Charlotte FC (6-6-4, seventh in the Eastern Conference) vs. Atlanta United FC (4-7-4, 11th in the Eastern Conference)
Atlanta; Sunday, 4:45 p.m. EDT
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BETMGM SPORTSBOOK: LINE Atlanta United FC -123, Charlotte FC +310, Draw +275; over/under is 2.5 goals
BOTTOM LINE: Saba Lobzhanidze leads Atlanta United into a matchup with Charlotte FC after scoring two goals against Inter Miami.
United is 4-5-3 against Eastern Conference opponents. United ranks fifth in the Eastern Conference drawing 83 corner kicks, averaging 5.5 per game.
Charlotte is 4-4-2 against Eastern Conference opponents. Charlotte ranks ninth in the Eastern Conference drawing 76 corner kicks, averaging 4.8 per game.
The matchup Sunday is the first meeting of the season between the two teams.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Giorgos Giakoumakis has scored five goals for United. Lobzhanidze has three goals over the last 10 games.
Patrick Agyemang has three goals and one assist for Charlotte. Kerwin Vargas has scored two goals over the past 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: United: 1-5-4, averaging 1.1 goals, 4.2 shots on goal and 6.3 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.4 goals per game.
Charlotte: 4-4-2, averaging 0.9 goals, 3.0 shots on goal and 5.3 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.1 goals per game.
NOT EXPECTED TO PLAY: United: Noah Cobb (injured), Tyler Wolff (injured), Bartosz Slisz (injured).
I think it’s time to chat again about Eric Hartman. The Braves’ now top prospect completed a 20 HR, 30 SB season on July 1st, through 71 games of his season. He was also ranked the 25th prospect in all of baseball by Baseball America and it’s getting easier every day to see him in the top 10 by the offseason. This is simply a hugely valuable prospect coming from a 20th round pick just two years ago and the back end of the organizational top 30 as recently as March. While he’s only at high-A (probably not for long) and still has work to do on his game, he has rapidly become a potential superstar on the position-player side for an organization that desperately needed talent on that hitting side and has got it this year from not only Hartman.
Part of Haralson County is under a Severe Thunderstorm Warning, the National Weather Service says.
The warning will be in place until 6:15 p.m.
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Officials say a severe thunderstorm has been located near Buchanan around 5:35 p.m. The storm was moving west at 5 miles per hour.
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Severe Thunderstorm Warning extended for Carroll, Douglas, and Fulton
The Severe Thunderstorm Warning set to end at 5 p.m. has been extended to 5:45 p.m. by the National Weather Service.
Authorities say the storm was last located near the city of South Fulton, moving west at 5 mph.
The other Severe Thunderstorm Warnings have expired.
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Dozens of Georgia counties under Thunderstorm Watch
Dozens of counties across Georgia remain under a Thunderstorm Watch until 8 p.m.
The National Weather Service has issued the watch for the following counties:
Banks
Barrow
Bartow
Butts
Carroll
Catoosa
Chattooga
Cherokee
Clayton
Cobb
Coweta
Dade
Dawson
DeKalb
Douglas
Fannin
Fayette
Floyd
Forsyth
Franklin
Fulton
Gilmer
Gordon
Gwinnett
Habersham
Hall
Haralson
Heard
Henry
Jackson
Lumpkin
Meriwether
Murray
Newton
Paulding
Pickens
Polk
Rabun
Rockdale
Spalding
Stephens
Towns
Troup
Union
Walker
Walton
White
Whitfield
Other counties in Alabama, North and South Carolina and Tennessee are also affected by the watch.
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High temperatures continue to cause concerns in Georgia
While parts of North Georgia brace for the impact of the storms and heavy winds, most of the state remains under a Heat Advisory.
Wednesday marks the third straight day of heat advisories across parts of north Georgia. While the advisory no longer includes all of metro Atlanta, it does cover North Fulton, South Fulton and several western metro counties, where it could feel as hot as 106 to 107 degrees between noon and 8 p.m., according to the National Weather Service and CBS News Atlanta Next Weather meteorologist Troy Bridges.
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Actual air temperatures are expected to climb to around 96 degrees Wednesday afternoon, well above the typical high of 89 degrees for this time of year.
Read more here.
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Warning downgraded to watch for Towns, Union, and Fannin
The Severe Thunderstorm Warning affecting parts of Towns, Union, and Fannin County in North Georgia has been canceled.
Authorities with the National Weather Service say the storm the prompted the warning has weakened to the point where it “no longer poses an immediate threat to life or property.”
Instead, a Severe Thunderstorm Watch is in effect for the area until 9 p.m.
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List of current Severe Thunderstorm Warnings in Georgia
Here are the current storm warnings in place for Georgia.
Severe Thunderstorm Warnings
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Central Cherokee County until 4:45 p.m.
East central Carroll County, southern Douglas County, southwestern Fulton County until 5 p.m.
Southwestern Cobb County, central Douglas County, southwestern Fulton County until 5 p.m.
Southwestern Towns County, Union County, northeastern Fannin County until 5 p.m.
Flash Flood Warning
Northeastern Union County until 10:15 p.m.
Severe Thunderstorm warning in place for parts of metro Atlanta
The National Weather Service has issued a severe thunderstorm warning for parts of Carroll, Douglas, and Fulton counties until 5 p.m.
Officials say a storm with winds of up to 60 miles per hour was slowly moving near Douglasville at 4:27 p.m.
Another warning is in place for parts of Cobb, Douglas, and Fulton counties. This warning is also expected to end at 5 p.m.
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Residents should prepare for possible heavy winds, quarter-sized hail, and fallen trees.
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Flash flood warning issued for parts of Union County
A flash flood warning is in place for part of Union County until late Wednesday night.
The National Weather Service says the warning will remain in place for the northeastern part of the county until 10:15 p.m. after radar indicated thunderstorms producing heavy rain in the area.
Officials estimate one to 2.5 inches of rain have already fallen and there may be one to two more inches of rainfall possible in the area.
Residents should prepare for small creeks, streams, and other areas with poor drainage to flood.
Drivers should not attempt to driver through flooded roads.
Dr. Algernon Cargill and Ronaldo Coxson say they were split on whether to have children when they first met. But after they fell in love and got married, they decided that becoming parents was the next step.
“We ultimately chose surrogacy because we wanted to have a biological connection to our kids,” Cargill said. “[A]nd we also heard some horror stories of families being placed with a foster family and then losing on the placement later on…”
The two say it was a rewarding experience. They now have two daughters, Elle, 7, and Grace, 2. They also have great relationships with their egg donor and surrogates. But they say that as a gay couple, the process was challenging and expensive. Cargill says they weren’t able to take advantage of certain forms of support that are more readily available to heterosexual couples and women looking to get pregnant.
“Employers and employer-sponsored health plans do cover some healthcare costs for couples suffering from infertility; that doesn’t necessarily apply to us,” Cargill said. “And so we had to purchase an insurance plan through the market and then use that to cover some of the healthcare costs of surrogacy.”
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In an effort to help other men interested in surrogacy, Dr. Cargill and Coxson have opened up about their journey alongside family planning experts at the Men Having Babies Conference in downtown Atlanta. The couple appeared last year, but the conference was held in the city again in June. Organizers say their goal is to create a safe space for gay men to unpack the stigmas and challenges they face while trying to become parents. They are also working to spread awareness about the resources available to community members looking to expand their families.
Dr. Algernon Cargill and Ronaldo Coxson read with their daughters Elle and Grace.
CBS News Atlanta
Tim’m West, the executive director of the Rustin Institute for Leadership Development, was a panelist during this year’s conference and is a friend to Cargill and Coxson.
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“We hear it takes a village all the time,” West said. “Well, it also takes a village for gay men that are exploring, bringing families into the world and who don’t want that negative stigma or the pushback…”
West says it’s important for friends, loved ones and allies to show support however they can.
“We use in the LGBTQ community all the time, ‘chosen family,’ ‘found family,’” he said. “Well, I think surrogacy is just something that expands that notion and sort of brings it to bear in terms of – ‘who’s going to be the family to these children that we bring into the world.”
Dr. Lauren Berman, a psychologist specializing in family planning with the Fertile Ground Psychology Group, was also on the panel.
“When people don’t understand that there are rigorous screening processes and very significant education, that there is informed consent, and that there is implications counseling, they misconstrue the idea of surrogacy, that surrogacy is exploitative of women,” Berman said.
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She says unpacking misconceptions is important for helping people decide if surrogacy is right for them and their families.
“When standards are used and applied, it is a safe and actually a really loving and exciting process. And I meet a lot of surrogates and a lot of intended parents who end up just adoring each other and feeling very excited about the journey that they’ve been through together,” Berman said.
Coxson says he put effort into fostering good relationships with their daughters’ surrogates.
“It took me really good communication, I’ll tell you that,” Coxson said. “Because you have to talk to someone else and take in their journey as a part of your own, and it becomes a collaborative effort. So if you’re a control freak, surrogacy is not the way to go.”
Cargill says he and his husband will give their daughters more details about how they came into the world as they get older.
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Until then, the couple says they tell their daughters they’re special—and were created with love and care.