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USC’s Isaiah Mobley forges a path to the NBA and ignores comparisons to his brother

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Over time, as their sons grew into basketball stars, sprouting up and up and up towards seven toes, the Mobleys lived by a mantra with their two boys, who had been born lower than two years aside.

Run your personal race.

Elevating two aggressive sons who from start had been sure to be in contrast, it was a vital lesson, one each Evan and Isaiah Mobley would return to usually as they soared to stardom, every taking very totally different routes to get there. For Isaiah, it rang very true this season as he waited on his NBA goals whereas watching his youthful brother, Evan, concurrently fulfill them.

As Isaiah leads third-seeded USC in opposition to sixth-seeded Washington within the Pac-12 event Thursday, his youthful brother stays the runaway favourite for NBA rookie of the 12 months. Each Mobley brothers are at peace with their place within the race.

“That was at all times the factor,” mentioned Nicol Mobley, their mom. “It’s not going to be the identical for you. Eric is a coach. I’m a instructor. So we all know that everybody learns and does issues otherwise however might be simply as profitable. The way you get there might be fully totally different. That’s what we dwell by.”

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At its begin, greater than three years in the past, Isaiah supposed that race to be extra of a dash. He arrived at USC with five-star expectations and the burden of these stars on his shoulders. He questioned then how rapidly he may get to the NBA. However a foot harm meant beginning late as a freshman, and from there, Isaiah struggled simply to seek out his footing.

He tried to will himself ahead, to match output along with his expectations. However Nicol reminded him once more that not everybody begins quick.

“Early on, I simply anticipated a lot of myself,” recalled Mobley, who averaged simply 6.2 factors and 5.3 rebounds as a freshman.

It wasn’t till final March as a sophomore that Mobley appeared to settle in. His breakthrough started right now final 12 months, because the 6-foot-10 ahead knocked down two three-pointers in a double-overtime win over Utah within the Pac-12 quarterfinals. Mobley had hit simply seven from deep all season however proceeded to knock down seven of his subsequent 9 as USC rolled to the Elite Eight.

His 19 factors in opposition to Gonzaga could be a lone vibrant spot in a brutal loss that stored the Trojans out of the Remaining 4.

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The postseason outburst earned him an invitation to the NBA scouting mix, the place he turned some heads as a potential second-round sleeper. Mobley finally determined to return to USC, figuring out deep down he may use one other 12 months. This time, he had plans to use what he realized about what it takes to succeed in the NBA.

The outcomes this season have been plain. Mobley is averaging 14.6 factors and eight.5 rebounds, each of which lead the staff, however the distinction was clear off the stat sheet as nicely.

USC ahead Isaiah Mobley drives in opposition to California ahead Grant Anticevich throughout the first half in Berkeley on Jan. 6.

(Jed Jacobsohn / Related Press)

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“Him coming again and taking what he realized,” Nicol mentioned, “it’s been a phenomenal factor.”

USC coach Andy Enfield mentioned Mobley has improved as a defender, as a passer, as a shooter. He’s gotten stronger, too, higher holding his floor in opposition to huge males on the block.

“He’s had an awesome 12 months,” Enfield mentioned.

Probably the most crucial stretch of that season remains to be forward. With its eyes on one other March run, USC wants Mobley to be at his finest over the subsequent a number of weeks. Scouts will likely be watching the Trojans’ main scorer carefully.

The expectation is it’ll be Mobley’s final March at USC. However he received’t say as a lot simply but. For now, he’s simply hoping to soak in his previous couple of weeks, to benefit from the house stretch of a faculty profession that has been extra of a marathon than he first deliberate.

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“I’ve been capable of run my race,” Mobley mentioned. “I’ve loved my journey. I believe it’s cool. I’ve no downside being a hero on my third 12 months, making an attempt to make one other run, after which additionally utilizing that have I’ve realized from taking part in some big-time video games, to not be rattled once I’m right here. My journey has been pure and it’s been nice. I’m glad I’ve been by means of all the pieces I went by means of.”

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Why some of California's most outdoorsy people are moving to…Las Vegas?

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Why some of California's most outdoorsy people are moving to…Las Vegas?

For many, the lure of Las Vegas is the near complete immersion in a man-made world.

Visitors bury themselves deep inside temperature-controlled casinos, surrounded by artificial lights and sounds, with no windows or even clocks to remind them that the outside world still exists.

It’s one of the indoors-iest places on the planet.

But just outside the city, about 20 minutes from the bachelor parties and slot machines, a growing number of elite outdoor athletes are buying homes, starting families and declaring Las Vegas the adventure sports capital of the United States.

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Alex Honnold, right, and climbing partner Joey Latina pause on the approach to the Rainbow Wall in Red Rock Canyon just outside Las Vegas.

“It just has unparalleled access to the outdoors,” gushed Alex Honnold, the world’s most famous rock climber and subject of the Academy Award-winning documentary, “Free Solo,” about his breathtaking 2017 ascent of Yosemite’s El Capitan, a nearly vertical granite wall that rises 3,000 feet above the valley floor.

It was first climbed in 1958 by a team who took 18 months searching for tiny protrusions and cracks to use as holds and driving heavy metal spikes into the rock where no natural holds existed. Honnold shocked the climbing world by using only his hands and feet — no safety equipment of any kind — and completing the ascent in just under four hours, a new speed record for the route.

In early May, as light from the rising desert sun seemed to set fire to the towering cliffs of Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area just west of Las Vegas, Honnold pulled up in his electric truck ready to sprint up another sheer rock face. This one, known as the Rainbow Wall, rose about 1,000 feet above the desert floor.

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Honnold, 38, who is of medium height and build and graying slightly at the temples, was dressed in a T-shirt, shorts and running shoes. At first glance, there was little to set him apart from a dozen or so other hikers and climbers lined up to enter the park at 6 a.m.

But then he tossed a small pack over his shoulder and started moving, eager to cover several miles of brush and boulder-strewn landscape between him and the base of the climb before the day got too hot. His small entourage, which included a climbing partner and two Times journalists, struggled to keep up.

An athletic woman with blond ponytail ascends a sheer limestone wall

Climber Shaina Savoy ascends a limestone wall at Robbers Roost in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area near Las Vegas.

“Honestly, I would say Las Vegas is better than any of the other cities in the country that have a reputation for being outdoorsy,” Honnold said. “People go to Denver because they say they want to be near the outdoors. But it’s at least an hour’s drive away from the real mountains.”

“In Vegas, you can live in the middle of suburbia and be 15 minutes from trailheads where you can be completely alone and feel like you’re gonna die,” he said as two of his companions hunched over and gasped for breath.

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What sets Vegas apart is the unexpected geographic diversity, making world-class climbing easily accessible year-round. In the winter, there are the endless routes in Red Rock, the canyon that begins just beyond the suburbs. Its sandstone walls start at about 3,000-feet elevation, which means they’re low enough to remain warm and pleasant even in December and January.

When spring and summer roll around, and the valley becomes a furnace, 12,000-foot Mt. Charleston is less than an hour’s drive away and the upper reaches can be 30 degrees cooler. There, towering limestone walls offer some of the toughest technical climbs in the world, and there are enough routes to keep a professional climber busy for a lifetime, Honnold said.

Even Yosemite, long regarded as Mecca for rock climbers from all corners of the globe, where Honnold and so many other professionals made their reputations, can’t match that.

The Las Vegas Strip viewed from a canyon 20 miles west

The Las Vegas Strip viewed from Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area about 20 miles west of the city.

“Yosemite is a world destination in the spring and fall,” Honnold said. “But in the summer, it’s way too hot and way too crowded.” And in the winter, at 4,000 feet and directly exposed to Pacific storms, “it’s too wintry.”

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And even when the weather is good, day-to-day life for climbers in Yosemite looks more romantic in old documentary films, and on Instagram, than it is in real life. Routes on its biggest and most famous walls, El Capitan and Half Dome, were pioneered by mostly unemployed self-proclaimed “dirtbag” climbers in the late 1950s and early 1960s, who built a fierce and defiant counterculture in the nearby campgrounds.

Among them was Yvon Chouinard, a tinkerer whose small climbing gear business grew into the billion-dollar retailer Patagonia, but who spent years living hand to mouth with fellow climbers in tents and out of their cars. He has told more than one interviewer that, at times during his early climbing days, he was so broke he subsisted on canned cat food because, “it was better than dog food.”

That underlying ethos had mellowed a bit, but still existed when Honnold first drove the family minivan down from Sacramento in the early 2000s. He was still living in a van in 2017 when he made the career-defining climb of El Capitan.

But ask anyone who has done it for long and they’ll tell you, van life gets old, even in a place as beautiful as Yosemite.

A toddler splashes in an outdoor baby pool while his mother looks on.

Emily Harrington says climbers of her generation are looking to buy homes and settle down. She and her husband recently had a son, Aaro, adding urgency to their quest.

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An athletic woman in a kitchen checks her phone with her toddler, in diapers, nearby.

Hot showers. Good climbing. Great food. Climber Emily Harrington’s joy and relief are palpable as she lists the upsides of moving to the Las Vegas suburbs with her husband and son.

Emily Harrington, a five-time U.S. national champion in sport climbing and one of Honnold’s good friends, knows it all too well.

“Yosemite is just a hard place to exist,” she said. You spend all day pushing yourself to mental and physical exhaustion on the climbing walls, but there’s no rest when you come down. You have to find a place to camp, or park the van, or drive the van on long, crowded, windy roads to find a place outside the park. And even when you find a place, you’re still stuck in a van.

“It’s quite stressful,” Harrington said.

At 37, Harrington says climbers of her generation are looking to settle down. She and her husband, fellow climber Adrian Ballinger, recently had a son, which added real urgency to their quest.

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That’s why they bought a place in Vegas not far from Honnold, his wife and their two young kids.

Harrington’s joy and relief are palpable as she lists the upsides of the new arrangement. “I can go out, drive five minutes to the trailhead, climb big routes all day, and then come back to my house and my kid and put him to bed, and I don’t have to live in a van!”

Hot showers. Soft beds. Great food. She rattled off about half a dozen of her favorite restaurants that are only a few minutes away. “It’s just so nice,” she said.

Jonathan Siegrist, 38, who is regarded as one of the world’s greatest technical climbers, couldn’t agree more.

While Honnold was battling the Rainbow Wall and nearly 90 degree heat in Red Rock last week, Siegrist and his wife, Shaina Savoy, huddled in puffy jackets between pitches on the cool limestone of nearby Mt. Charleston.

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 A climber hangs high off the ground from a horizontal shelf of rock.

Jonathan Siegrist tackles Robbers Roost, a world-class rock-climbing destination in the Spring Mountains National Recreation Area.

A man wears unusual goggles.

Jonathan Siegrist wears belay glasses, which give climbers a 90-degree view without craning their neck, during a climb at Robbers Roost.

Siegrist is unassuming when you first meet him: 5-foot-6, a firm handshake, a friendly smile. But then he pulls off his warm outer layer and starts climbing. Supporting his entire body with just his fingertips and the points of his toes on microscopic holds, he ascends the wall in precise choreographed movements, his progress as fluid and inevitable as flowing lava.

Despite the intense effort, which would leave most people gasping and single-minded, Siegrist had the aerobic and mental capacity to carry on a normal conversation.

He lived in his truck, off and on, for seven years. He settled down in Vegas because the climbing is better than anywhere else in the country and because the cost of living is much more reasonable than trendier climbing spots like his hometown of Boulder, Colo.

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Even so, he struggles to convince young climbers, who are still trying to make names for themselves, that Vegas is the place to be.

“This city still has a really bad reputation in the outdoor community,” he said. “A lot of outdoor people would never stoop so low as to walk into a casino and enjoy themselves, or shop at a strip mall,” he said. “That’s a huge contributing factor as to why Vegas has stayed under the radar.”

A man sitting against a boulder puts on special rock-climbing shoes.

After living in his truck for years, Jonathan Siegrist said he settled in Las Vegas because the climbing is great and the cost of living more reasonable than in many trendy mountain towns.

But it’s actually one of the perks, he said.

Fashionable mountain towns are full of people trying to fit in, Siegrist said, to conform to a pretty strict outdoorsy aesthetic. They tend to look, dress and think the same way.

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Freedom from that is one of the things he loves about Vegas.

“I’m not just talking about racial diversity. I’m talking about economic diversity, diversity of ideas and diversity of interests,” he said. On rest days, when he’s not climbing, “I can be a totally different version of myself.”

The difference can show in something as simple as walking his dogs off leash. If he tries that in Boulder, where his parents still live, “I’ll get yelled at by, like, six people in the first 30 seconds, even though the dogs are really obedient,” he said.

In Vegas, “nobody gives a s— what your dogs are doing as long as they’re not hurting anyone.”

Honnold, whose parents were teachers and who supports strong public services, confessed he, too, was pleasantly surprised by the lower cost of living in Nevada.

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“I mean, there’s no income tax! And the house was so cheap, it nearly paid for itself in tax savings,” he said. All those years on the road, living in vans, he had listed his mom’s house in Sacramento as his address.

“That was crazy,” he said, “I was like, why didn’t I move to Vegas sooner?”

The rising sun illuminates red sandstone peaks.

Sunrise at Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area.

The Vegas airport is another huge draw for people whose profession demands they travel the world in search of adventure. It’s 20 minutes from Honnold’s house, the security lines are usually a breeze and, because of all the tourists, it has direct flights almost anywhere you’d want to go.

One day, when he was splitting time between training and promoting “Free Solo,” he climbed a 2,000-foot wall in the morning, showered at home, then caught a noon flight to London.

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“Where else in the world can you do that?” he asked.

But what about that other side of Vegas, the strip? Honnold said he and his wife go there once or twice a year to catch a show and otherwise avoid it as much as possible.

Does he ever sit down at a slot machine and start pulling the lever?

“If a game is designed for you to lose, why play?” he asked. “I’ve actually never tried it. I like to joke that I only gamble with my life.”

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Jets' Aaron Rodgers says opted against becoming RKF Jr's running mate, wants NFL career to continue

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Jets' Aaron Rodgers says opted against becoming RKF Jr's running mate, wants NFL career to continue

The New York Jets no longer have to worry about scrambling to find a starting quarterback. 

Four-time NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers has decided to put any political ambitions on hold and stick with football. Rodgers’ name had been linked to independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

But, the 40-year-old quarterback finally addressed the speculation that he could pivot from the NFL to politics by becoming Kennedy’s running mate.

Aaron Rodgers and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (Getty Images)

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“I love Bobby (Kennedy), we had a couple of really nice conversations, but there were really two options: It was retire and be his VP or keep playing,” Rodgers told reporters after Jets’ organized team activities. “But I wanted to keep playing.”

AARON RODGERS AS POTENTIAL RFK JR VICE PRESIDENT WOULD MEAN MASSIVE PAY CUT

Earlier this year, the Kennedy campaign confirmed that Rodgers was on the short list of candidates under consideration to join RFK on the independent presidential ticket.  

However, shortly after Rodgers’ name was floated as a potential running mate, Kennedy tapped California lawyer Nicole Shanahan as his VP nominee.

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While Rodgers has mulled retirement during the past offseasons, he was contemplating stepping away from the NFL for a completely different reason this time.

Aaron Rodgers talks to media

New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers speaks to reporters at the team’s NFL football facility in Florham Park, N.J., Monday, Jan. 8, 2024.  (AP Photo/Dennis Waszak Jr.)

Rodgers is hoping to bounce back in 2024, after he suffered an Achilles injury in the Jets’ 2023 season opener. The Jets acquired the star quarterback in a blockbuster trade in April 2023.

In September, Rodgers and the Jets will once again open the season on Monday Night Football. But unlike last year, Gang Green will be on the road to kick off the 2024 campaign.

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

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LAFC advances to quarterfinals of U.S. Open Cup

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LAFC advances to quarterfinals of U.S. Open Cup

LAFC advanced to the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup quarterfinals for the third time in club history with a 3-0 win against Loudoun United, a team in the USL Championship division, at BMO Stadium on Tuesday night.

Timmy Tillman got LAFC on the board early with a goal in the eighth minute. It remained that way until the second half, when Cristian Olivera scored in the 52nd minute.

Tomás Ángel scored in the 61st minute to conclude the scoring.

Loudoun United is based in Leesburg, Va., which is in Loudoun County.

LAFC will find out its opponent in the quarterfinal round on Wednesday night when opponents are drawn during a live show on U.S. Soccer’s YouTube channel. The match will take place on July 9 or 10.

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