shots in the two-story brick rowhouse on 111th St. near 95th Ave., sources said. “We thought it was firecrackers, but when the lights started flashing, police sirens and someone’s dog was barking, we kind of just figured someone was shot,” neighbor Alvin Debieen, 63, told the Daily News on Sunday. The gunman’s 27-year-old brother, Vipanpal Multani, was shot multiple times all over his body and died at the scene, police said. Medics took the men’s 52-year-old mother, shot once in the torso, to Jamaica Hospital in stable condition. Karamjit Multani dashed off to 95th Ave. near 109th St., about two blocks away, where he apparently shot himself in the head on the sidewalk outside a house, police said. “It had to be something really serious or he just snapped,” Debieen commented. Police found the shooter dead on the quiet street with the gun next to his body. “His body was right there laid out in the open, and there was a lot of blood,” said a neighbor who asked not to be named. “There were people outside looking to see what was going on. Everyone was concerned.” Neighbors on the residential block were left shaken after the domestic violence. “I never really seen anything like that before,” said a neighbor who identified herself only as Gina. “I lived here many years. It was a little scary.” “Its a very sad story,” the woman added. “I pray for the mother. You lose two kids like that, it’s horrible.” The deadly episode marks the second homicide in the 102nd Precinct this year, which saw seven homicides in all of 2023. Brother fatally shoots brother, wounds their ma then kills self Blood marks the spot at 95th Ave. near 109th St. in Queens, where murderous brother apparently shot himself in the head after killing his younger sibling and wounding their mother in the family home two blocks away. 2 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BY TÉA KVETENADZE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS A bill that would essentially shift the burden of paying broker fees to landlords is heating up ahead of a key City Council hearing this week. Crowds are expected to fill City Hall on Wednesday both for and against the measure, which could seismically shift the New York rental world. Intro 360, or the Fairness in Apartment Rental Expenses (FARE) Act, would require broker fees be paid by whoever hired the agent — typically the landlord — but would neither cap nor eliminate the fees. “We know that something needs to change when it comes to this broker fee system, and this bill is just so common sense,” said City Councilman Chi Ossé, a Brooklyn Democrat and the FARE Act’s prime sponsor. If passed, it would mark an enormous change from the status quo, where renters typically pay a one-off broker fee on moving in, even if they didn’t hire the broker. The situation is almost entirely unique to New York City, where the fees are not capped and there are not-infrequent headlines about eye-watering amounts paid to brokers amid the ongoing housing crisis. Ossé has been waging a viral online campaign in recent months to draw supporters to the June 12 hearing. The Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY), an influential trade group pushing back against the bill, has been rallying its members to do the same and show up in opposition. Ossé’s bill has been gaining momentum since he introduced it last year, and Wednesday’s turnout will be a test of his internet savvy — and significant labor and activist support — versus REBNY’s massive resources and established lobbying machine. Many brokers and the larger real estate industry argue the FARE Act would make it more difficult for agents to earn a living and potentially lead to increased rents if landlords decide to shift the upfront cost of the fee into the monthly rent. Keyan Sanai, an agent with Douglas Elliman, predicted the measure would make his job “significantly harder.” “What it does is it prices people out in a different way,” he said. “So we’re just pushing the food around the plate instead of addressing the real issues.” REBNY has been campaigning hard against the bill since last year, when it blocked the FARE Act from getting a committee hearing. “Not only would it raise costs, it takes away choice,” said Ryan Monell, the group’s vice president of government affairs. The bill’s supporters counter that about half of city apartments are rent stabilized, meaning any price increases can only be approved by the Rent Guidelines Board, and contend the rates for the remaining units are up to market forces. “If [landlords] could increase your rent tomorrow, they would have done so yesterday,” said Ossé, who suggested the bill could even lead to a downward pressure on rents. His coalition has grown in recent months. The FARE Act has a majority of 31 backers in the 51-person Council, up from 26 in February when he reintroduced it, and has the endorsement of dozens of prominent trade unions and housing organizations. “The public isn’t fooled,” Ossé said of the opposition’s arguments. “You can clearly see that there are members of the City Council who are not swayed by those talking points as well.” Whether the FARE Act gets put to a vote will ultimately be up to Speaker Adrienne Adams (D-Queens), who has yet to comment on the legislation. If passed, it would be enforced by the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection. Those wishing to testify at Wednesday’s hearing can sign up on the Council website. The dueling rallies are set for 9 a.m. outside City Hall ahead of the 10 a.m. committee meeting. BATTLE OVER BROKERS The Fairness in Apartment Rental Expenses (FARE) Act, sponsored by City Councilman Chi Ossé (below), would require broker fees to be paid by whoever hires the agent — typically the landlord — but would not cap or eliminate the fees. Council push to shift fee burden onto landlords instead of tenants SHUTTERSTOCK; SHAWN INGLIMA/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 3
BY THOMAS TRACY NEW YORK DAILY NEWS The city has asked a judge to toss out a sweeping ageism lawsuit filed by a group of FDNY chiefs against Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh, arguing that it fails to show that seasoned fire officials were targeted or suffered discrimination because of their age. A half dozen experienced FDNY brass say in the lawsuit that they were harassed, maligned and ultimately demoted because they seemed too old in Kavanagh’s eyes. Each one was between 54 and 62 years old when the complaint was filed in March 2023. Asking Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Patria Frias-Colon to dismiss the case, city attorney Hayley Bronner said Wednesday the complaint fails to show the chiefs were specifically targeted because of their age. “There is nothing in the allegations that [the chiefs] were replaced by anyone younger or that they were targeted because of their age,” Bronner said. Representing the chiefs, attorney Jim Walden accused the city of playing “whacka-mole” with the complaint, smacking down sections of the lawsuit it claims are not specific enough to show ageism when the entire complaint shows what he called a “pattern of behavior.” “The city is arguing that there is a lack of specificity, but I don’t understand how there could be more specificity,” Walden said. “The story of this complaint, the arc of the behavior is a wide-ranging conspiracy that is one of the most detailed stories that I have ever seen in a complaint.” The lawsuit was filed by Assistant Fire Chiefs Michael Gala, Joseph Jardin, Michael Massucci and Frank Leeb; EMS Computer Aided Dispatch Programming Manager and Deputy Director Carla Murphy, and retired EMS Chief James Booth, who has since been removed from the case after it was found that his claims went beyond the four-year statute of limitations. Kavanagh, who is in her early 40s, is New York’s first female fire commissioner. She is also one of the city’s youngest fire commissioners. Walden argued that the fire officials filing suit were “all qualified to do their job and all suffered adverse actions.” Beginning in 2018 and continuing to the present, “the most senior people within the FDNY … were demoted, taken off medical leave, had their benefits cut, had their computer access cut off, were disparaged and had false claims filed against them,” Walden said. City attorneys say the lawsuit is filled with allegations involving other FDNY employees to bolster the ageism argument, but “they have not alleged an inference of discrimination for any or all of them.” The lawsuit is trying to claim that “an CITY ASKS JUDGE TO KAYO FDNY CHIEFS’ AGE BIAS SUIT Says complaint fails to show they were targeted by youthful fire commissioner 4 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh is in her early 40s and is first woman to head the FDNY. A half dozen FDNY brass claim that they were harassed, maligned and demoted because they seemed too old in Kavanagh’s eyes. Each was between 54 and 62 years old when the complaint was filed. THEODORE PARISIENNE/NYDN inference of age discrimination for any FDNY employee over 50 would exist by pointing to any other employee over 50 who has ever been subject to any kind of unfavorable treatment,” the city attorney wrote in her motion. “It is not enough for the plaintiff to say: I belong to a protected class; something bad happened to me at work; therefore, it must have occurred because I belong to a protected class,” she wrote. Walden disagreed and said all the allegations show an undercurrent of discrimination against older members of the department. “We have 20 people all experiencing similar acts of adversity and discrimination,” Walden said. “In cases of intimidation and discrimination, the employer doesn’t often say, ‘Hey we’re demoting you because we don’t like you because of your age.’ If that was the case, it would be much easier to plead a case.” The judge is expected to render her decision on the city’s dismissal motion in coming weeks. Over the past year, she has ordered parts of the wide-ranging lawsuit be excised, including allegations that one of the chiefs was ordered to fast-track fire inspections for companies and businesses friendly with the Adams administration. Colon determined that the allegations about a list of deep-pocketed developers whose inspections were to be bumped up on fire inspectors’ to-do lists did not belong in the suit because they didn’t get to the heart of the ageism complaint. Allegations of Mayor Adams pushing to fast-track the opening of the Turkish Consulate in Manhattan in 2021 have become a focus of an FBI investigation; Adams has not been accused of any wrongdoing. The judge also ordered that “scandalous and prejudicial” claims against Kavanagh be stricken. Outside court, Walden called the dismissal motion a “delay tactic.” “We’re hoping that the real takeaway here is not just that the complaint is upheld, which it should be, but that the court says ‘Enough is enough’ to the city and put us on a discovery schedule so we can find the actual underlying evidence,” he said. “That’s going to show there’s even more misconduct.” The department has repeatedly labeled the chiefs’ lawsuit as “baseless” and “just an attempt to undermine the authority of the fire commissioner.” The chiefs sued Kavanagh about a month after she demoted Gala, Jardin and Assistant Chief Fred Schaaf to deputy chief. Their demotions sparked a protest by FDNY chiefs who criticized Kavanagh and asked to be demoted in rank and moved out of department headquarters. So far, she has not signed off on any of the demotion requests, FDNY officials said. DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 5
New Yorkers with ew Yorkers with Puerto Rican roots uerto Rican roots boogie up 5th Ave. ogie up 5th Ave. 6 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Babies (inset above) aren’t too young to get in on the act as revelers march in the Puerto Rican Day Parade Sunday — a Big Apple tradition that’s gone on for more than 60 years. AP DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 7
BY EMMA SEIWELL AND ROCCO PARASCANDOLA NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Before her throat was fatally slit by a woman during a wild brawl between partygoers outside an illegal after-hours Bronx party, Ashley Smith was looking forward to becoming a grandmother in a new home. The day before she was slain, Smith, 37, called her mother to say she was finally about to leave her Bronx shelter behind for an apartment. “It was going to be on Monday that she would be able to finish up paperwork — which she never got to do,” the victim’s grieving mother, Monique Smith, said. “Why did you have to kill my baby?” Ashley was killed at a heavily promoted “Weekend Sauce” party at an illegal residential social club in Williamsbridge where it costs $20 to get in the door, officials said. Smith went to the bash with three friends, one of whom was “knocked to the ground” as a giant brawl involving several dozen people erupted early June 1. “A fight ensues. Security removes everybody from the location,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said. “They end up outside in front of the location.” In the melee, a woman stabbed Smith in the neck, slicing her jugular vein about 6:10 a.m. outside the two-family home on Oakley St. near E. 219th St., Kenny said. “It was just a bad scene. Everybody was drunk, high or whatever. It was just horrible” said Monique Smith, 59, recounting what cops and attendees told her. “I just can’t understand why everybody else is alive and my daughter’s dead. I can’t, I can’t, I can’t understand it. Why is she the only one that’s gone if there were that many people fighting?” Medics rushed Smith to Jacobi Medical Center, where she died of her wounds a short time later. No arrests have been made. The home has garages in the back used as an illegal social club, police said. So far this year, there have been six 911 calls and two 311 calls for loud music. In 2021, there was a vice operation at the same location. Ashley Smith, who grew up in Yonkers, was working as a construction flagger at sites across New York City. She had two sons, ages 21 and 14, and a 9-year-old daughter. “There was not one day that she wasn’t with her children. She made all her decisions for her kids. She was doing things to make her life better for her and her children,” said her mother. “My grandkids loved her. They loved the funny things that she would say. She was always joking and had them laughing.” Ashley Smith was excited to begin a new chapter in her life, especially meeting her first grandchild. Her older son’s girlfriend is expecting a baby boy any day. “[Her son] had sent her a teddy bear with the baby’s heartbeat, which she slept with. She kept it on her bed and constantly listened to it. She was so excited,” said her mother. “They had sent her the sonogram picture. … They have 3D so you can basically see what the baby looks like. The baby had features of ours because we all look alike.” The son’s traumatized girlfriend had contractions after hearing the news of Ashley Smith’s death, but it was only a false alarm. Monique Smith, who lives in South Carolina, said she had been planning to visit soon and then take her granddaughter down south for the summer. “We were excited,” she said. “We were making plans for when I came up to go shopping and stuff like that.” Now she is planning her oldest child’s funeral and comforting her suddenly orphaned grandchildren. She wasn’t immediately ready to tell Ashley Smith’s daughter the grim news, but the girl found out in a text message from a friend who had overheard their parents talking about the stabbing. “I’m sorry that your mom died,” the message on the girl’s phone said. “Is this true?’ ” the daughter asked her grandmother. “It was just heartbreaking,” Monique Smith said. “Everybody — my daughters, my sister, my nieces — we just all broke down crying, holding each other, surrounding her.” Now they are trying to help the girl heal. “We bought her a journal,” Monique Smith said. “So now she’s writing things to her mother, telling her how much she loves her, how funny she was.” Smith will be buried in New York in a plot next to her father, the grandmother said. The family has created a GoFundMe account to help with burial expenses. “When I buried my husband I purchased a double plot because they’re so expensive,” Monique Smith said. “I wanted to at least have one for myself — not for any of my children, you know?” She said her granddaughter will move to South Carolina to live with her as the family navigates the devastating loss. “I don’t know how to act and I don’t know how to feel. I just know that I need to handle. I actually just want to curl up and not get up,” the heartbroken mother said between sobs. “When I go to sleep, I wake up not knowing where I’m at and then I realize, then everything comes back to me.” “I just want the truth to come out and the person to be caught, and all the persons that were involved in this situation,” she added. “I just want them to catch them and put them away forever. Because I lost my child forever.” With Leonard Greene Why is she only one dead? y is she only one dead? A woman slit the throat of Ashley Smith, 37 (far right), during a wild brawl between partygoers outside an illegal after-hours Bronx party at a house in Williamsbridge (main). FACEBOOK Devastated ma cries out after daughter fatally slashed in brawl at party evastated ma cries out after daughter fatally slashed in brawl at party 8 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
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BY MICHAEL GARTLAND NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Rep. Jamaal Bowman has said publicly that he “co-wrote” one of President Biden’s biggest recent accomplishments, the CHIPS and Science Act, but critics are now countering that his claim is, at best, a stretch. The law, which Biden signed off on in 2022, put approximately $280 billion toward research and manufacturing in the semiconductor industry. The text of the legislation is more than 150,000 words long. Bowman’s claims around the legislation are now the subject of scrutiny amid a hotly contested primary battle with Westchester County Executive George Latimer — a race that’s evolved into a sort of proxy battle over Israel’s war against Hamas. Voters go to the polls June 25. The district also includes a slice of the Bronx. Latimer, a moderate Democrat, has largely backed Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks that led to the war, while Bowman has emerged as a vocal critic, focused primarily on the significant death toll in Gaza. Bowman, a progressive, has aligned himself with the more moderate Biden in other areas, though. The CHIPS law is one example, but Bowman’s claim that he “co-wrote” the bill is now being cast as an “exaggeration” by critics. Prior to the president’s signoff on CHIPS, a separate, much smaller piece of legislation from Bowman was folded into it. That bill, the Empowering STEM Discovery Act, was aimed at waiving cost-sharing requirements associated with science-related fellowships. It was just shy of 200 words long. Another Bowman bill, the Research Excellence through STEM Inclusion Act, was also incorporated into CHIPS. That bill is about 450 words long. The legislation Bowman has claimed he co-authored is Biden’s much larger bill that was enacted into law. At various times, Bowman has said the law included two, five or six of his amendments. But that isn’t entirely accurate. A review of the CHIPS and Science Act shows that, in actuality, only two pieces of legislation sponsored by Bowman made its way into the law that Biden ultimately approved. “If he had any common sense, he would just say, ‘I’m a contributor to the bill,’ ” said Richard Flanagan, a CUNY political science professor. “It’s an exaggeration.” Bowman, a member of the left-of-center “Squad,” has been battling with Latimer to hold on to his congressional seat for months now. So far, the race has been punctuated heavily with debate over the merits of Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attacks. The contest itself — and that dynamic specifically — has forced Bowman to point out what he presumably views as his accomplishments and attempt to hew to the political middle on other issues. Aside from the CHIPS law, another way that Bowman has attempted to do this is through his touting of Biden’s infrastructure law — which he voted against. Michael Gerald, a former Bowman rival who dropped his primary run and now backs Latimer, has criticized such tactics, claiming that “he’s desperately making stuff up” in the face of a competitive primary challenge. “Congressman Bowman has already been caught breaking his promise not to take money from lobbyists, stealing credit for President Biden’s infrastructure law after he joined Republicans in voting against it, and his claim of bringing back ‘$1 billion’ to the district has been completely debunked,” Gerald, a pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church in Tuckahoe, Westchester County, told the Daily News recently. “Now he’s telling people he ‘co-wrote’ another signature Biden achievement when he contributed a couple dozen words in a 158,000-word bill. Bowman has no real accomplishments.” Bowman claimed in February that he “co-authored” the CHIPS law. In a video posted online in April, he claimed his team “co-wrote one of the president’s largest pieces of legislation, the CHIPS and Science Act, which is gonna bring back thousands of jobs to our district.” Earlier, in July 2022, he claimed the legislation contained “six of my amendments.” The following August, he put that number at five. More recently in December 2023, Bowman lowered it to two. Bowman’s campaign manager Gabe Tobias did not immediately address the congressman’s claims that five or six of his amendments were included in the final legislation, but said that Bowman “had a direct role in shaping much of the language and pushing for his priorities like the regional and technology hubs program, as well as provisions for equity in microelectronics research and nuclear research.” “Two of his introduced bills were introduced in the final text, as well many amendments that were included in the markup process and language and priorities that he pushed for behind the scenes,” he said. “The congressman’s role in this cannot be understated.” Tobias would not say, however, whether Bowman defined “amendments” in the strictest sense of the word — separate bills, for example — or merely as textual changes made to the final law. More generally, Bowman has also attempted to counter incoming criticism by making the argument that Latimer is “bought and paid for by AIPAC,” a pro-Israel lobbying group that’s poured about $10 million into the race so far. Marshall Wittmann, an AIPAC spokesman, derided such rhetoric. “Rep. Bowman’s scurrilous and shameful attacks won’t hide his record of aligning with the extremist, anti-Israel fringe,” Wittmann said. Latimer has responded that, in addition to being endorsed by AIPAC, he also has the support of several unions, telling Politico that “they don’t own me and AIPAC does not own me.” CHIPS MAY FALL Congressman under fire for stand on Israel’s war vs. Hamas also 10 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Rep. Jamaal Bowman (main) is facing Westchester County Executive George Latimer (left) in a controversyridden primary. AP AGAINST BOWMAN feeling heat for claims on his input into a key Biden science law DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 11
BY REBECCA WHITE AND JOHN ANNESE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS A Manhattan man accused of fatally bashing in his neighbor’s head with a cricket bat says the weapon actually belonged to the man he killed and he was defending himself from an attack. Victor Springer, 35, faces murder charges for the Saturday killing of 40-year-old Guillermo Edgardo Ortiz Palacios in Harlem, but his lawyer contends he was acting in self-defense — and the judge overseeing the arraignment described the case as “factually murky.” Cops found Ortiz Palacios unconscious with a massive head injury about 3:15 a.m. in a stairwell between the first and second floors of an apartment building on Frederick Douglass Blvd. near W. 120th St. His head was bashed in, he was lying in a puddle of blood and more blood stained the walls and coated the cricket bat next to him, according to a criminal complaint. On Sunday, horrifying video of Ortiz Palacios lying on the ground before first responders arrived was circulating among residents of the building, drawing outrage from those who saw it. “You didn’t just beat him up. You killed him. That was an overkill. His face was disfigured,” said a resident who declined to be named. “You can’t tell who he is. His face was smashed in. It looked like he was already dying and he kept going. Look at all the slashes on his face, looks at the disfiguration,” the person added. “The swelling. There was blood and brain mass on the floor. This was not self-defense.” “I did nothing wrong. I was attacked. I did nothing wrong,” Springer said after he was ordered held without bail at his arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court. The complaint lays out part of the timeline leading to the gruesome find. About 3 a.m., Ortiz Palacios was spotted on surveillance video entering the stairwell, holding a clean cricket bat. Moments later, Springer could be seen leaving the stairwell on the second floor — only he was the one holding the bat, which was covered in blood, according to the complaint. Springer lingered on the second floor, then reentered the stairwell and emerged a few seconds later on the ground floor, the bat no longer in his hands, according to the complaint. A witness flagged down a police officer to let him know about the bloody scene, according to the complaint. As that happened, Springer walked to the nearby 28th Precinct stationhouse, where he told cops there that one of the residents of the building attacked him with a cricket bat, according to the complaint. “In response, he severely injured that person and left that person unconscious and motionless in the second-floor stairwell in the building,” authorities paraphrased in the criminal complaint. Springer refused medical attention, but said the other man would need an ambulance, according to the complaint. Assistant District Attorney Nicole Papastavrou asked that Springer be held without bail Sunday, explaining, “The defendant bludgeoned a man to death with a cricket bat.” Springer’s lawyer Wilfredo Sta. Ana called prosecutors’ argument for denying bail “very thin on some of the facts detailed.” “We know something happened between these two men, but I don’t think it rises to the level of murder,” the attorney said. Video showed Ortiz Palacios coming down the stairwell from the fifth floor with the bat, the defense lawyer said. “Something happened between these two men in the stairwell. … It’s very clear from the complaint the decedent had the bat. Mr. Springer did not confront the decedent with the bat,” Sta. Ana said. “They have no history of animosity. … Their relationship if any is one of casual interactions in and throughout the building.” Springer was known to loiter in the building, according to neighbor Robert Skeff. “He would urinate in the hallway. He would sleep in the stairs,” said Skeff, 63, who described Ortiz Palacios as “like a son.” Ortiz Palacios’ ex-girlfriend described him as a devoted father of three who worked in construction across the city and was originally from Honduras. “He loved his children. He was a very giving or loving person to those that he was around,” the ex told the Daily News on Saturday. Springer grew up in the building and lives there with his mother, Sta. Ana said. He works as a street vendor and an off-the-books porter. “Oftentimes in cases like this, the press canonizes those who are involved in violence at the expense of someone like Mr. Springer, who did not initiate this fight, did not start this fight and clearly did not want the end result,” the defense lawyer said. Springer wore a white Tyvek robe and blue slip-ons and stood with his hands cuffed, with a blue mask pulled down over his chin. “His shoes have been taken, his clothes have been taken and pictures were taken of injuries on his hip as well as his arm and his hands. Mr. Springer has scratches on his body and swelling on his shoulder, head and hands,” Sta. Ana said. “Mr. Springer has maintained he was merely defending himself.” Judge Abraham Clott acknowledged the potential problems with the case against Springer, but still ordered him held without bail until his next appearance Thursday, citing his criminal record. That record includes two felonies, one of them violent, and nine misdemeanors, according to the Manhattan DA’s office. He has a recent 1½-to-3-year sentence for grand larceny in 2021. “I agree that this case is factually murky for a variety of reasons,” Clott said. “But unfortunately what isn’t murky is that Mr. Springer appears to face a reasonable possibility of substantial incarceratory sentence.” Asked Sunday whether prosecutors planned to keep pursuing murder charges, a DA spokesman said the investigation is ongoing. Bat slay ‘self-defense’ at slay ‘self-defense’ Suspect in murder of neighbor held without bail in ‘murky’ case uspect in murder of neighbor held without bail in ‘murky’ case Police at scene after Guillermo Edgardo Ortiz Palacios, 40 (above), was found fatally bashed with a cricket bat in the stairwell of a Harlem building. THEODORE PARISIENNE FOR NYDN 12 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BY THOMAS TRACY AND JOHN ANNESE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Surveillance video obtained by the Daily News shows the moment a sneering criminal yanked $8 out of the hand of a10-year-old boy as the young victim walked on a Brooklyn sidewalk Friday. The video captures little Alex Medina and his 7-year-old sister walking along Sterling Place near Utica Ave. in Crown Heights about 11 a.m. Friday as the crook follows. The boy is holding the money in his left hand as he carries a black plastic bag around his wrist. As the robber catches up, Alex and his sister turn around and stop. The mugger moves in, clasping the cash and wrenching it out of Alex’s hand as the boy tries to pull away. The youngster then takes out a phone as the robber walks away. “He asked me if I can give him $5 dollars but I ignored him and walked away,” Alex told the News Saturday, with his family’s permission. “The second time I went to the pizzeria, he came, grabbed my hand and took the money and just ran off.” Alex and his sister were coming back from a nearby Crown Fried Chicken and Pizza with some food they had picked up. “He grabbed me by my right hand and took the money out of my left hand. I had like $8 dollars,” the child said. Alex called police and told his father about what happened and the two drove around the neighborhood, looking for the crook. When they spotted him, his father asked, “Did you steal money from my kids?” Alex said. His father snapped a photo and the crook ran off. Cops on Saturday released a photo of the mugger, who is believed to be homeless. Police are asking anyone with information on the suspect’s whereabouts to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential. I’LL TAKE THAT CASH, SONNY Surveillance vid shows crook ripping 8 bucks out of boy’s hand Young Alex Medina, 10 (above right), was with his little sister walking home in Crown Heights carrying takeout when an assailant confronts him and yanks $8 in cash out of his hand. The boy then called the cops, got together with his dad and the pair drove around searching for the perp. They found him, but he ran away. SEE THE VIDEO AT NYDAILYNEWS.COM DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 13
Among the super-heroes and villains who landed at Major R. Owens Health & Wellness Community Center over the weekend were (clockwise from top left) the Watcher and Galactus, Thor, two generations of the Flash, Wolverine and the Fantastic Four with the Watcher, Galactus and Dr. Doom. ANDREW SCHWARTZ FOR NYDN Whole lotta world-saving at B’klyn Comic Con 14 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 15 WE CAN CHANGE THAT. We’ve all had moments where we’ve felt we didn’t belong. But for people who moved to this country, that feeling lasts more than a moment. Together, we can build a better community. Learn how at BelongingBeginsWithUs.org FOR SOME, FEELING LASTS MORE THAN A MOMENT.
BY ELLIOT SPAGAT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN DIEGO — The Border Patrol arrested Gerardo Henao 14 hours after President Biden suspended asylum processing at the U.S. border with Mexico last week. But instead of being summarily deported, he was dropped off by agents the next day at a San Diego bus stop, where he caught a train to the airport for a flight to Newark. Henao, who said he left his jewelry business in Medellin, Colombia, because of constant extortion attempts, had one thing working in his favor: a scarcity of deportation flights to that country. Lack of resources, diplomatic limitations and logistical hurdles make it difficult for the Biden administration to impose its sweeping measure on a large scale. The policy, which took effect Wednesday, has an exception for “operational considerations,” official language acknowledging the government lacks the money and authority to deport everyone subject to the measure, especially people from countries in South America, Asia, Africa and Europe. The Homeland Security Department said in a detailed document outlining the ban that “demographics and nationalities encountered at the border significantly impact” its ability to deport people. Thousands of migrants have been deported under the ban so far, according to two senior Homeland Security Department officials who briefed reporters Friday on condition that they not be named. There were 17 deportation flights, including one to Uzbekistan. Those deported include people from Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru and Mexico. Henao, 59, said a Border Patrol agent told him about the ban after he was picked up Wednesday on a dirt road in the mountains east of San Diego. The agent processed release papers ordering him to appear in immigration court Oct. 23 in New Jersey. He casually asked Henao why he fled Colombia but didn’t pursue that line of questioning. “It was nothing,” Henao said at a San Diego transit center, where the Border Patrol dropped off four busloads of migrants in a four-hour span Thursday afternoon. “They took my photo, my fingerprints and that was it.” Many migrants released that day were from China, India, Colombia and Ecuador. One group included men from Mauritania, Sudan and Ethiopia. “Hello, if you are arriving right now, you have been released from immigration custody, and you can go to the airport,” a volunteer with a bullhorn told the migrants, directing them to a light-rail platform across the parking lot. “You can go for free if you don’t have money for a taxi or an Uber.” Under the measure, asylum is suspended when arrests for illegal crossings reach 2,500 a day. It ends when they average below 1,500 for a week straight. Border officials were told to give the highest priority to detaining migrants who can be easily deported, followed by “hard to remove” nationalities requiring at least five days to issue travel documents and then “very hard to remove” nationalities whose governments don’t accept U.S. flights. Homeland Security has been clear about the hurdles, said Theresa Cardinal Brown, senior adviser for immigration and border policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington think tank. “There’s a limitation to the resources that the government has for detention and removal of people,” Brown said. U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement did 679 deportation flights from January through May, nearly 60% of them to Guatemala and Honduras, according to Witness at the Border, an advocacy group that analyzes flight data. There were 46 flights to Colombia, 42 to Ecuador and 12 to Peru, a relatively small amount considering that tens of thousands enter illegally from those countries every month. There were only 10 deportation flights during that period to Africa, which has emerged as a major source of migration to the United States. There was just one to China, despite the arrests of nearly 13,000 Chinese migrants. It’s not so easy, Mr. Prez t’s not so easy, Mr. Prez Lack of resources & authority hinders asylum ban at Mex. border ack of resources & authority hinders asylum ban at Mex. border A volunteer instructs migrants, released with notices to appear in immigration court, to board a train to the airport in San Diego. AP 16 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BY MELANIE LIDMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JERUSALEM — Benny Gantz, a centrist member of Israel’s threeman War Cabinet, announced his resignation Sunday, accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of mismanaging the war effort and putting his own “political survival” over the country’s security needs. The move does not immediately pose a threat to Netanyahu, who still controls a majority coalition in parliament. But the Israeli leader now is more heavily reliant on far-right allies who oppose the latest U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal and want to press ahead with the war. “Unfortunately, Netanyahu is preventing us from achieving true victory, which is the justification for the painful and ongoing price,” Gantz said. He added that Netanyahu was “making empty promises,” and the country needs to take a different direction as he expects the fighting to continue for years to come. The popular former military chief joined Netanyahu’s government shortly after the Hamas attack in a show of unity. His presence also boosted Israel’s credibility with its international partners. Gantz has good working relations with U.S. officials. Gantz had previously said he would leave the government by June 8 if Netanyahu did not formulate a new plan for postwar Gaza. He scrapped a planned news conference Saturday night after four Israeli hostages were dramatically rescued from Gaza earlier in the day in Israel’s largest such operation since the eight-month war began. At least 274 Palestinians, including children, were killed in the assault, Gaza health officials said. Gantz called for Israel to hold elections in the fall, and he encouraged the third member of the War Cabinet, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, to “do the right thing” and resign from the government as well. Gallant has previously said he would resign if Israel chose to reoccupy Gaza, and he encouraged the government to make plans for a Palestinian administration. On Saturday, Netanyahu had urged Gantz not to leave the emergency wartime government. “This is the time for unity, not for division,” he said, in a direct plea to Gantz. Gantz’s decision to leave is largely “a symbolic move” due to his frustration with Netanyahu, said Gideon Rahat, chairman of the political science department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He noted it could further increase Netanyahu’s reliance on extremist, right-wing members of his government, led by National Security Minister Itamar BenGvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich. “I think the outside world, especially the United States, is not very happy about it, because they see Gantz and his party as the more responsible people within this government,” Rahat said. On Sunday evening, Ben-Gvir demanded a spot in the War Cabinet, saying Gantz and the smaller cabinet had bungled the war effort due to “dangerous” ideological decisions. Hamas took some 250 hostages during the Oct. 7 attack that killed about 1,200 people. About half were released in a weeklong ceasefire in November. Close to 120 hostages remain, with 43 pronounced dead. At least 36,700 Palestinians have been killed in the fighting, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between fighters and civilians. At least 274 Palestinians, including dozens of children, were killed, and hundreds more were wounded, in the Israeli raid that rescued four hostages held by Hamas, Gaza’s Health Ministry said Sunday. The Israeli military said its forces came under heavy fire and responded during the complex daytime operation in central Gaza. The killing of so many Palestinians, in a raid that Israelis celebrated as a stunning success, showed the heavy cost of such operations on top of the already soaring toll of the eight-monthold war ignited by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack. The Israeli bombing was “hell,” witness Mohamed al-Habash told The Associated Press. “We saw many fighter jets flying over the area. We saw people fleeing in the streets. Women and children were screaming and crying,” he said. One Nuseirat resident who witnessed Saturday’s assault said: “They killed everything inside us.” The woman, identified only as Mounira in a video shared by the UN on Sunday, urged a ceasefire. The operation in Nuseirat, a built-up refugee camp dating to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, was the largest rescue since Oct. 7. Saturday’s events also affected fragile attempts to deliver aid. The World Food Program chief said the organization suspended distribution around a U.S.-built pier off Gaza because “two of our warehouses, warehouse complex, were rocketed yesterday.” Also Sunday, the commander of the Israeli military’s Gaza division resigned over failures that led to the Oct. 7 attack. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will return to the Middle East this week, seeking a breakthrough in ceasefire efforts. U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN that mediators Egypt and Qatar had not received official word from Hamas on the proposed deal. In an interview with CBS, Sullivan did not say whether President Biden would meet Netanyahu when he comes to Washington next month to address Congress. International pressure is mounting on Israel to limit civilian bloodshed in its war in Gaza. Palestinians also face widespread hunger because Israel has restricted the flow of aid into Gaza. ISRAELI CENTRIST QUITS RAELI CENTRIST QUITS Out of War Cabinet, Gantz says Netanyahu has bungled Gaza ut of War Cabinet, Gantz says Netanyahu has bungled Gaza Israel’s former military chief Benny Gantz has resigned from the War Cabinet, leaving the prime minister more dependent on right-wing voices. AP DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 17
BY RAF CASERT, LORNE COOK AND SAMUEL PETREQUIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BRUSSELS — Voting has ended to elect the European Union’s regional lawmakers for the next five-year term after the last remaining polls closed in Italy, surging far-right parties dealing a body blow to two of the bloc’s most important leaders: French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Official results were being tallied Sunday from a marathon election spanning four days across 27 bloc member countries. An initial projection provided by the European Union indicated far-right parties have made big gains at the European Parliament. In France, the National Rally party of Marine Le Pen dominated the polls to such an extent that Macron immediately dissolved the national parliament and called for new elections, a massive political risk since his party could suffer more losses, hobbling the rest of his presidential term that ends in 2027. Le Pen was delighted to accept the challenge. “We’re ready to turn the country around, ready to defend the interests of the French, ready to put an end to mass immigration,” she said, echoing the rallying cry of so many far-right leaders in other countries who were celebrating substantial wins. Macron acknowledged the thud of defeat. “I’ve heard your message, your concerns, and I won’t leave them unanswered,” he said, adding that calling a snap election only underscored his democratic credentials. In Germany, the most populous nation in the 27-member bloc, projections indicated that the AfD party overcame a string of scandals involving its top candidate to rise to 16.5%, up from 11% in 2019. In comparison, the combined result for the three parties in the German governing coalition barely topped 30%. Scholz suffered such an ignominious fate that his long-established Social Democratic party fell behind the extreme-right Alternative for Germany, which surged into second place. “After all the prophecies of doom, after the barrage of the last few weeks, we are the second strongest force,” a jubilant AfD leader Alice Weidel said. The four-day polls in the 27 EU countries were the world’s second-biggest exercise in democracy, behind India’s recent election. And the rise of the far right was even more stunning than many analysts predicted. The French National Rally crystallized it as it stood at over 30% or about twice as much as Macron’s pro-European centrist Renew party, projected to reach around 15%. Overall across the EU, two mainstream and pro-European groups, the Christian Democrats and the Socialists, remained the dominant forces. The gains of the far right came at the expense of the Greens, who were expected to lose about 20 seats and fall back to sixth position in the legislature. Macron’s pro-business Renew group also lost big. For decades, the European Union, which has its roots in the defeat of Nazi Germany and fascist Italy, confined the hard right to the political fringes. With its strong showing in these elections, the far right could now become a major player in policies ranging from migration to security and climate. Bucking the trend was former EU leader and current Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who overcame Law and Justice, the national conservative party that governed Poland from 2015 to 2023 and drove it ever further to the right. A poll showed Tusk’s party won with 38%, compared to 34% for his bitter nemesis. “Of these large, ambitious countries, of the EU leaders, Poland has shown that democracy, honesty and Europe triumph here,” Tusk told his supporters. “I am so moved.” He declared, “We showed that we are a light of hope for Europe.” Germany, traditionally a stronghold for environmentalists, exemplified the humbling of the Greens, who were predicted to fall from 20% to 12%. With further losses expected in France and elsewhere, the defeat of the Greens could well have an impact on the EU’s overall climate change policies, still the most progressive across the globe. The center-right Christian Democratic bloc of EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which already weakened its green credentials ahead of the polls, dominated in Germany with almost 30%, easily beating Scholz’s Social Democrats, who fell to 14%, even behind the AfD. “What you have already set as a trend is all the better — strongest force, stable, in difficult times and by a distance,” von der Leyen told her German supporters by video link from Brussels. As well as France, the hard right, which focused its campaign on migration and crime, was expected to make significant gains in Italy, where Premier Giorgia Meloni was tipped to consolidate her power. The elections will shift the EU to the right and redirect its future. That could make it harder for the EU to pass legislation, and decision-making could at times be paralyzed in the world’s biggest trading bloc. EU lawmakers, who serve a five-year term in the 720-seat Parliament, have a say in issues from the EU budget, aid to Ukraine and financial rules to climate and agriculture policy. The elections come at a testing time for voter confidence in a bloc of some 450 million people. In the past five years, the EU has been shaken by the coronavirus pandemic, an economic slump and an energy crisis fueled by the biggest land conflict in Europe since World War II. Far-right r-right surges in urges in EU voting U voting Macron calls for perilous acron calls for perilous snap election in France nap election in France German citizen dressed in traditional Black Forest attire casts her ballot for the European Parliament elections at polling station in Gutach im Breisgau Sunday. (SILAS STEIN/DPA VIA AP) AP 18 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 19 DON’T SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF, JUST NAIL THE BIG STUFF. What’s another teeny, tiny stain? You’ve got more important things to think about—like making sure your kids are buckled correctly in the right seat for their age and size. Check at NHTSA.gov/TheRightSeat
BY JOSEPH WILKINSON NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Michael Mosley, a British TV personality who disappeared last week, was found dead Sunday on a small Greek island. Mosley, 67, had gone for a walk on the island of Symi on Wednesday but never reached his intended destination. His wife, Dr. Clare Bailey Mosley, reported him missing that night. Local authorities launched an extensive search for Mosley after he disappeared, while temperatures topped 100 degrees during the week. The island’s mayor, Lefteris Papakalodoukas, was on a boat with several members of the media when a photographer spotted Mosley’s body next to a fence on a rocky slope. Mosley likely fell down the steep slope before crashing into the fence, according to Papakalodoukas. As cops went to pick up Mosley’s body, one of them fell down the same slope and had to be taken away on a stretcher. “Michael was an adventurous man, it’s part of what made him so special,” his wife, Clare Bailey Mosley, said Sunday in a statement. “It’s devastating to have lost Michael, my wonderful, funny, kind and brilliant husband. We had an incredibly lucky life together. We loved each other very much and were so happy together.” “Some of these people on the island, who hadn’t even heard of Michael, worked from dawn till dusk unasked,” the widow added. “My family and I have been hugely comforted by the outpouring of love from people from around the world. It’s clear that Michael meant a huge amount to so many of you.” In the U.K., Mosley was best known for his numerous TV appearances on various BBC channels, where he dished advice as a medical expert. He also appeared on radio programs and had a regular column in the Daily Mail. He was known worldwide for popularizing certain diets that promised quick weight loss, including the Fast 800 and the 5:2 diet. The latter involved eating healthily for five days per week while drastically limiting calorie intake on the other two. Additionally, Mosley was known for testing medical theories on himself. For a 2014 BBC special, “Infested! Living With Parasites,” Mosley lived with tapeworms in his gut for six weeks. “Anyone who is thinking of popping parasites as a weight-loss device should think twice,” he told the BBC. Symi is a small island that sits less than 10 miles from the Turkish coast and more than 250 miles southeast of Athens. It is a popular tourist destination for British. With News Wire Services Brit TV diet booster found dead Mosley on Greek Island with wife apparently fell down a slope Michael Mosley was a popular British BBC TV personality specializing in science and health. He was on the Greek Island Symi when he died. 20 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BY MICHAEL CASEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BOSTON — A soaring demand for food delivered fast has spawned small armies of couriers — and increasing alarm — in big cities where scooters, motorcycles and mopeds zip in and out of traffic and hop onto pedestrian-filled sidewalks as their drivers race to drop off salads and sandwiches. Officials in Boston, New York and Washington have started cracking down on delivery companies by issuing warning letters, seizing illegally registered or driven vehicles and launching special street patrols to enforce speed limits. The pushback is not limited to the U.S.: There have also been a series of crackdowns in London and other British cities. For their part, the delivery companies have pledged to work with officials to ensure that all of their drivers operate legally and safely. In a letter last week to food delivery companies DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber, Boston officials cited an “alarming increase in unlawful and dangerous operation of motorcycles, mopeds and motorized scooters” that they said put the drivers, other motorists and pedestrians “in imminent danger.” The letter alleged that some drivers were operating unregistered vehicles and breaking traffic laws, and warned of a crackdown on the vehicles. It also demanded that the companies explain how they can ensure their drivers are operating safely. The Massachusetts State Police said they identified dozens of mopeds and scooters that were improperly registered or being operated by unlicensed drivers. Fourteen illegal mopeds and scooters were seized Wednesday in one Boston neighborhood alone. In New York City, authorities have seized 13,000 scooters and mopeds so far this year; on Wednesday, they crushed more than 200 illegal mopeds and other delivery vehicles. Authorities in Washington, meanwhile, launched a program Wednesday called Operation Ride Right to ensure drivers of two-wheeled vehicles are complying with the law. Since it began, authorities have made five arrests and impounded 17 mopeds. “They have terrorized many of our pedestrians, particularly our senior and older adults,” Mayor Adams said Wednesday at an event in which motorized twowheeled delivery vehicles were destroyed. “Riders who think the rules don’t apply to them, they’re going to see an aggressive enforcement policy that’s in place.” When food delivery services had their major surge during the COVID-19 pandemic, most drivers used cars to deliver their fare. That led to increased traffic congestion, prompting a shift to motorcycles and other two-wheeled modes of transportation. The drivers, many of them immigrants from Latin American countries but also from West Africa and South Asia, say they are just trying to earn a living and are providing a service that gets customers their food fast. “We’re not all bad,” Luis López, a delivery driver from the Dominican Republic said Friday from his motorcycle in an area of multiple restaurants near the Boston Public Library. “We come to work, to earn a living, pay the rent and send something to our families.” López, who came to the U.S. about three years ago, acknowledged that some drivers are unlicensed or driving unregistered vehicles, and he’s seen them running red lights and onto sidewalks, menacing pedestrians. Some people are so reckless that they’re also putting other delivery drivers at risk, he said. He said he was among a group of 10 delivery drivers outside a Chick-fil-A on Thursday night when a police officer approached them with a flyer describing how to register their scooters and mopeds. The whole group agreed to do just that. “We have to respect the law,” he said, speaking in Spanish. “We are going to respect the law so that they let us work here.” Drivers of motorized twowheeled vehicles are coming under much more scrutiny than was faced years ago by other gig workers in cars, such as Uber and Lyft drivers, because they can more easily violate traffic laws, said Hilary Robinson, an associate professor of law and sociology at Northeastern University. The switch to the vehicles “is really an attempt to make lowwage, high-risk labor available so that all of us can have cheap goods and services,” Robinson said. “It’s perhaps one of the reasons why people are starting to realize that there really is no such thing as a free lunch.” William Medina, a delivery worker in New York who is also an organizing leader with the Los Deliveristas Unidos Campaign, blames the delivery companies. “This is a problem that started because the companies force you to complete the deliveries from far distances,” he said by telephone Friday. Medina started out delivering food on a bicycle, switched to an electric bike and now is using a moped to make the longer trips. “If you have to complete the delivery 6 miles, 7 miles, you have to complete it,” he said. Among those advocating for tougher enforcement in Boston is City Councilor Edward Flynn, who said on Facebook that it “can no longer be the Wild West on the streets of Boston.” “Everyone using city roads needs to abide by the rules of the road. If you’re able to go 25 mph like a car — you should be licensed, registered and carry liability insurance in the event of an accident and injury,” he wrote. Some Boston residents are supportive of tougher action against the scooters. “I get frustrated when they don’t follow the traffic laws,” said Anne Kirby, 25, a student having lunch in a Boston neighborhood within a few hundred feet of several scooters. “I feel like I almost get hit every day when they go through the crosswalk when it’s not their turn to go.” But Jaia Samuel, 25, a hospital worker from Boston, was more conflicted. She said she agreed that delivery scooters can be dangerous, but she also acknowledged that she relies heavily on delivery services for her food. “I do think it’s unsafe to an extent, the weaving in between cars and the not stopping for red lights,” she said. “But I feel like everybody should be able to make a living, so who am I to say anything? It would be unfortunate for me. I would be taking a hit with the crackdown on them. I order a lot of Uber Eats, DoorDash.” Three major food delivery services have pledged to work with officials and neighborhood advocates to address the problem. “The overwhelming majority of Dashers do the right thing and like all drivers must follow the rules of the road. If they don’t, then they face consequences — just like anyone else,” DoorDash said Wednesday. Grubhub said its employees already agree to obey all local traffic laws. “While enforcement of the law is best handled by the police, we take safety seriously and will take action to address any reports of unsafe driving,” the company said Thursday. A delivery driver on a scooter uses the pedestrian crosswalk to get through traffic Friday in Boston. CHARLES KRUPA/AP COURIER CRACKDOWN OURIER CRACKDOWN Cities fed up with wild west scooter, moped driving ities fed up with wild west scooter, moped driving AP DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 21
F or the first time since the end of apartheid in South Africa, the African National Congress party has lost its majority of the nation’s parliament. Yet instead of trying to cast doubt on the results themselves or take aim at the country’s electoral system, its leaders are now discussing a unity government. In India, the world’s largest country and biggest democracy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held onto his majority but was dealt a major setback by voters. Modi has grown increasingly authoritarian, going after political opponents and even allegedly directing an assassination on Canadian soil and an attempted one in New York. Yet the results are the results, and Modi has not contested them. For the U.K.’s Conservative Party, the polls and public opinion portend a crushing coming defeat. Much like the U.S. GOP, the Tories have miscalculated in going all in on right-wing culture war issues and ignoring economic woes. Even as the losses loom, though, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is not talking about stolen elections. Not so here. The United States, the world’s oldest democracy and the template for that system of government — as imperfect as it’s been, and as occasionally hostile to other democracies that threatened its interests — now seems to teeter on the edge. Donald Trump might appear to many like a singular aberration whose eventual exit from the political scene could suddenly fix this, but the sad reality is this has not been true for years. He’s been a catalyst, but at this stage, the idea that elections lost are inherently illegitimate has become practically standard Republican dogma. You hear it from not only Trump’s surrogates but party officials, federal and state elected officials, even candidates for local offices down to formerly unremarkable races like school board elections. Former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, to use just one example, launched a crusade to call into question the validity of her 2022 loss to Katie Hobbs, pointing to bogus studies and attempting legal challenges. None of that seems to be hampering her ongoing bid for Senate, where Lake has weaponized election “integrity” even against her GOP primary rival. Unhappy even with the additional advantage offered by the structure of the Senate and the Electoral College, growing contingents of Republicans are simply unwilling to accept the results of any elections where they’re not the victors, either out of genuine belief in conspiracy theories about avalanches of noncitizen voters or rigged machines, or simple opportunism. We’re still at the stage now where this cynical undermining of our electoral system can be rebuked, and its proponents treated with the due ridicule and dismissal that they deserve. These are not claims that should be honored with serious responses, but treated as ridiculous by other political leaders and voters themselves, who must so roundly repudiate these candidates that their claims seem even more like the last resort of political losers. To allow this to become normalized, to have these candidates not suffer consequences for this contempt for our democratic system, is to begin to cede that system. If and when that happens, then they’ll be right that our electoral system has been subverted, but it’ll have been done by their hand. We cannot allow that to happen. Electing democracy W hen New York voters cast their ballots for the Legislature, they believe themselves to be making their voices heard in the exercise of the people’s business. The trouble is, the people’s business is often not very public. Case in point, New York Focus’ recent reports on the state Senate’s Working Rules group, a hazy body of unacknowledged Democratic lawmakers who get together in secret to decide which of the hundreds of bills left over at the end of the session will get advanced. Those that don’t get the nod die on the vine. We understand the need for efficiency in moving bills through as time runs out. Or at least we would understand it if this was really the only opportunity to deeply discuss the litany of matters of public import that come before the Legislature every year. One would think that the session only lasted a few days of frenzied negotiations and a haphazard up-down vote among a secret group of senators instead of being months of ostensibly serious policy-making. It’s no surprise that the Legislature has not managed to get much done in the aftermath of the budget, having decided that the budget itself will be the vehicle for any substantive or even mildly controversial policy. It’s also no surprise that this system creates the need for semi-informal backroom hashing out of legislative possibility, just as it has in Albany for eons. But a lack of surprise doesn’t equate to acceptance. A system where crucial decisions are made by a group of unknown lawmakers whose own colleagues are often unaware of their agenda or even the group’s existence at all isn’t the way to run a serious government. Nor is one where senators can push through dozens of judicial confirmations and other positions subject to confirmation with little scrutiny and no real record. Who voted which nominee up or down? Good luck finding out; the information isn’t anywhere but for the Senate journal (which isn’t available online). Much Albany business, by custom and lack of requirement, is conducted away from public eyes and without a trace, except for the outcome. Whether it’s a bill or a nomination, we see only the results but not the sausage being made, and we all suffer for it. This isn’t the recipe for the model of state government innovation that New York holds itself out to be. Aside from the Legislature, executive departments have been falling short of the transparency agenda announced by Gov. Hochul three years ago, as documented by Reinvent Albany, including a failure to report what have often been abysmal response rates to Freedom of Information Law requests. The public’s right to know is then stifled at every level — the legislative, the executive and the judiciary, where this page had to push heavily for the publication of the transcripts for Donald Trump’s Manhattan criminal trial, perhaps the most publicly notable criminal court proceeding this century. The powers that be have little incentive to change that, because transparency means scrutiny. Holding more processes publicly, with more records created and disseminated, exposes them to increased pressure from advocates, lobbyists and their own constituents. But they should be reminded that this is what they signed up for, and act on several bills to move forward the goal of transparency. In the dark S ome leaders in Congress have recently threatened to stall any congressional legislative actions as a consequence of former President Trump’s guilty verdict in the hush money trial. I am sure we could compile a long list of the negative effects of such an action on New York and all states, essentially putting Congress on hold for an indeterminate time period, perhaps as long as the fall election. But among other issues one that will definitely affect New York and stand out would be failure to pass two pieces of legislation that are primed and ready and will spur economic growth. They address education attainment and workforce development in very meaningful ways. All of which would have a decidedly positive impact on not some, but all Americans directly affecting their pocketbooks. One element of the two pieces of legislation scheduled to be taken up by Congress this week, would among other things expand the federal Pell Grant program to provide flexibility in order to support shorter term education and skills building efforts directly connected to career opportunities, easing the cost and difficulty of allowing more students to obtain the skills needed to have a stable and economically positive work life. This has been advocated by leaders in the business, education and nonprofit communities for years. It would also update things by funding access to online learning opportunities that have spread rapidly, reducing cost significantly and allowing individuals already in the workforce to be upskilled and advanced in their pay and responsibilities while still working. The other piece of legislation scheduled for a committee hearing also this coming week, would reauthorize the Workforce Innovation and Opportunities Act (WIOA) focusing federal funding specifically on much needed skills based training directly connected to high wage and priority career opportunities and economic success giving eligible workers focused education and training accounts that would direct resources on skill building connected to open work opportunities. It would also address the education and training needs of incarcerated youth, equipping them with the skills needed to enter the workforce and put an end to the prison pipeline and the significant cost related to their continued incarceration. Both pieces of legislation make enormous sense and are directly connected to economic growth and economic opportunity and are in America’s interest. Failure to act on both would be a tragedy and counter to American interest and benefit. Why? Because the benefits of these two pieces of legislation permit a brighter future for many Americans, especially those at the bottom of the economic pyramid. That is why Republicans, like Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, and Democrats, like ranking member Bobby Scott, have both spoken out in support, demonstrating the possibility of broader bipartisan support. If this legislation were enacted businesses that are desperately crying for more workers with needed and necessary skills will see more people with exactly those skills. This is why this legislation is supported by the Business Roundtable and companies like IBM and many others. But a raft of government and education leaders are supporters as well, along with civil rights organizations, workforce organizations and student leaders, all of whom are also in support. If these pieces of legislation were to be enacted, the government will see the cost of the social safety net decline and will reap the benefit of added tax revenue directly connected to rising wages and a focused effort to address labor needs. And, we have the needed and necessary engine in place to implement this kind of skills based effort. Our community colleges in New York and nationally, are primed and ready to expand their ability to offer focused training via both degree programs and shorter term micro credentials that are credit bearing and each and all of them, directly connected to high growth work opportunities in areas like green jobs, the growing semiconductor industry which is now booming in New York, cybersecurity, advanced manufacturing and health care among other areas of growth and opportunity. There are a lot of issues that divide our nation, but economic growth and economic opportunity, implemented fairly, and equitably, is something that unites and doesn’t divide. That was what resulted in both the CHIPS Act and the Infrastructure Act passing with bipartisan support in Congress. Sure they benefitted New York, but the same is true of states and cities across the nation. To get these two pieces of needed and necessary legislation over the finish line we will need that same kind of bipartisan support once again. Let’s put partisan rhetoric and actions aside and do what benefits all Americans. Litow is a SUNY Trustee and former president of the IBM Foundation and former NYC deputy schools chancellor. Congress must boost workforce readiness BE OUR GUEST BY STANLEY S. LITOW 22 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BRAMHALL’S WORLD F or decades, anti-abortion extremists have systematically worked the court system and legal loopholes to ban abortion and take away our reproductive freedoms across the country. In 2022, their efforts succeeded nationally when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, leaving every state vulnerable to the whims and ideologies of the politicians in power. Now those same anti-abortion actors are taking a page from the national playbook and working to roll back the protections in place here in New York. While some may feel abortion is safe and protected here in New York, that complacency poses a dangerous risk. Roe fell because too many of us thought it could never happen. But we have a chance to rectify that this November. Recently, anti-abortion extremists sued to block New Yorkers from voting on the New York Equal Rights Amendment. The NY ERA will constitutionally protect our right to an abortion — so it’s no surprise abortion opponents want it off the ballot. And while we’re certain their legal efforts will not succeed and the NY ERA will be on the ballot in November, this latest anti-abortion attack is further proof that we need to permanently enshrine our reproductive freedoms in the Constitution — because these extremists will stop at nothing to take them away. From overturning Roe to enacting dangerous abortion bans across the country, anti-abortion extremists have taken aggressive steps to strip us of our right to make decisions about our own bodies and futures. New York stepped up: the state Legislature passed legislation to put the NY ERA on the ballot. The last step to amending the Constitution comes down to the voters on Election Day. If New Yorkers approve the amendment in November, they will permanently protect against any government interference that would curtail a person’s reproductive autonomy or access to reproductive health care, including abortion. The anti-abortion extremists trying to keep the NY ERA off the ballot claim the Legislature didn’t follow the correct process; in reality, the process to bring this bill to a vote followed the same path of 18 other amendments that made it on the ballot in recent years. These opponents also claim the amendment was rushed through; in reality, the NY ERA was introduced in 2019 and received ample attention. The amendment was voted through two separate legislative sessions — over two years. Further, the anti-abortion plaintiff driving this lawsuit, an assemblymember, did not ask one single question during the bill discussion in conference, committee, or on the floor to be voted on. Let’s be clear: for the opponents of the NY ERA, this is about one thing: preventing New Yorkers from voting to protect their rights and freedoms. And there’s nothing they won’t say to try and get their way. They’re worried — because when we pass the New York Equal Rights Amendment, they lose their chance to attack and roll back our rights. There’s no time to wait: since Roe was overturned, at least 21 states have enacted abortion bans. Nationally, anti-abortion extremists have continued to use the courts to go after medication abortion and emergency room care for women suffering dangerous pregnancy complications. Our rights are more fragile than many believe, and we have to act to protect them. Without constitutional protections, one law passed and signed in Albany could strip us of our reproductive freedoms. And this scenario is not merely a distant possibility: in 2022, a staunchly anti-abortion candidate came within five points of the Governor’s Mansion. Elected officials who believe in our right to abortion have only controlled the state Legislature for eight of the past 58 years. And after years of anti-abortion majorities, New York’s Reproductive Health Act was only passed in 2019. Political winds change — as residents of Florida and Arizona will tell you. Rather than leave our right to bodily autonomy to the whims of whichever politician is in charge, we need to enshrine these rights in our constitution — to protect us and our rights and freedoms, permanently. From Alabama to Arizona to Texas, we’ve all watched as anti-abortion extremists attempt to use the courts to revoke reproductive freedoms — including abortion bans, IVF bans, even attacking birth control. This latest legal maneuver against the NY ERA is no different. While we’re confident this attack will fail and the NY ERA will be on the ballot, this latest legal challenge is a clear signal that the anti-abortion faction will spare no effort to deprive us of our rights. So when we have the chance to protect our rights and reproductive freedoms this November, we should take it. Ahuja is the campaign director of New Yorkers for Equal Rights on the New York Equal Rights Amendment ballot initiative. New York can make abortion protection permanent BE OUR GUEST BY SASHA AHUJA DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 23
K earny, N.J.: President Biden has gotten the world war he seems to have been craving since he got burned by his entirely correct decision to get us out of Afghanistan after 20 long years. Just like he’d have us believe he did with Corn Pop decades ago, Joey was determined to prove himself tougher than the “bad dudes” he was facing off against. Only it’s not him standing up and doing the fighting now, it’s innocent men and women in Ukraine, Russia, Gaza and Israel, with tens of thousands dead and countries destroyed. Biden straight up provoked Vladimir Putin into invading Ukraine by dangling NATO membership in front of Volodymyr Zelenskyy. And he has backed just about everything Benjamin Netanyahu has done in Gaza since Oct. 7, even continuing the flow of weapons after the IDF’s attacks on civilians, hospitals and foreign aid workers and vetoing UN resolutions calling for a ceasefire. And not a peep out of him when Israel attacked an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria (which is an attack on both those countries), bringing us to the edge of a greater conflagration. Using the people of Ukraine to stick it to Putin, giving cover to Netanyahu while he massacres Palestinians in a turkey shoot, and lobbing missiles at the groups who try to strike back at Israel in support of their co-religionists doesn’t make you tough, Joey — it makes you a punk. John Woodmaska Biden’s values are betrayed by his warmongering Trial silence North Haven, Conn.: I have been a Daily News reader for more than 50 years and enjoyed the years before you became lapdogs for the Democratic Party. I read my June 7 copy in anticipation of how you would skirt reporting on the Hunter Biden trial. You did it! Not one word about the trial. Perhaps if Hunter’s last name was switched to Trump, you would print a full-blown exposé, and former legitimate reporters like S.E. Cupp, Mike Lupica, etc. could add their biased and always arrogant two cents. The Daily News and many others censored knowledge of the Hunter Biden laptop so that his father could win the 2020 election. It has been almost four years of embarrassing incompetence. And Donald Trump is the threat to democracy? Wayne S. Nuhn Funding fantasies North Bergen, N.J.: Trump proposes to identify and deport upwards of 11 million undocumented illegal immigrants and to build holding camps to contain them while awaiting deportation. A project that large would cost billions, or more likely, hundreds of billions of dollars. Since Trump promises to cut taxes, just where does he expect to get the money to pay for his proposed projects? It’s time we realize that rather than being a financial genius, he’s a very skillful liar. Irving A. Gelb Celebrity precedent Albany: A recent Daily News editorial (“Crime and punishment,” June 3) said, among other things, that “we are not defenders of Trump by any means, but we do defend consistency in the rule of law.” Izzatso? Let’s see, Martha Stewart got five months in prison for four guilty counts. So “consistency in the rule of law” would say Trump should get 42.5 months. Wouldn’t that be consistent, Daily News? Jerry Boehm Dishonorable dirtbag Clifton Park, N.J.: To Voicer Bill Barrett: No, there is probably no tape of DJT’s horrible remarks about “suckers and losers,” but as a former Marine, I would think that confirmation of these thoughts by your former boss, Gen. John Kelly, would be good enough. Gen. Mark Milley has recounted the fact that DJT did not want to be around disabled veterans. And unless you lived in a cave, I assume you’re aware of his putdown of POW John McCain and disparagement of Gold Star parents. And remember when he couldn’t visit a veterans’ cemetery because it was raining, despite the fact that other world leaders and generals, including your former boss, made the trip? The sorry part is that I am sure you will still vote for your cult leader. Semper Fi! John Landers Serial ranter Bronx: To Voicer David DiBello: The old man yelling while hopped up on Adderall is your boy Trump. W. Twirley Justice served Sydney, Australia: Your editorial “Bye-bye Bannon” (June 7) is spot-on. As Trump “strategist” (read: fellow con man), the AP Email to [email protected] or post your letter to Voice of the People, Daily News, PO Box 7180, New York, NY 10008. Please include full name, address and daytime phone number. The Daily News reserves the right to edit letters. bombastic bastard was conducting himself with the arrogance of someone who believed he was untouchable by the law of the land. Now the long arm of the law has reached him and dumped him in jail. That is indeed the appropriate residence for him. He might get an opportunity to reflect on his wayward ways, but I doubt that. He is like a dog’s tail. It can not be straightened out! Rajend Naidu Precision alternative Bronx: If the MTA were to give drivers a choice, they could’ve sold this idea much easier. Why didn’t the MTA try the even and odd number rule? One week, drivers with even license plates can enter Manhattan, the next week it is the odd numbers’ turn, and do the same with plates with letters. If I decide to drive into Manhattan and my license plate is a no-no, I should pay a congestion fee no matter which bridge or tunnel I enter from. Delivery trucks will arrange to make deliveries on the week corresponding to their license plate. The congestion fee can be raised to $50. But the MTA tried a big net to get all the fishes, and they came up with an empty one. Virgilio Carballo Stop loss Hartsdale, N.Y.: When the MTA admits to losing $700 million a year from fare-beaters, and cars with obscured and damaged plates steal tolls, I think I see a way for them to more than recoup the projected income from congestion pricing. Lydia A. Ruth-Gaines Mayoral responsibility Brooklyn: The City Council’s effort to, in effect, decapitate the office of the mayor by requiring Council approval of 20 agency heads is probably the most dangerous move ever taken by the Council. Besides creating havoc with the ability of City Hall to recruit new commissioners by not allowing it to give someone a firm commitment, it also relieves the mayor of all responsibility for the conduct of a particular agency. There is no upside to this proposal except to increase the power of the City Council at the expense of the mayor. Robert Mascali Shared power Yonkers: The City Council, unlike the state and federal legislatures, is unicameral. However, the state Legislature and Congress both have advise-and-consent power over appointments. The City Council is not trying to usurp power from the mayor, it is trying to gain power that it was never allotted, but should have been. The attempt to appoint Randy Mastro illuminated this point. Thomas Schechter Density disaster Fresh Meadows: Re “In the zone” (editorial, June 6): Are you kidding? Your editorial is actually encouraging the City Council to vote yes to the City of Yes. This will rezone all of our communities and eliminate one- and two-family homes to be replaced by larger multiple dwellings and commercial establishments. No arrangements have been made for car parking and updating infrastructure like water, sewage and sanitation. Gone will be our tree-lined streets. The new multiple dwellings will not be low-income housing but market-rate rentals. Schools will be overcrowded with no plans to build more schools. The only ones who will be profitably affected are the developers, and who is sponsoring them? Who writes your editorials? They don’t represent the NYC citizens who will be affected by this disastrous plan. Stella Grillo Syntax slip Manhattan: Voicer Maria Saporito is “glad I’m not the only one who corrects people’s grammar” because it makes her crazy. What makes her crazy, correcting people’s grammar or not being the only one who does it? Or perhaps poor grammar itself? I think Saporito needs to brush up on her English syntax. I do not know what she meant. I wonder if I’m the only Voicer who noticed that and wrote to The News. Steven Fromewick 24 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 25 Finish your high school diploma, for you and for them. Find free, flexible and supporive adult educaion centers near you at FinishYourDiploma.org. When you graduate, they graduate.
BY ELIZABETH KEOGH NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Cops nabbed a homeless man who randomly slashed a stranger on a ritzy East Village streetcorner, police said Sunday. Steven Johnson, 35, was charged with attempted murder and assault in the unprovoked Thursday attack near the Astor Place Cube. The 30-year-old victim was standing on the corner of Astor Place and Lafayette St. about 5:20 p.m. when Johnson crept up behind him, cops said. H allegedly slashed the man in the back of the neck with an unidentified sharp object, authorities added. The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital, where he survived the attack. “There was nothing going on, no altercation. Suddenly, he was down on the ground holding his neck,” witness Michael Picadi, 25, told the Daily News after the attack. “He was in the fetal position in a huge pool of blood.” Police arrested Johnson for the attack Saturday night. His last address was a Midtown homeless shelter, according to police. The man’s arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court was pending Sunday afternoon. Homeless man arrested in random East Village slash Surveillance image of suspect, now identified as Steven Johnson, 35, in attack near Astor Place Cube. NYPD BY JOSEPH WILKINSON NEW YORK DAILY NEWS One man was fatally shot and more than five people stabbed in a sprawling brawl Saturday at a Northern California lake, police said. Two of the stabbing victims were airlifted from the scene at Lake Berryessa, while others were transported to hospitals in private vehicles, the San Jose Mercury News reported. The deceased man was not publicly identified. “There were several victims who were stabbed,” Napa County sheriff’s office spokesman Henry Wofford told the outlet. “We don’t have the count at this point. My understanding is there’s more than five who were stabbed for sure.” No suspects have been arrested or publicly identified in connection with the violence, according to the Mercury News. Police responded to the scene at Oak Shores Day Use Area around 5:30 p.m. Saturday, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat reported. The public area on the west side of the lake is a popular spot on summer weekends and sits about 45 miles north of San Francisco Bay. “We didn’t witness the brawl,” Wofford told the Mercury News. “By the time we were there, there wasn’t a brawl, there were victims, stabbed victims and a gunshot victim. It was pretty chaotic.” Investigators from various agencies worked through the night to interview witnesses and collect evidence from the scene, Wofford said. However, cops said they don’t know what sparked the violence. Lake Berryessa has been the scene of several drowning incidents since 2020, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. While the waters themselves have proven treacherous, the area is not known for violence. 1 shot dead, at least 5 stabbed in brawl at Calif. lake As scenic and peaceful as it looks, Lake Berryessa in Northern California is not immune to violence. No suspects in Saturday’s brawl have been arrested or publicly identified, according to a report. BY JOHN ANNESE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS A 19-year-old man suspected of stealing a car fell to his death from an elevated parkway leading on to the George Washington Bridge while fleeing cops early Sunday, officials said. Officers from the Bronx’s 52nd Precinct assigned to a public safety team tried to pull the man over for driving in a stolen car about 1:30 a.m., cops said. An NYPD spokesman could not immediately provide the location of the traffic stop. The suspect sped off, making it to Broadway and W. 207th St. in Inwood, where the car broke down, cops said. He abandoned the vehicle and sprinted south along the Henry Hudson Parkway toward the city-bound upper level of the George Washington Bridge, cops said. The man apparently misjudged a gap as he fled and plunged on to Riverside Drive below, cops said. Medics took the man to Harlem Hospital, where he died of his injuries, cops said. His name was not immediately released. Car theft suspect fleeing cop falls to death near GW Bridge A 19-year-old man suspected of stealing a car fell to his death from an elevated parkway leading on to the George Washington Bridge while fleeing police early Sunday. GET MORE OUT OF YOUR SUBSCRIPTION by setting up your digital account It’s easy to start your online access! Visit: go-activate.com 26 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 27 LIFESTYLE DINING POLITICS SUNDAY DELIVERY Offer includes Standard Digital Access 99¢ /wk SAVE 88%* FOR 26 WEEKS 7-DAY DELIVERY Offer includes Standard Digital Access $2 99 SAVE 89%* FOR 26 WEEKS *Savings based on newsstand rates of $3.00 Daily, $3.50 Sunday plus $4.99 weekly charge for standard digital access. By accepting this offer, you are agreeing to a CONTINUOUS subscription. You have the right to cancel at any time by calling 1-800-692-6397. After the introductory discount period, future prices may be higher, and you will be notified. This offer is available to new subscribers and households that have not subscribed to the paper in the past 30 days and cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. This offer is only valid in the tri-state home delivery area. Supply Chain surcharges may apply. See www.tribpub.com/tc for more details. For a complete and current version of Subscriber Terms and Conditions go to http://tribpub.com/tc. Respond within 30 days. Offer Code NYH403. /wk Money-saving coupons on Sundays Full Digital Access to nydailynews.com Our exclusive app with breaking news alerts Exclusive newsleters on a variety of topics Fact-based news in your community The eNewspaper, a digital ediion of our paper, emailed daily Visit nydailynews.com/subscribe Call 212-210-1601 Request Promo Code NYH403 Easy ways to subscribe ----- OR ----- Take a picture with your smartphone to discover addiional savings Scan to save more SPRING into SAVINGS!
TV CROSSWORD by Jacqueline E. Mathews S ©2021 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. 6/13/21 36 Periods of time 37 “Guilty” or “Not guilty” 38 Oscar-winning film about a waif 40 “Ugly __” 41 Opposite of hollow 42 “__ Like Love”; Amanda Peet movie 43 Golfer Ernie 44 Declare untrue DOWN 1 Furious 2 Role on “All Rise” 3 “__ Man”; Robert Downey Jr. movie 4 __ Aviv, Israel 5 “What I Like __ You” 6 Bekins trucks 7 “I __ Rock”; Simon & Garfunkel hit 10 “The Voice” coach 11 Blockhead 12 Womanizer 13 “What’s New, Scooby-__?” 15 Actress Glaudini 17 Actor on “The A-Team” 19 Catherine of “JAG” 20 “The Man Who __ Liberty Valance”; 1962 film 22 “Never __ Kissed”; Drew Barrymore movie 23 Lion’s cry 25 Deadly snakes 26 Skirt’s edge 27 Nabisco snacks 30 Gwynne & Savage 31 Cochlea’s location 33 Actress Estelle 34 “The __ Divorcee”; Astaire/ Rogers film 36 “Resident __”; 2002 horror movie 37 Brazilian soccer great 39 Suffix for infant or project 40 “The __ News Bears” ACROSS 1 “Whose Line __ Anyway?” 5 Actress Gardner 8 “The __ Breed”; 1966 James Stewart film 9 Animated film about a deer 12 Burnett or Channing 13 __ Mallard; “NCIS” role 14 __ impasse; deadlocked 15 Costello & Ferrigno 16 Objective 18 Six months ago: abbr. 19 Cowboy’s shoe 20 Chocolate toffee bar 21 Cain’s victim 23 Scarlett’s love 24 Ward, for one 25 Shouts of disapproval 26 “The Grand Budapest __”; 2014 movie 28 Sworn statement 29 One of John-Boy’s sisters 30 “__ Factor” (2001-12) 32 “The __ and I”; Fred MacMurray film 35 Alice’s boss Created by Jacqueline E. Mathews 6/13/21 BOGGLE R By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek INSTRUCTIONS: Find as many words as you can by linking letters up, down, side-to-side and diagonally, writing words on a blank sheet of paper. You may only use each letter box once within a single word. Play with a friend and compare word finds, crossing out common words. R YOUR BOGGLE RATING R BOGGLE POINT SCALE B G P H E A M I U W O O G L S K 4-4-22 Answers to Saturday's Boggle BrainBusters: SHARK PERCH SMELT TROUT SNOOK R BOGGLE is a trademark of Hasbro, Inc. 2022 Hasbro, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All Rights Reserved. 3 letters = 1 point 4 letters = 2 points 5 letters = 3 points 6 letters = 4 points 7 letters = 6 points 8 letters = 10 points 9+ letters = 15 points 151+ = Champ 101-150 = Expert 61 -100 = Pro 31 - 60 = Gamer 21 - 30 = Rookie 11 - 20 = Amateur 0 - 10 = Try again www.bogglebrainbusters.com We put special brain-busting words into the grid of letters. Can you find them? Find AT LEAST FOUR CRUSTACEANS in the grid of letters. Boggle BrainBusters Bonus R ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ gg y RETSBOL P MI RHS N WARP BARC y p p Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit from 1 to 9. For strategies on solving Sudoku, visit sudoku.org.uk. © 2020 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved. 9/14/20 Level 1 2 3 4 SUDOKU BONUS PUZZLE PAGE An extra array of word games, search and other tests to help you pass the time at home 28 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Today calls for personal expression from all of us. The intuitive Moon is flying along through outgoing Leo, urging us to stand firm in ourselves and our beliefs. We can use this passionate energy to connect with one another and share fabulous ideas, particularly when the Moon sextiles messenger Mercury in Gemini. This shows us mental and emotional pathways that can strengthen ongoing bonds and build fresh ones. This is not the day to hide our heads in the sand. ARIES MARCH 21-APRIL 19 You’ve got plenty of things to share with the world, so don’t hold back. The vibes are putting an emphasis on plus-ones, meaning you’ll be able to double your fun if you link up with a friend or two. There’s no need to forge ahead all alone. A few like-minded friends should seal the deal. TAURUS APRIL 20-MAY 20 You can feel especially good about the work you do right now. Your train of thought is gently guiding you toward your budget without making it feel like a chore. A relative or female authority figure could step forward with a business idea or proposition, so be willing to listen. You can get specific, wise advice. GEMINI MAY 21-JUNE 20 You’ve got plenty to say — even more than usual. You’ve got a silver tongue under today’s stars. Whether you’re presenting a major project, working away at a manuscript, or simply chatting with friends, there’s rarely been a better time to put your ideas out into the world. CANCER JUNE 21-JULY 22 A brilliant idea could arrive from out of the blue. Daydreaming can lead you to productive places. Even if you don’t have work in front of you, your mind could solve an ongoing financial or professional problem. Your eureka moment is percolating in the background. LEO JULY 23-AUG. 22 There’s rarely been such an ideal moment to link up with your favorite people. You’re in tune with your groups and the family and pals who enrich your life. People will be especially in sync with you and your ideas. Make a point of stepping up and playing ringleader if required. VIRGO AUG. 23-SEPT. 22 Someone may speak up in your favor today even if you aren’t expecting it. A VIP or other supervisor may have been watching you lately, ready to reward your effort. If they don’t acknowledge you, then go ahead and treat yourself. Remember that businesses thrive on your labor. You certainly deserve a treat. LIBRA SEPT. 23-OCT. 22 Feeling like you belong is sometimes a matter of location. Broaden your search radius as you scope out unfamiliar horizons. The people around you could make this easier for you, so remember that personal growth shouldn’t necessarily be a solo activity. Coming together can bring you joy. SCORPIO OCT. 23-NOV. 21 Progress may require some honest conversations at present. This path can bring sudden windfalls, so previous work may be rewarded with some sort of bonus. You could land a project with a hefty, one-time payout. You will have to speak up for what you want, however, so don’t remain silent. SAGITTARIUS NOV. 22-DEC. 21 Someone in particular may make your world appear much broader. These people will likely come from different walks of life than you, so they can inspire you to open your mind to all the possibilities floating out beyond the horizon. Chances are good that you both will enjoy everything you discover. CAPRICORN DEC. 22-JAN. 19 You can channel your energy in very effective ways today. You can tackle difficult tasks or other projects that normally seem rather daunting, recognizing that the planets are giving you the necessary drive to succeed in these endeavors, no matter how complicated. AQUARIUS JAN. 20-FEB. 18 Few things can get between you and fun at the moment. Life is encouraging you to bring people along in your search for delightful pastimes. A couple teammates will likely add to the experience in unique ways that you wouldn’t be able to achieve flying solo. PISCES FEB. 19-MARCH 20 You won’t find many days better suited than this one for getting things accomplished under your roof. You’re being boosted to roll up your sleeves and finally do some spring cleaning, regardless of the season. You should feel worlds better in your space once you’ve tended to any chores, so do what you must to make your house feel like home. For Monday, June 10 7 ° ° High/Low.......................... 74°/67° Normal high/low .............. 78°/62° Record high.................. 97° in 1933 Record low ................... 47° in 1980 24 hrs through 7 p.m. yest. ... Trace Sun 5:24 a.m. 8:27 p.m. Moon 9:09 a.m. none First June 14 Full June 21 Last June 28 New July 5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2024 6/59 78/64 New York Harbor: Wind WNW 8-16 mph today. Seas 2 feet or less. Visibility clear. Coney Island: Wind W 10-20 mph today. Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility generally clear. Sandy Hook: Wind WSW 12-25 mph today. Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility generally clear. Montauk: Wind WSW 8-16 mph today. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility generally clear. Statistics for New York City through 7 p.m. yesterday 2 5 6 4 3 2 Hig i Almanac Yesterday Temperature Precipitation Sun and Moon Rise Set r . o lantic City ay ach Marine Forecast V Index Today 8 am 10 am Noon 2 pm 4 pm 6 pm AccuWeather.com UV Index™ 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. Today’s forecast ................... Good Yesterday ............................ Good “S/G” denotes Sensitive Groups Air Quality The presence of man-made pollutants affecting aspects of human health. Source: NYDC Moon Phases DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 29 There’s a perfect place for your mom or dad. And we’ll help you find it. ASSISTED LIVING MEMORY CARE INDEPENDENT LIVING HOME CARE We know that finding the right senior care for your mom or dad is a big decision. That’s where A Place for Mom comes in. 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Sudoku Between the Lines Previous Puzzle How to Play Each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9; each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9; and each set of 3 by 3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 to 9. © 2024 Dist. by Andrews McMeel for UFS Pooch Café Red & Rover One Big Happy Hagar the Horrible Jump Start Zits Mother Goose & Grimm The Argyle Sweater 30 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square to form four ordinary words. Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer as suggested by the cartoon. Saturday’s answers: JUMBLES — ANSWER ZESTY, CONGA, SKIING, MINNOW CARTOON — The area of the park that allowed barbecue grills was nicknamed the — SMOKINGSECTION JUMBLE by David L. Hoyt & Jeff Knurek ACROSS 1 School subject 5 Time off from work 10 Votes against 14 Toward shelter 15 Citified 16 Gothic arch 17 Skyrocket 18 Denominations 19 Mouthful 20 Gear for a quarterback 22 Beef cut 24 Actor James — Jones 26 “— whiz!” 27 Seat in a tavern 31 Designated 34 Manning of football 35 Term of endearment 37 Expert 39 Clayey soil 41 Indian instrument 43 “Death on the —” 44 Sedans 46 Fruity drink 48 — Baba 49 Was bold enough 51 Citizen 53 Exist 54 Comedian—Buzzi 55 Substitute 59 Onetime grape 63 Jai — 64 Fiery crime 67 Unctuous 68 Excess 69 Actress — Keaton 70 “— Well That Ends Well” 71 Wiggling 72 Finished 73 Snout DOWN 1 Pulped food 2 — vera 3 Freshwater duck 4 Greek messenger god 5 Radiant 6 “Able wasI—...” 7 Rudiments 8 Cisterns 9 Naval officer 10 Earl or duke 11 Exchange premium 12 Himalayan monster 13 Perceived 21 Diner sign 23 Quantity of paper 25 Sound thinking 27 Actor — Lugosi 28 Audibly 29 Lasso 30 — Quarter in Paris 32 Water brand 33 Singer — Reese 36 Gun type 38 Astronaut — Armstrong 40 Virtue 42 Sent back 45 Antitoxins 47 Actress — Hayworth 50 Measure of time 52 Buckeye State native 55 Fury 56 Fashion magazine 57 Painter Peter — Rubens 58 Actress — Moriarty 60 Storage tower 61 Troubles 62 Wall Street acronym 65 Blue 66 — -hit wonder PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED © 2024 UFS/Dist. by Andrews McMeel for UFS 6/10 Today’s Crossword Mutts Blondie Pearls Before Swine Grand Avenue WuMo Gasoline Alley Baldo DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 31
32 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com CROSSWORD II ACROSS 1 Hoist 5 Comic’s performance 8 “Moby-Dick” captain 12 Where most of the world lives 13 Slashed pronoun for two genders 15 “An Inconvenient Truth” writer Al 16 Where to find Perseverance and Curiosity 17 Be a cast member of 18 “Completely agreed!” 19 Like McCartney’s guitar 20 They make things happen 21 Gmail button 22 Group of eight 24 “The Simpsons” neighbor 25 English class assignment 26 Like many Braille readers 28 Freak out 30 “Do the Right Thing” pizza joint owner 32 Valley, say 34 NFL ball carriers 37 Difficult duty 39 Anne Frank kept one 40 Halliwell of Spice Girls fame 41 Lost, or on the ocean 43 Part of NIMBY 44 They have sturdy trunks 45 Brought on board again 47 We 49 Word with “garden” or “Buddhism” 50 Drs.’ co-workers 51 Hit one out of the park, and the key to interpreting the starred clues 58 Settled a debt 59 Video game brand name since 1972 60 Canada’s has two colors 62 Data, for short 63 “Makes sense to me!” 64 Bunton of Spice Girls fame 65 Adolescent 66 Fencing implements 67 Bambi’s kin DOWN 1 Ferrari alternative, familiarly 2 Scientist Newton 3 *Show embarrassment 4 Mortarboard attachment 5 *___ instrument 6 Lauder of cosmetics 7 *Lively social event 8 Longtime rival of Sampras 9 *Mesh item in a window frame 10 Madison Square Garden, e.g. 11 Like a flexible straw 13 Possessed 14 Low-ranking Navy officer: Abbr. 23 Up to, informally 25 Conclude 27 Silently agree 29 Whichever 30 Fly high 31 Poker player’s payment 33 One may live by the Mekong River 35 Born and ___ 36 Spanish for “Yes, yes” 38 Eagerly took advantage of 40 Pasture-raised 42 Zone 44 Kind of steak for a pescatarian 46 Make really, really angry 48 Trips around the world? 51 Support staff? 52 Existence 53 Sporty car roof 54 Loathe 55 Lakeside county in New York or Pennsylvania 56 Red Muppet 57 “___ here!” (“Ditto!”) 58 Service place for Lewis Hamilton 61 Cook’s fuel, maybe Saturday’s Puzzle Solved 6/10 ©2024 Andrews McMeel Syndication Got Pets To place an ad Go To Placeanad.nydailynews.com BUYING BASEBALL CARDS $$$ Also All sports Cards Certf’d Memorabilia & Graded Cards, Prefer Pre-1980, paying top dollar; small or lrg collections. Call Henry 917-273-2353 Stuff Wanted Merchandise 14Y REQUESTS PROPOSALS Non-profit organization in New York is looking for local vendors to submit sealed bids for a grant-funded project. Project encompasses sourcing and installing locksets. Interested parties should contact Sam at Srajain@14streety. org for specific bid requirements. Bids will be accepted until June 30th. Services Services CLASSIFIED Call (212) 210-2111 placeanad.nydailynews.com Far Rockaway - Renovated 3 BR/1 BA, programs accepted. $2,950/mo Owner / Agent 646-246-3518 or 917- 300-3522 Rental - Queens Queens Village - Principls Only/No Prgrms. 3 BR/2 BA. $2850/mnth. Tenant pays own Util./Gas/Elect. Clse to bus/shopping. Call or text Owner (347) 245-0637 Rental - Brooklyn Keep It Locked Storage, d/b/a Storage Plus, will sell at Public Auction under New York Lien laws for cash only online via newyorkstorageauctions.com on June 28, 2024 at 10:30AM and on such succeeding days and times as may be necessary at 35-00 Review Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101, the property described as cartons, furniture, office furnishings & supplies, household goods and other effects belonging to: Patricio Ruiz #T4616; Lewis Kuper #T4604; Yoel Rosenberg #T1703 & T1641; Zoe Katz #F14B; Megha Choudhry #V6055; Joel Feliz #T4200; Lemaitre Grzybowski V6054; Guillermo Martinez #1405T; Nadav Bendavid #V8026; Peter Morales #1770B; Dariusz Solarski #1607B; Andrzej Majkut #T1717 & T1704. Donald Bader, DCA #865815 & Patrick Williams, DCA #1377072, Auctioneers as Agents. Lienor reserves the right to refuse or accept any bid. All bidders must register with newyorkstorageauctions.com. 6/10/24 7648509 Legal Notices Notices NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF QUEENS, DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE ON BEHALF OF THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF NATIXIS REAL ESTATE CAPITAL TRUST 2007-HE2, MORTGAGE PASS-THORUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-HE2, Plaintiff, vs. DEBORAH A. CASE ESQ., AS LIMITED ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF IMMACULA AUGUSTIN, Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on April 11, 2024 and an Order Substituting Court-Appointed Referee duly entered on May 16, 2024, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the outside steps of the Queens County Supreme Court, 88-11 Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica, NY 11435 on July 12, 2024 at 12:00 p.m., premises known as 243-33 145th Avenue, Rosedale, NY 11422. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Borough and County of Queens, City and State of New York, Block 13569 and Lot 15. Approximate amount of judgment is $415,371.81 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #714605/2017. The Referee shall comply with the Eleventh Judicial District’s COVID-19 policies concerning public auctions of foreclosed properties. These policies, along with the Queens County Foreclosure’s Auction Rules, can be found on the Queens Supreme Court - Civil Term website. Joseph Misk, Esq., Referee Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC, 10 Bank Street, Suite 700, White Plains, New York 10606, Attorneys for Plaintiff NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, pursuant to Title 5, Chapter 3, Subchapter 3 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York, a Real Property A&D Public Hearing will be held on Wednesday, June 26, 2024 at 10:00 AM. The Public Hearing will be held via Conference Call. Call-in #: 646-992-2010, Access Code: 717-876-299. REAL PROPERTY PUBLIC HEARING in the matter of the acquisition by the City of New York of Fee Simple (Fee) interest in property through the Streamside Acquisition Program (SAP), on the following real estate in the County of Greene for the purposes of providing for the continued supply of water and for preserving and preventing the contamination or pollution of the New York City water supply system. NYC ID County Municipality Type Tax Lot ID Acres (+/-) 9086 Greene Jewett SAP 129.00-3-42 5.60 ac. Jewett SAP 129.00-3-43 3.50 ac. A copy of the Mayor’s Preliminary Certificate of Adoption and a map of the real estate interests to be acquired are available for public inspection upon request. Please call 914-749-5410. In order to access the Public Hearing and testify, please call 646-992-2010, Access Code: 717-876-299 no later than 9:55 AM. If you need further accommodations, please let us know at least five business days in advance of the Public Hearing via e-mail at [email protected] . Legal Notices Legal Notices DO IT YOURSELF Reach out to the community and share your message with thousands of our readers in PRINT & ONLINE. The NewYork Daily News self-service portal allows you to post your own ad, at your own leisurely pace. VISIT: placeanad.nydailynews.com Automotive and Transportation Scooter Rentals Death Notice In Memoriam Garage Sales Jobs & Career Training Merchandise Pets & Services Water Taxi’s and Ferries
DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 33 placeanad.nydailynews.com The right place to advertise your Merchandise, Pets, Auto, Real Estate, Tag Sales & Flea Markets, Vacation Property, Wanted to Buy Items and more! ce e yo Renting or Selling Your Home? placeanad.nydailynews.com reach your buyers at PUBLIC NOTICE PSC Case 21-T-0366 — Application of Empire Offshore Wind LLC for a Certificate of Environmental Compatibility and Public Need for the Construction of Approximately 17.5 Miles of Transmission Lines from the Boundary of New York State Territorial Waters to a Point of Interconnection in Brooklyn, Kings County. NOTICE OF FILING OF EMPIRE OFFSHORE WIND’S ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AND CONSTRUCTION PLAN – PART 2B FOR THE EMPIRE WIND 1 PROJECT On June 30, 2021, in accordance with Article VII of the New York Public Service Law and the New York Department of Public Service’s (DPS) rules and regulations, Empire Offshore Wind LLC (Empire or the Applicant) applied to the New York State Public Service Commission (the Commission) for a Certificate of Environmental Compatibility and Public Need (Certificate) to construct, operate and maintain the New York portion of the transmission facilities (the Project) required to interconnect the Applicant’s proposed 816 megawatt (MW) Empire Wind 1 Offshore Wind project (OSW Facility) to the New York State Transmission System. The Project will supply renewable electricity produced from the OSW Facility to consumers in New York State. The Project is planned to be constructed almost entirely underground or under the waters of the State of New York to mitigate environmental impacts. The Project consists of the following: • Two three-core 230-kilovolt (kV) high-voltage alternating current (HVAC) submarine export cables (submarine export cables) from the boundary of New York State waters 3 nautical miles (5.6 kilometers) offshore to the cable landfall in Brooklyn, New York; • A 0.2-mi (0.3km)-long onshore cable route and substation including: o Two three-core 230-kV HVAC Empire Wind 1 onshore export cables buried underground from the cable landfall transition joint bays to the onshore substation (onshore export cables); o An onshore substation located at the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal (SBMT) (onshore substation), which will step up the voltage to 345-kV for the onshore interconnection cables; and o Two 345-kV cable circuits, each with three single-core HVAC onshore interconnection cables (interconnection cables), buried underground from the onshore substation to the Point of Interconnection (POI) operated by Con Edison. On December 18, 2023, the Commission issued Empire a Certificate. The Certificate requires Empire to file a proposed Environmental Management and Construction Plan (the EM&CP) for the Project. Certificate Condition A10 in the Certificate allows the filing and review of the EM&CP to be segmented to facilitate construction sequencing and scheduling, provided that with its first EM&CP filing, Empire identifies the remaining EM&CP segments of on-land components of the Project that do not require other permits. Empire’s EM&CP is segmented into six parts (each, a “Part”). Each Part is being submitted as a separate filing. On November 20, 2023, Empire filed its proposed Part 1 EM&CP with the Commission. On January 9, 2024, Empire filed its proposed Part 2 EM&CP. However, due to the anticipated timing associated with obtaining necessary land rights, Empire supplemented its previously submitted Part 1 EM&CP filing and split Part 1 into Parts 1A, 1B, and 1C submissions. For the same reason, Empire also supplemented its previously submitted Part 2 EM&CP filing and is splitting Part 2 into Parts 2A and 2B. 29097759.2 On or about June 10, 2024, Empire will file its proposed Part 2B EM&CP with the Commission in compliance with the Joint Proposal. The Part 2B EM&CP addressed in this Public Notice addresses all in-water work activities from the edge of the bulkhead between the 29th Street and 35th Street piers out to the pierhead line (approximately KP 0.6), including in-water structure removal and installation, scour protection, dredging, and submarine cable installation activities, onshore cable splicing and pulling, and operations and maintenance (O&M) and decommissioning of the installed project components offshore. EM&CP The EM&CP, in general, describes the construction procedures and environmental protection measures proposed to be used for the entire Project. Empire developed the EM&CP’s environmental protection measures related to the clearing of vegetation, wetland/waterbody crossings, and water quality concerns in coordination with DEC, DOS and DPS Staff. The EM&CP also identifies the Project facilities and environmental features inside the Project’s cable corridor; defines the Applicant’s organizational framework and procedures to implement construction techniques and impact avoidance, minimization and mitigation measures; defines site access and traffic management procedures; discusses protective measures for environmental resources, identifies operations and maintenance measures; and discusses associated decommissioning. An electronic version of the Part 2B EM&CP is available for public inspection online on the Commission’s Document and Matter Management page for this case at the following location: NYSDPS-DMM: Matter Master, or by visiting the Commission’s website (http://www.dps.ny.gov), clicking the “Search” tab, and entering “21-T0366” in the “Search by Case Number” box. The Part 2B EM&CP is also available for public inspection during normal business hours at the following local libraries: Brooklyn Public Library Brooklyn Public Library Flatbush Branch Park Slope Branch 22 Linden Blvd. at Flatbush Ave. 431 6th Ave. Brooklyn NY 11226 Brooklyn, NY 11215 Brooklyn Public Library Brooklyn Public Library Sunset Park Branch Bay Ridge Branch 5108 Fourth Avenue 7223 Ridge Blvd. Brooklyn, NY 11220 Brooklyn, NY 11209 COMMENTS, COMPLAINTS AND FURTHER INFORMATION Any person may be heard by the Commission on any matter or objection regarding the proposed EM&CP by filing written comments with the Commission Secretary and Empire (at the addresses immediately below) within 30 days. Please reference Case 21-T-0366 when making any comments or requesting further information regarding the Project. Any person desiring additional information about a specific geographical location regarding Part 2B EM&CP may request such information from Empire at the address listed below. Hon. Michelle L. Phillips Secretary to the Commission New York State Public Service Commission 29097759.2 Empire State Plaza Agency Building 3 Albany, NY 12223-1350 Phone: 518-474-6530 Fax: 518-474-9842 Email: [email protected] Public Service Commission Website: www.dps.ny.gov Empire Contact Ashley Ball Director of Community Affairs Equinor Renewables America PCT CA 34 35th Street, Suite A415 Brooklyn, NY 11232 Phone: 833-699-1965 Email: [email protected] Project website: https://www.empirewind.com/ Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices SPACE AVAILABLE To place an ad, go to Placeanad.NYDailyNews.com NOTICE OF SALE OF COLLATERAL RE: 880 Boynton Avenue Unit #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue 8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M; a/k/a 820 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M, Bronx, NY 10473 PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that, pursuant to the New York Uniform Commercial Code, State of New York Mortgage Agency (“Seller”), as secured creditor of Madison Ashley Feliciano a/k/a Madison Feliciano (“Debtor”), will sell all of the right, title and interest of the Debtor in the collateral described below at public sale. M&T Bank is servicer and attorney in fact for State of New York Mortgage Agency. The collateral to be sold is described as follows: UCC Financing Statement recorded on November 10, 2021 at CRFN 2021000447097 covering the Stock Certificate Number 3504 representing 608 shares of stock and Proprietary Lease for Unit No. 880 Boynton Avenue Unit #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue 8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M; a/k/a 820 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M, Bronx, NY 10473608 shares of stock per the Stock Certificate and Power issued by Lafayette-Morrison Housing Development Fund Corporation (“Corporation”) represented by Certificate number 3504 including all personal property of the Debtor, affixed to or used in connection with Unit 8M, located at 880 Boynton Avenue Unit #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue 8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Avenue #8M a/k/a 880 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M; a/k/a 820 Boynton Ave., Apt. 8M, Bronx, NY 10473, that are subject to the securing interest of the undersigned. The unpaid principal balance is $177,728.12 (not including fees, costs, other recoverable amounts). The sale shall be conducted pursuant to all terms and conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale, specifically including but not limited to: Buyer responsibility for obtaining possession of the collateral, payment of any sums due the Corporation, obtaining any necessary approvals from the Corporation, any existing tenancy and prompt payment of the purchase price according to the Terms of Sale issued by Seller. The sale shall be “as is, where is and with all faults” and subject to any prior liens. No bid shall be accepted with any contingency of any nature. A deposit of ten percent (10%) of the bid amount must be paid at sale, in the form of a certified check payable to “Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP.” Seller makes no warranty or representation in connection with the sale, except that it has a security interest in the collateral and that the transfer is made free and clear of its security interest. The warranties of merchantability and fitness are expressly disclaimed. The sale shall be conducted without recourse to Seller, except for breach of an express warranty contained in this Notice of Sale. The Debtor is entitled to an accounting of the unpaid indebtedness. Transfer shall occur by secured creditor bill of sale made without representation or warranty, except as set forth above. The public sale shall take place on June 24, 2024 at 12:00 pm Eastern on the front steps facing the Grand Concourse of the Bronx County Courthouse, located at 851 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY. Such sale shall be conducted by Matthew D. Mannion, Division of Consumer Affairs Licensed Auctioneer, License No. 1434494, and/or John O’Keefe, Division of Consumer Affairs Licensed Auctioneer, Auctioneer License No. 2103965, of Mannion Auctions, LLC, as Agent. Seller hereby reserves the right to bid. Interested parties may contact the undersigned prior to the sale to obtain a copy of the Terms of Sale. State of New York Mortgage Agency, by its Attorney in Fact M&T Bank Dated: May 21, 2024. Jennifer T. Abenhaim, Esq., Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP, Attorneys for Seller, 500 Bausch & Lomb Place, Rochester, NY 14604. Tel.: 855-227-5072 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF COOPERATIVE APARTMENT SECURITY BY VIRTUE OF A DEFAULT, under a certain Occupancy and Use Agreement (the “Lease”) by and between Trump Village Section 4, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Lessor”), and Irwin Gropper, in accordance with its rights as Lessor pursuant to the Lease, By-Laws and governing documents of Trump Village Section 4, Inc., the Lessor, by Mannion Auctions, LLC, by Matthew D. Mannion, Licensed Auctioneer, DCA #1434494, and/or John O’Keefe, Licensed Auctioneer, DCA # 2103965, will conduct a public foreclosure sale of the security consisting of 27.5 shares of common stock of Trump Village Section 4, Inc., all rights, title, and interest in and to a Proprietary Lease to Apartment 18R in the building known as and located at 2944 West 5th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11224. The sale will be held on June 17, 2024 at 12:30 p.m. at the Management Office – Trump Village West, 2928 West 5th Street, Brooklyn, New York 11224. The Collateral is sold “AS IS”, without any representation or warranty, and the sale is subject to the Terms of Sale, terms of the Proprietary Lease, the By-Laws, Offering Plan and any amendments thereto, the House Rules and to any other governing documents, rules and regulations of Trump Village Section 4, Inc. A ten (10%) percent deposit by bank or certified check payable to Woods Lonergan PLLC as attorneys, is required at the auction; balance due upon closing within thirty (30) days. The approximate amount of the lien as of May 8, 2024 is $37,585.42. Dated: New York, New York. May 8, 2024 Woods Lonergan PLLC, Attorneys for the Secured Party, One Grand Central Place, 60 East 42nd Street, Suite 1410, New York, NY 10165. (212) 684-2500 Foreclosures Foreclosures Get it SOLD To place an ad, email [email protected]
WALLER RETIRES Tight end hangs ’em up after one season with Giants PETER SBLENDORIO, PAGE 40 HOW DO YA LIKE ME LIKE ME NOW? As fans chant for Soto, Grisham As fans chant for Soto, Grisham delivers go-ahead HR as Yanks elivers go-ahead HR as Yanks salvage series finale vs. Dodgers alvage series finale vs. Dodgers 34 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
SCOTTIE, AGAIN Scheffler survives tough final round to take Memorial DETAILS, PAGE 40 “June 9, 1999, @Mets manager Bobby Valentine is ejected in the 12th inning. He sneaks back into the dugout at Shea Stadium wearing dark sunglasses and a fake mustache.” #LGM MetsRewind @metsrewind BY GARY PHILLIPS NEW YORK DAILY NEWS With runners on the corners and the Yankees down by a run, a loud “We want Soto” chant broke out in the Bronx on Sunday. Seconds later, the man filling in for the inflamed slugger did his best impression of him. That’s when Trent Grisham, questionably penciled in as the fifth hitter for the first time this season, smoked a Tyler Glasnow fastball to right field. The 107.7-mph, 394-foot pull shot helped the Yankees avoid a sweep with a 6-4 win over the Dodgers on Sunday Night Baseball. When Grisham returned to the plate in the eighth inning, Yankees fans revised their earlier chant. “We want Grisham,” the apologetic crowd bellowed. Prior to this week, Grisham had not played much this season. But with right fielder Juan Soto battling forearm inflammation, Grisham has been manning center with Aaron Judge sliding over to right. Grisham also hit a home run in Thursday’s win over the Twins. Three of his five hits this season have left the yard. While Grisham gave the Yankees a late lead, Oswaldo Cabrera provided an early one with his first long ball since May 1. The third-inning solo homer preceded an RBI double from Judge. Glasnow ended up allowing eight hits and five earned runs over six innings despite striking out 12. He also totaled one walk and 104 pitches. Meanwhile, the Dodgers erased the Yankees’ initial 2-0 lead, as Luis Gil finally looked hittable against one of the best offenses in baseball. Still, the right-hander held his own, tallying 5.2 innings, five hits, three earned runs, one walk, five strikeouts and 96 pitches. The Dodgers’ first two runs came on a Mookie Betts double in the fifth. Teoscar Hernández then drilled his third homer of the series, a solo blast, in the sixth. With Luke Weaver on the mound, Will Smith drove in another Dodgers run with an eighth-inning sac fly. Judge tried his best to gun down fellow superstar Shohei Ohtani on the play, but the speedy DH beat a strong throw to the plate. However, Judge got the last laugh, demolishing his 24th homer 434 feet in the bottom of the inning. The moonshot got the Yankees their run back, and they shook hands at the end of the night after Clay Holmes shut the door. While the Yankees won in thrilling fashion on Sunday, they lost just their third series of the year after dropping an 11-inning affair on Friday and a blowout on Saturday. The team also lost series to the Blue Jays and Orioles. With a potential World Series preview now behind them, the Yankees will head to Kansas City. There they will play four games against the second-place Royals. Carlos Rodón will face Seth Lugo, who is in line for an All-Star nod, tonight. From there, Marcus Stroman, Cody Poteet and Nestor Cortes will close out the series for the Yankees. As for the Royals, Brady Singer will start on Tuesday, while Alec Marsh will take the ball on Thursday. Kansas City had not announced its Wednesday starter at the time of publication J uan Soto remained out of the starting lineup on Sunday against the Dodgers, but Aaron Boone expected to have Soto back in the lineup in Kansas City, where the Yankees start a four-game series tonight. “Yeah, that’s the hope,” Boone said. The skipper added that Soto does not need more testing after receiving imaging on Friday. The right fielder also won’t be restricted to hitting when he returns to action. “The answers we got back from the testing, we’re not worried about him doing anything that he’s gotta do baseball-wise,” Boone said, when asked if Soto will be used in the field. “It’s just based on how he’s doing, how he’s feeling. He should be good to go.” COLE’S 2ND REHAB START Gerrit Cole (elbow inflammation) threw 4.2 innings in his second rehab start with Double-A Somerset on Sunday. The righty totaled two hits, one earned run, zero walks, four strikeouts and one home run over 57 pitches against the Hartford Yard Goats. “I saw his last inning,” Boone said. “I saw how he finished. Looked really good.” Cole, not thrilled with his fastball early on, said “it’s tough to say” how many more rehab starts he’ll need. However, he expected to throw at least one more. Boone said it’s too soon to know how many more rehab outings Cole will need. JASSON SET, YANKS ARE NOT Boone said Jasson Domínguez, on a rehab assignment at Triple-A following UCL surgery, is “probably” ready if the Yankees need him. “If the need arises, we probably wouldn’t hesitate,” Boone said. However, the Yankees don’t plan on promoting their red-hot top prospect right now. They want Domínguez to play every day, and they have a set starting outfield with Soto expected to avoid the injured list. While the Yankees have had to lean on Trent Grisham – a lesser bat who was hitting fifth Sunday – with Soto out, that is a short-term situation. “When it’s his time, we’ll be excited for that because we know what kind of impact he can have,” Boone said of Domínguez. “But we’re not going to rush that, either. It will be when it’s right. “The time he’s gonna come up here, he’s gonna play. So that avenue is gonna have to be there.” MARINACCIO IN BETTER SPOT The Yankees recalled Ron Marinaccio on Sunday when they designated Dennis Santana (6.26 ERA) for assignment. The right-handed Marinaccio has been excellent in the majors and minors this season, recording a 1.42 ERA with the Yankees and a 1.17 ERA at Triple-A. Considering his success in the majors, Marinaccio was a bit frustrated the last time he was demoted. However, Boone has been impressed with the work he’s done since. “He’s in a good place,” the manager said. “He was frustrated going down last time, but to his credit, he went down there and did what he needed to do.” Added Marinaccio: “It’s always tough to be down there, but I tried to take a little bit of a different approach this year and stay stronger mentally, be ready. It’s a long season left here, so I wanted to stay ready and be ready to come help whenever I’m needed.” Soto set for K.C.; Cole looks solid BY GARY PHILLIPS YANKEES 6 DODGERS 5 Trent Grisham blasts three-run home run in sixth inning to put Yankees ahead for good in Sunday night victory over Dodgers in Bronx. GETTY DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 35
BY ABBEY MASTRACCO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS LONDON — The Mets gave the Brits exactly what they were hoping for Sunday at London Stadium: a playoff-like game that came down to a thrilling ninth-inning finish. After going down by a run in the seventh, the Mets rallied for three runs off left-handed closer Jose Alvarado (1- 3) in the top of the ninth to defeat the Phillies, 6-5, splitting the two-game London Series. The Phillies (45-20) rallied in the bottom of the ninth. With the bases loaded and one out, Drew Smith (two saves) jammed Nick Castellanos with an 0-2 curveball. Castellanos broke his bat on a dribbler and raced toward first base, but catcher Luis Torrens quickly picked it up, tagged home plate and threw to Pete Alonso at first for a game-ending, 2-3 double play. “What I’m proud of is that the guys never quit,” said outfielder Brandon Nimmo. Smith couldn’t quit. Right-hander Reed Garrett (6-2) had already thrown 1 ⅓ innings when he went back out to try to close out the ninth. Garrett put two on and got one out before the Mets (28-36) went to Smith. The right-hander promptly gave up a single to Bryce Harper to KINGS FOR A DAY! With crazy ninth, ith crazy ninth, Mets top Phils to ets top Phils to split London series plit London series METS 6 PHILLIES 5 L ONDON — How, exactly, are Mets fans supposed to explain their team to foreigners? Do they start with their standings in the NL East (fourth place)? The exorbitant payroll? Maybe they start with the time Mr. Met flipped off a group of fans? After all, Mr. and Mrs. Met did make the trip to London for the team’s series against the Phillies. It’s a question Mets fans grappled with — and laughed about — this weekend. Danielle Sepulveres, a lifelong Mets fan from New Jersey, found herself trying to figure out how to accurately describe the experience of being a Mets supporter to a couple of Brits in a pub in Stratford near London Stadium on Saturday. “The Mets are an inherited fandom, if you will,” Sepulveres told the Daily News on Sunday. “Most of us got it from our parents or grandparents. In it for life, and this is what we do. We’re dedicated, no matter what — even in another country.” Sepulveres was one of the 108,956 fans in attendance for the two-game series and one of many Mets fans who made the trip across the Atlantic. It was a big financial undertaking and she knew she could be in for some tough losses, but she also knew the experience alone would be worth it. “It very much felt like this historic thing,” she said. “In a way, it almost feels like the games don’t count. I know it’s nothing to get upset about. I feel like people still had a great time, at least in my section, and even (Saturday) night, everyone I bumped into was having so much fun. That’s been the overriding sentiment.” Mets fans found community in London. Sepulveres came by herself but made friends with other fans once she arrived. The highlight of her trip was running into outfielder Brandon Nimmo and his wife, Chelsea, on the street. Nimmo even offered to take a photo with her. The weekend was everything Sepulveres imagined it would be. It proved to be popular with players, and equally as popular of an experience for sports fans from New York, Philadelphia, and the U.K. “I remember last year watching the Cubs and Cardinals and being like, ‘Oh, I really want to do this,'” Sepeulveres said. “So it just feels kind of surreal. Both days have been incredible.” MCNEIL GETS MCGOING Jeff McNeil made his first appearance since June 2 on Sunday, going 2-for-4 with a run scored, with both hits coming against left-handed pitchers. It was a frustrating week for the 2022 NL batting champ. The Mets sat the slumping second baseman against four straight left-handed pitchers, giving him time to work on his swing. His return was encouraging. “I felt like my first two at-bats were my two best swings, and I was 0-for-2,” McNeil said. “Then my last two at-bats, I got a blooper and was able to sneak one by an infielder. So it’s the game of baseball, it’s tough. Hits aren’t always going to go your way, but my approach is always to stay up the middle and hit a line drive.” McNeil, an avid golfer who won a pro-am event in January, might have picked up a new hobby during his time in London. The infielder got hooked on cricket with his wife, Tatiana. McNeil got so into it that he’s already making plans to see a World Cup game on Long Island next week. “I think I’d be a heck of a cricket player,” McNeil said. “Everything bounces and you’re able to put in play and hit it anywhere. I think that’d be a lot of fun.” CATCHING CAROUSEL Luis Torrens might have secured his spot on the team with his performance in London. Acquired last weekend from the Yankees, Torrens has hit safely in four of the five games he’s started since joining the Mets and has shown a strong arm behind the plate. He saved the game Sunday with his heads-up 2-3 double play, and he went 1-for-3 with a walk, a run and a pickoff. With Francisco Alvarez returning from the injured list next week, the Mets will decide between Torrens and Tomas Nido. While Nido filled in admirably in Alvarez’s absence, his .229 average might not be enough to keep his spot on the roster. Explaining Met fandom to Londoners not easy BY ABBEY MASTRACCO 36 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Mets catcher Luis Torrens makes force out at home on Phillies catcher Garrett Stubbs and throws to first for game-ending double play in bottom of ninth inning Sunday as Mets, Phils and Phanatic (below) bid farewell to London. AP PHOTOS load the bases, then walked Alec Bohm to bring in a run. But Smith went right at Castellanos, unafraid to attack an aggressive hitter. “I would have loved to come in and strike out Harper and then strike out Bohm and get done with it. That’s the ideal situation,” Smith said. “I made it a little tougher on myself, but made some pitches when I needed to and came through. And that’s what it’s all about.” The Mets are without closer Edwin Diaz (shoulder impingement), and with the way they’ve blown leads, they need someone to step up. Smith did exactly that, but Torrens was the key to getting those last two outs. “The first thing that I thought about doing was getting that out at home,” Torrens said through a team translator. “Then (I thought) that if we can get that out at first base, then that’s what we wanted to do.” Pinch-runner Garrett Stubbs slid hard into Torrens, getting the catcher’s left foot with his spike. Torrens didn’t see any ill intentions, and Smith was so excited he didn’t even grasp what had happened. “I pumped my fist and then I saw him on the ground and just wanted to make sure he was OK,” Smith said. “I saw him on the ground and asked if he was good. And then I asked him if he stepped on the bat. He said no. I had no idea what happened at the time, but I’m glad he’s OK.” Right-hander Dedniel Nuñez gave up a tie-breaking homer to sparsely-used Phillies outfielder David Dahl in the seventh. It was only Dahl’s third game in the Major Leagues this season. The Mets may have pushed Nuñez a little too far by having him get up for a third time, but the Mets needed to make up innings after pulling starter Jose Quintana in the fourth. For the second straight day, the Mets were forced to pull their starting pitcher in the fourth inning. Quintana came out with two outs in the fourth and the Mets trailing, 3-0. Once again, the bullpen was forced to cover a lot of ground. With only two games in five days, the Mets and Phillies could be aggressive with their relief arms, but the bullpen has been unreliable in the late innings, and without Diaz, the high-leverage innings have been a challenge. Nuñez, a 24-year-old rookie, did what he could by picking up five big outs before giving up the home run. Smith stepped up when the Mets needed him. “Credit to the guys for continuing to battle back,” said manager Carlos Mendoza. “We got down early in the game and then had good at-bats in the sixth. … Overall, good at-bats (in the ninth), then we’re piecing it together. Garrett gets one out, and then Drew Smith comes in and continues to make pitches. Then that last play of the game from Torrens, what a great play.” Quintana allowed three earned runs on six hits, walked two and struck out one over his 3 ⅔ innings. His ERA is 5.29 on the season. Phillies starter Taijuan Walker, formerly of the Mets, was charged with two earned runs on two hits. He walked one and struck out six in 5 ⅔ innings. A total of 108,956 attended the two MLB World Tour games this weekend. The entire production received rave reviews from fans and players alike, making it a successful weekend for all involved. “This trip has been phenomenal,” Jeff McNeil said. “To get to play baseball in another country, it’s always exciting. I thought it was a lot of fun and pretty cool, too, with both sets of fans here. I feel like every pitch, there’s so much going on and it’s just loud.” DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 37
BY ABBEY MASTRACCO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS LONDON — Mets owner and CEO Steve Cohen isn’t ready to talk trades. Speaking in London on Sunday ahead of the Mets’ victory over the Phillies, Cohen seemed equal parts frustrated and optimistic. Cohen, like baseball operations David Stearns, believes the Mets still “have a run in them.” With the 28-36 Mets still near a wild-card spot, Cohen is willing to wait. He won’t elaborate on any trade-deadline strategies just yet. “I’m focused on winning games right now,” Cohen said. “We can worry about the trade deadline (later). That’s seven weeks away. How many games is that? That’s 45, maybe 50 games. A lot can happen. So I’m focused right now on the season, winning games, and we’ll worry about that when the time comes.” Cohen sees some indicators that the team is improving, but he’s not naive to the issues plaguing them on the field. He isn’t happy with the defense, it “boggles his mind” how the team continually blows late leads and he doesn’t understand why the pitching, hitting and defense never seem to come together. “It’s a variability of human performance, right?” Cohen said. “You can write it down on paper, but then you’ve got to play the games. You know, frankly, we haven’t really put it all together for a consistent period of time. And so I still think that can happen. There (are) a lot of good ballplayers on this club, and and it’s just a question of getting a little confidence, getting on a run. “Listen, I think that’s possible.” Cohen is forgetting that the Mets often defy possibilities. Major changes have been ushered in at nearly every level of the organization since Cohen took over as the majority owner in late 2020. Under Cohen’s ownership, the Mets have seen three managers, three general managers (four if you count Sandy Alderson), two farm directors and one president of baseball operations. And yet, the team has largely dominated the headlines for the wrong reasons, much as it did in the Wilpon era. This season alone the Mets have lost two of their best players to injuries (catcher Francisco Alvarez and right-handed ace Kodai Senga), and the clubhouse recently held a players-only meeting on the same night the team drew ire for its treatment of relief pitcher Jorge Lopez. It became a debacle, as it always does, despite the promises that there would be fewer debacles in this new, Cohen-led era. All of this, of course, has been amid a stretch of extremely bad baseball. It’s been more of the same, no matter who is in charge. Still, Cohen doesn’t necessarily see any systemic issues leading to losses on the field. “I actually think things are improving,” Cohen said. “We’ve got new management who are in the evaluation phase. I know what’s going on in various parts of the system and the infrastructure. And so I think I actually am pretty optimistic, you know? Now these things take time. Unfortunately, you just can’t turn the system around today or on a dime.” The optimism comes from his trust in Stearns and the people around him in the front office. Cohen promised to have the “best and brightest” baseball minds, but acknowledged that it could be years before he builds the All-Star front office he has always envisioned. The hedge fund manager also endorsed rookie manager Carlos Mendoza. “I’m impressed by Carlos,” Cohen said. “He’s got an incredible rapport with the team. He’s thoughtful. He’s very capable of relating to the players, delivering hard messages when he has to, and I’m impressed by how he conducts himself.” Cohen arrived in London a week ago and chose to work out of Point 72’s London offices in anticipation of the weekend series. He played golf and came away raving about the sausages he had on the course, even going as far as to say he thinks London has a better food scene than New York. He surprised Mets fans at a pub Saturday afternoon, unafraid to answer hard questions from the team’s biggest critics. They came all this way, so he felt it was important to spend time with them. “We were having a blast,” Cohen said. “They’re excited about being here and being at the games. And so, you know, the fans have been through worse, OK? Right? We’re trying to break that history. So they’re great and they’re certainly going to be there for the team.” Cohen and his team have yet to break that history. Changing history could require a rebuild, something Cohen either doesn’t have the appetite for or doesn’t want to vocalize. While the time may be fast approaching, Cohen insists it’s not time to sell just yet. “Theoretically, you don’t know what you’re going to get back,” Cohen said. “You don’t know. What if the return that you got is kind of marginal, right? So the decisions are not black and white, OK? We’re not there yet. We’ll evaluate it when we get there.” Pete Alonso can’t believe it as he takes throw from catcher Luis Torrens to complete game-ending double play in Mets’ victory over Phillies Sunday in London. AP Steve Cohen GETTY COHEN: WE OHEN: WE CAN STILL AN STILL DO THIS Mets owner more interested in s owner more interested in winning than trade deadline nning than trade deadline 38 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
BY FIIFI FRIMPONG NEW YORK DAILY NEWS The Liberty played seven games in 12 days, and stayed undefeated during that stretch by gutting out a 93-88 win over the Washington Mystics Sunday. The winless Mystics fought till the end but faltered in the fourth quarter, a frequent theme through the first 12 games of the season. This time, Eric Thibault’s team ran into a torrid Jonquel Jones, who poured in a season-high 29 points while grabbing eight boards and blocking two shots. She shot 11- for-15 on the night, including 4-of-5 in the fourth en route to Washington’s 12th loss of the season. It’s the most points she’s scored since arriving in New York in 2023. And the 2021 MVP looks like she’s in the best shape since putting on seafoam colors. “Well I’m in better shape, obviously,” said Jones, who began the 2022 season after rehabbing a foot injury sustained as a member of the Connecticut Sun. “Everything was new last year. So it was just figuring things out and figuring my teammates out. Now it’s less of that and way more chemistry.” Her performance was enough to stave off a hungry Mystics team that managed to get within one point when guard Jade Melbourne, who scored a team-high 21 points, hit a layup with 19.1 seconds remaining in regulation. Sabrina Ionescu was trapped after the ensuing inbounds, but she whipped a pass to Betnijah Laney-Hamilton near midcourt. The guard then found an open player in the paint with no one in sight. And of course, Jones was there to lay in the final dagger with eight seconds remaining. The win gives the Liberty an 11-2 record and 5-0 record in Commissioner’s Cup standings. After not dropping a game during a brutal stretch, the team will now have home-court advantage for the Commissioner’s Cup championship game on June 25. “We understood that regardless of the situation we’re in, we can use every game, every opportunity to get better and be ready so that in the playoffs we’ll be able to say we’ve been tested in various situations,” Jones said. Sunday marked Washington’s third game in four days while the Liberty returned home for the back end of a back-to-back. The early sloppiness showed in the first quarter with the Liberty (five) and Washington (three) combining for eight turnovers. Ionescu and Jones combined to shoot 6-for-7 in the first, which was enough to give the Liberty a one point lead going into the second. Then Jones continued to pick up where she left off in Saturday’s win against the Connecticut Sun. Jones decimated her former team down the stretch Saturday, then totaled nine quick points going into the second quarter of Sunday’s matchup. After Melboune blew by Laney-Hamilton, Jones dashed across the paint to swat what should’ve been an easy layup. The star center then ran the floor and drew a shooting foul on the other end. The highlight plays continued with Jones dishing a behind-the-back pass to Leonie Fiebich that led to a three. And on the next possession, Ionescu displayed some flashy moves, tossing a no-look pass to Jones for an easy layup that put the Libs up four with 3:33 remaining in the second. The flashy plays, however, didn’t amount to bonus points in the box score as the teams entered halftime tied at 45. Washington took the lead in the third on Julie Vanloo‘s trey. Shatori Walker-Kimbrough then followed up with her own trey to put her team up five with 6:11 remaining in the third. Six quick Liberty points regained the lead, but Ariel Atkins drained a wide-open trey to put the Mystics up two at the 4:22 mark. The teams continued to trade buckets to end the quarter. The Mystics failed to get the big stop in the fourth. Washington led by five with eight minutes remaining in regulation, but never regained the lead down the stretch. Libs sink Mystics for seventh straight victory LIBERTY 93 MYSTICS 88 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BOSTON —Jrue Holiday notched 26 points and 11 rebounds, and Jayson Tatum made up for a rough shooting night with 12 assists and nine rebounds as the Celtics beat the Mavericks, 105-98, on Sunday night to take a 2-0 lead in the NBA Finals. Luka Doncic, who was listed as questionable to play less than two hours before the opening tipoff, scored 32 points with 11 rebounds and 11 assists — the first NBA Finals triple-double in Mavericks franchise history. But he missed a one-footed, running floater from 3-point range with 28 seconds left, ending Dallas’ last chance at a comeback. Game 3 is Wednesday night in Dallas. The Mavericks need a win then or in Game 4 on Friday to avoid a sweep and earn a trip back to the Boston Garden, where the local fans are already making space in the rafters for what would be an unprecedented 18th NBA championship banner. The Celtics won the opening pair in the NBA Finals for the ninth time. They have won the previous eight, and have never been forced to a Game 7 in any of them. Jaylen Brown scored 21 points, Tatum poured in 18 and Derrick White also scored 18 points for top-seeded Boston. Kristaps Porzingis limped his way to 12 points. Tatum went 6 for 22 shooting and 1 of 7 from 3-point range; the Celtics were 10 for 39 from long distance overall. Kyrie Irving, who’s drawn the animosity of the local fans ever since cutting short his stay in Boston in 2019, scored 16 points; he has lost 12 games in a row against the Celtics. Unlike their 107-89 victory in Game 1, when a fast start from 3-point range staked them to a 29-point, first-half lead, the Celtics missed their first eight attempts from long distance and were around 20% for most of the game. Tatum scored zero points in the first quarter and had only five at halftime, when he was still 0 for 3 from 3-point range. Boston was still just 5 for 30 from long distance when Peyton Pritchard banked in a half-courter at the third-quarter buzzer to give Boston an 83-74 lead. Mavs closer, but fall to Celts again CELTICS 105 MAVERICKS 98 Jaylen Brown dunks against Mavericks as Celtics grab 2-0 series edge Sunday night. GETTY DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 39
BY PETER SBLENDORIO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Darren Waller is retiring after one season with the Giants, the star tight end announced Sunday, ending months of speculation about his football future. “The passion has slowly been fading,” Waller said in a 17-minute video announcement. Acquired for a third-round pick in a March 2023 trade with the Raiders, the 31-year-old Waller entered last season as the Giants’ top receiving threat but finished with 52 catches for 552 yards and a touchdown in 12 games. A hamstring injury cost Waller five games in 2023, marking the second season in a row that the 6-6 pass-catcher missed time with a hamstring issue. Days after he suffered last season’s hamstring ailment on Oct. 29 against the Jets, Waller experienced an undisclosed medical episode that left him “on the edge of death,” he said in Sunday’s video. The health scare, which left Waller hospitalized for three-and-a-half days, caused him to re-evaluate his life, he said. In April, Waller and Las Vegas Aces star Kelsey Plum filed for divorce after just over a year of marriage. Waller has since released a breakup song, “Who Knew (Her Perspective),” and an accompanying music video. Originally a 2015 sixth-round pick by the Ravens, Waller overcame addiction to play eight seasons in the NFL, using his rare blend of size and speed to become one of the league’s top tight ends. “These last four months (have been) quite a journey for me,” Waller said in Sunday’s video. “It makes me look back on getting sober from drugs and alcohol as really just the tip of the iceberg, when really that’s a big deal and should not be discounted.” He continued, “Really learning that the drugs and alcohol are really just a symptom of deeper issues, deeper-rooted things. What I’ve learned in these last four months has me like, aha, that’s the reason that I am the way that I am. It’s brought me to the point of rethinking my career and leaving my marriage.” Sunday’s development had been expected by many within the league. It came two days before the start of mandatory minicamp on Tuesday. Waller missed all of the Giants’ voluntary offseason programs as he contemplated retirement. “We have great respect for Darren as a person and player,” the Giants said in a statement. “We wish him nothing but the best.” With Waller’s playing status up in the air, the Giants drafted tight end Theo Johnson out of Penn State in the fourth round of April’s draft. Johnson joined a tight-end room that also includes Daniel Bellinger and Jack Stoll. Waller finishes his career with 350 receptions, 4,124 yards and 20 touchdowns with the Ravens, Raiders and Giants. He made the Pro Bowl with the Raiders in 2020, when he set career highs with 107 catches, 1,196 yards and nine touchdowns. Waller signed a three-year, $51 million contract extension with the Raiders before the 2022 season and was set to count $14.08 million against the cap in 2024. “The common thought process is, ‘How could you leave money like that on the table,’ which is (in) excess of $30 million over the next three years,” Waller said. “That’s a whole lot of money. … I understand and respect that, but I feel like I spent most of my life on what I ‘should’ be doing and measuring that in the eyes of what people would expect from me.” Without Waller, Giants quarterback Daniel Jones figures to lean even more heavily on a wide receiver group that includes rookie Malik Nabers, whom Big Blue drafted No. 6 overall in April; second-year speedster Jalin Hyatt; slot target Wan’Dale Robinson; and veteran Darius Slayton, who led the team in receiving four of the past five seasons. Giants’ Waller decides to retire Darren Waller hangs ’em up after one year with Giants. AP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DUBLIN, Ohio — Scottie Scheffler had more stress than he wanted Sunday at the Memorial and got the victory everyone has come to expect. On a Muirfield Village course so demanding only six players broke par, Scheffler scored his highest final round in nearly two years at 2-over 74, and it was just enough to hold off Collin Morikawa and win for the fifth time this year. Scheffler, who started the final round four shots ahead, never lost the lead. He never felt safe, either, particularly on a back nine where saving par felt like hard work. That’s what it took on the 18th hole. He was leading Morikawa by one shot and both hit approach shots that bounced hard and high off the green and into the rough. Both chipped to five feet. Scheffler buried his putt to win, and the force of his fist pump to celebrate showed how tough this day was on him, and practically everybody. Making the day even more special was the handshake with tournament host Jack Nicklaus, and cradling month-old son Bennett at his first PGA Tour event. “This is a tough place to close out,” Scheffler said. “It was a fun test of golf. I like when it gets this hard. I didn’t do a whole lot great today, but I did enough.” Just barely. Morikawa, who played in the final group of both majors this year, holed a 30-foot birdie putt on the par-3 12th hole and stayed on Scheffler’s heels the rest of the way. He shot 71, the only one from the final 13 groups to break par. Adam Hadwin was right there with them until closing with three straight bogeys for a 74 to finish alone in third. Scheffler finished at 8-under 280 and won $4 million from this signature event and its $20 million purse. That pushes him over $24 million for the year, breaking the PGA Tour season earnings record — and it’s barely June — that he set last year in this era of rising purses. He also become the first player since Tom Watson in 1980 to win five times on the PGA Tour before the U.S. Open. That’s next week at Pinehurst No. 2, and Scheffler will go to the U.S. Open as a huge favorite. This was his 11th consecutive tournament with a top 10. Morikawa picked up $2.2 million and now has a big cushion as he tries to sew up the fourth spot for the Americans going to Paris this summer for the Olympics. Hadwin was within one shot of the lead until he finished the front nine with a pair of bogeys. He stayed in the hunt until closing with a pair of bogeys for a 74. Still, his third-place finish moved him ahead of Corey Conners for the second Canadian spot in the Olympics. Despite final-round troubles, Scheffler hangs on at Memorial 40 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
Chet Walker, a seven-time All-Star forward who helped Wilt Chamberlain and the 76ers win the 1967 NBA title and later starred for the Bulls, has died. He was 84. The National Basketball Players Association confirmed Walker’s death, according to NBA.com. The 76ers, Bulls and National Basketball Retired Players Association also extended their condolences on social media on Saturday. Walker was part of Chicago’s inaugural class for its Ring of Honor in January. “His skill, dedication and contributions to the game made a lasting impact on the sport of basketball and the city of Chicago,” the Bulls said in their statement. “Chet Walker will forever be remembered as a true Chicago Bulls icon.” Nicknamed “The Jet,” Walker recorded career averages of 18.2 points and 7.1 rebounds over his 13 seasons in the NBA. His teams made the playoffs every year he was in the league. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2012. The 6-foot-7 Walker was selected by Syracuse in the second round of the 1962 NBA draft. He averaged 12.3 points in his first season before the Nationals moved to Philadelphia and were renamed the 76ers. In his fifth season, Walker averaged 19.3 points and 8.1 rebounds in 81 games. With Chamberlain, Hal Greer, Billy Cunningham and Walker leading the way, the deep 76ers went 68-13 during the regular season. They eliminated Cincinnati and Boston in the playoffs before defeating Rick Barry and San Francisco for the 1967 NBA title. CLARK STILL DREAMS OF GAMES Caitlin Clark hopes to play for the U.S. Olympic team one day. It just won’t be in Paris next month. The Indiana Fever rookie confirmed on Sunday that she isn’t on the roster for this year’s Olympics. “I think it just gives you something to work for,” Clark said. “It’s a dream. Hopefully one day I can be there. I think it’s just a little more motivation. You remember that. Hopefully when four years comes back around, I can be there.” The next Summer Olympics after Paris will be held in Los Angeles. Sixer great Chet Walker dies at 84 Carlos Alcaraz of Spain celebrates after defeating Alexander Zverev for French Open crown Sunday in Paris. GETTY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PARIS — As Carlos Alcaraz began constructing his comeback in Sunday’s French Open final, a 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2 victory over Alexander Zverev for a first championship at Roland Garros and third Grand Slam title in all, there arrived the sort of magical shot the kid is making a regular part of his varied repertoire. It was a running, then sliding, down-theline, untouchable forehand passing winner that Alcaraz celebrated by thrusting his right index finger overhead in a “No. 1” sign, then throwing an uppercut while screaming, “Vamos!” No, he is not ranked No. 1 at the moment — the man he beat in the semifinals, Jannik Sinner, makes his debut at the top spot today — but Alcaraz has been there before and, although a “2” will be beside his name next week, there is little doubt that he is as good as it gets in men’s tennis right now. And more accomplished than any other man ever has been at his age. Alcaraz is a 21-year-old from Spain who grew up running home from school to watch on TV as countryman Rafael Nadal was accumulating title after title at Roland Garros — a record 14 — and he just eclipsed Nadal as the youngest man to collect major championships on three surfaces. Nadal was 1½ years older when he did it. “Now,” Alcaraz told his parents, after hugging them in the Court Philippe Chatrier stands, “I am lifting this trophy in front of you.” Alcaraz adds that one from the clay-court Slam to a collection of hardware that includes triumphs on hard courts at the U.S. Open in 2022 and on grass at Wimbledon in 2023. He is 3-0 in major Slam finals. “It’s an amazing career already. You’re already a Hall of Famer. You already achieved so much — and you’re only 21 years old,” said Zverev, a 27-year-old from Germany who also lost the 2020 U.S. Open final. “Incredible player. Not the last time you’re going to win this.” Zverev exited the French Open in the semifinals each of the past three years, once after tearing ankle ligaments during the second set against Nadal in that round in 2022. Hours before Zverev’s semifinal victory over Casper Ruud began on Friday, a Berlin district court announced that he reached an out-of-court settlement that ended a trial stemming from an ex-girlfriend’s accusation of assault during a 2020 argument. On Sunday against Alcaraz, Zverev faltered after surging in front by reeling off the last five games of the third set. Alcaraz’s level dipped during that stretch and he seemed distracted by a complaint over the condition of the clay, telling chair umpire Renaud Lichtenstein it was “unbelievable.” But Alcaraz reset and ran away with it, taking 12 of the last 15 games while being treated by a trainer at changeovers for an issue with his left leg. This was the first men’s title match at Roland Garros since 2004 without at least one of Nadal, Novak Djokovic or Roger Federer. Nadal lost to Zverev in the first round two weeks ago; Djokovic, a three-time champion, withdrew before the quarterfinals with a knee injury that required surgery; Federer is retired. NEW FACE OF TENNIS F TENNIS At 21, French Open champ Alcaraz t 21, French Open champ Alcaraz set to pick up where Big 3 left off et to pick up where Big 3 left off DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 41
BY GARY PHILLIPS NEW YORK DAILY NEWS The Yankees had the best offense in baseball entering their highly anticipated series against the Dodgers. After two games, the ratings didn’t change much. However, the Yankee lineup certainly felt different without Juan Soto, nursing left forearm inflammation. The 25-year-old, who played in all 162 games with the Padres last season, watched from the dugout as Los Angeles secured a series win with victories on Friday and Saturday. The Yankees scored four runs in those games, and one came via the ghost runner in Friday’s 11-inning affair. The team has also gone 1-15 with runners in scoring position while leaving 19 runners on in the first two games of the series. Soto’s peers acknowledged feeling his absence. “It is a big part,” Alex Verdugo, who has been batting second in Soto’s place, said after Saturday’s 11-3 loss. “Not gonna say it’s not. But at the end of the day, we’ve had our opportunities with him out of the lineup to win, and we just haven’t cashed in.” Verdugo made sure to credit the Dodgers’ top-five pitching staff, which surrendered two homers to Aaron Judge on Saturday. However, Gleyber Torres agreed that Soto’s production — lethally paired with Judge’s all season — has been missed. “He’s a huge part of the team, for sure,” the second baseman, fresh off another error, said Saturday. It’s been interesting to see the Yankees’ offense sputter without Soto, as the right fielder is an impending free agent who could command a record-setting salary. As good as Soto has been statistically — he’s hitting .318/.424/.603 with 17 home runs and 53 RBI — he also brings some intangibles. “It’s just a presence,” Verdugo said. “Obviously, being able to work at-bats. It’s a good way to kind of see all the guy’s pitches early on. And then obviously what Soto does, he drives the ball everywhere. So it’s a big bat out for us right now. But at the end of the day, we always know when one guy’s down, the next guy’s gotta step up.” Fortunately for the Yankees, Soto is expected to avoid a stint on the IL. On Saturday, Aaron Boone said the Yankees were leaning toward giving Soto a “couple days” of rest. “I know today he felt really good,” Boone said. “Noticeably better in his eye, but it was also important that (Friday) he not do much of anything baseball to try and get this to calm down.” No surprise, Soto’s hard to replace Outfielder Chris Taylor watches Aaron Judge’s home run sail out Saturday, right into a sea of Dodger fans at Yankee Stadium. AP BY PETER SBLENDORIO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Before the Dodgers’ hit parade on Saturday, a literal parade of Dodgers fans marched outside of Yankee Stadium. Hundreds of revelers dressed in white and blue walked in unison and chanted “let’s go Dodgers” in an unusual scene for a visiting fan base in the Bronx. They remained boisterous inside the stadium, breaking out that same chant as the Dodgers pulled away late in their 11-3 victory over the Yankees. “It was pretty clear,” Yankees left fielder Alex Verdugo, who made his MLB debut with Los Angeles in 2017, said of the Dodgers fans’ presence. “They were loud. We know. Obviously, we know, but I think at the end of the day, we had chances to take over the stadium again,” Verdugo continued. “If we get that big hit, get those big runs across, we give our fans something to cheer about, and the noise is a little bit different, more on our side. Really, it is what it is.” The vocal Dodgers fans added to the playoff-like atmosphere in a much-hyped threegame series that many billed as a potential World Series preview. Saturday’s sold-out crowd of 48,374 was the largest of the season at Yankee Stadium to that point. Yankee fans were also loud — particularly when Aaron Judge hit the first of his two home runs to tie the game, 2-2, in the third inning — but the Los Angeles faithful were well-represented. Some traveled with the Dodgers fan group Pantone 294, which organized a “New York Takeover” for Saturday’s game with the plan to scatter 2,000 tickets into groups of 50 throughout the grandstands. The prominence of Dodgers fans surprised Los Angeles’ Teoscar Hernández, who gave them plenty to cheer about with two home runs — including an eighth-inning grand slam — and a career-high-tying six RBI on Saturday. “Never expect it here in New York,” said Hernández, who frequently faced the Yankees as a member of the AL East-rival Blue Jays from 2017-22. “That’s incredible.” Hernández also struck a go-ahead two-run double in the 11th inning of the Dodgers’ series-opening 2-1 win on Friday. This weekend marks the Dodgers’ first trip to Yankee Stadium since 2016. That visit eight years ago elicited a similar roar from Dodger fans, who at the time welcomed their team with “roll call” chants similar to how the Yankees’ Bleacher Creatures greet their players at the start of every game. The latest matchup features five former MVPs, with Judge and Giancarlo Stanton suiting up for the Yankees and Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman representing the Dodgers. Yankee Stadium commemorated the occasion by selling merchandise that recognizes both teams, including a split hat that features Judge’s No. 99 and Ohtani’s No. 17. “They haven’t been here in a long time,” Aaron Boone said after Saturday’s loss. “We experience that wherever we travel. You knew this was going to be a big series. “You certainly notice the Dodgers fans here, too.” CHAVEZ RAVINE EAST Dodger fans make presence known at Stadium 42 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
MLB STANDINGS RESULTS, SCHEDULE AMERICAN LEAGUE SUNDAY’S RESULTS N.Y. Yankees 6, L.A. Dodgers 4 Texas 7, San Francisco 2 Detroit 10, Milwaukee 2 Cleveland 6, Miami 3 Baltimore 9, Tampa Bay 2 Minnesota 11, Pittsburgh 5 (10) Seattle 6, Kansas City 5 (10) Boston 6, Chicago White Sox 4 (10) Toronto 6, Oakland 4 (10) L.A. Angels 9, Houston 7 TUESDAY’S GAMES Atlanta at Baltimore, 6:35 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 6:40 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay, 6:50 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 7:40 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 9:40 p.m. L.A. Angels at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. Oakland at San Diego, 9:40 p.m. Houston at San Francisco, 9:45 p.m. Texas at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. SATURDAY’S RESULTS L.A. Dodgers 11, N.Y. Yankees 3 Kansas City 8, Seattle 4 Toronto 7, Oakland 0 Pittsburgh 4, Minnesota 0 San Francisco 3, Texas 1 Baltimore 5, Tampa Bay 0 Chicago White Sox 6, Boston 1 Milwaukee 5, Detroit 4 Cleveland 8, Miami 0 Houston 6, L.A. Angels 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE SUNDAY’S RESULTS N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 5 N.Y. Yankees 6, L.A. Dodgers 4 Texas 7, San Francisco 2 Detroit 10, Milwaukee 2 Cleveland 6, Miami 3 Washington 8, Atlanta 5 Chicago Cubs 4, Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 5, Colorado 1 Minnesota 11, Pittsburgh 5 (10) Arizona 9, San Diego 3 TUESDAY’S GAMES Atlanta at Baltimore, 6:35 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 6:40 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay, 6:50 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. Miami at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 7:40 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 7:45 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. Oakland at San Diego, 9:40 p.m. Houston at San Francisco, 9:45 p.m. Texas at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. SATURDAY’S RESULTS Philadelphia 7, N.Y. Mets 2 Washington 7, Atlanta 3 Pittsburgh 4, Minnesota 0 San Francisco 3, Texas 1 Cincinnati 4, Chicago Cubs 3 Colorado 6, St. Louis 5 Milwaukee 5, Detroit 4 Cleveland 8, Miami 0 L.A. Dodgers 11, N.Y. Yankees 3 San Diego 13, Arizona 1 N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 5 SUNDAY’S RESULT New York AB R H BI SO AVG Lindor ss 5 0 0 0 1 .235 Alonso 1b 3 1 0 1 1 .240 Nimmo lf 5 1 1 1 3 .221 Martinez dh 5 0 1 2 2 .271 Stewart rf 2 0 0 0 1 .183 a-Bader ph-cf 1 0 0 0 0 .266 Taylor cf-rf 3 1 0 0 2 .230 McNeil 2b 4 1 2 0 0 .232 Baty 3b 2 0 1 0 0 .229 b-Vientos ph-3b 1 0 1 1 0 .324 1-Iglesias pr-3b 0 1 0 0 0 .409 Torrens c 3 1 1 0 0 .313 TOTALS 34 6 7 5 10 Philadelphia AB R H BI SO AVG Schwarber dh 4 1 2 0 1 .235 Realmuto c 3 0 0 0 1 .261 2-Stubbs pr 0 0 0 0 0 .173 Harper 1b 3 0 1 0 2 .277 Bohm 3b 3 0 1 1 0 .291 Castellanos rf 5 1 1 0 1 .215 Sosa ss 3 1 1 1 0 .294 Merrifield lf 4 0 1 1 1 .177 Wilson 2b 3 0 0 0 0 .000 d-Stott ph-2b 1 0 0 0 0 .242 Rojas cf 2 0 1 0 0 .237 c-Dahl ph 1 1 1 1 0 .667 Pache cf 1 1 1 0 0 .217 TOTALS 33 5 10 4 6 New York 000 003 003 6 7 0 Philadelphia 100 200 101 5 10 0 a-walked for Stewart in the 6th. b-walked for Baty in the 7th. c-homered for Rojas in the 7th. d-grounded out for Wilson in the 8th. 1-ran for Vientos in the 9th. 2-ran for Realmuto in the 9th. LOB: New York 7, Philadelphia 9. 2B: Nimmo (11), Sosa (6). HR: Dahl (2), off Nunez. RBIs: Nimmo (32), Martinez 2 (18), Vientos (13), Alonso (32), Sosa (18), Merrifield (8), Dahl (2), Bohm (51). Runners left in scoring position: New York 4 (Taylor, Alonso, Martinez 2); Philadelphia 4 (Castellanos 2, Realmuto 2). RISP: New York 3 for 10; Philadelphia 2 for 7. Runners moved up: Bohm. GIDP: Castellanos, Merrifield, Bohm. DP: New York 3 (Lindor, McNeil, Alonso; Lindor, McNeil, Alonso; Torrens, Alonso). NEW YORK IP H R ER BB SO ERA Quintana 3 ⅔ 6 3 3 2 1 5.29 Young ⅔ 0 0 0 1 2 1.12 Nunez 1 ⅔ 2 1 1 0 0 2.70 Diekman ⅔ 0 0 0 1 1 3.80 Garrett, W, 6-2 1 ⅔ 1 1 1 1 2 3.31 Smith, S, 2-2 ⅔ 1 0 0 1 0 2.38 PHILADELPHIA IP H R ER BB SO ERA Walker 5 ⅔ 2 2 2 1 6 5.40 Soto, BS, 2-3 0 2 1 1 1 0 5.40 Strahm 1 1 0 0 1 1 0.69 Hoffman 1 ⅓ 0 0 0 0 1 0.93 Alvarado, L, 1-3, BS, 11-13 ⅔ 2 3 2 2 2 3.54 Ruiz ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 1.88 Soto pitched to 3 batters in the 6th Inherited runners-scored: Young 2-0, Garrett 1-0, Smith 2-1, Soto 2-2, Strahm 2-0, Hoffman 2-0, Ruiz 2-0. HBP: Quintana (Sosa), Alvarado (Alonso), Garrett (Realmuto). PB: Realmuto (3). Umpires: Home, Stu Scheuwater; First, Jordan Baker; Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Cory Blaser. T: 3:27. A: 55,074 (66,000). Detroit 10, Milwaukee 2 SUNDAY’S RESULT Milwaukee AB R H BI SO AVG Ortiz 3b-ss 4 0 0 0 3 .284 Hoskins dh 3 0 1 0 1 .235 c-Bauers ph-p 1 0 0 0 0 .206 Yelich lf 2 0 0 0 1 .324 a-Frelick ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 .256 Adames ss 1 0 1 0 0 .243 b-Dunn ph-3b 1 0 0 0 1 .231 Sanchez c 3 1 1 0 1 .216 Perkins cf 4 0 1 0 1 .255 Chourio rf-lf 4 1 1 0 1 .217 Monasterio 1b 4 0 1 1 0 .147 Turang 2b 4 0 1 1 2 .306 TOTALS 33 2 7 2 11 Detroit AB R H BI SO AVG Perez rf 5 2 2 0 1 .252 Vierling cf 4 0 1 0 1 .276 Canha 1b 3 2 0 0 0 .233 Greene lf 4 1 2 1 0 .243 Urshela 3b 5 1 2 2 0 .268 Malloy dh 2 1 1 1 0 .188 McKinstry ss 4 1 1 2 1 .198 Ibanez 2b 4 1 1 1 2 .262 Rogers c 4 1 2 3 0 .233 TOTALS 35 10 12 10 5 Milwaukee 000 000 101 2 7 0 Detroit 200 080 00x 10 12 0 a-grounded out for Yelich in the 6th. b-hit by pitch for Adames in the 6th. c-flied out for Hoskins in the 8th. LOB: Milwaukee 7, Detroit 7. 2B: Monasterio (1), Greene 2 (14), Vierling (9). 3B: Turang (1). HR: Rogers (5), off Milner. RBIs: Turang (24), Monasterio (4), Greene (25), Malloy (2), Urshela 2 (16), McKinstry 2 (8), Ibanez (14), Rogers 3 (11). SF: Malloy. Runners left in scoring position: Milwaukee 4 (Turang, Chourio, Ortiz, Monasterio); Detroit 3 (Malloy, Canha, McKinstry). RISP: Milwaukee 1 for 7; Detroit 5 for 11. Runners moved up: Chourio, Vierling, Urshela. GIDP: Frelick, McKinstry. DP: Milwaukee 1 (Turang, Ortiz, Monasterio); Detroit 1 (McKinstry, Canha). MILWAUKEE IP H R ER BB SO ERA Wilson, L, 3-3 4 ⅓ 6 7 7 2 4 4.19 Milner 0 3 3 3 0 0 3.73 Hernandez 1 ⅔ 3 0 0 0 0 0.00 Herget 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.08 Bauers 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.00 DETROIT IP H R ER BB SO ERA Skubal, W, 8-1 6 ⅔ 5 1 1 2 10 1.92 Vest ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 3.00 Wentz 1 0 0 0 0 1 6.08 Englert 1 2 1 1 0 0 4.35 Milner pitched to 3 batters in the 5th Inherited runners-scored: Milner 3-3, Vest 1-0. HBP: Wilson 2 (Canha,Canha), Skubal (Dunn). Umpires: Home, Clint Vondrak; First, Dan Merzel; Second, Bruce Dreckman; Third, Jeremie Rehak. T: 2:26. A: 24,077 (41,083). Texas 7, San Francisco 2 SUNDAY’S RESULT San Francisco AB R H BI SO AVG Ramos cf 4 0 0 0 1 .314 Bailey c 3 0 1 1 1 .277 Flores dh 4 0 0 0 1 .220 Conforto lf 4 0 0 0 3 .255 Estrada 2b 4 0 1 0 1 .246 Yastrzemski rf 4 1 1 1 2 .214 Wisely ss 3 0 0 0 0 .298 Schmitt 3b 3 1 1 0 0 .243 Brooks 1b 3 0 1 0 0 .167 TOTALS 32 2 5 2 9 Texas AB R H BI SO AVG Semien 2b 3 2 1 2 0 .261 Smith ss 2 2 1 0 1 .287 Garcia rf 4 1 1 0 0 .217 Lowe 1b 3 1 1 0 1 .264 Duran 3b 4 0 1 2 2 .278 Langford dh 4 0 2 2 0 .234 Heim c 4 0 1 0 1 .246 Jankowski lf 4 1 1 0 1 .242 Taveras cf 3 0 0 0 2 .223 TOTALS 31 7 9 6 8 San Francisco 001 100 000 2 5 0 Texas 320 020 00x 7 9 0 LOB: San Francisco 4, Texas 4. 2B: Lowe (6). 3B: Langford (3). HR: Yastrzemski (7), off Eovaldi; Semien (11), off Winn. RBIs: Bailey (21), Yastrzemski (25), Langford 2 (17), Semien 2 (37), Duran 2 (11). SB: Semien (2), Langford (2), Garcia (5), Jankowski (5). Runners left in scoring position: San Francisco 2 (Yastrzemski, Flores); Texas 2 (Heim 2). RISP: San Francisco 1 for 4; Texas 4 for 9. GIDP: Garcia, Jankowski. DP: San Francisco 2 (Wisely, Estrada, Brooks; Estrada, Wisely, Brooks). SAN FRANCISCO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Winn, L, 3-7 4 ⅓ 6 7 7 2 7 6.94 Rodriguez 1 ⅔ 1 0 0 0 1 3.10 Ta.Rogers 1 1 0 0 1 0 2.52 Jackson 1 1 0 0 0 0 6.00 TEXAS IP H R ER BB SO ERA Eovaldi, W, 3-2 7 5 2 2 1 5 2.68 Leclerc 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.71 Yates 1 0 0 0 0 2 0.81 Inherited runners-scored: Rodriguez 2-2. HBP: Winn (Semien). Umpires: Home, Ben May; First, CB Bucknor; Second, Edwin Jimenez; Third, Dan Iassogna. T: 2:16. A: 34,912 (40,000). TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON INTERLEAGUE 2024 2023 VS OPP LAST 3 STARTS TEAM PITCHERS TIME W-L ERA REC W-L IP ERA W-L IP ERA Col Hudson (R) 2-7 5.25 3-9 1-0 7.0 3.86 1-0 17.1 3.63 Min Paddack (R) 7:40p 4-3 5.26 8-4 1-0 3.0 0.00 0-1 14.2 7.98 Tor Berrios (R) 5-4 2.80 9-4 0-0 0.0 0.00 0-1 20.0 2.25 Mil Rea (R) 8:10p 4-2 3.53 7-3 0-0 0.0 0.00 0-2 15.2 5.17 Oak Estes (R) 2-1 4.67 3-2 0-0 0.0 0.00 1-0 18.1 2.45 SD Cease (R) 9:40p 5-5 3.51 7-6 0-1 9.2 10.24 0-2 18.0 5.00 Hou Arrighetti (R) 3-5 5.79 5-5 0-0 0.0 0.00 1-1 14.0 2.57 SF Harrison (L) 9:45p 4-3 4.18 9-4 0-0 0.0 0.00 0-2 16.0 6.19 AMERICAN LEAGUE 2024 2023 VS OPP LAST 3 STARTS TEAM PITCHERS TIME W-L ERA REC W-L IP ERA W-L IP ERA Bal Burnes (R) 6-2 2.26 9-4 0-0 0.0 0.00 2-0 20.0 1.80 TB Pepiot (R) 6:50p 4-2 3.96 6-4 0-0 0.0 0.00 1-0 15.2 4.60 NYY Rodon (L) 8-2 3.08 10-3 0-1 0.0 0.00 3-0 18.0 2.50 KC Lugo (R) 8:10p 9-1 2.13 9-4 0-0 0.0 0.00 2-0 19.0 3.32 ChW Fedde (R) 4-1 3.27 5-8 0-0 0.0 0.00 0-0 16.1 3.86 Sea Gilbert (R) 9:40p 3-4 3.12 6-7 0-0 5.1 3.38 0-2 19.0 2.84 TEAM REC: Team’s Record in games started by today’s pitcher. VS OPP: Pitcher’s record versus this opponent. MLB CALENDAR July 13: Futures Game, Arlington, Texas. July 15: Home Run Derby, Arlington, Texas. July 16: All-Star Game, Arlington, Texas. Aug. 18: New York Yankees vs. Detroit at Williamsport, Pa. Aug. 31: Last day to be in organization to be postseason eligible. Sept. 29 : Regular season ends. Arizona 9, San Diego 3 SUNDAY’S RESULT Arizona AB R H BI SO AVG Carroll cf 4 2 2 0 0 .204 Marte 2b 4 2 1 0 0 .281 Pederson dh 4 1 1 2 2 .283 Walker 1b 5 0 2 2 2 .256 Gurriel lf 5 2 2 2 1 .247 McCarthy rf 4 1 3 2 0 .282 Suarez 3b 5 0 1 1 1 .200 Moreno c 5 0 0 0 0 .229 Newman ss 4 1 3 0 0 .266 TOTALS 40 9 15 9 6 San Diego AB R H BI SO AVG Arraez 1b 5 0 0 0 0 .362 Tatis rf 4 1 1 1 0 .281 Profar lf 4 1 2 1 2 .325 Cronenworth 2b 3 0 1 0 0 .262 Solano 3b 3 1 0 0 1 .314 D.Peralta dh 3 0 1 0 1 .250 Merrill cf 4 0 1 0 0 .272 Kim ss 4 0 0 0 1 .220 Campusano c 4 0 1 1 1 .234 TOTALS 34 3 7 3 6 Arizona 160 200 000 9 15 1 San Diego 111 000 000 3 7 1 E: Newman (3), Brito (1). LOB: Arizona 8, San Diego 8. 2B: Gurriel (12). HR: McCarthy (3), off Mazur; Tatis (12), off McGough; Profar (10), off Henry. RBIs: Walker 2 (41), Pederson 2 (23), Gurriel 2 (39), McCarthy 2 (15), Suarez (30), Tatis (34), Campusano (28), Profar (43). SB: Marte (2), Carroll (11), Merrill (9). CS: Newman (1). GIDP: Arraez. DP: Arizona 1 (Marte, Walker). ARIZONA IP H R ER BB SO ERA McGough ⅔ 1 1 1 0 1 6.62 Henry, W, 2-2 2 ⅓ 3 2 2 2 1 5.58 Ginkel 1 ⅓ 1 0 0 0 0 3.46 Mantiply 1 ⅓ 0 0 0 0 1 3.80 Martinez 1 ⅓ 0 0 0 1 1 0.39 Thompson 1 2 0 0 0 1 1.00 Jarvis 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.75 SAN DIEGO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Mazur, L, 0-1 3 8 8 8 3 2 9.00 Brito 3 5 1 1 0 3 3.60 Kolek 2 2 0 0 0 1 5.76 Matsui 1 0 0 0 1 0 4.61 HBP: Henry (D.Peralta). T: 3:01. A: 41,979 (40,222). AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY New York 46 21 .687 — — 8-2 W-1 22-10 24-11 Baltimore 42 22 .656 2½ +8½ 7-3 W-3 21-12 21-10 Boston 33 33 .500 12½ 1½ 5-5 W-1 14-18 19-15 Toronto 32 33 .492 13 2 6-4 W-2 16-15 16-18 Tampa Bay 31 34 .477 14 3 5-5 L-3 17-21 14-13 CENTRAL W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY Cleveland 42 22 .656 — — 6-4 W-2 21-8 21-14 Kansas City 39 27 .591 4 +4½ 5-5 L-1 24-11 15-16 Minnesota 34 31 .523 8½ — 4-6 W-1 16-13 18-18 Detroit 32 33 .492 10½ 2 5-5 W-1 15-17 17-16 Chicago 17 49 .258 26 17½ 2-8 L-1 12-23 5-26 WEST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY Seattle 37 30 .552 — — 6-4 W-1 21-11 16-19 Texas 31 34 .477 5 3 5-5 W-1 16-17 15-17 Houston 30 36 .455 6½ 4½ 6-4 L-1 17-18 13-18 Oakland 26 41 .388 11 9 3-7 L-2 15-20 11-21 Los Angeles 25 40 .385 11 9 4-6 W-1 11-23 14-17 NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY Philadelphia 45 20 .692 — — 7-3 L-1 27-10 18-10 Atlanta 35 28 .556 9 +4½ 4-6 L-3 19-12 16-16 Washington 30 35 .462 15 1½ 4-6 W-3 13-17 17-18 New York 28 36 .438 16½ 3 6-4 W-1 13-22 15-14 Miami 22 43 .338 23 9½ 3-7 L-2 12-25 10-18 CENTRAL W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY Milwaukee 38 27 .585 — — 6-4 L-1 18-10 20-17 Chicago 32 34 .485 6½ — 4-6 W-1 18-13 14-21 Cincinnati 32 34 .485 6½ — 8-2 L-1 17-18 15-16 St. Louis 31 33 .484 6½ — 4-6 W-1 15-14 16-19 Pittsburgh 31 34 .477 7 ½ 6-4 L-1 16-17 15-17 WEST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAY Los Angeles 41 26 .612 — — 6-4 L-1 21-12 20-14 San Diego 34 35 .493 8 +½ 4-6 L-1 15-21 19-14 San Francisco 32 34 .485 8½ — 3-7 L-1 17-14 15-20 Arizona 31 35 .470 9½ 1 6-4 W-1 15-16 16-19 Colorado 23 42 .354 17 8½ 3-7 L-1 13-17 10-25 N.Y. Yankees 6, L.A. Dodgers 4 SUNDAY’S RESULT Los Angeles AB R H BI SO AVG Betts ss 5 0 1 2 2 .309 Ohtani dh 4 1 1 0 0 .310 Freeman 1b 3 0 0 0 0 .290 Smith c 3 0 0 1 0 .288 T.Hernandez lf 4 1 2 1 1 .266 Heyward rf 4 0 0 0 2 .230 Pages cf 3 1 1 0 1 .260 Lux 2b 4 1 3 0 1 .216 K.Hernandez 3b 4 0 1 0 1 .207 TOTALS 34 4 9 4 8 New York AB R H BI SO AVG Volpe ss 4 0 0 0 2 .280 Verdugo lf 4 2 2 0 1 .261 Judge rf 4 2 3 2 1 .305 Stanton dh 4 0 0 0 3 .224 Grisham cf 2 1 1 3 1 .100 Torres 2b 4 0 1 0 1 .230 LeMahieu 1b 3 0 1 0 2 .219 Cabrera 3b 3 1 1 1 2 .238 Trevino c 3 0 0 0 1 .254 TOTALS 31 6 9 6 14 Los Angeles 000 021 010 4 9 0 New York 002 003 01x 6 9 0 LOB: Los Angeles 6, New York 3. 2B: T.Hernandez (14), Pages (8), Betts (15), Ohtani (18), Verdugo (14), Judge (21). HR: T.Hernandez (16), off Gil; Cabrera (5), off Glasnow; Grisham (3), off Glasnow; Judge (24), off Ramirez. RBIs: Betts 2 (37), T.Hernandez (48), Smith (39), Cabrera (22), Judge 2 (59), Grisham 3 (9). SB: LeMahieu (0), Lux (3). CS: LeMahieu (1). SF: Smith. Runners left in scoring position: Los Angeles 3 (Betts, Ohtani, Lux); New York 2 (Stanton, LeMahieu). RISP: Los Angeles 2 for 11; New York 2 for 6. Runners moved up: Freeman. GIDP: Betts, Torres. DP: Los Angeles 1 (K.Hernandez, Lux, Freeman); New York 1 (Torres, LeMahieu). LOS ANGELES IP H R ER BB SO ERA Glasnow, L, 6-5 6 8 5 5 1 12 3.24 Ramirez 2 1 1 1 1 2 3.27 NEW YORK IP H R ER BB SO ERA Gil 5 ⅔ 5 3 3 1 5 2.04 Ferguson, W, 1-3 ⅓ 1 0 0 1 1 4.95 Weaver, H, 8 2 1 1 1 0 1 2.70 Holmes, S, 19-22 1 2 0 0 0 1 1.23 Inherited runners-scored: Weaver 2-0. WP: Glasnow(2). Umpires: Home, Nestor Ceja; First, Manny Gonzalez; Second, Todd Tichenor; Third, Emil Jimenez. T: 2:44. A: 48,023 (47,309). DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 43
Baltimore 9, Tampa Bay 2 SUNDAY’S RESULT Baltimore AB R H BI SO AVG Henderson ss 4 3 2 0 1 .267 Rutschman c 5 1 3 6 0 .306 Mountcastle dh 4 0 0 1 0 .276 O’Hearn 1b 5 0 0 0 0 .276 Santander rf 5 1 1 1 1 .227 Westburg 2b 5 2 3 0 1 .285 Cowser lf 5 0 2 1 1 .233 Urias 3b 3 1 0 0 0 .238 Mullins cf 4 1 2 0 0 .178 TOTALS 40 9 13 9 4 Tampa Bay AB R H BI SO AVG Diaz 1b 4 1 2 0 0 .250 B.Lowe 2b 4 0 1 1 1 .211 Arozarena lf 4 0 2 1 1 .179 J.Lowe dh 3 0 0 0 2 .213 DeLuca cf 4 0 0 0 1 .169 Palacios rf 2 0 0 0 2 .250 a-Rosario ph-rf 1 0 0 0 1 .296 Walls ss 3 1 0 0 0 .200 Rortvedt c 4 0 1 0 1 .243 Caballero 3b 4 0 0 0 2 .255 TOTALS 33 2 6 2 11 Baltimore 001 101 240 9 13 0 Tampa Bay 000 002 000 2 6 0 a-struck out for Palacios in the 7th. LOB: Baltimore 7, Tampa Bay 7. 2B: Henderson (10), Westburg (12), Rortvedt (5). 3B: Cowser (1), Mullins (2), Westburg (5). HR: Santander (14), off Littell; Rutschman (13), off Maton. RBIs: Rutschman 6 (49), Santander (37), Cowser (27), Mountcastle (32), B.Lowe (15), Arozarena (20). SB: Mullins (13). Runners left in scoring position: Baltimore 3 (Urias, Mountcastle, Santander); Tampa Bay 5 (DeLuca 2, Caballero 2, J.Lowe). RISP: Baltimore 5 for 13; Tampa Bay 2 for 5. Runners moved up: Rutschman, Mountcastle, O’Hearn. BALTIMORE IP H R ER BB SO ERA Rodriguez,W,7-2 5 ⅔ 2 2 2 1 6 3.27 Tate, H, 1 ⅓ 1 0 0 1 1 2.66 Perez, H, 6 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.78 Akin 2 3 0 0 1 3 3.73 TAMPA BAY IP H R ER BB SO ERA Littell, L, 2-4 6 7 3 3 1 3 3.63 Cleavinger 1 3 2 2 0 0 2.03 Maton 1 2 4 4 2 0 6.56 Fairbanks 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.15 Inherited runners-scored: Tate 2-1. Umpires: Home, Brian O’Nora; First, Chris Conroy; Second, Brennan Miller; Third, Derek Thomas. T: 2:54. A: 20,386 (25,025). Boston 6, Chi. White Sox 4 (10) SUNDAY’S RESULT Boston AB R H BI SO AVG Duran lf 4 3 1 0 0 .263 Valdez 2b 1 0 0 0 0 .184 a-Wstbrk ph-2b 2 0 0 1 1 .167 Refsnyder rf 5 0 2 1 0 .336 Smith 1b 1 0 0 0 1 .221 b-Cooper ph-1b 3 0 1 1 1 .171 Wong dh 4 0 1 0 0 .329 Hamilton ss 5 2 2 1 2 .282 Dalbec 3b 4 0 0 0 2 .149 McGuire c 3 0 1 1 0 .220 Rafaela cf 4 1 0 0 2 .212 TOTALS 36 6 8 5 9 Chicago AB R H BI SO AVG Julks lf 4 0 2 0 1 .288 1-Ellis pr-lf 1 1 0 0 1 .000 Lopez 2b 4 0 0 0 2 .239 Robert cf 4 0 0 0 2 .188 Sheets dh 4 1 1 1 2 .246 Vaughn 1b 5 1 1 0 2 .217 DeJong ss 5 1 2 3 2 .238 Colas rf 3 0 0 0 2 .200 c-Mendick ph 1 0 0 0 0 .218 Sosa 3b 3 0 1 0 2 .234 Maldonado c 4 0 0 0 1 .071 TOTALS 38 4 7 4 17 Boston 000 111 001 2 6 8 3 Chicago 000 300 100 0 4 7 1 a-lined out for Valdez in the 6th. b-grounded out for Smith in the 6th. c-lined out for Colas in the 10th. 1-ran for Julks in the 7th. E: Slaten (1), Hamilton (6), McGuire (5), Soroka (1). LOB: Boston 7, Chicago 10. 2B: Hamilton (7), DeJong (11), Julks (6), Sosa (3). 3B: Duran (10). HR: Hamilton (3), off Flexen; DeJong (12), off Slaten. RBIs: Hamilton (8), Cooper (5), McGuire (15), Westbrook (2), Refsnyder (15), DeJong 3 (27), Sheets (28). SB: Julks (3), Wong (3), Sosa (1), Hamilton (13), Duran (15). SF: McGuire, Westbrook. S: Lopez. Runners left in scoring position: Boston 3 (Hamilton 3); Chicago 8 (Robert, Maldonado 2, Ellis, Mendick, DeJong, Sosa 2). RISP: Boston 1 for 7; Chicago 2 for 14. Runners moved up: Refsnyder, Cooper, Vaughn. GIDP: Refsnyder. DP: Chicago 1 (DeJong, Lopez, Vaughn). BOSTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA Kelly 2 0 0 0 2 3 1.80 Weissert 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.93 Slaten, BS, 1-4 2 1 3 1 0 3 2.84 Bernardino 1 ⅓ 4 1 1 2 2 1.03 Keller ⅔ 0 0 0 0 1 4.86 Jansen, W, 2-1 2 1 0 0 0 5 2.61 Booser, S, 1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.80 CHICAGO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Flexen 5 2 2 2 2 3 5.06 Peralta, H, 1 ⅓ 1 1 1 1 0 27.00 J.Anderson,BS,0-1 1 ⅔ 1 0 0 0 2 6.35 Brebbia, H, 7 1 1 0 0 0 1 6.08 Banks, BS, 1-4 1 1 1 1 0 1 4.75 Soroka, L, 0-7 1 2 2 0 0 2 6.07 Inherited runners-scored: Keller 2-0, J.Anderson 2-1. IBB: off Bernardino (Sosa), off Bernardino (Robert). HBP: J.Anderson (Wong). WP: Kelly. Umpires: Home, Ryan Blakney; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Sean Barber; Third, Alan Porter. T: 3:22. A: 21,055 (40,241). Seattle 6, Kansas City 5 (10) SUNDAY’S RESULT Seattle AB R H BI SO AVG Crawford ss 5 1 2 1 1 .226 Moore 3b-lf 4 1 1 0 2 .213 Rodriguez cf 5 1 2 1 2 .269 Garver c 4 0 0 0 2 .176 Raleigh dh 5 0 2 2 1 .206 Haniger rf 2 1 0 0 1 .217 Raley rf 2 0 0 0 1 .258 Locklear 1b 4 1 1 1 1 .250 Robles lf 1 0 0 0 0 .167 a-Rojas ph-3b 2 1 1 1 0 .270 Bliss 2b 3 0 1 0 1 .217 TOTALS 37 6 10 6 12 Kansas City AB R H BI SO AVG Garcia 3b 5 0 0 0 0 .256 Witt ss 5 0 1 0 1 .320 Pasquantino 1b 5 0 1 0 1 .243 Perez dh 4 0 0 0 3 .299 Loftin 2b 4 1 1 0 0 .283 Melendez lf 4 1 1 2 1 .165 Fermin c 4 2 1 0 2 .292 Renfroe rf 4 1 2 2 0 .201 Isbel cf 3 0 2 1 0 .219 1-Blanco pr 0 0 0 0 0 .255 TOTALS 38 5 9 5 8 Seattle 100 000 200 3 6 10 0 Kansas City 000 010 002 2 5 9 1 a-singled for Robles in the 7th. 1-ran for Isbel in the 10th. E: Isbel (1). LOB: Seattle 7, Kansas City 5. 2B: Locklear (1), Rodriguez (6), Loftin (1). 3B: Pasquantino (2). HR: Crawford (6), off Ragans; Melendez (7), off Baumann; Renfroe (6), off Voth. RBIs: Crawford (18), Locklear (1), Rojas (12), Rodriguez (25), Raleigh 2 (35), Isbel (19), Melendez 2 (19), Renfroe 2 (26). CS: Rojas (3). S: Robles, Bliss, Isbel. Runners left in scoring position: Seattle 4 (Raley, Raleigh, Garver, Bliss); Kansas City 2 (Garcia, Perez). RISP: Seattle 3 for 10; Kansas City 2 for 4. SEATTLE IP H R ER BB SO ERA Kirby 7 5 1 1 0 4 3.81 Munoz, H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.67 Baumann, W, 2-0 1 2 2 2 0 3 2.70 Voth, H, 4 ⅔ 2 2 1 0 0 3.42 Saucedo, S, 3-5 ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 2.81 KANSAS CITY IP H R ER BB SO ERA Ragans 6 3 1 1 1 9 3.08 Klein ⅔ 4 2 2 0 0 6.35 Zerpa ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 2.16 Anderson 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.70 Stratton 1 0 0 0 0 0 5.46 McArthur, L, 2-3 ⅔ 2 3 2 2 1 5.27 Smith ⅓ 0 0 0 0 1 5.57 Inherited runners-scored: Saucedo 1-0, Zerpa 1-0, Smith 2-0. Umpires: Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Alex Tosi; Second, Dan Bellino; Third, Phil Cuzzi. T: 3:05. A: 20,926 (38,427). Washington 8, Atlanta 5 SUNDAY’S RESULT Atlanta AB R H BI SO AVG Albies 2b 5 0 1 0 0 .265 Riley 3b 4 0 0 0 0 .230 Ozuna dh 5 0 0 0 2 .312 Olson 1b 4 0 1 0 3 .239 Duvall rf 3 1 0 0 1 .180 d’Arnaud c 4 1 1 0 0 .246 Harris cf 4 1 2 1 0 .248 Arcia ss 2 1 1 0 1 .230 Kelenic lf 4 1 2 3 1 .265 TOTALS 35 5 8 4 8 Washington AB R H BI SO AVG Abrams ss 5 0 1 3 0 .245 Thomas rf 4 1 1 0 2 .218 Winker lf 1 2 0 0 0 .261 Rosario dh 4 0 1 0 1 .190 Garcia 2b 4 1 2 1 0 .270 Ruiz c 3 1 1 4 0 .202 Senzel 3b 2 1 0 0 1 .239 Gallo 1b 3 1 1 0 1 .161 Young cf 3 1 0 0 2 .267 TOTALS 29 8 7 8 7 Atlanta 020 000 003 5 8 1 Washington 000 710 00x 8 7 0 E: Olson (4). LOB: Atl 8, Was 6. 2B: Abrams (12). HR: Kelenic (4), off Weems; Ruiz (4), off Waldrep. RBIs: Harris (20), Kelenic 3 (15), Garcia (27), Ruiz 4 (17), Abrams 3 (31). SB: Abrams (10). CS: Thomas (3). SF: Ruiz. Runners left in scoring position: Atl 4 (Albies 2, Duvall 2); Was 3 (Thomas, Young 2). RISP: Atl 3 for 7; Was 4 for 8. Runners moved up: Rosario. GIDP: Young. DP: Atl 1 (Riley, Albies, Olson). ATLANTA IP H R ER BB SO ERA Waldrep, L, 0-1 3 ⅔ 4 7 7 4 1 17.18 Bummer ⅔ 3 1 1 1 1 3.68 Chavez 1 ⅔ 0 0 0 2 3 1.37 Jimenez 1 0 0 0 1 1 2.52 Iglesias 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.22 WASHINGTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA Herz 4 ⅓ 4 2 2 3 5 6.48 Barnes, W, 3-2 1 0 0 0 1 1 4.35 Garcia 1 ⅔ 1 0 0 0 0 4.22 Floro 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.11 Weems 0 3 3 3 1 0 7.12 Finnegan, S, 18-20 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.73 Weems pitched to 4 batters in the 9th Inherited runners-scored: Bummer 3-3, Chavez 2-0, Barnes 2-0, Finnegan 1-0. WP: Herz(2). Umpires: Home, Andy Fletcher; First, Adam Beck; Second, Tom Hanahan; Third, Jansen Visconti. T: 2:38. A: 34,282 (41,376). Chicago Cubs 4, Cincinnati 2 SUNDAY’S RESULT Chicago AB R H BI SO AVG Tauchman rf 4 1 1 1 0 .261 Suzuki dh 5 1 3 0 2 .272 Bellinger 1b 5 0 2 0 1 .260 Morel 3b 4 1 1 0 1 .203 Happ lf 3 0 1 3 1 .222 Swanson ss 4 0 2 0 1 .226 Busch 2b 3 0 0 0 2 .242 Bote 2b 1 0 0 0 0 .231 Crw-Armstrng cf 4 0 0 0 1 .205 Amaya c 3 1 1 0 0 .198 TOTALS 36 4 11 4 9 Cincinnati AB R H BI SO AVG Fairchild rf-lf 3 0 0 0 2 .232 b-Benson ph-lf 1 0 0 0 1 .212 De La Cruz ss 3 0 0 0 0 .235 Candelario 1b 4 0 0 0 1 .234 Steer dh 3 1 1 0 1 .239 India 2b 4 0 1 0 2 .243 Espinal 3b 4 0 2 1 0 .202 Friedl cf 3 0 0 0 2 .220 Maile c 2 1 1 1 1 .189 a-Fraley ph-rf 1 0 0 0 1 .288 Dunn lf 2 0 0 0 0 .111 Stephenson c 1 0 0 0 0 .262 TOTALS 31 2 5 2 11 Chicago 310 000 000 4 11 0 Cincinnati 001 000 100 2 5 0 a-struck out for Maile in the 7th. b-struck out for Fairchild in the 8th. LOB: Chicago 12, Cincinnati 4. 2B: Suzuki (8), Happ (14), Amaya (4), Swanson (9). HR: Maile (2), off Imanaga. RBIs: Happ 3 (30), Tauchman (19), Maile (6), Espinal (18). SB: Happ 2 (5). Runners left in scoring position: Chicago 8 (Crow-Armstrong, Tauchman, Busch, Amaya, Happ 2, Bote 2); Cincinnati 1 (Fraley). RISP: Chicago 2 for 15; Cincinnati 1 for 3. Runners moved up: Swanson, Morel. GIDP: Swanson, Morel. DP: Cincinnati 2 (India, De La Cruz, Candelario; De La Cruz, India, Candelario). CHICAGO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Imanaga, W, 6-1 6 ⅔ 5 2 2 1 7 1.96 Leiter, H, 9 1⅓ 0 0 0 1 2 3.20 Neris, S, 9-11 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.62 CINCINNATI IP H R ER BB SO ERA Montas, L, 3-5 1 ⅓ 5 4 4 3 2 4.55 Spiers 5 ⅔ 4 0 0 1 7 2.33 Suter 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.86 Farmer 1 2 0 0 2 0 2.51 Inherited runners-scored: Leiter 1-0, Spiers 2-0. IBB: off Farmer (Happ), off Farmer (Swanson). HBP: Spiers (Amaya). Umpires: Home, David Rackley; First, Adrian Johnson; Second, Junior Valentine; Third, Ramon De Jesus. T: 2:49. A: 32,737 (43,891). St. Louis 5, Colorado 1 SUNDAY’S RESULT Colorado AB R H BI SO AVG Blackmon dh 4 0 0 0 0 .254 Tovar ss 4 1 1 0 0 .294 McMahon 3b 4 0 0 0 1 .263 Diaz c 4 0 2 1 1 .305 Doyle cf 4 0 1 0 1 .269 Cave lf 3 0 0 0 0 .232 a-Stallings ph 1 0 0 0 1 .282 Toglia 1b 2 0 0 0 1 .150 Amador 2b 3 0 1 0 1 .333 Jones rf 2 0 0 0 2 .000 TOTALS 31 1 5 1 8 St. Louis AB R H BI SO AVG Winn ss 5 0 2 2 2 .306 Burleson dh 4 1 1 1 0 .273 Goldschmidt 1b 3 0 1 0 1 .229 Arenado 3b 4 0 2 0 0 .252 Gorman 2b 4 0 0 0 0 .223 Carlson rf 3 1 1 0 1 .175 Donovan lf 4 1 1 0 0 .241 Pages c 2 2 1 1 1 .091 Siani cf 3 0 1 0 1 .207 TOTALS 32 5 10 4 6 Colorado 000 000 001 1 5 1 St. Louis 011 201 00x 5 10 0 a-pinch hit for Cave in the 9th. E: Tovar (3). LOB: Col 5, StL 8. 2B: Tovar (20), Carlson (2). HR: Burleson (9), off Blach. RBIs: Diaz (28), Pages (5), Burleson (24), Winn 2 (23). SB: Amador (1), Toglia (1). SF: Pages. S: Siani. Runners left in scoring position: Col 3 (Jones, Toglia, Tovar); StL 4 (Goldschmidt, Gorman, Donovan, Burleson). RISP: Col 1 for 7; StL 1 for 7. Runners moved up: Cave, Donovan. GIDP: Cave. DP: StL 1 (Winn, Goldschmidt). COLORADO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Blach, L, 2-4 5 8 4 4 1 3 4.84 Hartlieb 2 2 1 1 1 2 4.50 Chivilli 1 0 0 0 0 1 8.10 ST. LOUIS IP H R ER BB SO ERA Pallante, W, 2-2 5 3 0 0 1 6 4.88 Liberatore 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.45 Fernandez 1 ⅔ 0 0 0 1 1 2.73 King 1 ⅓ 2 1 1 0 1 1.66 Inherited runners-scored: King 1-0. HBP: Blach (Carlson). WP: Hartlieb. Umpires: Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Scott Barry; Second, Brian Walsh; Third, Edwin Moscoso. T: 2:15. A: 40,219 (44,494). Cleveland 6, Miami 3 SUNDAY’S RESULT Cleveland AB R H BI SO AVG Kwan lf 3 1 1 0 0 .370 Freeman cf 4 2 2 3 2 .222 Ramirez 3b 5 1 2 1 1 .275 J.Naylor 1b 4 0 0 0 2 .220 Fry c 4 0 1 1 1 .333 Hedges c 0 0 0 0 0 .130 Gimenez 2b 4 0 1 0 2 .263 Arias dh 3 1 1 1 1 .215 b-Mnzrdo ph-dh 1 0 1 0 0 .230 Schneemann rf 2 0 0 0 1 .385 Brennan rf 1 0 0 0 0 .233 Rocchio ss 4 1 1 0 0 .214 TOTALS 35 6 10 6 10 Miami AB R H BI SO AVG Chisholm cf 4 1 1 1 2 .249 De La Cruz rf 4 0 1 0 0 .248 Bell 1b 4 0 0 0 0 .252 Burger 3b 4 1 1 1 2 .224 Sanchez dh 4 0 0 0 1 .239 Edwards ss 3 1 1 0 1 .222 Gordon lf 2 0 1 1 0 .234 a-Myers ph-lf 1 0 0 0 1 .213 Brujan 2b 3 0 0 0 1 .250 Fortes c 2 0 0 0 0 .169 c-Gray ph 1 0 0 0 1 .000 Bethancourt c 0 0 0 0 0 .155 TOTALS 32 3 5 3 9 Cleveland 010 001 301 6 10 1 Miami 000 110 001 3 5 2 a-struck out for Gordon in the 7th. b-doubled for Arias in the 8th. c-struck out for Fortes in the 8th. E: Freeman (1), Fortes (3), Burger (6). LOB: Cleveland 7, Miami 2. 2B: Ramirez (14), Manzardo (10), De La Cruz (11), Edwards (1). HR: Arias (2), off Rogers; Freeman (6), off Puk; Chisholm (9), off Carrasco; Burger (5), off Clase. RBIs: Arias (11), Fry (29), Freeman 3 (27), Ramirez (62), Chisholm (31), Gordon (22), Burger (22). SB: Ramirez (10). Runners left in scoring position: Cleveland 3 (Brennan, Arias, J.Naylor); Miami 2 (Sanchez, Chisholm). RISP: Cleveland 3 for 8; Miami 1 for 7. Runners moved up: Bell, Fortes. GIDP: Ramirez, Fry. DP: Miami 2 (Edwards, Brujan, Bell; Burger, Brujan, Bell). CLEVELAND IP H R ER BB SO ERA Carrasco 4 ⅔ 4 2 2 0 3 5.50 Herrin ⅓ 0 0 0 0 1 1.05 Sandlin, W, 5-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.63 Hentges, H, 4 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.00 Gaddis, H, 13 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.72 Clase 1 1 1 1 0 1 0.57 MIAMI IP H R ER BB SO ERA Rogers 5 2 1 1 4 5 5.37 Nardi, BS, 0-5 1 2 1 1 0 2 5.18 Puk, L, 0-7 ⅓ 3 3 3 0 0 7.30 Bender ⅔ 0 0 0 0 1 5.04 B.Smith 2 3 1 1 0 2 3.81 Inherited runners-scored: Herrin 1-0. HBP: Rogers (Freeman). WP: B.Smith. Umpires: Home, Nate Tomlinson; First, Quinn Wolcott; Second, Larry Vanover; Third, Chris Segal. T: 2:27. A: 12,850 (37,446). Minn. 11, Pittsburgh 5 (10) SUNDAY’S RESULT Minnesota AB R H BI SO AVG Santana 1b 5 1 1 2 2 .217 Larnach dh 3 1 1 0 0 .265 a-Lewis ph-dh 2 0 1 1 1 .353 Correa ss 5 2 3 2 0 .265 Kepler rf 5 1 2 1 0 .258 Miranda 3b 4 0 1 1 0 .273 2-Farmer pr-3b 0 1 0 0 0 .172 Kirilloff lf 3 0 0 1 0 .209 b-Margot ph-lf 3 1 2 1 0 .225 Buxton cf 5 1 0 0 2 .223 Jeffers c 5 2 2 0 0 .237 Castro 2b 2 1 0 1 1 .250 TOTALS 42 11 13 10 6 Pittsburgh AB R H BI SO AVG McCutchen rf 4 1 1 0 3 .238 Reynolds dh 4 1 1 1 1 .262 Joe lf-1b 5 1 1 2 2 .263 Cruz ss 5 0 2 1 0 .247 Gonzales 2b 5 0 2 0 0 .310 Tellez 1b 3 1 2 0 0 .218 1-Taylor pr-cf 1 0 0 0 0 .200 Triolo 3b 5 0 1 1 0 .215 Suwinski cf-lf 3 0 0 0 2 .175 Davis c 2 1 0 0 1 .150 c-Grandal ph-c 1 0 0 0 0 .167 TOTALS 38 5 10 5 9 Minnesota 300 001 000 7 11 13 0 Pittsburgh 010 030 000 1 5 10 1 a-sacrificed for Larnach in the 6th. b-lined out for Kirilloff in the 7th. c-grounded out for Davis in the 8th. 1-ran for Tellez in the 8th. 2-ran for Miranda in the 10th. E: Joe (4). LOB: Min 13, Pit 9. 2B: Jeffers (15), Miranda (10), Lewis (1), Santana (8), Tellez (6), Reynolds (15). 3B: Margot (1), Joe (1). RBIs: Miranda (21), Kirilloff (20), Lewis (4), Margot (12), Castro (17), Santana 2 (27), Correa 2 (26), Kepler (22), Triolo (20), Reynolds (35), Joe 2 (27), Cruz (25). SB: Taylor (5), Buxton (3). SF: Lewis. Runners left in scoring position: Min 8 (Jeffers 2, Miranda, Kirilloff, Correa, Kepler 2, Buxton); Pit 3 (Grandal, Davis, Cruz). RISP: Min 5 for 20; Pit 4 for 9. GIDP: Gonzales, Reynolds. DP: Min 2 (Castro, Correa, Santana; Correa, Santana). MINNESOTA IP H R ER BB SO ERA Ober 4 ⅔ 7 4 4 2 5 5.13 Thielbar ⅓ 0 0 0 0 0 5.17 Sands 1 2 0 0 0 1 4.61 Jax 1 0 0 0 1 2 2.30 Alcala 1 0 0 0 2 0 1.89 Duran, W, 1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.32 Staumont 1 1 1 0 0 0 0.00 PITTSBURGH IP H R ER BB SO ERA Jones 5 6 3 2 3 3 3.27 Nicolas, H, 1 ⅓ 1 1 1 1 0 6.14 Bruihl, BS, 0-1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.00 Stratton 1 ⅔ 0 0 0 0 1 4.31 Chapman 1 1 0 0 0 0 4.24 Heller, L, 0-1 1 5 7 6 1 2 49.50 Inherited runners-scored: Thielbar 1-0, Bruihl 3-1. IBB: off Bruihl (Correa). HBP: Nicolas (Castro), Heller 3 (Buxton,Castro,Farmer). WP: Jones, Nicolas, Bruihl. PB: Davis (2). Umpires: Home, Ryan Wills; First, Chad Fairchild; Second, Paul Clemons; Third, Carlos Torres. T: 3:24. A: 24,463 (38,753). L.A. Angels 9, Houston 7 SUNDAY’S RESULT Houston AB R H BI SO AVG Altuve 2b 5 2 4 3 0 .297 Bregman 3b 3 0 1 1 0 .237 Cabbage lf 1 0 0 0 1 .227 Alvarez dh 3 0 0 0 0 .292 Pena ss 5 0 1 1 0 .300 Diaz c 5 0 1 0 1 .257 Meyers cf 5 0 2 0 2 .263 Dubon lf-3b 3 2 1 0 0 .297 J.Abreu 1b 4 2 2 1 0 .132 McCormick rf 4 1 2 1 2 .214 TOTALS 38 7 14 7 6 Los Angeles AB R H BI SO AVG Stefanic 2b 5 0 0 1 0 .167 Guillorme 2b 0 0 0 0 0 .289 Rengifo 3b 4 1 2 0 0 .316 Ward lf 5 0 0 0 2 .247 Calhoun dh 3 1 2 1 0 .296 1-Tucker pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 .178 a-Adell ph 1 0 0 0 0 .189 Pillar rf 4 3 2 0 1 .381 O’Hoppe c 5 3 4 2 0 .269 Schanuel 1b 2 0 0 2 2 .211 Neto ss 3 1 1 1 2 .247 Moniak cf 3 0 1 2 1 .167 TOTALS 35 9 12 9 8 Houston 003 004 000 7 14 2 Los Angeles 010 211 022 9 12 0 One out when winning run scored. a-flied out for Tucker in the 9th. 1-ran for Calhoun in the 7th. E: Dubon 2 (5). LOB: Hou 8, LAA 8. 2B: Bregman (12), J.Abreu (2), McCormick (4), Meyers (6), Pillar (4), O’Hoppe (8), Neto (14). HR: Altuve (10), off Strickland; O’Hoppe (8), off Hader. RBIs: Altuve 3 (25), Bregman (30), Pena (24), J.Abreu (7), McCormick (9), Schanuel 2 (22), Moniak 2 (11), Calhoun (8), Neto (24), Stefanic (1), O’Hoppe 2 (28). SB: Meyers (5), Moniak (4), Rengifo 2 (17), O’Hoppe (1). CS: Moniak (1). SF: Schanuel 2. GIDP: Bregman, Diaz, Alvarez, Pillar. DP: Hou 1 (Pena, Altuve, J.Abreu); LAA 3 (Neto, Stefanic, Schanuel; Neto, Stefanic, Schanuel; Stefanic, Neto, Schanuel). HOUSTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA Verlander 5 7 4 4 0 3 3.95 Martinez, H, 3 ⅔ 0 1 0 0 2 2.12 Montero, H, 8 ⅓ 1 0 0 0 0 3.04 B.Abreu, H, 14 1 0 0 0 1 1 2.97 Pressly, BS, 1-6 ⅔ 2 2 2 1 1 5.40 Hader, L, 3-4 ⅔ 2 2 2 0 1 4.08 LOS ANGELES IP H R ER BB SO ERA Sandoval 5 ⅔ 8 5 5 3 4 5.23 Strickland ⅓ 2 2 2 0 0 3.33 Moore 1 2 0 0 0 0 5.11 Garcia 1 2 0 0 0 1 4.28 Estevez, W, 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.05 IBB: off Sandoval (Alvarez). HBP: Verlander 2 (Pillar,Neto), Strickland (Bregman), B.Abreu (Rengifo). WP: Pressly. T: 3:13. A: 42,703 (45,517). Toronto 6, Oakland 4 (10) SUNDAY’S RESULT Toronto AB R H BI SO AVG Horwitz 2b 4 0 1 0 0 .167 Cabrera p 0 0 0 0 0 --- Jansen c 4 0 0 0 0 .264 Guerrero 1b 5 0 1 0 2 .292 Bichette ss 4 1 0 0 0 .239 Turner dh 3 1 1 0 1 .233 1-Clement pr-3b 0 1 0 0 0 .232 Springer rf 4 1 1 0 0 .203 Varsho lf-cf 3 2 1 0 1 .217 Kiner-Falefa 3-2b 3 0 2 5 0 .275 Kiermaier cf 2 0 0 0 1 .203 a-Schneider ph-lf 1 0 0 1 0 .230 TOTALS 33 6 7 6 5 Oakland AB R H BI SO AVG Toro 3b 5 0 1 2 2 .269 Bleday cf 4 0 0 1 0 .237 Rooker dh 5 1 1 1 1 .270 Andujar lf 4 0 2 0 1 .302 Cameron rf 3 0 1 0 0 .226 b-Brown ph-rf 1 0 0 0 1 .190 Langeliers c 4 0 0 0 2 .197 Soderstrom 1b 3 1 1 0 0 .193 Diaz 2b 4 1 1 0 1 .133 Schuemann ss 3 1 0 0 2 .252 TOTALS 36 4 7 4 10 Toronto 020 000 010 3 6 7 0 Oakland 000 001 200 1 4 7 0 a-sacrificed for Kiermaier in the 8th. b-struck out for Cameron in the 8th. 1-ran for Turner in the 10th. LOB: Toronto 4, Oakland 6. 2B: Turner (12), Kiner-Falefa (7), Andujar (3). HR: Rooker (13), off Pearson. RBIs: Kiner-Falefa 5 (26), Schneider (31), Rooker (40), Toro 2 (23), Bleday (24). SB: Springer (8), Varsho (7). CS: Kiner-Falefa (1). SF: Schneider. S: Kiner-Falefa, Schuemann. GIDP: Bichette. DP: Oakland 1 (Diaz, Schuemann, Soderstrom). TORONTO IP H R ER BB SO ERA Francis 4 3 0 0 1 3 7.36 Pop 1 0 0 0 0 3 4.15 Pearson, H, 3 1 2 1 1 0 1 4.62 Richards, BS, 0-1 ⅔ 2 2 2 1 0 3.48 Green 1 ⅓ 0 0 0 0 2 2.03 Garcia, W, 3-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.08 Cabrera, S, 1-2 1 0 1 0 0 0 5.25 OAKLAND IP H R ER BB SO ERA Spence 7 5 2 2 0 3 3.68 Alexander, BS, 0-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 3.24 Miller 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.12 Adams, L, 0-2 1 1 3 2 3 1 3.63 HBP: Adams (Varsho). WP: Adams. T: 2:32. A: 11,276 (46,847). 44 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
NBA PLAYOFFS NBA FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) #1 Boston 2, #5 Dallas 0 G1: June 6 at Boston 107-89 G2: Sunday at Boston, 105-98 G3: Wednesday at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. G4: Fri, June 14 at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. x-G5: Mon., June 17 at Boston, 8:30 p.m. x-G6: Thu., June 20 at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. x-G7: Sun., June 23 at Boston, 8 p.m. NHL PLAYOFFS STANLEY CUP FINAL (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Florida 1, Edmonton 0 G1: Saturday at Florida 3-0 G2: Monday at Florida, 8 p.m. G3: Thursday at Edmonton, 8 p.m. G4: Sat, June 15 at Edmonton, 8 p.m. x-G5: Tue, June 18 at Florida, 8 p.m. x-G6: Fri, June 21 at Edmonton, 8 p.m. x-G7: Mon, June 24 at Florida, 8 p.m. FINAL SERIES PLAYOFF STATS Through Game 1 Stanley Cup Final FLORIDA G A PT S ATOI Matthew Tkachuk 5 14 19 67 18:45 Aleksander Barkov 6 13 19 47 21:43 Carter Verhaeghe 10 8 18 64 19:55 Sam Reinhart 8 5 13 68 21:56 Anton Lundell 3 9 12 21 16:35 Gustav Forsling 4 7 11 44 23:24 Sam Bennett 6 5 11 28 15:26 Brandon Montour 3 7 10 38 23:08 Evan Rodrigues 4 5 9 33 14:35 Eetu Luostarinen 2 5 7 24 15:21 Vladimir Tarasenko 3 3 6 30 14:01 Aaron Ekblad 0 5 5 25 22:45 Oliver Ekman-Larsson 1 3 4 19 15:09 Steven Lorentz 2 1 3 5 6:53 Niko Mikkola 1 2 3 16 18:51 Kyle Okposo 0 2 2 12 8:37 Nick Cousins 0 1 1 8 8:35 Kevin Stenlund 0 1 1 15 11:18 Sergei Bobrovsky 0 1 1 0 60:57 Ryan Lomberg 0 0 0 9 7:41 Dmitry Kulikov 0 0 0 10 13:58 Team 55 92 147 565 — GOALTENDER W L SV% GAA MIN Sergei Bobrovsky 13 5 .915 2.08 1097 Team 13 5 .915 2.08 1097 EDMONTON G A PT S ATOI Connor McDavid 5 26 31 61 23:02 Leon Draisaitl 10 18 28 61 21:30 Evan Bouchard 6 21 27 58 24:41 Ryan Nugent-Hopkins 6 14 20 26 20:12 Zach Hyman 14 4 18 79 21:19 Evander Kane 4 4 8 44 15:11 Mattias Ekholm 4 3 7 31 21:46 Brett Kulak 1 4 5 13 16:36 Dylan Holloway 3 1 4 24 11:53 Mattias Janmark 2 2 4 14 11:19 Cody Ceci 2 2 4 19 19:45 Adam Henrique 2 2 4 8 14:28 Connor Brown 1 3 4 8 11:04 Darnell Nurse 0 3 3 32 19:47 Warren Foegele 1 2 3 25 12:01 Corey Perry 0 1 1 11 11:03 Vincent Desharnais 0 1 1 4 17:19 Sam Carrick 0 1 1 4 9:26 Derek Ryan 0 1 1 8 8:55 Philip Broberg 1 0 1 3 14:32 Ryan McLeod 1 0 1 19 13:58 Calvin Pickard 0 0 0 0 45:18 Stuart Skinner 0 0 0 0 60:07 Team 63 113 176 520 — GOALTENDER W L SV% GAA MIN Stuart Skinner 11 6 .897 2.47 1019 Calvin Pickard 1 1 .915 2.21 136 Team 12 7 .899 2.63 1155 NWSL CLUB W L T PT GF GA Kansas City 8 0 4 28 31 17 Orlando 8 0 4 28 21 11 Washington 9 3 0 27 26 16 Portland 7 4 1 22 25 16 Gotham FC 6 2 3 21 12 8 Chicago 5 6 1 16 16 17 Louisville 3 2 6 15 17 12 North Carolina 5 7 0 15 13 15 San Diego 3 4 4 13 10 10 Bay FC 4 8 0 12 17 24 Houston 3 6 3 12 11 20 Angel City 3 6 2 11 12 18 Seattle 2 9 1 7 13 25 Utah Royals FC 1 10 1 4 6 21 Three points for win, one point for tie. SUNDAY’S RESULT Kansas City 5, Seattle 2 FRIDAY, JUNE 14 Chicago at Kansas City, 8 p.m. SATURDAY’S RESULTS Gotham FC 2, Angel City 1 Bay FC 2, Chicago 1 Washington 1, Utah Royals FC 0 Portland 1, North Carolina 0 SOCCER MLS EASTERN W L T PT GF GA Inter Miami CF 10 3 5 35 42 27 Cincinnati 10 3 3 33 23 16 New York City FC 9 5 2 29 24 17 New York 8 4 5 29 29 23 Charlotte FC 7 6 4 25 18 18 Toronto FC 7 7 3 24 26 26 Columbus 6 2 6 24 21 13 Philadelphia 4 4 8 20 27 23 Nashville 4 5 7 19 20 22 D.C. United 4 6 7 19 25 31 Orlando City 4 7 5 17 16 24 CF Montréal 4 7 5 17 23 35 Atlanta 4 8 4 16 22 21 Chicago 3 8 6 15 17 29 New England 4 10 1 13 12 27 WESTERN W L T PT GF GA Real Salt Lake 9 2 6 33 36 19 Los Angeles FC 9 4 3 30 28 19 Minnesota United 8 3 5 29 28 21 LA Galaxy 7 3 7 28 31 25 Vancouver 7 5 4 25 24 19 Austin FC 6 6 5 23 21 25 Houston 6 6 4 22 18 18 Colorado 6 7 4 22 29 31 Portland 5 7 6 21 32 32 Seattle 4 7 6 18 20 21 St Louis City 3 4 9 18 23 25 FC Dallas 3 8 5 14 18 25 Sporting KC 3 9 5 14 26 32 San Jose 3 11 2 11 24 39 Three points for win, one point for tie. FRIDAY, JUNE 14 Columbus at New York City FC, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, JUNE 15 Houston at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. D.C. United at Charlotte FC, 7:30 p.m. Real Salt Lake at CF Montréal, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at New England, 7:30 p.m. Nashville at N.Y. Red Bulls, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles FC at Orlando City, 7:30 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Toronto FC, 7:30 p.m. St Louis City at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Austin FC at Colorado, 9:30 p.m. Sporting KC at LA Galaxy, 10:30 p.m. Cincinnati at San Jose, 10:30 p.m. Minnesota at Seattle, 10:30 p.m. SATURDAY’S RESULTS New England 1, N.Y. Red Bulls 0 FC Dallas 1, Minnesota 1 Portland 0, St Louis City 0 Sporting KC 2, Seattle 1 U.S. WOMEN’S SCHEDULE (9-1-0) June 4: U.S. 3, South Korea 0 July 13: vs. Mexico, 2:30 p.m. July 16: vs. Coasta Rica, 7:30 p.m. w-July 25: vs. Zambia, 3 p.m. w-July 28: vs. Germany, 3 p.m. w-July 31: vs. Australia, 2:30 p.m. w-Olympic Tournament U.S. MEN’S SCHEDULE (2-2-0) Saturday: Colombia 5, USA 1 Wed, June 12: vs. Brazil, 7 p.m. in Orlando, Fla. c-Sun., June 23: vs. Bolivia, 6 p.m. in Arlington, Texas c-COPA America U.S. OPEN CUP QUARTERFINALS: Tue. July 9 — Wed., July 10 Spring KC vs. Dallas FC, TBD Atlanta United vs. Indy Eleven, TD Sacramento Rep. FC vs. Seattle FC, TBD LAFC vs. New Mexico United, TBD Semifinal: Tue., Aug. 27 — Wed., Aug. 28 Final: Wed., Sept. 25 STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS 2023: Vegas, Coach Bruce Cassidy 2022: Colorado, Coach Jared Bednar 2021: Tampa Bay, Coach Jon Cooper 2020: Tampa Bay, Coach Jon Cooper 2019: St. Louis, Coach Craig Berube 2018: Washington, Coach Barry Trotz 2017: Pittsburgh, Coach Mike Sullivan 2016: Pittsburgh, Coach Mike Sullivan TENNIS 123RD FRENCH OPEN Sunday at Stade Roland Garros; Paris; outdoors, Red clay MEN”S SINGLES, FINAL #3 Carlos Alcaraz d. #4 Alexander Zverev, 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2. SATURDAY’S WOMEN”S SINGLES FINAL #1 Iga Swiatek d. #12 Jasmine Paolini 6-2, 6-1. ROAD TO THE FINALS #3 Carlos Alcaraz R1: J.J. Wolf, 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 R2: Jesper De Jong, 6-3, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 R3: #27 Sebastian Korda, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-3 R4: #21 Felix Auger-Aliassime, 6-3, 6-3, 6-1 QF: #9 Stefanos Tsitsipas, 6-3, 7-6(3), 6-4. SF: #2 Jannik Sinner2-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3. #4 Alexander Zverev R1: Rafael Nadal, 6-3, 7-6 (7-5), 6-3 R2: David Goffin, 7-6 (4), 6-2, 6-2 R3: #26 Tallon Griekspoor, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6 (10-3) R4: #13 Holger Rune, 4-6, 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 (2), 6-2 QF: #11 Alex de Minaur, 6-4, 7-6(5), 6-4. SF: #7 Casper Ruud, 2-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. WTA OPEN DE PUGLIE Sunday at Circolo del Tennis Bari; Bari, Italy; outdoors, Red clay WOMEN’S SINGLES, FINAL Anca Todoni d. Panna Udvardy, 6-4, 6-0. WTA MAKARSKA OPEN Sunday at Bluesun Tennis Center; Makarska, Croatia; Red clay, outdoors WOMEN’S SINGLES, FINAL #8 Katie Volynets d. #2 Mayar Sherif, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. COLLEGE BASEBALL NCAA DIVISION I SUPER REGIONALS (Best-of-3; x-if necessary) TALLAHASSEE Friday: Florida State 24, UConn 4 Saturday: Florida State 10, UConn 8 (12) KNOXVILLE Friday: Tennessee 11, Evansville 6 Saturday: Evansville 10, Tennessee 6 Sunday: Tennessee 12, Evansville 1 CHAPEL HILL Friday: North Carolina 8, West Virginia 6 Saturday: North Carolina 2, West Virginia 1 CHARLOTTESVILLE Friday: Virginia 7, Kansas State 4 Saturday: Virginia 10, Kansas State 4 ATHENS Saturday: NC State 18, Georgia 1 Sunday: Georgia 11, NC State 2 Monday: NC State (35-21) vs. Georgia (41-16), TBA CLEMSON Saturday: Florida 10, Clemson 7 Sunday: Florida 11, Clemson 10 (13) BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION Saturday: Texas A&M 10, Oregon 6 Sunday: Texas A&M 15, Oregon 9 LEXINGTON Saturday: Kentucky 10, Oregon State 0 Sunday: Kentucky (43-14) vs. Oregon State (43-14), late x-Monday: Oregon State vs. Kentucky, TBA Winners advance to College World Series LIBERTY SCHEDULE June 15: at Las Vegas, 3 p.m. June 18: at Phoenix, 10 p.m. June 20: vs. Los Angeles, 7 p.m. June 22: vs. Los Angeles, 5 p.m. June 23: at Atlanta, 3 p.m. June 30: vs. Atlanta, 1 p.m. July 2: vs. Minnesota, 7 p.m. July 6: at Indiana, 1 p.m. July 10: at Connecticut, 11 a.m. July 11: vs. Chicago, 7 p.m. July 13: at Chicago, 1 p.m. July 16: vs. Connecticut, 7 p.m. August 15: at Los Angeles, 9 p.m. August 17: at Las Vegas, 4 p.m. August 20: vs. Dallas, 7 p.m. August 22: vs. Dallas, 7 p.m. August 24: vs. Connecticut, 7 p.m. August 28: at Los Angeles, 10 p.m. Florida 3, Edmonton 0 SATURDAY’S GAME 1 RESULTS Edmonton 0 0 0 — 0 Florida 1 1 1 — 3 First Period: 1, Florida, Verhaeghe 10 (Barkov, Reinhart), 3:59 Penalties: Ekholm, EDM (Tripping), 7:33; Forsling, FLA (Tripping), 14:53; Verhaeghe, FLA (High Sticking), 19:51 Second Period: 2, Florida, Rodrigues 4 (Montour, Bennett), 2:16 Penalties: Stenlund, FLA (Roughing), 10:24; Ekman-Larsson, FLA (Roughing), 10:24; Brown, EDM (Roughing), 10:24; Janmark, EDM (Roughing), 10:24; Bennett, FLA (Interference), 10:38 Third Period: 3, Florida, Luostarinen 2 (Barkov), 19:55 (en) Penalties: Perry, EDM (Interference), 6:47 Shots on Goal: Edmonton 12-13-8—33; Florida 4-8-6—18 Power-play opportunities: Edmonton 0 of 3; Florida 0 of 2 Goalies: Edmonton, Skinner 11-6-0 (17 shots15 saves); Florida, Bobrovsky 13-5-0 (32-32) A: 19,543 (19,250) T: 2:31 Referees: Steve Kozari, Dan O’Rourke Linesmen: Matt MacPherson, Jonny Murray WNBA EAST W L Pct GB Connecticut 9 1 .900 ½ New York 11 2 .846 — Atlanta 5 4 .556 4 Chicago 4 6 .400 5½ Indiana 3 9 .250 7½ Washington 0 12 .000 10½ WEST W L Pct GB Minnesota 8 3 .727 — Seattle 7 4 .636 1 Las Vegas 5 4 .556 2 Phoenix 6 6 .500 2½ Los Angeles 4 7 .364 4 Dallas 3 7 .300 4½ SUNDAY’S RESULTS New York 93, Washington 88 Phoenix 97, Dallas 90 (2OT) Minnesota 83, Seattle 64 Los Angeles 96, Las Vegas 92 MONDAY’S GAMES Indiana at Connecticut, 7 p.m. TUESDAY’S GAMES Washington at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Seattle, 10 p.m. Minnesota at Las Vegas, 10 p.m. WEDNESDAY’S GAMES Connecticut at Chicago, 8 p.m. SATURDAY’S RESULTS New York 82, Connecticut 75 Atlanta 89, Chicago 80 New York 93, Washington 88 SUNDAY’S RESULT FG FT Reb WASH. Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS Edwards 30:26 4-6 1-2 2-6 3 1 9 Samuelson 25:34 2-6 0-0 0-1 2 6 5 Dolson 20:51 3-6 1-1 0-2 3 3 7 Atkins 37:38 5-10 0-0 1-2 5 3 13 Vanloo 22:55 2-6 2-2 0-0 4 3 8 Hines-Allen 24:35 7-13 4-5 0-8 7 2 20 Walker-Kimbrough 20:33 2-7 0-0 0-1 0 0 5 Melbourne 13:44 8-12 2-2 0-1 1 1 21 Engstler 3:44 0-1 0-0 1-1 1 0 0 Totals 200:00 33-67 10-12 4-22 26 19 88 Percentages: FG .493, FT .833. 3-Point Goals: 12-28, .429 (Melbourne 3-6, Atkins 3-7, Hines-Allen 2-2, Vanloo 2-4, Walker-Kimbrough 1-3, Samuelson 1-4, Dolson 0-1, Engstler 0-1). Team Rebounds: 4. Team Turnovers: None. Blocked Shots: 2 (Dolson, Edwards). Turnovers: 12 (Hines-Allen 3, Atkins 2, Dolson 2, Melbourne 2, Samuelson 2, Vanloo). Steals: 7 (Edwards 2, Hines-Allen 2, Atkins, Dolson, Walker-Kimbrough). Technical Fouls: None. FG FT Reb NEW YORK Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS Stewart 36:16 4-14 6-6 1-7 3 5 14 Thornton 17:28 1-5 0-0 3-4 0 0 2 Jones 32:33 11-15 4-4 3-8 3 1 29 Ionescu 34:23 7-13 2-3 2-6 8 2 19 Laney-Hamilton 3 2:58 0-1 5-5 2-10 6 3 5 Fiebich 24:52 4-9 0-0 0-3 1 5 12 Burke 11:11 3-6 2-2 2-2 2 0 9 Dojkic 7:32 1-2 0-0 0-0 0 1 3 Davis 2:47 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Totals 200:00 31-65 19-20 13-40 24 17 93 Percentages: FG .477, FT .950. 3-Point Goals: 12-27, .444 (Fiebich 4-8, Ionescu 3-4, Jones 3-5, Dojkic 1-1, Burke 1-2, Thornton 0-2, Stewart 0-5). Team Rebounds: 5. Team Turnovers: None. Blocked Shots: 3 (Jones 2, Thornton). Turnovers: 21 (Ionescu 8, Laney-Hamilton 7, Stewart 3, Jones 2, Fiebich). Steals: 7 (Stewart 3, Fiebich, Ionescu, Laney-Hamilton, Thornton). Technical Fouls: None. Washington 23 22 25 18 — 88 New York 24 21 27 21 — 93 A: 12,477 (17,732). T: 2:03. AUTO RACING NASCAR CUP SERIES: TOYOTA / SAVE MART 350 Sunday at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway Lap length: 1.99 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevy, 110 laps, 48 pts. 2. (12) Michael McDowell, Ford, 110, 40. 3. (26) Chris Buescher, Ford, 110, 44. 4. (4) Chase Elliott, Chevy, 110, 40. 5. (9) Ross Chastain, Chevy, 110, 36. 6. (11) AJ Allmendinger, Chevy, 110, 0. 7. (3) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 110, 39. 8. (2) Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 110, 39. 9. (15) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 110, 28. 10. (14) Todd Gilliland, Ford, 110, 31. 11. (17) Corey LaJoie, Chevy, 110, 28. 12. (29) Kyle Busch, Chevy, 110, 32. 13. (35) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 110, 29. 14. (7) Daniel Suárez, Chevy, 110, 26. 15. (8) Alex Bowman, Chevy, 110, 28. 16. (20) Zane Smith, Chevy, 110, 21. 17. (13) Carson Hocevar, Chevy, 110, 20. 18. (30) Ryan Preece, Ford, 110, 28. 19. (38) Erik Jones, Toyota, 110, 22. 20. (18) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 110, 17. 21. (1) Joey Logano, Ford, 110, 18. 22. (28) Austin Cindric, Ford, 110, 15. 23. (36) Kaz Grala, Ford, 110, 14. 24. (33) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Chevy, 110, 13. 25. (22) Harrison Burton, Ford, 110, 13. 26. (19) Noah Gragson, Ford, 110, 11. 27. (21) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 110, 18. 28. (34) Daniel Hemric, Chevy, 109, 9. 29. (37) John H. Nemechek, Toyota, 109, 8. 30. (6) William Byron, Chevy, 108, 7. 31. (24) Will Brown, Chevy, 107, 6. 32. (32) Josh Berry, Ford, suspension, 95, 5. 33. (27) Justin Haley, Ford, garage, 88, 4. 34. (23) Chase Briscoe, Ford, transmission, 73, 3. 35. (31) Cam Waters, Ford, accident, 66, 2. 36. (16) Austin Dillon, Chevy, dvp, 39, 1. 37. (10) Ty Gibbs, Toyota, dvp, 16, 1. 38. (25) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, engine, 2, 1. RACE STATISTICS Winner’s Average Speed: 74.528 mph. Time: 2 hours, 56 minutes, 14 seconds. Margin of Victory: 4.258 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 22 laps. Lead Changes: 11 among 9 drivers. Lap Leaders: J.Logano 0-16; T.Reddick 17-33; R.Blaney 34; T.Reddick 35-52; C.Buescher 53-67; A.Allmendinger 68-70; K.Larson 71-80; C.Elliott 81-83; C.Buescher 84-100; M.Truex 101; K.Larson 102-110; K.Busch 111 Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): T.Reddick, 2 times for 35 laps; C.Buescher, 2 times for 32 laps; K.Larson, 2 times for 19 laps; J.Logano, 1 time for 16 laps; C.Elliott, 1 time for 3 laps; A.Allmendinger, 1 time for 3 laps; R.Blaney, 1 time for 1 lap; K.Busch, 1 time for 1 lap; M.Truex, 1 time for 1 lap. Wins: D.Hamlin, 3; W.Byron, 3; K.Larson, 2; C.Bell, 2; C.Elliott, 1; T.Reddick, 1; B.Keselowski, 1; A.Cindric, 1; D.Suárez, 1. Top 16 in Points: 1. D.Hamlin, 534; 2. K.Larson, 513; 3. C.Elliott, 507; 4. M.Truex, 490; 5. W.Byron, 488; 6. T.Reddick, 473; 7. T.Gibbs, 465; 8. C.Bell, 437; 9. B.Keselowski, 437; 10. A.Bowman, 417; 11. R.Chastain, 417; 12. R.Blaney, 405; 13. B.Wallace, 371; 14. C.Buescher, 368; 15. C.Briscoe, 358; 16. J.Logano, 354. Boston 105, Dallas 98 SUNDAY’S GAME 2 RESULT FG FT REB DALLAS Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS Jones Jr. 32:07 4-7 3-3 2-3 2 2 11 Washington 39:58 6-13 4-4 2-7 1 3 17 Gafford 22:43 6-9 1-4 2-9 0 0 13 Doncic 42:18 12-21 4-8 0-11 11 1 32 Irving 41:27 7-18 2-2 0-2 6 4 16 Lively II 19:01 1-3 0-0 3-7 0 1 2 Kleber 16:17 0-4 0-0 0-2 0 4 0 Green 13:40 1-4 2-3 0-1 0 2 4 Exum 10:30 1-1 0-0 0-1 1 0 3 Hardy 1:59 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 240:00 38-80 16-24 9-43 21 17 98 Percentages: FG .475, FT .667 3-Point Goals: 6-26, .231 (Doncic 4-9, Exum 1-1, Washington 1-5, Kleber 0-2, Green 0-3, Irving 0-3, Jones Jr. 0-3) Team Rebounds: 11 Team Turnovers: None Blocked Shots: 3 (Gafford, Jones Jr., Washington) Turnovers: 15 (Doncic 8, Irving 2, Lively II 2, Exum, Jones Jr., Washington) Steals: 5 (Doncic 4, Jones Jr.) Technical Fouls: None FG FT REB BOSTON Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS Brown 42:25 8-15 4-4 2-4 7 3 21 Tatum 45:09 6-22 5-6 1-9 12 2 18 Horford 28:06 2-4 0-0 0-7 2 2 5 Holiday 40:42 11-14 2-2 4-11 3 3 26 White 38:05 6-15 2-2 2-5 2 2 18 Porzingis 23:14 4-7 4-4 0-4 1 2 12 Pritchard 12:01 1-2 0-0 1-1 2 0 3 Hauser 10:18 0-5 2-2 0-0 0 1 2 Totals 240:00 38-84 19-20 10-41 29 15 105 Percentages: FG .452, FT .950 3-Point Goals: 10-39, .256 (White 4-10, Holiday 2-4, Pritchard 1-2, Horford 1-3, Brown 1-5, Tatum 1-7, Porzingis 0-3, Hauser 0-5) Team Rebounds: 2 Team Turnovers: 1 Blocked Shots: 5 (Porzingis 2, White 2, Holiday) Turnovers: 10 (Brown 6, Tatum 3, White) Steals: 10 (Brown 3, White 3, Holiday, Horford, Pritchard, Tatum) Technical Fouls: None Dallas 28 23 23 24 — 98 Boston 25 29 29 22 — 105 A—19,156 (18,624). T—2:18 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 45
SPORTS CALENDAR MON JUN 10 TUE JUN 11 WED JUN 12 THU JUN 13 FRI JUN 14 SAT JUN 15 SUN JUN 16 KC 8:00 P.M. YES KC 8:00 P.M. YES KC 8:00 P.M. PRIME KC 2:00 P.M. YES BOS 7:00 P.M. YES BOS 7:15 P.M. CH. 5 BOS 7:00 P.M. ESPN FLA 7:00 A.M. SNY FLA 7:00 A.M. SNY FLA 7:00 A.M. SNY SD 7:00 A.M. SNY SD 4:00 A.M. CH. 11 SD 1:30 A.M. CH. 11 NASH 7:30 A.M. APPLE COL 7:30 P.M. APPLE LV 3:00 P.M. CH. 7 MLB 6:30 p.m.: Orioles at Rays, FS1 8 p.m.: Yankees at Royals, YES 9:30 p.m.: Regional Coverage: Astros at Giants OR White Sox at Mariners, MLB WNBA 7 p.m.: Indiana at Connecticut, NBATV NHL 8 p.m.: Stanley Cup Final: Oilers at Panthers, Game 2, Ch. 7 SOCCER 11:50 a.m.: International Friendly: Czech Republic vs. North Macedonia, Kralove, Czechia, FS2 2:30 p.m.: International Friendly: Netherlands vs. Iceland, Rotterdam, Netherlands, FS2 8:30 p.m.: The Soccer Tournament: TBD, Final, Cary, N.C., ESPNEWS 7 p.m.: The Soccer Tournament: TBD, Final, Cary, N.C., ESPNU SOFTBALL 6 p.m.: Athletes Unlimited: Team Wiggins vs. Team Leach, Wichita, Kan., ESPNEWS 8:30 p.m.: Athletes Unlimited: Team Warren vs. Team Leach, Wichita, Kan., ESPNU TENNIS 5 a.m.: s-Hertogenbosch-ATP/ WTA, Stuttgart-ATP, Nottingham-WTA Early Rounds, TENNIS 6 a.m.: s-Hertogenbosch-ATP/ WTA, Stuttgart-ATP, Nottingham-WTA Early Rounds, TENNIS 5 a.m. (Tuesday): s-Hertogenbosch-ATP/WTA, Stuttgart-ATP, Nottingham-WTA Early Rounds, TENNIS 6 a.m. (Tuesday): s-Hertogenbosch-ATP/WTA, Stuttgart-ATP, Nottingham-WTA Early Rounds, TENNIS HORSE RACING 156TH BELMONT STAKES 12th Race at Saratoga, Saturday; 12th-$2,000,000, Stakes, 3-Year-Olds, One Mile and One Fourth. Belmont S. Presented by NYRA Bets Off 6:45. Clear, Fast Horse Wgt PP 1/4 1/2 3/4 1M Strch Fin Jockey (6)Dornoch 126 6 2-½ 2-1 2-2 1-hd 2-3 1-½ L. Saez (10)Mindframe 126 10 4-1 3-½ 3-hd 3-2 1-hd 2-1 I. Ortiz Jr. (9)Sierra Leone 126 9 9-4 9-2½ 9-2½ 10 3-hd 3-4 F. Prat (8)Honor Marie 126 8 10 10 10 8-hd 6-1 4-2 F. Geroux (5)Antiquarian 126 5 6-½ 5-1½ 5-1½ 4-½ 5-hd 5-2¼ J. Velazquez (7)Protective 126 7 8-2 8-2 8-½ 9-1 8-3 6-3 T. Gaffalione (1)Seize the Grey 126 1 1-1½ 1-½ 1-½ 2-½ 4-½ 7-3 J. Torres 5.30 (9)Mystik Dan 126 3 5-hd 7-5 7-5 6-½ 7-½ 8-6 B.Hernandez Jr. (1)The Wine Steward 126 4 7-4 6-½ 6-½ 5-1 9-4 9-11½ M. Franco (2)Resillence 126 2 3-hd 4-hd 4-hd 7-hd 10 10 J. Alvarado Time 22.99 47.25 1:10.67 1:35.51 2:01.64 6 (6) Dornoch 37.40 17.60 8.10 10 (10) Mindframe 6.80 4.20 9 (9) Sierre Leone 2.60 $1 Pick 6 (1-1-8-2-9-6) 6 Correct Paid $35,034.00. $1 Pick 6 (1-1-8-2-9-6) 5 Correct Paid $227.25. $0.50 Pick 5 (1-8-2-9-6) 5 Correct Paid $3,972.50. $0.5 Pick 4 (8-2-9-6) 4 Correct Paid $514.00. $1 Pick 3 (2-9-6) 3 Correct Paid $213.25. $0.50 Trifecta (6-10-9) paid $236.50. $0.10 Superfecta (6-10-9-8) paid $320.05. $1 Exacta (6-10) paid $163.25. $1 Daily Double (9-6) paid $86.50. $5 Daily Double (MET MILE/BELMONT) (2-6) paid $240.00. $5 Daily Double (NEW YORK/BELMONT) (3-6) paid $942.50. Trainer: Danny Gargan Winner: Dornoch, Bay Colt, by Good Magic out of Puca, by Big Brown. Foaled Apr 22, 2021 in Kentucky. Copyright 2024, Equibase Company LLC UFL PLAYOFFS CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS SATURDAY’S RESULT USFL: Birmingham 31, Michigan 18 SUNDAY’S GAME XFL: San Antonio 25, St. Louis 15 UFL CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY, JUNE 16 IN ST. LOUIS Birmingham vs. San Antonio, 5 p.m. SEASON PLAYER STATISTICS Through regular season statistics PASS YARDS TM YDS TD I RAT Luis Perez Arl 2,310 18 4 99.4 Jordan Ta’amu DC 1,854 15 9 82.1 Adrian Martinez Bir 1,748 15 3 99.0 A.J. McCarron StL 1,582 15 4 94.6 Quinten Dormady SA 1,206 6 6 77.9 Reid Sinnett Hou 1,136 5 4 79.5 Case Cookus Mem 989 7 4 83.1 Danny Etling Mich 787 3 2 82.7 Chase Garbers SA 767 6 2 90.4 E.J. Perry Mich 664 2 3 78.1 RUSHING YARDS TM CAR YDS AVG TD Adrian Martinez Bir 54 528 9.78 3 Jacob Saylors StL 94 461 4.90 5 De’Veon Smith Arl 110 451 4.10 3 John Lovett SA 103 421 4.09 5 Matt Colburn Mich 90 401 4.46 4 Darius Victor Mem 106 391 3.69 4 Ricky Person Bir 93 297 3.19 6 CJ Marable Bir 80 294 3.68 4 Wes Hills Mich 72 277 3.85 5 T.J. Pledger Hou 77 253 3.29 0 RECEIVING YARDS TM REC YDS AVG TD Hakeem Butler StL 45 652 14.49 5 Jontre Kirklin SA 56 614 10.96 3 Justin Hall Hou 56 604 10.79 3 Tyler Vaughns Arl 45 503 11.18 3 Sal Cannella Arl 53 497 9.38 6 Jace Sternberger Bir 25 454 18.16 4 Daewood Davis Mem 41 446 10.88 5 Jonathan Adams Mem 33 441 13.36 1 TOUCHDOWNS TM PT TD PASS RUN Adrian Martinez Bir 116 18 15 3 Luis Perez Arl 124 18 18 0 Jordan Ta’amu DC 110 16 15 1 AJ McCarron StL 110 16 15 1 Jacob Saylors StL 50 8 - 5 Case Cookus Mem 46 7 7 0 Chase Garbers SA 44 7 6 1 FIELD GOALS TM PT FG FGA LG Andre Szmyt StL 57 19 21 61 Jake Bates Mich 51 17 22 64 Matt Coghlin Mem 48 16 17 57 Matthew McCrane DC 48 16 20 58 J.J. Molson Hou 45 15 18 62 Jonathan Garibay Arl 39 13 14 48 Ryan Santoso SA 36 12 18 51 Ramiz Ahmed Bir 30 10 13 46 Chris Blewitt Bir 24 8 9 46 Taylor Russolino Arl 15 5 6 52 KICKOFF RETURNS TM KR AVG TD LG Chris Rowland DC 45 27.0 1 82 Juwan Manigo Arl 43 22.4 0 45 Titus Swen Mem 35 25.4 0 38 Darrius Shepherd StL 32 27.1 0 60 Gary Jennings Bir 21 23.8 0 35 INTERCEPTIONS TM I YDS LG PD A.J. Thomas Bir 3 51 29 4 Markel Roby Hou 3 42 18 8 Kai Nacua Mich 3 6 4 8 Kameron Kelly StL 3 43 22 5 BELMONT STAKES WINNERS; *2020 race run at 1 & 1/8 miles and as the 1st of the 3 Triple Crown races due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Year Horse Trainer Jockey Time 2023 Arcangelo Jena M. Antonucci Javier Castellano 2:29.23 2022 Mo Donegal Todd Pletcher Irad Ortiz Jr. 2:28.28 2021 Essential Quality Brad H. Cox Luis Saez 02:27.1 2020* Tiz the Law Barclay Tagg Manny Franco 01:46.5 2019 Sir Winston Mark E. Casse Joel Rosario 02:28.3 2018 Justify Bob Baffert Mike Smith 02:28.2 ODDS NHL STANLEY CUP MONDAY FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG LINE at Florida -137 Edmonton +114 Odds to win Stanley Cup Trophy Florida -250 Edmonton +210 Number of Games in Series (Best of 7) 6 Games +200 7 Games +200 5 Games +240 4 Games +600 Series Correct Score (Best of 7) Florida 4-1 +325 Florida 4-2 +400 Florida 4-3 +425 Edmonton 4-3 +600 Florida 4-0 +600 Edmonton 4-2 +650 Edmonton 4-1 +1600 MLB MONDAY American League FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG LINE Baltimore -164 at Tampa Bay +138 N.Y Yankees -130 at Kasnas City +110 at Seattle -230 Chi White Sox +190 Interleague FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG LINE at Minnesota -225 Colorado +188 Toronto -112 at Milwaukee -104 at San Diego -220 Oakland +184 Houston -120 at San Fran. +102 For the latest odds, go to BetMGM Sportsbook, https://sports.betmgm.com/en/sports GOLF PGA THE MEMORIAL TOURNAMENT 4th of 4 rounds, Muirfield Village Golf Club, Dublin, Ohio, 7,569 yards; Par: 72 Scottie Scheffler 67-68-71-74—280 -8 Collin Morikawa 68-74-68-71—281 -7 Adam Hadwin 66-72-72-74—284 -4 Ch. Bezuidenhout 72-67-74-72—285 -3 Ludvig Aberg 68-72-72-74—286 -2 Matt Fitzpatrick 73-70-74-69—286 -2 Sepp Straka 72-70-68-76—286 -2 Tony Finau 71-70-73-73—287 -1 Sungjae Im 76-71-67-73—287 -1 Hideki Matsuyama 73-70-74-70—287 -1 Xander Schauffele 68-73-71-75—287 -1 Nick Dunlap 70-73-70-75—288 E Victor Perez 71-74-68-75—288 E Sahith Theegala 73-71-69-75—288 E Sam Burns 71-75-71-73—290 +2 Billy Horschel 69-74-76-71—290 +2 Viktor Hovland 69-69-77-75—290 +2 Si Woo Kim 72-70-73-75—290 +2 Rory McIlroy 70-71-73-76—290 +2 Corey Conners 68-76-76-71—291 +3 Tommy Fleetwood 69-73-73-76—291 +3 Byeong Hun An 71-73-73-75—292 +4 Akshay Bhatia 69-72-75-76—292 +4 Max Homa 71-73-72-76—292 +4 Alex Noren 70-74-75-73—292 +4 J.T. Poston 75-69-72-76—292 +4 Emiliano Grillo 70-78-76-69—293 +5 Russell Henley 73-71-74-75—293 +5 Seamus Power 69-74-73-77—293 +5 Adam Svensson 72-73-76-72—293 +5 Nick Taylor 73-73-74-73—293 +5 Davis Thompson 73-73-74-73—293 +5 Jason Day 73-75-69-77—294 +6 Brian Harman 77-69-71-77—294 +6 Matt Kuchar 75-71-74-74—294 +6 Peter Malnati 72-73-74-75—294 +6 Taylor Pendrith 74-71-77-72—294 +6 CHAMPIONS: AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE CHAMPIONSHIP 3rd of 3 rounds, University Ridge GC, Madison, Wis., 7,083 yards; Par: 72 (x-won on first playoff hole) x-Ernie Els 71-64-69—204 -12 Steve Stricker 69-66-69—204 -12 Cameron Percy 70-70-67—207 -9 Stephen Ames 73-68-67—208 -8 Doug Barron 70-72-66—208 -8 Thomas Bjorn 69-70-69—208 -8 Greg Chalmers 71-68-70—209 -7 Mark Hensby 73-67-69—209 -7 Ken Tanigawa 73-68-68—209 -7 Shane Bertsch 71-68-71—210 -6 Glen Day 68-74-68—210 -6 Chris DiMarco 72-67-71—210 -6 Thongchai Jaidee 71-68-71—210 -6 David Duval 69-68-74—211 -5 Matt Gogel 70-72-69—211 -5 Miguel Angel Jimenez 72-68-71—211 -5 Tim Petrovic 70-72-69—211 -5 Kevin Sutherland 72-69-70—211 -5 Steve Allan 70-69-73—212 -4 Skip Kendall 70-72-70—212 -4 Duffy Waldorf 69-70-73—212 -4 Angel Cabrera 73-69-71—213 -3 John Daly 74-70-69—213 -3 Steve Flesch 70-69-74—213 -3 Brian Gay 71-68-74—213 -3 Ricardo Gonzalez 73-69-71—213 -3 Lee Janzen 69-72-72—213 -3 Scott McCarron 71-69-73—213 -3 Tom Pernice 74-68-71—213 -3 John Senden 72-70-71—213 -3 LIV GOLF HOUSTON 3rd of 3 rounds, Golf Club of Houston, Houston, 7,353 yards; Par: 72 TEAMS SCORES 1st Place $3 million; 2nd Place $1.5 million; 3rd Place $500,000 Cleeks GC (M.Kaymer-c, R. Bland, A.Meronk, K.Samooja) -33 Fireballs GC (S.Garcia-c, A.Ancer, E.Lopez-Chacarra, D.Puig) -31 Smash GC (B.Koepka-c, T.Gooch, J.Kokrak, G.McDowell) -31 Torque GC (J.Niemann-c, C.Ortiz, M.Pereira, S.Munoz) -25 4 Aces GC (D.Johnson-c, P.Uihlein, P.Perez, P.Reed) -25 Crushers GC (B.DeChambeau-c, J. Catlin, A.Lahiri, P.Casey) -25 Legion XIII (B. Campbell, T.Hatton, K.Vincent, C.Surratt) -18 HyFlyers GC (P.Mickelson-c, B.Steele, A.Ogletree, C.Tringale) -15 Majesticks GC (I.Poulter-c, L.Westwood, H.Stenson, S.Horsfield) -15 Ripper GC (C.Smith-c, M.Leishman, M.Jones, L.Herbert) -13 Stinger GC (W. Ormsby, D.Burmester, C,Schwartzel, B.Grace) -11 Rangegoats GC (B.Watson-c, T.Pieters, P.Uihlein, M.Wolff) -10 Iron Heads GC (K.Na-c, S.Vincent, D.Lee, J.Kozuma) -4 TOP INDIVIDUALS $4,000,000 -15 Carlos Ortiz 66-68-67—201 $2,250,000 -14 Adrian Meronk 65-69-68—202 $1,250,000 -13 David Puig 68-66-69—203 Patrick Reed 67-68-68—203 $800,000 -11 Sergio Garcia 67-70-68—205 $608,333 -10 Graeme McDowell 69-68-69—206 Lucas Herbert 69-68-69—206 Anirban Lahiri 69-69-68—206 $396,875 -9 Paul Casey 67-67-73—207 Martin Kaymer 65-72-70—207 Cameron Tringale 70-69-68—207 Brooks Koepka 70-72-65—207 $340,000 -8 Dustin Johnson 67-71-70—208 $320,000 -7 Matthew Wolff 69-67-73—209 $285,000 -6 Sebastian Munoz 69-71-70—210 Henrik Stenson 70-70-70—210 Talor Gooch 73-71-66—210 SHOPRITE LPGA CLASSIC 3rd of 3 rounds, Bay Course, Galloway, N.J., 6.197 yards; Par: 71 Linnea Strom 69-70-60—199 -14 Ayaka Furue 67-68-65—200 -13 Megan Khang 65-69-66—200 -13 Atthaya Thitikul 69-67-65—201 -12 Morgane Metraux 68-68-66—202 -11 Marina Alex 68-71-64—203 -10 Na Rin An 64-70-69—203 -10 Wei-Ling Hsu 65-69-69—203 -10 Lauren Coughlin 69-68-67—204 -9 Jenny Shin 63-69-72—204 -9 Albane Valenzuela 65-68-71—204 -9 Ashleigh Buhai 67-72-66—205 -8 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 68-68-69—205 -8 Maria Fassi 68-68-69—205 -8 Jin Young Ko 67-69-69—205 -8 Nanna Koerstz Madsen 67-71-67—205 -8 Stephanie Kyriacou 65-70-70—205 -8 Jeongeun Lee6 67-68-70—205 -8 Azahara Munoz 66-71-68—205 -8 Yue Ren 68-68-69—205 -8 Lauren Hartlage 67-70-69—206 -7 Yuna Nishimura 67-71-68—206 -7 Yealimi Noh 66-69-71—206 -7 Mao Saigo 67-68-71—206 -7 Hinako Shibuno 66-71-69—206 -7 Arpichaya Yubol 61-75-70—206 -7 Dottie Ardina 68-70-69—207 -6 Ssu-Chia Cheng 69-65-73—207 -6 Alexandra Forsterling 70-69-68—207 -6 Hannah Green 71-68-68—207 -6 Mina Harigae 67-72-68—207 -6 Brooke Henderson 66-73-68—207 -6 Haeji Kang 67-70-70—207 -6 MinJi Kang 69-70-68—207 -6 Auston Kim 67-69-71—207 -6 Pornanong Phatlum 70-68-69—207 -6 Paula Reto 69-69-69—207 -6 Yu Jin Sung 67-68-72—207 -6 Lindsey Weaver-Wright 67-69-71—207 -6 Jaravee Boonchant 67-71-70—208 -5 Kristen Gillman 71-67-70—208 -5 Rachel Kuehn 66-71-71—208 -5 Somi Lee 68-68-72—208 -5 Roberta Liti 72-67-69—208 -5 Kaitlyn Papp 67-72-69—208 -5 Lizette Salas 67-70-71—208 -5 VOLVO SCANDINAVIAN MIXED 4th of 4 rounds, at Vasatorps GC; Helsingborg, Sweden; 7,295 yards; Par: 72 271 (-17) (0) $312,189 Linn Grant 67-68-71-65 272 (-16) (417) $158,849 Calum Hill 69-67-67-69 Sebastian Soderberg 63-66-66-77 275 (-13) (169) $77,986 Alex Fitzpatrick 65-71-70-69 Andy Sullivan 69-69-67-70 Johanna Gustavsson (0) 70-67-70-68 276 (-12) (107) $42,531 Ugo Coussaud 72-65-72-67 Jens Dantorp 68-67-70-71 Nacho Elvira 73-66-69-68 Nicole Broch Estrup (0) 71-66-71-68 Nastasia Nadaud 73-67-66-70 277 (-11) (59) $26,674 Alexander Bjork 69-67-68-73 Jorge Campillo 68-67-71-71 Scott Jamieson 67-65-73-72 Matthew Jordan 70-67-74-66 Adrien Saddier 71-68-67-71 Darius Van Driel 68-69-73-67 Alice Hewson (0) 69-68-67-73 Noora Komulainen (0) 68-71-71-67 46 Monday, June 10, 2024 DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com
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History by the Numbers Hitler's SNY Straw 18 Mets Yearbook Mets Classics - 2015: New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies SportsNite (N) SportsNite (N) SportsNite (N) STARZ BRIGHTBURN BACK ON THE STRIP ('23) Tiffany Haddish, Wesley Snipes. Power Book II: Ghost SAW X ('23) ++ Shawnee Smith, Synnøve Macody Lund, Tobin Bell. SILENT NIGHT STZENC PREY FOR TH... PASSENGERS ('16) ++ Chris Pratt, Jennifer Lawrence. GAME CHANGE GAME ('22) (10:45) CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE ++ (P) KINGDOM OF ... SUND (6:00) BlueBlood Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods SYFY (6:15) THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK ('97) ++ Jeff Goldblum. (9:15) JURASSIC PARK III ('01) ++ William H. Macy, Sam Neill. (11:15) DANTE'S PEAK ('97) ++ TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang American Dad! American Dad! American Dad! American Dad! American Dad! TCM LAURA ('44) +++ Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney. PSYCHO ('60) ++++ Janet Leigh, Vera Miles, Anthony Perkins. 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TRVL (6:00) Mysteries of the Unknown Mysteries of the Unknown (N) Mysteries of the Unknown Mysteries TVLND Andy Griffith Raymond (7:35) Raymond (8:10) Raymond (8:45) Raymond (9:20) Everybody Loves Raymond (9:55) Raymond Raymond King King King USA (6:00) 9-1-1 9-1-1 WWE Monday Night RAW (N) Race to Survive: New Zealand (N) (12:15) 9-1-1 VH1 (5:30) COMING 2 AMERICA ('21) ++ (P) The Impact: Atlanta (N) The Impact: Atlanta COMING 2 AMERICA ('21) ++ Arsenio Hall, Jermaine Fowler, Eddie Murphy. WE (6:00) Bones Bones Bones Bones Bones Bones Bones YES Homegrown Moments of Pregame (N) MLB Baseball - New York Yankees at Kansas City Royals (N) Yankees Postgame (N) MLB Baseball LIVE SPORTS MOVIES REALITY DAILY NEWS NYDailyNews.com Monday, June 10, 2024 47
Fans chant for Juan Soto with Yanks down in sixth inning, but they get Trent Grisham instead, and he blasts 3-run HR to put Yanks ahead for good, salvaging finale of Dodgers series, 6-4, on night Luis Gil struggles Pages 36-37 Monday, June 10, 2024 onday, June 10, 2024 SPORTS FINAL GETTY PHOTOS ETTY PHOTOS Grisham writes risham writes feel-good eel-good ending with ding with towering blast owering blast to save Yanks o save Yanks on night Gil on night Gil doesn’t have it sn’t have it THE RAINMAKER AINMAKER Wild top of 9th, and even ild top of 9th, and even wilder bottom, lift Mets to wilder bottom, lift Mets to PICCADILLY CIRCUS ICCADILLY CIRCUS London series split don series split P. 36-38 0 26832 10060 2 13241 06/10/24 SF-CITY