Sports
Las Vegas Raiders 2022-2023 NFL schedule
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The Las Vegas Raiders limped into the playoffs final 12 months and practically beat the Cincinnati Bengals within the postseason behind star quarterback Derek Carr.
Add Davante Adams into the combination and the Raiders may probably be one of the harmful groups within the convention. Carr, Adams, Josh Jacobs and Darren Waller on the offensive aspect of the ball will definitely be enjoyable to observe.
Las Vegas added Chandler Jones within the offseason too in hopes of including extra strain on some star quarterbacks within the division. Jones was a Professional Bowler in 2021 after recording 10.5 sacks.
Learn under for the Raiders’ schedule, how one can watch video games and the place to observe.
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Week 1: Las Vegas Raiders @ Los Angeles Chargers, September 11, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:25 p.m. ET
Week 2: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Arizona Cardinals, September 18, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:25 p.m. ET
Week 3: Las Vegas Raiders @ Tennessee Titans, September 25, 2022
TV: FOX
Time: 1 p.m. ET
Week 4: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Denver Broncos, October 2, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:25 p.m. ET
Week 5: Las Vegas Raiders @ Kansas Metropolis Chiefs, October 10, 2022
TV: ESPN
Time: 8:15 p.m. ET
Week 6: BYE
Week 7: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Houston Texans, October 23, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Week 8: Las Vegas Raiders @ New Orleans Saints, October 30, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 1 p.m. ET
Week 9: Las Vegas Raiders @ Jacksonville Jaguars, November 6, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 1 p.m. ET
Week 10: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Indianapolis Colts, November 13, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Week 11: Las Vegas Raiders @ Denver Broncos, November 20, 2022
TV: FOX
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Week 12: Las Vegas Raiders @ Seattle Seahawks, November 27, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Week 13: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Los Angeles Chargers, December 4, 2022
TV: CBS
Time: 4:25 p.m. ET
Week 14: Las Vegas Raiders @ Los Angeles Rams, December 8, 2022
TV: Amazon Prime
Time: 8:15 p.m. ET
Week 15: Las Vegas Raiders vs. New England Patriots, December 18, 2022
TV: NBC
Time: 8:20 p.m. ET
Week 16: Las Vegas Raiders @ Pittsburgh Steelers, December 24, 2022
TV: NFL Community
Time: 8:15 p.m. ET
Week 17: Las Vegas Raiders vs. San Francisco 49ers, January 1, 2023
TV: FOX
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Week 18: Las Vegas Raiders vs. Kansas Metropolis Chiefs, January 8, 2023
TV: TBD
Time: TBD
Sports
WWE legend Ric Flair addresses viral restaurant confrontation, denies being drunk
Ric Flair went viral earlier this week as a video of a verbal confrontation he was in at a Gainesville, Florida, restaurant surfaced online.
The WWE legend was at Piesanos Stone Fired Pizza last week when he was “Disrespected More Than I Ever Have In My Entire Life,” per a post on X.
Flair was heard using expletives and asking a bartender to take their discussion into the parking lot.
The 75-year-old wrote on X that the incident began “Because Of An Issue I Had With The Kitchen Manager Taking Too Long In The Bathroom.”
Flair addressed the argument on the “MJ Morning Show” in Tampa.
“It just escalated, and I was wrong for getting mad, but I kind of felt like I was defending my position,” Flair said. “I was wrong for losing my temper. When I feel like I’m put in that area where I’m uncomfortable and all of a sudden everything just fell apart, I got upset.”
“I was wrong for getting upset. I probably just should have just walked out the door, but it caught me so off-guard because we were having a wonderful time,” he added. “Then all of a sudden… someone in their kitchen said I did something wrong in the bathroom and there’s no one there except me and him.”
ART ‘ONE GLOVE’ JIMMERSON, WHO FOUGHT IN VERY FIRST UFC EVENT, DEAD AT 60
Flair denied being drunk, although he admitted he had Michelob Ultra and “probably” two mixed drinks.
The video begins with Flair and a bartender in an argument, and Flair saying, “I didn’t do anything wrong except spend money and put this place over and bring my family and friends here. That is bad for you.”
The bartender asked why that would be the case, to which Flair said to “watch social media tomorrow,” seemingly hinting at his future post.
The bartender told Flair his name was Nicholas, to which Flair replied, “Nicholas D—head.”
The two then discussed an interaction Flair had near the bathroom. Flair said on social media that the argument started “Because Of An Issue I Had With The Kitchen Manager Taking Too Long In The Bathroom.”
Flair then offered a female bartender a $1,000 tip “just to say to him ‘kiss my a–.’”
Nicholas said he “cut off” Flair at the bar and did not ask him to leave like Flair claimed.
Flair then asked the bartender to take the discussion to the parking lot, which he declined as he was “on the clock.” Flair then replied, “You’re on the p—- clock.” Another patron at the bar said he would take it outside, as he was not an employee, and he did not “give a s—.” That’s when a female bartender asked that man to “please stop.”
Flair posted on social media pleading to his followers to “never visit” Piesanos, although he said he had food from there delivered via Uber Eats shortly after the altercation anyway.
Flair has battled health and alcohol issues over the years.
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Sports
Battle in Huntington Beach after transgender surfer barred from longboard competition
Sasha Jane Lowerson just wanted to surf.
But when the Australian longboard surfer attempted to enter an upcoming competition in Huntington Beach, the athlete, who was born intersex, learned that the organizer wasn’t going to allow transgender athletes.
Instead, surfers would be required to enter the category of the gender they were assigned at birth, the organizer said in a video posted to Instagram last month.
The video received over 4,000 likes and more than 1,000 comments from people both supporting and arguing against the move. This week, it prompted the California Coastal Commission to intervene in what equity advocates say is an issue of access to the state’s coastline and an ongoing problem of discrimination against transgender athletes.
“As I walk my journey through the turmoil and the implications of people that want to spread misinformation, I’ve found myself wondering why?” Lowerson wrote in a post on Instagram in response to the situation. “Just why [do] people hate me for existing?”
The fight playing out in Huntington Beach is part of a larger discussion over the rights of transgender individuals across the country, particularly those in professional sports.
Former President Trump has said he plans to ban transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports if he again wins the White House in November. Though the city of Huntington Beach is not part of the fight, some LGBTQ+ activists have expressed concern after the actions of a new, conservative City Council — which, among other things, banned Pride flags from being flown at city properties.
Advocates such as surf equity activist Sabrina Brennan say a ban has nothing to do with athleticism or competition.
“It’s a Republican and religious agenda that’s playing out and, frankly, harming people,” Brennan said. “The entire LGBTQ community is being negatively impacted. There’s a lot of damage happening.”
Lowerson did not respond to Times requests for comment. However, she told the Inertia that before she entered the Huntington Beach Longboard Pro contest, scheduled for Saturday, she reached out to organizer Todd Messick to make sure a spot was available for her. She didn’t hear back, but saw his video post calling for more entrants in the women’s division, so she entered, she told the outlet.
In his Instagram video on April 25, Messick addressed Lowerson’s entry, saying that his policy was to “support biological males and biological females in their divisions, respectively.” The policy, he said, complied with the standards of the sport’s governing body, the International Surfing Assn.
“You guys can live however and whatever you want to do in life. It’s not for me to decide,” he said in the video. “But it is for me to decide what’s fair and not fair for the American Longboard Assn. That being said, we’re going to stick to our guns. I want to offer an equal playing field for all athletes.”
Messick did not respond to a call seeking comment on Thursday.
The video quickly caught Brennan’s attention, and she contacted the California Coastal Commission.
International Surfing Assn. policy, which was updated last year, states that a transgender woman may participate in a women’s event if she provides a written declaration saying she identifies as a woman and tells the organization’s medical commission that her testosterone level has been below a certain concentration in the last 12 months. Lowerson wrote online that she meets all requirements for her to compete in the women’s category.
“I think discrimination on public property, on public lands, is completely unacceptable,” Brennan said. “To do this in a surf competition is absolutely not right. The ocean belongs to all of us.”
Brennan, who runs Surf Equity, which aims to improve access, equity and justice in pro surfing, said forcing a transgender athlete to “compete in a gender category that they don’t identify with is just really wrong.”
It’s also not in compliance with current policy, she said.
California Coastal Commission staff wrote in a letter Tuesday to Messick that if he wants to host the event, he will have to allow transgender athletes to participate. Banning those individuals violates the Coastal Act, a landmark law that declared the beach as a public treasure to be shared by everyone, according to the letter.
“Prohibiting or unfairly limiting transgender athletes from competing in this or any surf competition that takes place in the coastal waters of California does not meet the requirements of the public access policies of the Coastal Act and impedes access by discriminating against transgender surfers,” Coastal Commission Executive Director Kate Huckelbridge wrote.
The letter was written to formalize a conversation staff had with Messick in which he agreed to allow transgender participants in the contest, according to the document.
Lowerson said in an interview with the Inertia that she entered the Huntington Beach contest to have fun. But now she’s decided not to participate.
This is the American Longboard Assn.’s second year hosting the competition in Huntington Beach.
Brennan and others have long fought to make surfing — traditionally a male-dominated sport — more inclusive in California. And this isn’t the first time the California Coastal Commission has stepped in.
In 2016, the commission required the Titans of Mavericks, a famous big-wave contest near Half Moon Bay, to have a heat for women if it wanted a permit. For decades, the contest had invited only men.
In 2018, the State Lands Commission indicated it would lease the public beach for Mavericks only if women and men were awarded the same prize money. Historically, women have been paid less than male surfers participating in the same contests. Commission staff wrote in a report at the time that “the waves do not discriminate.”
Lowerson has long been a public figure in the surfing world. In March 2022, she placed ninth in the Noosa Festival of Surfing and was the first transgender woman to compete at the professional level. She also placed first in the Open Women’s and Women’s Logger divisions at the Western Australian State Titles that year.
Despite the gains made by transgender athletes, there have been persistent detractors. Sportswear company Rip Curl faced backlash this year after it featured Lowerson in an Instagram post as part of the company’s “Meet the Local Heroes of Western Australia” campaign. The comments eventually prompted the company to remove the post, according to published reports.
“I just want to be me, and I want to be included,” Lowerson told the Australian Broadcasting Co. in 2022.
Lowerson’s name did not appear on a list of individuals participating in the women’s division of the Huntington Beach Longboard Pro competition published Thursday. The roster had two spots left.
Sports
Julian Edelman recalls tense backstage moment between Robert Kraft, Bill Belichick at Tom Brady's roast
There was a noticeable amount of tension in the air before Netflix’s “The Roast of Tom Brady” kicked off, according to former New England Patriots star Julian Edelman.
Edelman was joined by Drew Bledsoe, who was the Patriots starting quarterback before Brady took the reins, on a recent edition of the “Games with Names” podcast. The two former NFL stars , who both attended the roast, detailed the seemingly tense pre-show moment.
Edelman said his former coach Bill Belichick was initially enjoying his time in the green room and was “excited” to see so many of his former players.
“Pre-show, we’re in the green room. Randy [Moss], Drew [Bledsoe], me, [Rob Gronkowski], we were just chilling in there,” Edelman said. “Bill was opening up, he’s having fun, he’s talking war stories, talking rookies. Doing s— we know what Bill’s about, but it was like amplified, because he’s excited to see guys because he doesn’t have a job anymore.”
SUPER BOWL CHAMP ADMITS ‘OLD-SCHOOL MENTALITY’ WOULD HAVE KEPT HIM FROM BILL BELICHICK ZINGERS DURING ROAST
But, Belichick’s relaxed demeanor quickly went out the window once longtime team owner Robert Kraft walked in.
“The tension in that room, though, could cut f—ing glass,” Edelman said. “It was so awkward. … I was just like, ‘Oh s—, this could be some fireworks.’ I just walked away.”
Bledsoe described the awkwardness as “some crazy s—” and hinted that the tension was “very, very real.”
But, Bledsoe did note that Belichick and Kraft did manage to have a brief conversation.
“They did break it down and got together for 10 minutes at least, the two of them,” the former Patriots quarterback said.
At one point during the roast, comedian Kevin Hart encouraged Belichick and Kraft to both drink a shot of alcohol as a show of goodwill.
“I want to say this is the greatest coach in the history of the game that did what no one else has done,” Kraft told the audience. “And having Tom Brady and him was the greatest honor the good Lord gave me.”
Belichick left the Patriots earlier this year after a remarkable 24 seasons with the team. The Patriots said the organization and the coach “mutually agreed to part ways.”
However, Belichick and Kraft’s relationship seemed to grow particularly sour in recent years. Belichick did not land another coaching job once he left New England, which is something Kraft may have contributed to.
In April, ESPN reported that Kraft contacted Falcons owner Arthur Blank following Belichick’s interview for Atlanta’s head coaching job and suggested that the coach was not trustworthy.
Belichick coached the franchise to six Super Bowls during his tenure. But, the Patriots largely struggled following Brady’s departure. Belichick never won another playoff game after Brady left, and New England finished the 2023 season with a 4-13 record.
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