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Deshaun Watson: Wife of Indians legend Jim Thome cancels Browns season tickets over trade

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Deshaun Watson: Wife of Indians legend Jim Thome cancels Browns season tickets over trade

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The commerce for quarterback Deshaun Watson — who’s dealing with 22 civil lawsuits over sexual assault allegations — has led to a backlash amongst followers of the Cleveland Browns. 

Now, the controversy over the commerce has prompted one outstanding sports activities household with ties to Cleveland to attract a “line within the sand.” 

Andrea Thome, the spouse of Cleveland Indians legend Jim Thome, has determined to cancel the household’s Browns season tickets.

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Designated hitter Jim Thome of the Chicago White Sox celebrates together with his spouse, Andrea Thome(left), after hitting his five hundredth profession homerun throughout the recreation in opposition to the Los Angeles Angels at U.S. Mobile Discipline in Chicago, Illinois on Sept. 16, 2007. 
(Picture by Matthew Kutz/Chicago White Sox/MLB through Getty Photographs)

Thome introduced on Twitter Friday that she was canceling the tickets on the identical day that the Browns held a press convention to introduce Watson and deal with the controversy surrounding the commerce and his lawsuits. 

“Formally cancelled our Browns season tickets immediately and requested for a refund as they had been paid in full,” Thome wrote. “Very unhappy after 40 years as a fan, however that is my line within the sand. I imagine girls. Particularly when there are 22 of them. That press convention did nothing to alter my thoughts.”

Through the press convention, Watson answered a number of questions concerning the validity of the allegations and repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. When requested if he can be open to counseling, Watson mentioned: “I don’t have an issue.”

“I perceive the entire circumstance may be very troublesome, particularly for the ladies’s aspect — the followers on this group. I’m not naive to that,” Watson mentioned of the criticism his commerce has drawn. “I do know these allegations are very, very critical, however like I discussed earlier than, I’ve by no means assaulted any girl. I by no means disrespected any girl. I used to be raised by a single guardian mother. … That’s who raised me.”

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Cleveland Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski speaks during a press conference introducing quarterback Deshaun Watson at CrossCountry Mortgage Campus on March 25, 2022 in Berea, Ohio.

Cleveland Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski speaks throughout a press convention introducing quarterback Deshaun Watson at CrossCountry Mortgage Campus on March 25, 2022 in Berea, Ohio.
(Nick Cammett/Getty Photographs)

“I can’t communicate on what folks’s opinions are, as a result of everybody has their very own opinions,” he mentioned, “however what I can proceed to do is inform the reality, and that’s I’ve by no means assaulted or disrespected or harassed any girls in my life. Like I mentioned earlier than, I used to be raised in another way. That’s not in my DNA. That’s not my tradition. That’s not me as an individual and that’s not how I used to be raised.”

NFL EXEC BLASTS DESHAUN WATSON’S NEW CONTRACT WITH BROWNS

If the Browns do not supply a refund, Thome mentioned she plans to public sale off the tickets and publicly donate the cash to completely different girls’s disaster charities in northeast Ohio.

“They might not give us a refund. However I despatched the letter immediately. If @Browns gained’t refund—-I’ll public sale off each single recreation and publicly donate each cent to completely different girls’s disaster charities in N.E. Ohio, elevating consciousness week by week throughout the season,” she wrote. 

Browns coach Kevin Stefanski on Monday mentioned he expects Watson to take part absolutely within the group’s offseason program starting April 18.

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Talking on the NFL homeowners’ conferences in Palm Seashore, Florida, Stefanski mentioned the group has been welcoming of Watson regardless of his off-the-field points, and the coach famous he’ll attempt and ensure these points do not distract the group. 

Cleveland Browns general manager Andrew Berry, left, new quarterback Deshaun Watson, center, and head coach Kevin Stefanski pose for a photo during a news conference at the NFL football team's training facility, Friday, March 25, 2022, in Berea, Ohio. 

Cleveland Browns common supervisor Andrew Berry, left, new quarterback Deshaun Watson, heart, and head coach Kevin Stefanski pose for a photograph throughout a information convention on the NFL soccer group’s coaching facility, Friday, March 25, 2022, in Berea, Ohio. 
(AP Picture/Ron Schwane)

“I believe that’s necessary for our gamers, coaches and our constructing normally,’’ Stefanski mentioned, in accordance with the Cleveland Plain-Vendor. “We perceive that there are questions, and we’re going to proceed to have that dialogue. However on the finish of the day, we even have our work to do. We’ve got to concentrate on that. … It’s a must to be current and be the place your toes are. That can actually be our strategy to every part.”

BROWNS’ KEVIN STEFANSKI HOPES FOR ‘CLOSURE’ IN BAKER MAYFIELD SITUATION

Amid the backlash for hiring Watson, Stefanski mentioned his group has tried to be “understanding of everyone’s viewpoint.”

“I need to simply make it possible for I’m out there in our constructing to everybody to speak by means of as a result of it’s not one thing that was taken calmly,” the coach added.It’s simply too necessary. I wished to make it possible for everyone understood that that is one thing that took weeks, months, weeks of gathering info, of discussions and conversations. It’s not one thing we might take calmly.”

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The commerce for Watson, who agreed to a five-year, $230 million contract with the Browns, probably spells the top of the Baker Mayfield period. Mayfield has been the Browns’ quarterback since his rookie season after the group chosen him No. 1 total within the 2018 NFL Draft.

Mayfield battled a shoulder damage final season as he began 14 video games and threw for simply 3,010 yards and 17 touchdowns, the bottom totals in his profession. In 2020, Mayfield led the Browns to the playoffs for the primary time since 2002, throwing for 3,563 yards, 26 touchdowns and eight interceptions. 

Jim Thome, a Corridor of Famer, had his quantity (25) retired by the Indians in 2018. 

Cleveland Indians batter Jim Thome watches as his solo home run goes over the right field wall during the second inning against the New York Yankees 19 June at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, Ohio.

Cleveland Indians batter Jim Thome watches as his solo dwelling run goes over the precise discipline wall throughout the second inning in opposition to the New York Yankees 19 June at Jacobs Discipline in Cleveland, Ohio.
(ANTHONY ONCHAK/AFP through Getty Photographs)

He at present ranks eighth on the MLB all-time dwelling run checklist, with 612.

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Fox Information’ Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report

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Palisades High girls' basketball team has an emotional, and winning, return to the court

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Palisades High girls' basketball team has an emotional, and winning, return to the court

A light blue poster with the words “We’re Here for You” between a drawing of two Dolphins hung on the wall of the Fairfax High gym Wednesday afternoon. Another sign read: “Let’s go Pali!”

Fairfax teams are nicknamed the Lions, but on this day home fans were rooting almost as hard for the visitors.

Despite playing on the opponents’ floor, something it will have to get used to for the time being, the Palisades High girls basketball team saw its first action since a fire ripped through the Pacific Palisades community eight days earlier.

The Dolphins won big, 75-42, but their real victory was suiting up.

Ayla Teegardin, a junior wing on the varsity team, lost her home in the fire but was anxious to get back on the court as soon as possible. She won the opening tip, scored five points, grabbed five rebounds, dished out four assists and had two steals while Riley Oku led the way with 17 points for Palisades (7-6, 2-0 in Western League).

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“The first day we had a gym to practice in I was there,” said Teegardin, who is staying with her family at a hotel in Marina del Rey. “Basketball helps me get through the hard things in my life. It’s a way I can cope.”

Head coach Adam Levine shared that in addition to Teegardin, three frosh/soph players and three JV players also lost their homes.

“Every parent said this is the best news of the week,” said Levine, who has been flooded with calls and texts from coaches offering donations, equipment and gym time. “We were off Monday, so yesterday was the first day back and Brentwood School let us use their gym for practice. The girls couldn’t wait to play.”

A poster on the wall of the Fairfax High gym in support of the visiting team Palisades.

(Steve Galluzzo / For The Times)

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Athletic director Rocky Montz was at Wednesday’s game and credited Principal Dr. Pam Magee for “putting the press on” to get winter sports teams playing as soon as possible.

The boys basketball squad resumes its schedule Thursday at LACES (preceded by the girls), plays Hamilton at Pierce College on Friday night and plays Oxnard at El Camino Real High in Woodland Hills on Saturday. Jeff Bryant’s team (9-5) has practiced the last three days at Westside Neighborhood School in Los Angeles.

Though the Palisades campus is off limits, the baseball and football fields are in good shape and neither the gym nor the pool appear to have suffered significant damage.

“As of right now we’ll be doing online learning for at least the next few weeks,” Montz said. “I’m not allowed on campus, but from pictures I’ve seen on-campus facilities look pretty good. We were dealt a bad hand but we’ll handle it the best we can. For league games, we’ll play some doubleheaders [boys and girls] and others will be separate depending on what alternative sites we can find. Soccer starts back up next week and if we have to play games on the road we will. As far as water polo, we’re looking at Loyola Marymount, Samo High and SMC or possibly the YMCA pool near University High. As for the spring season, which begins in three weeks, Cheviot Hills Pony Baseball and Venice Little League have offered help so we’re considering all possible options.”

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Even the wrestling team has found a place to practice, a Brazilian jiu jitsu studio in West L.A. Indeed, where there’s a will, there’s a way.

“Safety is the most important thing, but we need a home to come back to,” Montz added. “There are issues we need to be taken care of and just how much time that takes I don’t know yet.”

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PSR is not perfect, but the Premier League’s shock therapy has had an effect

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PSR is not perfect, but the Premier League’s shock therapy has had an effect

An air of desperation hung over a handful of Premier League clubs last summer. Accounting years were drawing to a close across the top division of English football and the pressure was on to book profits before it was too late. Player sales were a must if a profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) breach was to be avoided before June 30.

Newcastle United’s business back then was a microcosm of the chaos. They reluctantly agreed to sell Yankuba Minteh, their then teenage winger, to Brighton & Hove Albion for £30million before sanctioning the exit of Elliot Anderson, the homegrown forward, to Nottingham Forest for £35m.

“We had no other option,” their head coach Eddie Howe told reporters in October about those two departures. “We couldn’t breach PSR, couldn’t face a points deduction, and the only two deals we had on the table at that time were the two deals we did.”

Newcastle, who had spent £320million in the first two and a half years under their Saudi Arabian owners, did not want to sell either Minteh or Anderson. Nor, you suspect, did they want to pay Forest £20m for Odysseas Vlachodimos, a third-choice goalkeeper yet to feature for them in the Premier League under Howe. Anderson’s sale, though, was reliant on Forest, who had breached PSR last season and were close to the line again, getting something in return, so Newcastle had nowhere to turn.


Newcastle did not want to lose Minteh to Brighton (Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Others were at it, too, with Aston Villa, Everton, Chelsea and Leicester City all concocting their own mutually beneficial deals to chase compliance. Close to £200million, most of it “pure profit”, was collectively banked by those six clubs in June’s final weeks and Tuesday brought confirmation that the trading had been worth it.

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A 14-day assessment period of 2023-24 accounts and PSR calculations had not raised red flags within the Premier League and, unlike last January, when Everton and Forest were both charged, there was no cause for disciplinary action to be triggered.

Leicester’s case remains more complex than others, with the Premier League still believing they are on the hook for at least one charge amid the legal challenges back and forth, but 2024, the year of the asterisk, has left its mark.

The three PSR charges heard last season — two for Everton and one for Forest — resulted in a combined 12 points being deducted, the kind of shock therapy that was difficult to ignore.

It may never be known just how close Newcastle and others came to going beyond their spending threshold last season. Clubs’ 2023-24 accounts, which are due to be filed by the end of March, will give us clues, but the absence of transparency in the PSR process makes it difficult to offer fully informed analysis.

Clubs instead have to be judged by their actions and those madcap days of late June revealed anxieties ultimately born out of the penalties handed to Everton and Forest a few months earlier. That jolted the whole of the Premier League, heightening motivation to find quick profits in the transfer market once the season had concluded.

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Howe admitted as much — Newcastle had no wish to sell Minteh or Anderson. Certainly not both. But, as Howe, the front-facing figure in that organisation, accepts, there was “no other option” but to accept £65million in transfer fees for the duo if a PSR breach was to be avoided.

Were Chelsea as close to the edge? That is unclear but their compliance owed as much to the sale of two hotels which are part of the wider site at their Stamford Bridge stadium to other companies owned by BlueCo, Chelsea’s parent company, as it did the late sale of defender Ian Maatsen to Villa for £37.5million. Others did not have the luxury of property deals enhancing the numbers.


Maatsen’s transfer to Villa helped Chelsea comply with PSR, but not as much as the sale of two hotels (Matt McNulty/Getty Images)

PSR continues to have its vocal opponents, such as Villa co-owner Nassef Sawiris, who told the Financial Times in June that the regulations were inhibitive and “not good for football”, but last season served the warning that overspending would still carry a sporting cost. Everton and Forest became the bad boys nobody wanted to emulate.

That was obvious with the sudden business done in June, and the wariness has been extended into this season.

Manchester United, traditionally one of English football’s strongest financial forces, have made it clear they have little scope to strengthen new head coach Ruben Amorim’s hand after their heavy losses of recent times. Newcastle also remain bound by financial constraints, with only about £60million spent this season. Villa’s net spend for the season, meanwhile, stood at about £26million going into the current winter transfer window.

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Those three clubs could have spent more but learnt last season that punishments would then be unavoidable down the road.

It would not be fitting to congratulate the Premier League on strong governance when 115 charges of financial wrongdoing still hang over four-in-a-row title winners Manchester City and Leicester’s case remains unresolved, but last season served notice that rules had to be adhered to. Points deductions would be in the post to any club not complying.

“The Premier League submits that the only proper sanction is a sporting sanction in the form of a deduction of points,” it argued in Everton’s first PSR hearing, which brought an initial 10-point penalty, later cut to six on appeal. That exact sentence was repeated when Forest faced an independent commission.

PSR has its inconsistencies and imperfections, and might well lead to more scrambled, incoherent transfer business before financial years are out at the end of every June.

But the past 12 months — and no fresh charges this week — have made it clear to clubs that it is a sanction to be taken seriously.

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(Top photos: Getty Images)

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Ex-Notre Dame coach opens up on Caitlin Clark backing out of commitment: 'I may still be coaching if she came'

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Ex-Notre Dame coach opens up on Caitlin Clark backing out of commitment: 'I may still be coaching if she came'

Former Notre Dame women’s basketball coach Muffet McGraw has revealed the details of Caitlin Clark’s decommitment from her program during the star’s recruiting process in 2019. 

McGraw appeared on the “Good Game With Sarah Spain” podcast on Tuesday, and said that if Clark followed through on her commitment to Notre Dame, then McGraw might still be the coach there. McGraw retired from coaching in April 2020, just months ahead of Clark’s freshman year. 

“I may still be coaching if Caitlin Clark came to Notre Dame,” McGraw said.

McGraw says she received a verbal commitment from Clark to play at Notre Dame, but it never felt certain. 

“She committed to us, but I had a feeling it was kind of a soft commitment when she did, because she couldn’t decide, couldn’t decide,” McGraw said. “And then finally she said, ‘I want to come.’ But it wasn’t like ‘I’m coming!’ It was kind of like ‘I made the decision.’”

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Notre Dame head coach Muffet McGraw reacts on the sidelines against UConn during the women’s Final Four at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida, on April 5, 2019. (Jasen Vinlove-USA Today Sports)

Then, after a tense and dramatic wait, McGraw found out she would miss out on Clark, who announced her commitment to Iowa on Nov. 12, 2019. 

“After that, we waited and waited for her to announce it, because as you know, we’re not allowed to announce anything. The players have to do that themselves,” McGraw said. “So she made the announcement a long time after that, I kept saying ‘When is it coming out?’ And then when she made the announcement, she was going to Iowa. But of course she called me to tell me.” 

McGraw’s retirement came shortly after the end of the 2019-20 season, five months after finding out she wouldn’t be coaching Clark, ending a 33-year run that included two national championships in 2001 and 2018. 

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McGraw went on to call Clark’s decommitment from her program in favor of Iowa, “probably a pretty good decision.” 

Clark previously told ESPN that her own family wanted her to play for the Fighting Irish. 

“My family wanted me to go to Notre Dame,” Caitlin said. “At the end of the day they were like, you make the decision for yourself. But it’s Notre Dame! ‘Rudy’ was one of my favorite movies. How could you not pick Notre Dame?”

USC’S JUJU WATKINS OPENS UP ON CAITLIN CLARK’S WHITE PRIVILEGE COMMENTS AND EMBRACING CONTROVERSIAL NEW FANS

Iowa vs Nebraska

Iowa guard Caitlin Clark cheers during Big Ten Women’s Basketball Championship against Nebraska at the  at Target Center on March 10, 2024 in Minneapolis. (Angelina Katsanis/Star Tribune via Getty Images)

Clark then spoke about her experience visiting Notre Dame and her consideration of playing for the Fighting Irish during an interview on the “New Heights” podcast on Jan. 2. She said she ultimately made the decision not to play there because of a feeling in her gut. 

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“I could feel it in my gut, I was like ‘Ahh, I’m not supposed to go there,’” Clark said. 

“I basically narrowed it down pretty early on when I was going through my college recruitment that I wanted to be like in the Midwest, just kind of a homebody. Family person. Just wanted to stay fairly close to home. So that narrowed a lot of stuff down.”

Clark then played her entire four-year college career for the Hawkeyes, where she broke multiple program and NCAA records, including the all-time leading scoring record among all college basketball players, men or women, in history. 

Clark also met her current boyfriend, Connor McCaffery, while at Iowa. McCaffery played on Iowa’s men’s basketball team for his father, head coach Fran McCaffery. 

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Caitlin Clark

Caitlin Clark dribbles down the court at the All Iowa Attack Basketball Fieldhouse on April 22, 2017, in Ames, Iowa. (Luke Lu/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

Meanwhile, without Clark, Notre Dame fared OK, but not nearly as well as Iowa. Under the leadership of current head coach Niele Ivey, the Fighting Irish made the NCAA tournament three years in a row from 2021-24, but they lost in the regional semifinal all three times, while Clark led much deeper tournament runs in 2023 and 2024. 

Clark led Iowa to two straight national championship game appearances, en route to becoming the No. 1 overall selection by the Indiana Fever in the 2024 WNBA Draft. McCaffery was already in Indiana working on the Pacers’ coaching staff, and they are still in the city together as he now works on Butler’s men’s basketball coaching staff. 

Clark was named WNBA Rookie of the Year, was selected to the All-Star team, led the WNBA in assists, and helped lead the Fever to the playoffs in her rookie season. 

Clark was also named Time magazine’s Athlete of the Year for 2024. 

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