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When: 1:10 p.m. Thursday.
Where: Comerica Park in Detroit.
TV: Bally Sports Detroit, MLB Network.
Radio: WXYT-FM (97.1). (Tigers radio affiliates).
Weather report: High of 66 degrees, mostly sunny, 9 mph winds.
Probable pitchers: Tigers RHP Kenta Maeda (0-1, 6.00 ERA) vs. Rangers RHP Jack Leiter (MLB debut).
• Box score
Tigers lineup: TBD.
YESTERDAY’S GAME: Pinch-hit strategy from A.J. Hinch pays off in Detroit Tigers’ 4-2 win over Texas Rangers
Game notes: The Detroit Tigers hitters will get the very first look at one of the more anticipated prospects in baseball, even after a down year in 2023. Jack Leiter, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2021 MLB draft and the son of former New York Yankees pitcher and two-time All-Star Al Leiter, will get the start Thursday for a Rangers starting rotation dealing with some injury issues. Make no mistake, this was not a small decision to bring up Leiter. MLB teams are always very careful about when they decide to bring up their top prospects to the big leagues, and the Rangers also had to make a corresponding move on their 40-man roster to clear space for Leiter to face the Tigers.
Leiter looks set to fill the fifth spot in the Rangers rotation, at least temporarily, which the Tigers have gotten to see most of during their four-game series. The Tigers hitters continued their slow start in Game 1 of the series, going scoreless against former Tigers starter Michael Lorenzen, but the bats woke up a bit in Game 2 for a late comeback win. The Tigers will be looking to hand the 23-year-old righty a “welcome to the MLB” moment to close out the series.
MORE ON LORENZEN: How Detroit Tigers performance coach Shane Wallen helped Michael Lorenzen land new deal
Meanwhile, the Tigers will have Kenta Maeda on the mound, who is pretty much the opposite of Leiter in terms of where they are in their career. While Leiter is still looking to check the box on many “firsts,” Maeda has been there and done that. The veteran pitcher, in his first year with the Tigers, came out of the gates slow in his debut start sporting the Old English D, lasting just 3⅓ innings against the Chicago White Sox while giving up six earned runs on three home runs.
Maeda had a nice bounceback the next time out, giving up three earned runs and just two hits, but was hurt by the four walks he issued. The 36-year-old righty more than cleaned up the walks issue in his third start this season against the Minnesota Twins, not issuing a single free pass and allowing just one earned run. Maeda will be trying to keep the momentum going in the right direction in his fourth start this year.
DON’T TRY RUNNING: Turns out, everyone has underestimated Tigers’ Riley Greene’s arm, even Greene himself
After Thursday’s game, the Tigers will head to Minnesota to start another series with the Twins, which will be the last time the divisional foes face off until July 2.
For updates from and around the diamond, check it out on X.
AUSTIN – The Texas Longhorns have one of the best rosters in the country heading into the 2024 season.
At nearly every level of the roster, the Horns are stacked with elite talent. Even an area that was a question mark coming out of the spring game – defensive tackle – was addressed with additional talented with a commitment from Arizona’s Bill Norton via the NCAA Transfer Portal.
However, there was also one area of the roster that took a bit of a hit following the conclusion of spring, with cornerbacks Terrance Brooks and Austin Jordan both hitting the portal and leaving a question mark at the field corner spot.
Of course, the Longhorns do have Gavin Holmes available to slide into that starting spot, as well as some incumbent, albeit unproven talent in Santana Wilson, Wardell Mack, Warren Roberson and Kobe Black. That said, they are still looking to add some talent to that spot.
And now, they may have a candidate.
According to reports from 247Sports, San Jose State standout cornerback transfer Jay’Vion Cole has set a visit to the 40 Acres in the coming weeks.
Per the report, he is also planning visits to Michigan State and Auburn, and has additional offers from Cincinnati, Miami (Ohio), South Florida and Jacksonville State
Cole, who began his career at Cal Poly, At Cal Poly was an impact player as a true freshman, finishing the season with 15 tackles, four passes defended and four interceptions.
He then transferred from Cal Poly to San Jose State last offseason, where he ended the year with 28 tackles, 100 passes defended, three picks, and a sack, being named honorable mention All-Mountain West for his efforts.
Walmart will close its health centers that for five years, provided low-cost medical care to patients.
The retailer announced on Tuesday that it plans to shutter its 51 health clinics in five states and its telehealth business.
Walmart has eight health centers in Texas, according to its website.
“We determined there is not a sustainable business model for us to continue,” the company said in a statement. “We understand this change affects lives – the patients who receive care, the associates and providers who deliver care and the communities who supported us along the way.”
Located next to Walmart Supercenters, the health centers provide a range of services, including medical, dental and behavioral health care.
Since Walmart first introduced its health centers in 2019, 51 clinics have opened in five states across the U.S.
Walmart has not yet decided on a specific date for when each center will close, but the retailer indicated intentions to share those details as soon as decisions are made, according to a report from USA Today.
More info on the eight health centers can be found on its website.
USA Today contributed to this report
The recent rash of student-involved shootings in North Texas has left families rattled and some school districts scrambling to assuage them. Yet this spate of violence hasn’t drawn national attention, in part because these shootings appear to be targeted, involving only a couple of students. One student at Arlington ISD’s Bowie High School was killed, but the victims in the other two incidents in Dallas are expected to recover, including two students injured off campus in a drive-by shooting.
Parents and students in the affected districts are owed detailed answers about how students were able to sneak guns into school. But while heightened safety measures have become necessary, these shootings should also drive home the point that simply “hardening” campuses can’t fix a culture of violence fueled by easy access to guns and an addiction to social media.
School violence is just a fact of American life, almost as commonplace as tests, football and prom. In the 2021-22 school year, 61% of public schools recorded at least one physical fight or attack without a weapon. About 4% of schools — that’s 3,700 campuses — reported at least one attack with a weapon.
That data comes from the latest federal survey on school crime and safety by the National Center for Education Statistics. It captures only violence that happens in school, though some conflicts follow students off campus.
Gun use in school is also on the rise, even as it remains rare. Everytown, a gun-safety advocacy group, logged 51 incidents of guns discharged on school grounds across the U.S. in 2013, the first year it began tracking that data. Last year, it recorded 137 incidents and 42 deaths.
Things are looking bad this year, too. As of last week, Everytown’s database had tallied 63 incidents of gunfire and 24 dead as a result.
School fights are not what they were when we were growing up. Many of them are filmed with cellphones and often end up on TikTok or Snapchat, where they are shared for social currency.
Meanwhile, lawmakers at the state and federal level have not just resisted passing sensible gun-safety laws — think universal background checks — but they have also made it easier for anyone to carry a firearm. Texas joined several other states in passing permitless carry three years ago.
Texas state legislators have pushed through a spate of school safety regulations in recent years. Among the requirements are having an armed guard at every school, installing panic buttons in classrooms and training certain district employees to recognize students who need mental health support.
Texans can keep trying to fortify their schools even more, but the violence won’t stop at the school doors. We have to send our children out into the world, and we cannot enclose them in a protective bubble. We’ll continue to fail them as long as we focus on hardening schools while leaving untouched this country’s culture of violence and a gun-rights absolutism that enable each other in a nasty loop.
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