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Bengals place franchise tag on safety Jessie Bates III

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Bengals place franchise tag on safety Jessie Bates III

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The Cincinnati Bengals on Monday positioned the franchise tag on security Jessie Bates III, holding him with the crew for the 2022 season.

The Bengals had tried unsuccessfully to return to phrases on a long-term contract for the 25-year-old Bates, whose rookie deal expired on the finish of the season, placing him on the verge of turning into a free agent.

Bates was chosen within the second spherical of the 2018 draft and has emerged as one of many crew leaders. He was a key participant in 2021 because the Bengals reached their first Tremendous Bowl in 33 years.

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INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 13: Jessie Bates #30 of the Cincinnati Bengals reacts after a play in opposition to the Los Angeles Rams throughout Tremendous Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium on February 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California. (Picture by Ronald Martinez/Getty Photos)

The franchise tag means Bates shall be beneath contract by the 2022 season for roughly $13 million because the crew continues to barter a long-term cope with him.

“Jessie has been an impressive participant right here for 4 years,” Cincinnati govt vice chairman Katie Blackburn mentioned in an announcement. “Over the previous yr, we’ve tried to increase his contract right here in Cincinnati, and whereas that hasn’t come to go, we would like him right here for 2022 to be part of what we predict needs to be an thrilling soccer season and vibrant future for our group.”

Bates has performed in 163 video games — all begins — for Cincinnati, and has 406 tackles and 10 interceptions, one for a landing.

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LeBron James on taking court with son, Bronny, as Lakers teammates for first time: ‘I will never forget'

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LeBron James on taking court with son, Bronny, as Lakers teammates for first time: ‘I will never forget'

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It may only be a preseason game, but LeBron James is never going to forget the first time he shared the same court with his son, Bronny James, as Los Angeles Lakers teammates on Sunday night. 

LeBron and Bronny became the first father-son duo to play in any NBA game together, as they took the court in the first half against the Phoenix Suns. They played around four minutes together in the second quarter. 

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LeBron, who was an efficient 8-of-12 from the field, including 2-of-3 made from three-point land, for 19 points discussed what it was like to have his son by his side on the hardwood for the first time in a game.

LeBron James and Bronny James of the Los Angeles Lakers smile before the game against the Phoenix Suns on Oct. 6, 2024, at Acrisure Arena in Palm Springs, California. (Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)

“It’s pretty cool for the both of us, and especially for our family,” LeBron said. “It’s definitely a moment that I will never forget.”

LeBron has been wanting to play with Bronny since his son was just a high school prospect who hadn’t committed to playing at USC yet. And everyone knew that meant LeBron would have to play well past 20 years in the NBA to do so based on the current steps prospects must take before being eligible for the NBA Draft. 

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Ahead of Year 22 in the association, LeBron remains in top-notch shape and he’s seeing this milestone checked off. 

LAKERS’ LEBRON JAMES SAYS HE EXPERIENCED ‘PURE JOY’ IN PRACTICES WITH SON BRONNY AS TRAINING CAMP TIPS OFF

“For a father, it means everything,” he said. “For someone who didn’t have that growing up, to be able to have that influence on your kids and have that influence on your son, be able to have moments with your son – and the ultimate, to be able to work with your son – that’s one of the greatest things that a father could ever hope for or wish for.”

It was a pedestrian night for Bronny, who saw his first game action as an NBA player. He had just one shot, a missed three-pointer, with two defensive rebounds over his 13:25 minutes on the floor. He also had two turnovers.

It also happened to be his 20th birthday on Sunday, which only adds to the milestone. 

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NBA fans are intrigued to see when it will be official that the father-son duo becomes the first-ever pair to play in a regular season game. It was reported earlier this year after the Lakers drafted Bronny in the second round that he would be up with Los Angeles to get the milestone out of the way before being sent down to the G-League South Bay Lakers for more development. 

LeBron and Bronny James sit on bench

LeBron James and Bronny James of the Los Angeles Lakers during the Phoenix Suns game on Oct. 6, 2024, at Acrisure Arena in Palm Springs. (Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)

In the meantime, Bronny is still trying to develop a work relationship with his father. 

“I’m always thinking about, ‘That’s my dad!’ because that’s literally my dad,” he said. “But when I’m playing, he’s just my teammate. That’s all.” 

New head coach JJ Redick is also navigating this pairing as he gets his bearings in his first-time role. 

“I’m thrilled that I get to be a part of this, I really am,” Redick said. “It’s cool as a basketball fan. I think it speaks to LeBron’s longevity, but also his competitive stamina that he’s able to still be doing this in Year 22. It speaks to the work that Bronny has put in to get to this point, and really just the fatherly care, and certainly the motherly care from Savannah as well. Bronny, he’s such a great kid and a pleasure to be around.”

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Redick added that their connection on the floor won’t be “gimmicky,” as he wants to get them in as the game flows naturally. 

LeBron and Bronny James warm up

Los Angeles Lakers guard Bronny James steps onto the court with forward LeBron James during the preseason game Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024. (AP Photo/William Liang)

While it hasn’t been done in the NBA, father-son duos have been together on the same playing field in other professional sports, including MLB with Ken Griffey Sr. and Ken Griffey Jr. playing together on the Seattle Mariners.

It’s history in the making, and though LeBron is definitely still in this game to win championships, he knows how special this moment is for him not only as a player, but as a father, too. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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UCLA guard Gabriela Jaquez learned to handle bruising hits while leading Mexican team

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UCLA guard Gabriela Jaquez learned to handle bruising hits while leading Mexican team

When Gabriela Jaquez noticed three of her UCLA teammates passionately representing Serbia and Germany during Olympic qualifiers, she was motivated.

Emily Bessoir and Lina Sontag qualified to make their Olympic debuts playing for Germany. UCLA teammate Angela Dugalić, of Serbia, also qualified to compete during the Paris Games.

“I saw them and they inspired me,” said Jaquez, explaining why she decided to play for the Mexican national team.

Jaquez, 20, then talked with her father and older brother about playing for Mexico during the summer in her first international tournament. Mexican basketball federation officials had long sought her participation after her brother, former UCLA star and current Miami Heat player Jaime Jaquez Jr., played for Mexico during the 2019 Pan American Games in Lima, Peru.

“Mexico had always asked me to play with them, but I didn’t know if I was going to be ready,” Jaquez said. “I took the initiative to play with them and I’m super grateful I got to do it.”

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Her dad warned her, “You’re not going to get the fouls at FIBA that you get at UCLA,” Jaime Jaquez Sr. recalled while laughing. Her brother told her the same thing.

But Gabriela was not intimidated and called the coach of the Mexican women’s team, Lindsey Harding, a successful Duke player and former pro, who welcomed her. Harding made Jaquez feel comfortable and told her that her first adventure with Mexico could be in August in the pre-qualifying tournament for the FIBA 2026 Women’s Basketball World Cup.

“It was very cool that she was the coach. I admire the way she is, how much I can learn from her,” Jaquez said of Harding, who was recently named an assistant coach with the Lakers, becoming the first woman to hold that title in Lakers history.

Jaquez had the support of UCLA coach Cori Close, who urges her players to seek international competition experience to broaden their repertoire of play.

Unlike college basketball, the FIBA game is generally more physical. Jaquez’s role on the Mexican team also was different from what she is used to with UCLA, a team on which she has very tall teammates. In Mexico, Jaquez, at 6 feet, is one of the tallest players.

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“I knew it was going to be physical, but I tried to have fun and that’s what I did,” Jaquez said of the strong FIBA style.

“After every game, she had new bruises,” said Jaime Jaquez Sr., who accompanied his daughter to every game in Mexico City.

Harding said Gabriela Jaquez adapted quickly.

“The game is different than college basketball in the United States, it’s different than anywhere else you play. You’re allowed to do more things, more contact than you’re used to,” Harding said at the news conference after the first game, where she noted that it only took Jaquez one half of the game to adjust.

During the seven-day tournament in August, played at the Juan de la Barrera Olympic Gymnasium in the Mexican capital, the Mexican team was not the favorite but debuted with a win over Mozambique and then defeated New Zealand. Mexico then lost a competitive game to Montenegro and in the semifinals, they were eliminated by the powerful Czech Republic.

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The Jaquez family gathered for a fundraiser benefitting the Jaquez Family Scholarship Fund. From left, Angela, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Gabriela, Marcos and Jaime Jaquez Sr. Gabriela Jaquez played for Mexico during the summer, following her brother’s path competing fo the country.

(Cortesía UCLA)

Jaime Jaquez Sr. said he was proud of how his daughter connected with her teammates, including Sofia Payan and Carla Martinez.

“I think they are going to be her friends forever,” he said.

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Gabriela Jaquez is grateful she decided to play for Mexico.

“Honestly, it was a lot of fun, it was a great experience,” said Jaquez, who led the Mexican team in points and rebounds. “At the beginning, I was a little nervous. I didn’t want to think about it too much because I didn’t want to stress myself out. But at the end of the day, it’s basketball, it’s what I love to do.”

The competition exceeded the Mexican team’s expectations and confirmed how much Jaquez can help the team. The Camarillo native averaged 21.8 points, 7.8 rebounds and 1.3 assists per game.

“We are very happy. … Gabriela integrated very quickly with her teammates. The senior women’s national team had an outstanding pre-World Cup event,” said Modesto Robledo, president of the Mexican Basketball Sports Assn. “They played with a lot of grit.”

Jaquez said her teammates and coaches were very welcoming. The crowd also stole her heart.

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UCLA's Gabriela Jaquez dribbles during a game against California Baptist on March 23 in L.A.

UCLA’s Gabriela Jaquez dribbles during a game against California Baptist on March 23 in L.A.

(Kyusung Gong/AP)

“The people from Mexico who went to our games were incredible. They were saying they were grateful that I would play for Mexico, but no, I was the one who was more grateful,” she said.

Omar Quintero, Mexico’s national team director, believes the Jaquez siblings can have a big effect on the Mexican national team.

“She came to revolutionize Mexican women’s basketball,” Quintero said of Gabriela. And he wants to see her brother return next summer to represent Mexico.

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Last season, Jaquez and UCLA reached the NCAA tournament Sweet 16 before falling to Louisiana State. She averaged 10 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game in 34 games, starting six of them and averaging 25.2 minutes per game.

Jaquez wants to help UCLA win the Big Ten and hopes the more physical play she adapted to during the summer will help her during the NCAA tournament.

“The Big Ten championship and being in the Final Four are always our goals,” Jaquez said.

During the tournament in Mexico, Harding learned she had landed the Lakers assistant coaching job. It is unclear whether she will continue coaching Mexico during international tournaments, but federation officials hope she still has time in her schedule.

Meanwhile, the Mexican Basketball Sports Assn. is intensifying the search for players for its national teams. A FIBA rule requires players who represent a national team be born in that country or have obtained their passport from that country before the age of 16. There is only one exemption spot on the roster for a player who got their passport after the age of 16. Jaime and Gabriela Jaquez both used exemptions.

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Mexican federation officials are trying to process as many passports as possible for young Mexican American basketball players in the United States so that if they continue to develop their talent, they can play for Mexico without relying on exemptions. The federation has scheduled a camp in Los Angeles for boys and girls under age 3 for January 2025.

UCLA forward Gabriela Jaquez shoots over Purdue forward Alaina Harper.

UCLA forward Gabriela Jaquez, left, shoots over Purdue forward Alaina Harper during a game on Nov. 6.

(Ryan Sun / Associated Press)

“We may have to set up 300 passports, but if five or six players come out of those 300, we’re good,” Quintero said.

Some of the young basketball players they have in their sights include the children of former Laker Matt Barnes, who have Mexican roots through their mother.

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“We are looking for boys and girls from the United States who have the same dream as Gabriela,” Quintero said.

This article first appeared in Spanish via L.A. Times es Español.

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Cal Berkeley’s Calgorithm — social media and self-awareness in ‘the people’s program’

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Cal Berkeley’s Calgorithm — social media and self-awareness in ‘the people’s program’

BERKELEY, Calif. — Speckled throughout the mass of overjoyed fans scrunched together at the epicenter of the Cal Berkeley campus Saturday morning were the ambassadors who played specific parts in making this once inconceivable scene materialize.

They raised their phones high, capturing a 360-degree view of the madness of ESPN’s “College GameDay,” and hit record. They embraced the emotion of the moment as the sun began to peek over the Berkeley hills.

Without them, Nick Saban isn’t tearing off his crimson tie at the behest of the fans who couldn’t bear seeing even a tinge of something close to Stanford Cardinal red in front of the sea of exultant California blue and gold. Without them, program legend Marshawn Lynch isn’t flown in to be the celebrity guest picker, taking his rightful place in a golf cart and later placing Kirk Herbstreit in a very friendly headlock.

And without them, the seats inside California Memorial Stadium aren’t packed more than 12 hours later to digest an agonizing last-minute 39-38 loss to No. 8 Miami.

Behold, the ballooning cultural clout of the Calgorithm, a guerilla-like social media movement that leans into sarcasm, stereotypes and self-awareness through photoshopped and AI-generated memes that embrace the absurdity of perception.

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Calgorithm was easy to spot on Saturday in Berkeley. (Christopher Kamrani / The Athletic)

On Saturday, as GameDay’s Pat McAfee constantly roused the crowd, it was clear the Calgorithm had achieved its objective: to prove that Cal, associated with one of the most liberal communities in America, does, in fact, have a beloved fan base happily obsessed with Golden Bears football.

Punch in the hashtag online, and you’ll be awash in memes of grizzly bears wearing masks and stepping off an airplane called “Stop Climate Change Airlines” in Florida prior to Cal’s game earlier this season at Florida State. Or grizzly bears welcoming Miami Hurricanes on the tarmac with a “Critical Race Theory” book in hand.

“There’s a certain joy and a certain absurdity,” said Nam Le, who graduated from Cal in 2012. “It’s a fun story from a fan base that is traditionally ignored.”

At this point there are too many memes to count — and new attempts at their own brand of self-deprecation nearly every minute.

From within, they’ve cultivated a very obscure sports moment that has resonated not only within the online reaches of the Cal fan base, but among college football followers of other teams nationwide. A routine response from a random follower after diving deep into the Calgorithm is that “Cal is now my second favorite team,” members of the Calgorithm say.

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When it pertains to actual membership, some are known publicly, some aren’t. Some are transparent about their real lives on social media, some aren’t.

Known commodities include a teacher, data analyst, political coordinator and someone who hawks hot dogs at minor-league baseball games. The others exist in the realm of anonymity and are referred to as “the burners.” They are known by random social media handles for their participation in the online discourse that has brought a disarming nature to platforms often inundated with volatility.

They’ve made themselves seen online but also within the walls of the Cal football facility. Some members of Cal’s football support staff have a group text thread carved out specifically for new memes to share.

“The burners are hilarious, man,” said Marshall Cherrington, Cal’s director of player personnel. “We all love them inside this building.”

Linebacker Cade Uluave specifically thanked “the burners” during a news conference appearance last week for helping bring more attention to the program and game against the Hurricanes. Special teams coordinator Vic So’oto shared on X that defensive lineman Xavier Carlton and linebacker Ryan McCullough were “keeping the pocket hot like Cal burners” followed by some flame emojis.

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The reach the Calgorithm has achieved over the course of the season is apropos for the school and its locale. At a university in a city long known for its involvement in social movements dating back to the 1960s, this movement just played out on social media.

And the people, the fans, took matters into their own hands. GameDay producer Matthew Garrett said prior to making the call to Cal last week to gauge interest in hosting, he was flooded with questions by fans of what they could do to get the show to Berkeley for the first time. Prior to Saturday, Cal was one of six Power 4 schools to have never hosted.

When it got its chance, of course it was in typical cognizant Calgorithm fun. Signs held high compared Cal’s list of Nobel laureates produced at Berkeley compared with Miami. (The score is currently 61-4.) One read: “I thought this was a protest!”

The Calgorithm really seemed to take off after Cal upset Auburn 21-14 on Sept. 7 at Jordan-Hare Stadium. The meme by Don Grizzel, Ph.D (@golDonBear on X) featured cutouts of Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, whose parents met in Berkeley in the early 1960s, Oski, Cal’s bear mascot, quarterback Fernando Mendoza, a rainbow, and an obtusely stretched out photo of President Joe Biden and the caption read: “You Just Lost to the Woke Agenda.” The post has received 5 million impressions.

The scope of the Calgorithm is immeasurable, members say, due to always churning conference realignment in college football. As the previously constituted Pac-12 imploded, Cal, alongside its rival Stanford, was forced to join the Atlantic Coast Conference, a league on the opposite coast but a home in a power conference. With that, came an opportunity for Cal fans to introduce themselves to a portion of the country that may have only known of Berkeley through various long-perpetuated stereotypes.

“They already believe these stereotypes about us,” said burner Callie, also known as @WokeMobFootball. “Why don’t we just turn it up to 12 and just absolutely make fun of it for how absurd they sound when it’s thrown back at them?”

Mike Davie says Cal fans have come armed for any sort of perception lobbed their way by fans online. But they say they always try to do it with a smile knowing that college football is what they all love and that it doesn’t need to be another well poisoned online.

“Yeah, we tell them the ‘DEI’ defense is here killing it,” Davie said. “And when people say, ‘Don’t make fun of Cal fans. They police pronouns.’ And we were like, ‘Here comes the pronoun punt team!’ And it makes them laugh.”

The Calgorithm is also perpetually one step ahead. They’ve also helped raise funds for Cal’s NIL collective, Cal Legends. People donating are leaving comments thanking the Calgorithm for activating attention.

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“That’s the kind of person Cal produces into the real world, people who want to help do things in smart, simple and efficient ways,” Cherrington said. “And we want to always have our doors open to them. This is the people’s program.”

Four hours before kickoff against Miami, a small parking lot on the southeast side of campus hosted a Calgorithm tailgate. Exhausted already from a day that began before sun-up, they shared highlights and beers. They were still amped that Lynch drove the golf cart. Together, they watched Vanderbilt upset No. 1 Alabama.

They introduced themselves to one another as their online handles. Some burners geeked out over meeting others. One burner thanked Callie for remixing Chappell Roan’s “Hot to Go!” hit song for Cal running back Jaydn Ott. “Ott to Go” was played at GameDay, which Callie could not get over, and probably never will.

Fellow Cal fans crowded around an exhausted Avinash Kunnath, a Cal grad and one of the godfathers of popular fan blog site, Write for California. Kunnath wore a Calgorithm meme T-shirt, jean jacket and a fuzzy bear hat. Saturday doesn’t happen without him, and basically everyone else in that tailgate lot, they said.

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The group passed around shots of Malört, a tradition at the burner tailgate that dates back to the 2021 season. It was an ode to a past too often filled with disappointment, one which made a vengeful reappearance Saturday night. But it was also a salute to a future so swiftly reshaped by the community of devotees who took matters into their own hands and made the joke at their own expense before anyone else could.

“I like to tell people that we almost died as a program,” Le said. “We can’t really afford to be realistic about it anymore. This program deserves to and can only survive with a love and an ambition and a spirit that’s larger.”

(Top image: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; Bob Kupbens / Icon Sportswire)

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