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Aaron Judge. Luke Weaver. Anthony Volpe. Clay Holmes. They're rooting for the Dodgers

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Aaron Judge. Luke Weaver. Anthony Volpe. Clay Holmes. They're rooting for the Dodgers

Breaking News: Luke Weaver will not be pitching for the New York Yankees during the World Series.

First of all, he’s blind. Second, he’s a lifelong Dodgers fan who remembers going to sleep to the sound of the games on the radio.

Weaver is not to be confused with Yankees closer Luke Weaver, whose star has risen this year as he mows down batters and screams on the mound. This Luke Weaver is just a guy.

Dodgers fans like Weaver with namesakes on the Bronx Bombers are in a bit of a pickle this fall, caught between the team they support and the American League stalwart whose name they share. Fandom seems to win out.

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“I hope he gets destroyed in the World Series,” Weaver told The Times. “I wish him well. I wish him a good career. But you know, I hope he has four blown saves in the World Series.”

Weaver, who lives in Palmdale but used to live half a mile from Dodger Stadium, is a retired messenger who delivered gifts and checks to celebrities before going blind 12 years ago. He still listens to Dodgers games on the radio and supports his favorite team, even if he can’t watch them play anymore. About seven years ago, he heard about a player in the league with his name and bought a bunch of Luke Weaver cards.

“I think he pitched for the Diamondbacks back then, and I got all his baseball cards in case he became famous,” Weaver said.

Clay Holmes, a lifelong Venice resident, hasn’t played much baseball since his time as a catcher for Palisades High School last century. Unlike the relief pitcher for the Yankees, this Clay Holmes is pulling for the Dodgers to bring the Commissioner’s Trophy back to Los Angeles.

Angeleno Clay Holmes sort of understands what it is like to be a professional athlete — he supplements his income playing competitive poker — though he says he doesn’t really break a sweat doing it.

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If the Dodgers are down 6-5 in the ninth inning, would Holmes mind if his namesake comes in and gets knocked around a bit?

“I would have no problem with that if it meant a Dodger victory,” he said.

In fact, on the diamond, Clay Holmes wishes Clay Holmes nothing but the worst.

“Shohei, Mookie, Freddie. I hope they bring in a couple runs and have a walk-off [game-winning hit] off him,” he said.

The situation is a bit different for Aaron Judge — not the record-setting Yankees slugger, but the Dodgers fan who served in the U.S. Air Force.

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“Intramural Air Force softball really prepared me for the big leagues,” he said.

Judge is from Montana, a free agent when it comes to choosing a major league team to root for. His father traveled to Los Angeles when Judge was a child, so Judge decided to be a Dodger fan.

“It was Steve Garvey when I was a kid,” he said. “I would have been playing T-ball or Little League then.”

About once a month Judge will receive a comment from a waiter or a cashier who looks at his credit card and notes that he has the same name as the big leaguer.

“It’s never annoying. I just kind of laugh it off,” he said.

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Tougher are the texts and phone calls he gets from kids who think they’ve reached the 2022 American League MVP, only to realize they’re connecting with a different Aaron Judge.

“I get calls from kids in New York and Jersey asking if I am No. 99. I have to let them down easy,” he said.

Though he’s rooted for the Mariners and the Phillies in intervening years, this year he’s backing the Dodgers in the World Series. But he’s still wishing his younger namesake well.

“I am wishing him a great Series. I know he’ll play his best. He’s a great player and leader. I do hope the Dodgers prevail, but I won’t say, ‘Oh my gosh, I hope the Yankees lose.’ I think they’re both great teams.”

Anthony Volpe — not the Yankees’ young shortstop — is also rooting for the Dodgers, even though he lives in the Bay Area.

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“Yes, I’m aware there is a player on the Yankees that has my name,” he said. “But I’m a Californian, so I’m rooting for the Dodgers.”

“I can root for Volpe individually but the Dodgers as a team,” he said.

Volpe noted that the name is not terribly uncommon among Italian Americans. It means “fox” in Italian, said Volpe, who has dual citizenship in America and Italy.

Volpe’s friends like to send him photos of the TV at a bar with his name under an image of the baseball player. Or they’ll send him a photo of a Jumbotron at the game if Volpe is playing.

Judge hears the teasing from family.

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“My kids will call me and say, ‘Hey, I see you hit a home run today. Nice job.’”

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Ohio State’s close call against Nebraska revealed a weakness that could derail title hopes

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Ohio State’s close call against Nebraska revealed a weakness that could derail title hopes

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Just three weeks ago, Ohio State dominated Iowa with a physical performance against one of the country’s premier run defenses. The Buckeyes looked like they were hitting their stride up front and could win games in the trenches.

Things can change fast in college football. Now, after a 21-17 win over Nebraska, an inability to dominate in the trenches could prove to be the Buckeyes’ undoing.

Ohio State ran for just 64 yards and averaged a season-low 2.1 yards per carry against the Huskers. According to TruMedia, it averaged just 0.79 yards per rush before contact, its fourth-worst mark since 2019. It gave up two sacks and six pressures on quarterback Will Howard as the offense struggled to find its rhythm and went the entire third quarter without a first down.

There have been some changes up front with left tackle Josh Simmons out for the season due to a knee injury. Zen Michalski stepped in for him Saturday, but he struggled mightily until he went down with an injury in the fourth quarter. Michalski, who was on crutches on the sideline, wasn’t the answer, and Ohio State doesn’t have an answer yet as to who will start at left tackle in a potential top-five matchup next Saturday at Penn State, which entered this week ranked third in the FBS in pressure rate.

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Ohio State survives: What does this mean for Buckeyes, Huskers?

Who will replace Michalski? Can that person be good enough to avoid a drop-off elsewhere on the line? Because of its recruiting struggles on the offensive line, Ohio State is not really equipped to even face those questions. Now Ryan Day, offensive coordinator Chip Kelly and offensive line coach Justin Frye have to find answers fast because their Big Ten and national championship hopes depend on it.

During preseason camp, Ohio State’s offensive linemen got hit with an illness that went through the entire position group. Coaches spent weeks switching players in and out of the lineup, keeping others at home sick and giving some of the bench players reps against the defensive starters.

Day, as any coach would do, spun that into a positive, saying that it gives the Buckeyes more depth than they initially expected.

“Guys were forced into an early camp and had to respond,” Day said Tuesday.

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Ohio State is 6-1, but Nebraska pushed it to the limit. (Joseph Maiorana / Imagn Images)

Midway through the season, that depth is being tested in a way nobody could’ve expected.

Starting left guard Donovan Jackson missed the first two games of the season, forcing Austin Siereveld into the lineup. He’s now rotating with right guard Tegra Tshabola.  Ohio State finally got healthy before the Oregon game, then watched as Simmons went down with a season-ending knee injury.

That thrust the redshirt junior Michalski into his first career start. Despite his struggles, which included allowing a sack on the first drive and a sack that led to a fumble later in the game, Day didn’t think about pulling him.

“I felt like for his first start he had to play through it,” Day said. “We didn’t want to panic and just pull him out. It’s your first start, so there’s some things you’re going through. … We wanted him to play through that and see how that went.”

That’s an understandable response from a coach, though there also wasn’t another answer at tackle unless Ohio State moved players around. It didn’t want to do that mid-game unless Michalski got hurt, which he ultimately did. That forced Jackson to move out to tackle.

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The next-man-up mentality is a coaching cliche that sounds nice until you run through so many players that the next man up isn’t ready to play. The healthy scholarship offensive tackles left on the roster are redshirt sophomore George Fitzpatrick, freshman Ian Moore and freshman Deontae Armstrong. They are not ready.

The next-best scenario is to move Jackson to tackle and Luke Montgomery to guard, like the Buckeyes did against Nebraska. Ohio State will mull other decisions this week.

Ohio State has nobody to blame but itself for the depth issues on the line getting this bad. Its recruiting failures along the offensive line made something like this a worst-case scenario all offseason.

On the high school front, it failed to recruit talented tackles for years. Ohio State hit on Jackson, a five-star, and Tshabola, a four-star, but they both moved inside since arriving in Columbus. After them, the top two tackles since 2021 were Fitzpatrick and Michalski, who didn’t look ready to play despite being in his fourth season. That’s not good enough.

Then there’s the transfer portal.  Ohio State did a nice job adding Simmons from San Diego State before the 2023 season, developing him into a potential first-round pick. It also did a nice job of getting Seth McLaughlin from Alabama to play center this year. And yet depth is still lacking.

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All of it has put Ohio State in the situation it’s in now, coming off an abysmal performance in which neither TreVeyon Henderson nor Quinshon Judkins — two of the nation’s most talented running backs — had more than 30 yards rushing against a Nebraska team that gave up 215 yards and five touchdowns on the ground to Indiana a week earlier.

Day said he thought it was an execution problem, along with Nebraska doing some new things.

“It’s not good enough,” Day said. “We have to be able to run the football and we didn’t do that today.”

Regardless of the reasoning, Ohio State has to get this fixed.

Ohio State is 6-1 overall and 3-1 in the Big Ten, losing only by a point to Oregon. It still has all of its goals on the table: the Big Ten title, the College Football Playoff and the national title. But the question remains: Does Ohio State have the bodies up front to reach those goals by beating Penn State, Indiana, Michigan — and perhaps Oregon in the Big Ten title game — and anybody else it would play in the Playoff?

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The Buckeyes looked like they were erasing those concerns not too long ago, but suddenly Day is under pressure again to find answers.

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College Football Playoff 2024 projections: Boise State strengthens case with Week 9 underway

(Photo: Ian Johnson / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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Jameis Winston leads Browns to upset win over Ravens in thrilling AFC North battle

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Jameis Winston leads Browns to upset win over Ravens in thrilling AFC North battle

The Cleveland Browns are back in the win column, and it came in a massive upset over their AFC North-rival Baltimore Ravens in thrilling fashion on Sunday. 

Jameis Winston, in his first start since taking over for the injured Deshaun Watson, threw for 334 yards with three passing touchdowns to help his squad beat the Ravens, 29-24, and it came down to the very last play to determine a winner in this one. 

Winston launched a 38-yard touchdown to Cedric Tillman to put Cleveland back in the lead that had passed back and forth between these divisional foes all game long. 

Browns wide receiver Cedric Tillman celebrates after a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens during the second half in Cleveland, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

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Lamar Jackson and the Ravens’ offense had only 59 seconds to work with, and they needed a touchdown to keep their win streak going. Jackson, using as much of his magic as he could, got the ball down to Cleveland’s 24-yard line and spiked it to ice the clock at 35 seconds to play. 

He attempted multiple passes to the end zone, including a heave on fourth-and-10 at the end of the game, but no Raven was able to haul in the game-winning score.

BROWNS’ JAMEIS WINSTON GIVES FIERY SPEECH TO TEAMMATES BEFORE GAME VS RAVENS: ‘WE GOTTA BELIEVE’

The Browns faithful were elated as they moved to 2-6 on the year, while the Ravens fell to 5-3. 

Winston, ever the gunslinger when he’s under center, got a struggling Browns offense going, and it was Tillman that ended up being his favorite target with seven catches for 99 yards. 

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Myles Garrett gets to Lamar Jackson

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson escapes from Browns defensive end Myles Garrett during the second half in Cleveland, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/David Richard)

Elijah Moore also added eight catches for 85 yards, while David Njoku had a touchdown on five catches for 61 yards. 

Meanwhile, Jackson was 23-for-38 for 289 yards with two touchdown passes, finding Nelson Agholor and Mark Andrews for six. Zay Flowers added 115 yards on seven receptions. 

Of course, it wouldn’t be a Ravens game without Derrick Henry getting into the end zone as he had 73 yards on the ground on just 11 carries. 

Jameis Winston hands the ball off

Browns quarterback Jameis Winston hands off to running back D’Onta Foreman during the second half against the Baltimore Ravens in Cleveland, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/David Richard)

But in the end, Jackson was slamming his helmet to the turf as the Ravens – favorites in this contest as they’ve been one of the best teams in the NFL over the last few weeks – couldn’t get the job done on the road. 

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Shohei Ohtani expected to play Game 3 of the World Series after shoulder injury scare

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Shohei Ohtani expected to play Game 3 of the World Series after shoulder injury scare

The Dodgers breathed a collective sigh of relief on Sunday.

After Shohei Ohtani left Game 2 of the World Series with a partially dislocated left shoulder, the team’s hope is that he’ll be back in the lineup for Game 3 on Monday.

Manager Dave Roberts told ESPN on Sunday afternoon that Ohtani was “in a great spot” less than 24 hours after leaving Game 2 on Saturday with a shoulder subluxation, which he suffered while trying to steal second base in the seventh inning.

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Roberts confirmed to The Times that his expectation is Ohtani will play in Game 3.

Another person with knowledge of the situation who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly said that while a final decision on Ohtani’s availability for Monday hasn’t been made, the soon-to-be three-time MVP was doing “shockingly well” on Sunday.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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