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Practical but Not Pretty. That’s Pro Tennis at Miami’s N.F.L. Stadium.

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Practical but Not Pretty. That’s Pro Tennis at Miami’s N.F.L. Stadium.

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Nobody actually needed to maneuver the Miami Open 18 miles north from the idyll setting of Key Biscayne to a suburban N.F.L. stadium and its car parking zone.

Not match organizers, or gamers, or county officers, or longtime followers. They so beloved the Key Biscayne location that they tolerated the visitors from downtown Miami throughout the Rickenbacker Causeway and confines so cramped at Crandon Park that gamers typically stretched and warmed up on the stadium’s concourse.

Trekking throughout the crystal waters of Biscayne Bay made a day at these old-school grounds really feel like a mini trip to tennis Shangri-La, with the coastal breezes by the coconut palms and dense vegetation easing the South Florida humidity. For a lot of, a tennis match, even one as vital because the Miami Open, is much less a sporting occasion than a novel method to expertise the most effective of what a area has to supply, whether or not it’s the seascapes past Monte Carlo Nation Membership, or the desert mountain views of Indian Wells, Calif.

However Crandon Park badly wanted an improve. And whereas I.M.G., the sports activities and leisure conglomerate that owns the match, was keen to spend some $50 million to renovate the primary stadium, which seated roughly 13,000 spectators, and assemble three new everlasting stadiums with greater than 10,000 seats mixed, native opposition arose within the type of Bruce Matheson.

Matheson’s household had donated the land for Crandon Park to Dade County in 1940 beneath phrases that didn’t embody non-public enterprise. A mediated settlement in 1992 allowed for one stadium, however he drew the road at three extra, returned to courtroom and gained, stopping any enlargement.

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With few choices in South Florida, I.M.G. minimize a cope with Stephen Ross, the proprietor of the Dolphins. He agreed to wedge a short lived tennis area within the nook of Exhausting Rock Stadium every March and construct a everlasting grandstand, together with greater than two dozen different courts, in his car parking zone.

It was the polar reverse of Crandon Park attraction, with its bandbox stadium that felt like a tennis model of a beloved nightclub. Roger Federer was not completely satisfied.

“Proper now it doesn’t really feel nice to maneuver away from Key Biscayne to be sincere,” he mentioned throughout the match’s closing 12 months on the seashore in 2018.

5 years later, Stefanos Tsitsipas, the Greek star, is amongst these nonetheless pining for the previous neighborhood and adjusting to the brand new setup — a stadium-within-a-stadium for the primary courtroom, a tennis advanced MacGyvered into a parking lot. There generally is a “don’t search for” high quality to all of it, lest the vacancy of the soccer stadium or the development for a coming F1 race become visible.

“It’s one of many only a few tournaments of the 12 months that I’d say is soulless,” Tsitsipas mentioned after he misplaced to Karen Khachanov of Russia within the spherical of 16. “It has zero vibe, zero vitality.”

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Tsitsipas, who has by no means made it previous the quarterfinals right here, mentioned he loves Miami as a tennis vacation spot however that he believes that tennis tournaments ought to happen in venues the place gamers and followers can join with the historical past of the game. “I guess any participant would nonetheless select to be on Key Biscayne,” he mentioned.

Not everybody. Carlos Alcaraz, the world No. 1 and defending champion, is a serious fan of the brand new location.

“A tennis courtroom is at all times the identical measurement,” Alcaraz mentioned after beating Tommy Paul in straight units on Tuesday. “I really feel nice right here.”

The expanded grounds and simpler entry to residents north and west of Miami allowed attendance to develop to a file 388,734 in 2019, 62,603 greater than the Key Biscayne file. The match is more likely to break that file this 12 months. Joshua Ripple, I.M.G.’s senior vp for tennis occasions, mentioned the match is financially way more profitable on the new web site and may give gamers a office crammed with facilities.

“It was once extra about the place you had been going, how cool is the city, and the place can me and my pals exit to eat,” he mentioned. Now, he mentioned, it’s about a lot of observe courts, loads of balls, good meals on web site, an enormous fitness center and respectable transportation.

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At Exhausting Rock, I.M.G. can promote 50 lush company suites as a substitute of 25 at Key Biscayne, and the 75-acre footprint, in contrast with 32 acres in Crandon Park, has allowed for 100,000 sq. ft of pop-up retail and competition house. Mark Shapiro, the president of I.M.G.’s guardian firm, Endeavor Co., referred to as it “a day get together” minus the pool.

James Blake, the previous professional who has been the match’s director since 2018, mentioned he now has extra alternatives to say sure to participant requests. On-site ice baths. Personal therapeutic massage rooms. Personal suites for the highest eight gamers and defending champions. A sprawling restoration room. Shaded seating for gamers and their entourages on the soccer subject, plus corn gap and spike ball. Even bathe heads excessive sufficient to accommodate N.F.L. linemen — and tall tennis gamers like Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev.

It beats filling buckets from the lodge ice machine to refill the bathtub within the room lengthy after a match. Or a participant eating space with out sufficient seats.

“There may be room to develop right here,” Blake mentioned. “It felt like in case you put yet one more particular person at Crandon Park, it was going to be Armageddon.”

And but, Crandon Park nonetheless has its pull.

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Late Wednesday morning, Jorge Fernandez, the daddy of the U.S. Open finalist Leylah Fernandez, was loading up a automobile after a observe session along with his different daughter, Bianca, who can also be attempting to make it as a professional, on their favourite courts at Crandon Park, a world away from the motion at Exhausting Rock Stadium.

“No comparability,” he mentioned, when requested concerning the previous and the brand new match websites. “You bought the seashore, you bought the golf course, you’re near downtown.”

Contained in the previous Crandon Park stadium, the place Federer and Rafael Nadal performed their first match in 2004 (Rafa gained) two middle-aged locals had been having a recreation. Federer and Nadal they weren’t — and that didn’t matter one bit.

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Oldest MLB player turns 100: Roomed with Yogi Berra, stymied Ted Williams

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Oldest MLB player turns 100: Roomed with Yogi Berra, stymied Ted Williams

SONOMA, Calif. — There were no radar guns in Art Schallock’s day, and even if there were, the soft-throwing lefty knows he would have barely registered a blip. At 5-foot-9, 155 pounds, the New York Yankees pitcher got by on guile.

“I was sneaky,’’ Schallock said Monday.

But now, at very long last, the crafty lefty is about to hit triple-digits. Schallock turns 100 this month, a milestone day for the oldest living former Major League Baseball player.

And here inside this senior living center, where Schallock is the resident celebrity, they’re about to throw the party of his century. “Oh, it’s the big buzz,’’ said Wendy Cornejo, the executive director of the Cogir on Napa Road. “It’s all about Artie’s party.”

Schallock was born on April 25, 1924. Elsewhere that day, Babe Ruth hit a three-run home run against the Red Sox, while Wally Pipp played first base (Lou Gehrig’s epic Iron Man streak had yet to begin). Over in Philadelphia, “The Big Train” Walter Johnson lost a 2-1 decision to the Athletics.

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So began Schallock’s lifelong connections to baseball’s gods. When he got called up for his major-league debut on July 16, 1951, the Yankees made room on the roster by optioning to Triple-A Kansas City a disappointing rookie named Mickey Mantle. They would joke about the absurdity of that transaction for years. And Mantle exacted his playful revenge, in 1955 when Schallock was with the Orioles, by hitting a home run that has yet to come down. The Mick smiled his way around the bases. “Jeez, he could hit that ball,” Schallock said.


Art Schallock pitched in the majors from 1951 to 1955, time enough to play on three World Series champions for the Yankees. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum) :

Schallock’s first roommate on the road? The Yankees paired him with Yogi Berra, counting on the veteran catcher to share some wisdom with the rookie about how to attack hitters around the league. Schallock still marvels over how Berra knew the weaknesses of every American League hitter as well as who didn’t have one. “Once in a while he’d come across somebody and just say, ‘Hold them to a single,’” Schallock said with a laugh.

Berra got something out of the pairing, too.

“Yeah, when I roomed with him, the first thing in the morning, I had to run down to the lobby to get funny papers for him,’’ Schallock said, laughing again. “Hell, I didn’t know a thing about comic books, but he’d say, ‘Go down and pick up a half-a-dozen comic books.’”

With Schallock, as with some trees, you can calculate the age by counting the rings. He helped the Yankees win three consecutive World Series starting with his rookie season of 1951. For this interview, the facility adorned the walls of a conference room with photos from his Yankees days. By his side were the commemorative bats from those World Series winners and at one point he studied the names engraved on the 1953 model and began reading off royalty like roll call.

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“Whitey Ford … Vic Raschi … Phil Rizzuto … Casey Stengel, oh, he was a great manager,’’ Schallock said. “He was a smart guy when it came to baseball. Half the time he’d be asleep on the bench and Frank Crosetti would run the ballclub.”

The golden names just keep coming. Though Schallock made just 58 appearances while shuttling between the big club and Triple-A from 1951 to 1955, he had time enough to play alongside eight Hall of Fame teammates — Berra, Mantle, Rizzuto, Ford, Joe DiMaggio, Johnny Mize and Enos Slaughter with the Yankees; and rookie third baseman Brooks Robinson with the Orioles.

On the mound, Schallock faced 14 future Cooperstown residents. Let the record reflect that Ted Williams was 0-for-2 against him.

“I threw him fastballs, but never threw it as a strike. He’d kill me!” Schallock said. “I changed speeds with him. But he did knock the first baseman down one time. Tore the glove right off his hand. He picked it up and threw him out.”

Schallock’s voice is strong and his memories are vivid, as even his bygone minor-league tales hold up to fact-checking. But beyond that and his sense of humor, not all of his health is so robust. “I can’t see. I can’t hear. I’m falling apart!” he cracked.

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Schallock took over the distinction of oldest living ballplayer when the aptly named George Elder died on July 7, 2022, at the age of 101. By the time of Schallock’s 100th birthday, he will have been the oldest living former major leaguer for 659 days.

“Is that right?’’ Schallock said. “Well, I’ll be darned.”

The next two players behind him are also undersized pitchers. Schallock is 131 days older than Bill Greason (a 5-10, 170-pound right-hander) and 519 days older than Bobby Shantz (5-6, 139-pound left-hander).

This has meaning to Schallock, who cites his stature when asked what makes him most proud about his baseball career. On Aug. 15, 1951, the New York Times described him as “the diminutive southpaw from the Coast” in a story headlined “Schallock Subdues Senators, 5-3, For Sweep of Series by Bombers.”

“I thought I had two strikes against me because of my size,’’ Schallock said Monday. “But I made it. I mean, you can’t get any higher than the Yankees, world’s No. 1 team.”

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When asked to describe his pitching repertoire, Schallock talked about his fastball and a big breaking ball “like that left-hander from the Giants.” As he racked his brain for the name, it hits that his lifespan opens a wide range of possibilities — Carl Hubbell? Johnny Antonelli? Vida Blue? Barry Zito?

“Bumgarner,’’ he finally said, referring to the 2014 World Series MVP.

There are countless wonderful ways to fathom Schallock’s longevity. Also born in 1924 were iodized table salt, ready-to-use Band-Aids, Kleenex tissues, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and Washburn’s Gold Medal Whole Wheat Flakes (known today as Wheaties).

Baseball researcher and historian Bill Chuck, who unearthed many of the statistical gems for this story, noted that Babe Ruth hit 240 homers before Schallock was born and another 474 after.

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Schallock’s favorite baseball player growing up was outfielder Lefty O’Doul, who last played in the majors in 1934. O’Doul was from San Francisco and Schallock was born and raised about 15 miles north, in the Marin County city of Mill Valley.

O’Doul spent the latter part of his post-MLB career playing for the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League, and Schallock wanted to be just like him.

Alas, the admiration was not mutual.

“When I grew up, I wanted to play with Seals,’’ Schallock said. “But O’Doul scouted me and said I was too small.”


Art Schallock’s milestone birthday party will be met with much fanfare. The CBS Evening News is dispatching a camera crew. (Wendy Cornejo / Cogir on Napa Road)

Instead, Schallock took the backroads to his improbable career. He was a star at Tamalpais High School when, as a senior in 1942, he registered for the draft. By 1943, he was taken into the Navy — and his baseball career was put on hold while he served as a radio operator on the USS Coral Sea during World War II.

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Schallock was discharged in 1946, having received 11 battle stars. Not long after returning home, he went on a blind date with a woman named Dona Bernard. It seemed to work out OK. They were married for 76 years until Dona’s passing last year at age 97.

She died on Art’s 99th birthday. They had two children and five grandchildren.

“They were amazing together. A true life-long love right there,’’ Zach Pascoe, one of the grandchildren, wrote in an email. “They were best friends. They truly enjoyed being in each other’s company, and as partners, they were even stronger. They complemented each other perfectly. They knew when to give each other space and when to be right there for each other.”

The Dodgers signed Schallock in 1946, and his career of rubbing elbows with legends was underway. His first manager at Class-A Pueblo (Col.) in 1947 was Walter Alston.

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In 1948, he made his debut with the Triple-A Montreal Royals by relieving the great Don Newcombe on a team that also included Duke Snider, at age 21. The first baseman of that team was Chuck Connors, who later made a name for himself as the star of the “Rifleman” television franchise.

Maybe that brush with a future actor prepared him for life for the Hollywood Stars, where Schallock played in 1949. That team’s celebrity stockholders included the likes of Cecil B. DeMille, Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck.

The fans were famous, too.

“Well, every homestand, Groucho Marx was there,’’ Schallock recalled. “He had a box in back of home plate. There were six seats in it, but he would only occupy one. … He was a neat guy.”

Dona cherished this time of their lives. “My wife loved Hollywood — rubbing elbows with all the movie stars,’’ Schallock said.

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She was less keen at the time regarding the pecking order of the baseball universe. So Dona had a curious response when Hollywood Stars manager Fred Haney summoned her from the stands midway through a game in July 1951 to tell her that Art had just been traded to the New York Yankees.

“And my wife said, ‘Who in the hell are the New York Yankees?”’ Schallock said. “Fred Haney just about fell off the chair laughing.”

Schallock had his high moments in the major leagues. He threw three complete games and amassed a career record of 6-7 with a 4.02 ERA.

Though he played for three World Series teams, he appeared in only one Fall Classic. In 1953, with the Yankees trailing late in Game 4, he pitched the final two innings and gave up one run. And, as was his custom, he left with a story to tell. The first five batters he faced were Jackie Robinson, Gil Hodges, Roy Campanella, Duke Snider and Carl Furillo.

His favorite baseball memory, though, had nothing to do with the superstars in his midst.

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“The height of my career was just walking into Yankee Stadium,’’ he said. “I thought it was a thrill just to be on the mound.”

Schallock will get the chance to tip his cap to the crowd at least one more time, at his 100th birthday celebration on April 25.

Staffers at Cogir on Napa Road will wear Yankees jerseys as they transform the parking lot into a mini-ballpark, complete with concession stands hawking popcorn and hot dogs.

Sonoma mayor John Gurney will present Schallock with a certificate saluting his centenarian status. The slightly younger players from the Sonoma High School baseball team will attend. CBS Evening News is dispatching a camera crew. There will be a live band.

“He’s just humble,’’ said Cornejo, the director of the facility. “And he loves baseball. It’s just an honor to be able to celebrate a living legend.”

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Schallock wasn’t the hardest thrower, but it’s easy to see now what made the zip on his fastball so special. It had late life.

(Top photo of Art Schallock: Daniel Brown / The Athletic)

 

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Coban Porter sentenced in fatal DUI crash days after brother's lifetime NBA ban for gambling

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Coban Porter sentenced in fatal DUI crash days after brother's lifetime NBA ban for gambling

Coban Porter, the younger brother of Denver Nuggets star Michael Porter and Jontay Porter, who was recently banned from the NBA, was sentenced Friday to six years in prison for killing a 42-year-old woman in a drunken driving crash last year.

Porter was a sophomore playing basketball for the University of Denver at the time of his arrest.

He was involved in a crash Jan. 22 just before 2 a.m., and an arrest affidavit said he was driving around 50 mph when he ran a red light at South University Boulevard and crashed his vehicle into Katharina Rothman’s vehicle. 

Rothman was pronounced dead at the accident site. 

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Denver Pioneers guard Coban Porter (5) drives to the basket against Paul Bruns (23) and Brian Mathews (34) of the North Dakota Fighting Hawks Feb. 3, 2022, at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center in Grand Forks, N.D. (Jacob Kish/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Coban Porter pleaded guilty to DUI vehicular homicide and vehicular assault. As part of his plea agreement, Porter acknowledged he was driving drunk at 2 a.m. when he ran a red light near the university and crashed into Rothman’s car, killing her and seriously injuring her 47-year-old passenger, Jason Branch.

In college, Porter averaged 11.4 points as a freshman with 2.8 rebounds and a 41.9% field goal percentage in 28 games.

The sentencing came two days after Jontay was banned by the NBA after an investigation found he disclosed confidential information to sports bettors and bet on games in violation of league rules and one day before Michael’s Nuggets beging the playoffs in defense of their NBA title.

The league said an investigation discovered before “the [Toronto] Raptors’ March 20 game, [Jontay] disclosed confidential information about his own health status to an individual he knew to be an NBA bettor.

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Jontay Porter vs Raptors

Jontay Porter of the Toronto Raptors fights for a rebound with Lindy Waters III of the Oklahoma City Thunder during a game in Toronto March 22, 2024. (Zou Zheng/Xinhua via Getty Images)

CAVINDER TWINS ANNOUNCE SURPRISE RETURN TO MIAMI AFTER SAYING THEY’D GIVE UP THEIR FINAL YEAR OF ELIGIBILITY

“Another individual with whom Porter associated and known to be an NBA bettor subsequently placed an $80,000 parlay proposition bet with an online sports book, to win $1.1 million, wagering [Jontay] would underperform in the March 20 game.” 

He only played three minutes in the March 20 game, claiming to have been sick. The $80,000 prop bet was frozen and not paid out.

Jontay Porter shoots basketball

Jontay Porter of the Toronto Raptors warms up before a game against the Portland Trail Blazers at the Moda Center March 9, 2024, in Portland, Ore.  (Alika Jenner/Getty Images)

The NBA said it found that, from January to March of this year, while Jontay was either with the Raptors or its G League team, Raptors 905, he placed “at least 13 bets on NBA games using an associate’s betting account.”

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Fox News’ Scott Thompson, Ryan Gaydos, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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Prep baseball roundup: Corona clinches Big VIII League championship

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Prep baseball roundup: Corona clinches Big VIII League championship

Corona High’s baseball team did what it was supposed to do Friday — clinch the Big VIII League championship with a 2-0 win over Corona Centennial, completing a three-game sweep of the Huskies.

Ethan Schiefelbein, tuning up for the pressure of the Southern Section Division 1 playoffs, gave up five hits, struck out four and walked one.

Corona is 22-2 overall, 12-0 in league and expected to be the No. 1 seed for the Division 1 playoffs when pairings are announced a week from Monday.

Eastvale Roosevelt 6, Norco 3: Chase Pulido’s three-run home run in the fifth inning powered the Mustangs to victory.

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Corona Santiago 6, King 1: Barrett Ronson homered and had three RBIs for Santiago.

Hart 5, West Ranch 3: The Indians pulled into a first-place tie in the Foothill League. Ryan De La Maza finished with three hits.

Birmingham 6, Cleveland 0: Isaac Monterrubio gave up one hit in 4 2/3 innings and Allen Olmos finished up with 2 1/3 scoreless innings to help Birmingham stay unbeaten in the West Valley League. Christian Woods had three hits.

Granada Hills 11, El Camino Real 3: Two-run singles by Jack Donohoe, Easton Hawk and John Barnett sparked the Highlanders.

Taft 8, Chatsworth 6: Dylan Sidell contributed three hits for the Toreadors.

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Sierra Canyon 3, Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 1: The Trailblazers rallied to beat the Knights and stay in contention for third place in the Mission League.

Bishop Alemany 5, Chaminade 1: Jayden Lusk had four RBIs, including a home run, to lead Alemany.

Harvard-Westlake 10, Loyola 8: Bryce Rainer finished a big week of hitting against the Cubs by collecting a home run, double, single and three RBIs. James Dell’Amico homered for Loyola.

St. Francis 4, Crespi 3: The Golden Knights prevailed in nine innings. Jordan Viramontes had three hits and three RBIs and Holden Deitch homered for St. Francis.

Aliso Niguel 2, San Clemente 1: Brandon Tatch struck out five in six innings for Aliso Niguel.

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Beckman 7, Woodbridge 1: Zach Ireland had a two-run double to help Beckman complete a three-game sweep of Woodbridge.

Camarillo 6, Royal 1: Boston Bateman and Tommy Goodin each had home runs for Camarillo.

Cypress 8, Crean Lutheran 0: John Short finished with three hits and Aiden Franco threw five shutout innings for Cypress.

Foothill 7, Villa Park 2: Brian Harbour struck out seven in six innings and also contributed a double and a triple for Foothill. Garrett Davidson had a solo home run for Foothill.

Huntington Beach 16, Edison 3: A 13-run second inning got the Oilers rolling. John Petrie had a grand slam.

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Fountain Valley 3, Los Alamitos 0: Cayden Bonura struck out nine, walked none and threw a two-hit shutout.

Oaks Christian 14, Calabasas 7: Chris Tampoya finished with three hits and five RBIs to lead Oaks Christian.

Santa Margarita 6, Servite 3: Carter Enoch had the big hit, a three-run triple, for Santa Margarita.

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