Arizona
Arizona Diamondbacks-Washington Nationals game updates: Burnes struggling, Herrera’s rare home run
Torey Lovullo talks “next man up mentality” with Ketel Marte injury
Arizona Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo talks “next man up mentality” with Ketel Marte’s injury and the call-up of Tim Tawa.
The Arizona Diamondbacks and Washington Nationals are tied at 2 in the bottom of the second inning at Nationals Park, as starting pitcher Corbin Burnes labored through the bottom of the first, throwing 28 pitches, including 14 balls.
Burnes allowed two runs on three hits, and it could have been worse. If not for catcher José Herrera’s tag of Nathaniel Lowe at the plate for the final out of the inning, Burnes would have still needed to get a third out, and there would have been two on base.
Corbin Carroll, who couldn’t come up with a line drive to right field that went for a double for Lowe, provided the outfield assist. Herrera tied the game in the top of the second with his first home run of the season, equaling the number of home runs he hit last season.
Burnes walked two batters and struck out two in the first.
After the first inning, fans cheered as a replay of Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin’s record-setting 895th career NHL goal that he scored Sunday was replayed on the video board.
Clutch Grichuk in D.C.
Arizona Diamondbacks designated hitter Randal Grichuk entered Sunday, April 6, batting .313 in seven games played, and four of his five hits were doubles. He also delivered in the clutch on the two previous days. Grichuk’s two-out, two-run, tie-breaking double in the seventh inning gave the Diamondbacks the win on April 4.
On April 5, Grichuk singled with two outs to drive in Tim Tawa in the sixth inning for the Diamondbacks’ first run of the day.
“He’s got a real good idea of what he’s trying to do per at-bat,” Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said of Grichuk. “He doesn’t just hit lefties. We’re equipped to handle it differently. I know that he wants to play every day, but with Pavin (Smith) and he splitting the (DH) job, I think they both complement each other. Not surprised by that at all, he’s just a good hitter, smart hitter and an experienced hitter.”
Smith got the start on April 6, but the two have been used interchangeably as pinch hitters for each other later in games as matchups against pitchers dictate.
Arizona Diamondbacks-Washington Nationals Sunday pitching matchup
Diamondbacks at Nationals, 10:35 a.m., Cox, Ch. 34
Diamondbacks RHP Corbin Burnes (0-0, 4.15) vs. Nationals RHP Trevor Williams (0-0, 5.40)
At Nationals Park: Burnes looks for a better outing than his season and Diamondbacks debut, in which he allowed four earned runs in 4 ⅓ innings despite eight strikeouts on April 1. This is to be his third career start against the Nationals, and first since May of 2024. “He’s a perfectionist. He’s striving for the smallest spot on the plate to throw a pitch as perfectly as he can,” Lovullo said. “He knows how to get balls to certain places at certain times and it’s a lot of fun to watch.” Williams is 12-11 over the past two seasons with the Nationals. He played his college ball at Arizona State, pitched five innings in his first start of the 2025 season and allowed four runs on 10 hits. He is 2-4 with a 4.24 ERA against the Diamondbacks in his career, having made nine appearances (eight starts) against them.
Coming up
Monday, April 7: At Chase Field, 6:40 p.m., Diamondbacks RHP Zac Gallen (1-1, 3.38) vs. Orioles RHP Zach Eflin (1-1, 3.75).
Tuesday, April 8: At Chase Field, 6:40 p.m., Diamondbacks RHP Merrill Kelly (1-1, 10.00) vs. Orioles RHP Charlie Morton (0-2, 9.72).
Wednesday, April 9: At Chase Field, 12:40 p.m. Diamondbacks RHP Brandon Pfaadt (1-1, 5.25) vs. Orioles RHP Dean Kremer (1-1, 6.52).
Arizona
Hair shows are a staple of Black culture. This Arizona competition is in its 4th year
Over the last 75 years, hair shows have become a staple of Black culture in the U.S. These events celebrate textured hair through the creative, and often sculptural, styling of centuries-old techniques like braiding and barbering.
The biggest hair shows in the country take place in cities with a much larger Black population than Phoenix — like Bronner Bros. in Atlanta, which can bring in around 30,000 people semi-annually.
But as the Black community here grows and newer Arizona residents bring the culture with them, hair shows have started to pop up in town.
The fourth annual Arizona Fantasy Expo Hair Show will return Sunday in Phoenix.
Show producer Athena Ankrah attended the third annual Fantasy Expo Hair Show in Phoenix last April, and shares what she saw.
About 200 people crowd La Princesa event hall in north Phoenix on a Sunday evening in 2025. Music blasts from speakers on either side of a stage and flows into the dance floor below. There are people of all ages here. Most attendees are dressed in white, to match the all-white ball theme, but there’s no shortage of color atop models’ heads.
Lauren Jackson, 20, just graduated from a barber school in Phoenix.
We’re watching a competition between two barbers — who can shave the cleanest tapered fade the fastest — when she tells me her plans for the event she’s competing in: the loc battle.
“So I made a basketball hoop out of locs,” Jackson said.
Hair shows give local hair stylists, barbers and braiders the chance to show off their creative talents through showcases and competitions.
Some stylists had been working on their entries for more than a year leading up to the Fantasy Hair Expo. But that wasn’t the case for Jackson. The event’s organizers promoted the show at Jackson’s barber school shortly before that day.
“I’m like, OK, bet! … Mind you, this was a week before the hair show,” Jackson said.
Hair shows are a Black American tradition dating back about 75 years. The creative hair styling can be so eccentric, it’s almost performance art.
Because it’s not just the hair style on display. It’s a message conveyed through clothes, and sometimes choreography. And a chance to delight in hair textures and styles that have historically been a target of discrimination.
“A lot of us are like really creative and they’re styles that you just can’t do on a daily basis. So the hair show just kind of gives you the platform to just have fun with it, you know, just be really artistic,” Aisha Wesley said.
Wesley is a cosmetologist who organized the event with fellow cosmetologist and friend LaTricia Williams.
“I definitely think that the hair show is empowering to the community because it’s like, if nobody else accepts us, we accept us, right,” Wesley said. “I’ve had clients before that have had to come back and get their hair redone because their job was like, ‘you can’t wear that.’ You know? the hair show just kind of gives that freedom …”
“I can wear whatever I wanna wear,” Williams said.
That freedom and ingenuity was on display at the show.
Now, seeing 40 inches of dollar bills sewn into the bottom of a pixie haircut would have been enough.
But the same stylist, Cherie Nelson of Majestik Handzz Beauty Demand in Mesa, put together a whole crew of models with ’90s-inspired streetwear and exuberant hair to match.
Nelson put one model in vivid bubblegum pink afro puffs, and another with huge headphones over her ears — made entirely of braids.
And for the finale: A young woman crawls on stage, covered in wigs. She’s wearing crimped wigs from head to toe. Underneath, the leather catsuit, knee-high boots and afro wreath around her face gives her a sort of Janet Jackson lioness look.
She stalks downstage, rises to her feet and pulls the lion’s mane onto her shoulders to reveal bantu knots: sleek sectioned hair twisted into knots, a protective style dating back to Zulu women in South Africa.
The crowd is loving it.
“She went from hoodie, to a lion’s mane, to a jacket, to Catwoman – how do you do that?” the host said.
Finally, it’s time for Lauren Jackson’s event — the loc battle.
It’s all about who can craft the most creative and colorful style out of locs and accessories, with extra points for technique and details.
For the uninitiated, locs aren’t always dreadlocks. The term often refers to a more structured twist or coiling of hair rather than the Rastafari-style organic loc-ing of hair.
Loc specialists — also called locticians — can build their styles ahead of time, but on competition day they only have 30 minutes to attach everything to their model’s head and make any finishing touches.
“Y’all ready? Get set! Go!” the host exclaimed.
Anna Holly drove from San Francisco the night before to compete with her mom as her hair model.
“It was about 12 hours. But it wasn’t bad,” Holly said while laughing.
Despite the time constraint, Jackson’s entry is not insignificant.
She super-glued, painted and shaped synthetic hair onto a basketball hoop with about a foot tall backboard.
“So I bought a box of those, the sandwich bags, and I’m like, ‘well, I can use this.’ At Dollar Tree, they also had a hoop already made. So I basically wrapped the whole thing with locs,” Jackson said. “Then I took some orange loc hair and I wrapped that with the rim. And then I took some silver grayish lock hair as well for the, the net to the basketball hoop.”
“It was so hard, I’m not gonna lie. I stayed up like day and night trying to figure it out between school,” Jackson said.
And it’s functional, too — she brought a teeny tiny basketball to prove it.
“Now, if Steph Curry come out of there and shoot a 3? You won!” the host said.
Another loctician, Elisha Davis, has built a sea goddess look that’s essentially a huge halo of locs sticking straight up. It’s woven with seashells. The stylist and her model have matching glittery siren makeup. The design is minimal enough that you can really see the details.
“She sells seashells by the seashore. … Aphrodite ain’t playin’!” the host said.
And Holly is installing a replica of a famous landmark on her mother’s head.
“Is that traffic on her head, y’all? … It’s the Golden Gate Bridge!” the host said to cheers from the crowd.
Yes, the Golden Gate Bridge, made entirely of hair.
“I’m like, dang, I didn’t even know that was possible, y’all! And she had cars on the bridge!” Jackson said.
Master loctitian and cosmetologist Jai Davis is this event’s judge.
“I’m looking for detail, creativity. … I like integrity more than flash. I like skill more than flash,” Davis said.
It was a tight race. But a winner and runner-up are announced.
“This one was super, super hard, we had to go all the way down to details. We had to look at edges and fresh retwists because the creativity in this competition was so cold,” Davis said. “So, because we had to go down to detail and crispy edges. … We gon’ give it to the Golden [Gate] Bridge!”
So Jackson’s basketball hoop didn’t win.
But despite that, she said, “it was so worth it. If I can go back, I would do it all over again.”
And next time, she’ll be ready.
“Oh my God, I’m gonna do so much more next year. Oh my goodness, I can not wait for next year. ‘Cause I’m gonna do so much more,” Jackson said.
Arizona
President Trump to visit Phoenix Friday for first Arizona trip of 2026
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — President Donald Trump will make a visit to the Valley for the first time in 2026 on Friday.
The President will speak at the “Build the Red Wall” event, hosted by Turning Point USA, at Dream City Church in North Phoenix. “Build the Red Wall” is an effort to support Republican candidates ahead of the 2026 midterm election.
“I think the President’s coming to town to look for a rally among his adoring fans,” said Pollster at Highground Inc. Paul Bentz.
Arizona’s Family spoke to voters in downtown Phoenix ahead of the President’s visit. Affordability and the economy were the top issue that many people shared.
While some say they supported the Trump administration’s efforts on immigration, with border crossings at a decades-long low, others said the war in Iran, gas prices, and overall affordability were big concerns.
“The ultimate issue that he has is that whether it’s the war in Iran opening the Strait of Hormuz, gas prices as they are right now, the general affordability issues, he has not come up with a lot of solutions to this point,” said Bentz.
Other speakers listed for the event include Republican candidate for governor Andy Biggs, Erika Kirk, and several Arizona congressional republicans.
The doors will open at 9 a.m., pre-programming is scheduled to begin at noon. President Trump is scheduled to take the stage at 2 p.m.
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Arizona
Arizona State assistant football coach dies
ASU football staffer Steve Miller on Peach Bowl loss, fan support
Arizona State football staff member Steve Miller spoke to The Republic about the Sun Devils’ Peach Bowl loss and what support from fans means to the team.
Arizona State football assistant strength coach Steven Miller has died, according to the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Miller, 29, passed away Wednesday, April 15.
Chris Karpman first reported the news via X.
Miller, who suffered from epilepsy, had endured medical issues recently, one incident occurring after the team had wrapped up practice on April 7. Most of the players had left the practice facility, but about 30 or so remained behind, some waiting for transportation back and others doing interviews with the media.
Miller was not at the next two practices, but was back at practice on April 14.
He was one of the coaches who had a special bond with many of the team’s players.
Jeff Sims, who played quarterback from 2024 to 2025, posted a photo on his social media of Miller after the Big 12 conference championship win over Iowa State with the caption: “Solid as they come rest up my dawg.”
Tributes from players started to flow in.
Miller, a local product out of Gilbert High School, played right tackle for ASU from 2015-18.
(This story will be updated. Check back soon.)
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