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Why Gaelic footballers have the NFL's attention: 'These lads can kick balls'

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Why Gaelic footballers have the NFL's attention: 'These lads can kick balls'

TAMPA, Fla. — A tall lad with tousled brown hair and ruddy cheeks flipped through the pages of his light green leather notebook, looking at “wee reminders” to get his head right.

Killer mindset

YOU ABSOLUTELY DESERVE THIS

Teams are watching me. Brilliant!

The kicking workout was the grand finale of the NFL’s International Player Pathway pro day this Wednesday afternoon at the University of South Florida. The event featured the first kickers and punters in the IPP program, which since 2017 has sought to provide players outside of North America with opportunities to play in the league.

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Three of the kickers were plucked straight from Gaelic football, Ireland’s most popular sport. Charlie Smyth, 22, of Down, Mark Jackson, 25, of Wicklow, and Rory Beggan, 31, of Monaghan, each left their posts as goalkeepers for their county teams this winter to give NFL kickin’ a fair go.

The lads started kicking NFL footballs this past fall, so Smyth’s wee written reminders were necessary. He stretched outside in the Florida sun before his workout, then took out his phone and watched a cutup of himself making 50-plus-yard field goals at this same indoor field.

“I know I can do it here,” he said.

Smyth has been illegally streaming NFL games since he was 16. When he was 18, he sent an email to [email protected] pitching himself as an NFL kicker. He never heard back.

This past August, during his off-time from his county team, he finally went to an American football kicking session in Dublin, “just for the craic,” he said. (For the uninitiated, “craic,” pronounced “crack,” means fun in Irish.)

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The craic turned serious and led Smyth to the scouting combine, where he caught the eye of several NFL special teams coaches, then to Tampa for this second NFL audience.

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The Gaelic kickers were inconsistent past 50 yards in their first appearance in front of NFL teams — “I was kicking myself a bit after the combine,” Beggan said, no pun intended — so this time they wanted to prove they had the distance. When Beggan lined up from 50 yards, he banged it through. Then again from 55 and again from 60. Jackson was perfect through 45 yards and narrowly missed from 50-plus. Smyth drilled his 50-yard attempt, missed from 55, then was good from 60.

After Smyth knocked in his last long attempt, a senior NFL executive who’d been on the field said he expected at least one of the Irish guys to sign with an NFL team, a feat that once seemed outlandish.

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“I have to be very honest, I didn’t expect it,” said Ravens assistant special teams coach Randy Brown.

“They were further ahead than everybody expected,” said Saints special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi. “There’s the expression, an ‘NFL leg.’ All of them have an NFL leg.”

These “Irish Gaelic” guys, as special teams coaches call them, seemed to come out of nowhere. So how the feck did they go from kicking 45s and frees to kicking field goals for NFL personnel?


The lad behind the lads is Tadhg Leader. Fair-skinned and ginger-haired and -bearded, Leader is a former professional rugby player from Galway on the west coast of Ireland. He wound up stateside with Major League Rugby in 2018, and when the pandemic hit he started kicking NFL footballs just for the craic.

Soon he started training with John Carney, the former NFL All-Pro who is fifth on the all-time scoring list. Carney encouraged Leader, then 28, to make a career out of kicking, so Leader called the IPP.

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The program didn’t carry kickers and punters, so he sent his tape to NFL teams. He was told he needed more game experience, so he played in the Spring League, then European League Football before finally signing with the Canadian Football League’s Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 2022. In his only preseason appearance, he kicked a walk-off 35-yard game-winner.

“Life was great,” Leader said. “I thought I was going to be there for the season.”

But then Hamilton’s general manager called him in and told him he was too raw. Leader was 30 years old, and despite getting more tape, he kept hearing the same feedback.

“Well, like, where else do I get experience?” Leader said.

He tried to kick in the XFL but had issues getting a visa, so he decided to move on. “It’s looking like it’s too late for me,” he said, explaining his mindset. “Let me go home to Ireland to start a pathway that everyone else can walk.”

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Last February, Leader started a business to discover Irish kicking talent and help them land college scholarships. He wanted to create a program where cost wouldn’t be a barrier, so he spent his own money at the start, including at least a thousand dollars on footballs. His family thought he’d gone mad.

“It was extremely raw,” Leader said. But in a few months, he’d helped two Irish kickers earn college scholarships and arranged a sponsorship with Delta Airlines.

While Leader was training his first class of soon-to-be collegiate kickers, NFL special teams coordinators convened with the league office to discuss an idea they’d been talking about for years: taking the specialists out of the scouting combine and creating a separate event so they could invite more players and do more kicking.

Brown, the Ravens coach, said that when they presented their vision to NFL EVP of Football operations Troy Vincent, Vincent told them he’d like to see an international component. Last April, James Cook, who runs the IPP and knew of Leader’s quick work with Irish kickers, scheduled a meeting with him at the NFL’s London office.

Leader happened to be in town on business for his day job at J.P. Morgan and snuck away to meet with Cook, who told him they were considering adding kickers and punters to the IPP. Nothing was finalized, but did he think the guys were out there? And if so, could he get them ready in time?

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“The biggest barrier that exists is not the capability, but it’s the access,” Leader told Cook. “And if you guys can give access, I can get the kicking talent.”


Monaghan’s Rory Beggan kicks a free during a match against Cavan on Sunday, April 7. (Ramsey Cardy / Sportsfile via Getty Images)

There are only two sports in the world where athletes kick a ball off the grass and send it high through uprights. And the width of the posts in Gaelic football is only about three feet wider than NFL and college football goal posts.

“Kicking the ball is part of our DNA growing up here in Ireland,” Leader said. “Americans throw baseballs, basketballs, footballs. We don’t do that. We pass those balls with our feet, so now we’ve just been given a new ball to use our feet with …

“It’s the most perfect of synergies, just no one’s ever connected the dots.”

His girlfriend and parents urged him to iron out more details with the NFL, but Leader couldn’t wait. Driving around the country, he started training a group of 12 Gaelic football players whenever they could make time.

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Leader didn’t want to get on the bad side of any coaches, so he got the word out through mutual friends and encouraged players to reach out for information. He wound up with a group of the country’s most talented Gaelic goalkeepers, the most prolific off-the-ground kickers of any position in the sport.

Beggan is the equivalent of an All-Star. Jackson is the youngest goalkeeper in Gaelic Athletic Association history to score 100 career points. Beggan tried to mix in the odd kicking session during the fall while his focus was with his club team.

Gaelic players aren’t paid — Beggan runs his own sportswear business — so it was tough to balance it all. He made it work for his “favorite skill in Gaelic football,” which also requires players to run, carry, pass and bounce the ball.

“I love kickin’ out of hands,” Beggan said. “I love kickin’ off the ground.”

Smyth, a graduate student in physical education, arrived frazzled and late to his first session in August because he’d confused the location. “My head was gone and my laces weren’t even tied,” he said. He didn’t know how to set up the holder and had to kick four field goals in a row to catch up to everyone else.

He made them all.

By October, Leader whittled his group of 12 down to his four best — the Gaelic trio plus Leader’s younger brother, Darragh, a rugby player turned punter, and they were evaluated by NFL UK personnel in London.

Leader says there are only two indoor fields in Ireland, so that often meant training through rough weather. On one cold and rainy day in Dublin, Jackson, who also punts, said he could barely get an attempt off in the gale-force winds.

“Every time you dropped the ball, the ball moved around six yards,” he said.

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They’d get stares from onlookers, “especially when we’re in a public park and a ma and a dog was walking around the field,” says Leader. “We looked like these weird fellas that were kicking weird-shaped balls. No one really knew what was going on.”

In December, the four Irish players found out they’d earned spots in the IPP along with Harry Mallinder, a British rugby player turned punter.

Smyth finally told his Gaelic manager that he’d been kicking American footballs in his spare time, and that he’d be stepping away for now — maybe forever, depending on how the NFL received him. Jackson said his Wicklow teammates and boss were shocked, but supportive. He’d been playing in goal for the club since he was 18. “No one expected me to be leaving at 25,” he said.

The lads took up kicking full-time with Leader, whose volunteer work became a paid role with the NFL in January. Leader took them to Boston to get acclimatized to America before joining the other players in the IPP program in Florida in early February.

In Boston, they saw a field marked up with hashes and numbers for the first time, as well as yellow uprights (in Gaelic football, the posts are white with a black spot in the center of the crossbar). They’ve been playing “Madden” and reviewing game film to master the intricacies of situational football and spent time learning about the business side of NFL clubs and the value of each roster spot.

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“We’re quick learners, in fairness to us,” Beggan said.

Beggan said the hardest adjustment has been wearing all the gear. “Funny, we were doing all this stuff in Ireland with no helmet or pads on us. So we thought this is quite easy, then,” he said. They took to wearing their helmets for five or ten minutes at a time to get used to the weight while sitting around in their villas at IMG Academy about an hour’s drive south of Tampa.

In February, Brown visited IMG to get them ready for the combine. While some of the guys were punting, he told Smyth to “Go down there and shag.” Smyth looked at him like he was crazy. The rest cracked up laughing.

“Tadgh looked at me and he says, ‘You know, shag means something different,’” Brown said. “And I said, Oh, yeah I watched ‘Austin Powers.’”


When the lads took the field at Lucas Oil Stadium to participate in the first-ever specialist showcase, there was at least one long snapper who scoffed at their presence.

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“He thought we played Gaelic football in kilts,” Jackson said. “I stepped up for my first kick and banged it through the posts, and I think he started to take note then that yeah, these lads can kick balls.”

Brown, who coaches the NFL’s best kicker in Justin Tucker, started to believe when he saw the way the balls traveled end-over-end — and when he closed his eyes and heard a deep thud, like a fist pounding a chest, the distinct sound of an NFL kick.

“It brought a smile to your face,” Brown said. “God, they did it.”

“I was blown away by how good they are in a short amount of time,” said Cowboys special teams coordinator John Fassel.

When they interviewed in Indianapolis, the Irish trio had to explain Gaelic football to the coaches, who had no idea that although it is an amateur sport, athletes train like professionals and play in front of crowds of 80,000 people in the All-Ireland tournament.

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“When you tell the teams that you’ve played at an elite level for eight years, it kind of perks their ears up a bit,” Jackson said.

“These guys are like household names in their counties in Ireland, and they dropped everything to pursue this dream,” Rizzi said.

Beggan’s Monaghan team went 1-6 in his absence and was relegated out of the first division after ten years in the big league. He is back playing for the club while he awaits an NFL opportunity. Jackson is training with Wicklow, which also went 1-6, but doesn’t want to risk injury.

Last year, Monaghan made it to the semi-final of the All-Ireland tournament, in which every county team plays for the Sam Maguire Cup. This year’s tournament started on April 6 and runs through July. Beggan isn’t sure how long he’ll be with the team if the NFL comes calling.

“They don’t know how it’s gonna go,” Beggan said. “And I suppose over the last few weeks, we’re in the unknown.”

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Charlie Smyth signs an American football for a young Irish fan. (Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan)

When the Gaelic kickers first walked into the interview rooms at the combine, NFL coaches were struck by their size (average height: 6-3, average weight: 215 pounds). Beggan is built like a rhinoceros. Jackson’s quads compare favorably with Saquon Barkley’s. Smyth is a lanky 6-4.

The new NFL kickoff will increase returns, and a kicker who can run and make a tackle downfield could prove useful. “We played a tough sport where you have to give hits and take hits as well,” Jackson said. “We’re not just some wee fragile kickers.”

“Some special teams coaches were calling them ‘brick sh–houses’, I think that’s the phrase,” Leader said.

They were rooting for the new kickoff to pass because it will emphasize directional kicking, away from the returners in a landing zone — exactly where they’d be placing the ball on kick-outs in Gaelic football. “We feel we have a bigger strength to maybe what the Americans have,” Beggan said.

At the combine, they kicked with long snappers they’d never practiced with before. At their pro day, they chose to kick with a long snapper and holder, a risk very few college specialists take, because they wanted to address the biggest question in their NFL transition: can they consistently handle the live field goal operation?

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A perfect NFL snap, hold and kick should happen in 1.3 seconds to beat the rush, and the lads aren’t quite up to speed yet. Scouts at USF muttered that the kickers were a bit slow. But Brown is mindful that they are at the infant stage of the position. Learning intricacies, like how to adjust a plant leg for wind, will come later.

In September, the NFL announced that starting in 2024, every NFL practice squad would expand to include a 17th spot reserved for an international player. (In the past, international players had been allocated to just one division per year.) That could prove to be an opportunity for specialists.

Most NFL teams don’t carry a second kicker or punter on the roster, and most starters only practice two days a week. Special teams practice goes on without them with the help of the JUGS machine.

“Everybody probably should use that spot for a kicker,” Fassel said. “Let’s have a guy on the roster the whole time so we’re training him so we don’t have to go get somebody once somebody gets hurt.”

And in the NFL’s salary-capped world, a potential source of young, homegrown — read “cheap” — developmental talent could prove incredibly valuable. “Could they kick this year in the NFL?” Brown said. “Maybe, but the deck is stacked against them. Could they develop in the next 12 to 24 months? Absolutely.”

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“This isn’t some marketing tool,” Jackson said. This isn’t any gimmick. We’re elite-level kickers. We’re not perfect, but if we were on a roster for a year we won’t be too far off.”


As the scouts cleared out of the USF facility following a long day, Leader sat on the turf and reviewed his notes, sighing in relief and exhaustion.

His work wasn’t done yet. He’d head back to Ireland the next day to host another kicking workshop to discover the next wave of young talent. “You think I’m joking, but there’s hundreds of Irish kids just like these guys,” Leader said.

Smyth scrolled through a flurry of excited texts from his parents, who’d been watching his workout on Instagram Live from their home in Mayobridge. When he earned his IPP spot in December, his friends still didn’t believe this was legit. “Sure you’re not going to the NFL,” he says they told him.

“Just you watch, boys,” Smyth told his friends then.

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A week after the Florida workout, Smyth was in a yoga class with the rest of the IPP players. They aren’t supposed to bring their phones in, but he was expecting an important update. During the last meditation, he opened his eyes a crack to see a notification flash a message with a New Orleans Saints logo.

“We were doing our last namaste, but I knew this was happening,” Smyth said. “I was just trying to stay calm and I was like, sh–, the Saints are bringing me in!”

Smyth worked out for New Orleans that Friday morning. Afterward, coaches told him he could go shower before his flight back to Tampa. Then, Harry Piper, a Saints scouting assistant, told Smyth he should head upstairs.

They were getting his paperwork ready.

Smyth is back in Ireland until OTAs start next week, and he’s talked to what feels like every journalist in the country. He overheard his sister’s colleagues talking about him on a work call and was even a guest on “The Late Late Show,” the country’s most popular television show.

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This past weekend, Smyth’s club GAA team in Mayobridge threw him a party. When he walked in, everybody cheered and applauded. He says he hasn’t cried yet, because he always knew what he was capable of.

“It’s where I saw myself getting to,” he said. “It’s where I expected to be.”

In New Orleans, he believes he has a chance to compete for the starting job. “I didn’t make all these sacrifices just to be happy to sit on a practice squad,” Smyth said.

After a Q&A with the 100 or so kids at his club reception, he headed to Gorman’s, the local pub, with a few pals. He’s normally not a Guinness guy, but he ordered a few pints. He knows it won’t taste as good in New Orleans.

(Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; photos courtesy of NFL UK)

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'Is this real?': The Blue Jays' eye-popping 50/50 lotto is changing lives

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'Is this real?': The Blue Jays' eye-popping 50/50 lotto is changing lives

TORONTO — Thomas can’t remember what he said or heard during a meeting last month.

That’s because only minutes before, he was informed by Sportsnet anchor Evanka Osmak that he had won half a million dollars.

A few days earlier Thomas, who asked to use a pseudonym to preserve his privacy, bought a ticket to the Jays Care 50/50 raffle on a whim after a marketing email landed in his inbox. And then he forgot all about it.

“When you play these things,” he said, “you don’t really anticipate you’re going to win.”

When his phone rang while at work at his IT job on May 13, he nearly rejected the call from a private number. “I’m glad I didn’t,” Thomas said. Instead, he picked up to hear Osmak, the host of Sportsnet Central, inform him that he was the winner of the 50/50 grand prize. She asked if he knew how much he had just won. Thomas responded that he thought $50,000 would be great. “Then she said, ‘Yeah, $50,000 would be great. But it’s actually (CAD) $538,908.’”

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Thomas didn’t have long to process his shock. He had to head into a meeting right afterwards.

“I don’t know what I said. I was clearly talking and answering questions, but my mind was completely elsewhere, just thinking, ‘Is this real? Did that just actually happen?’” said Thomas, who had only entered the 50/50 a handful of times prior.

Over the years, the Toronto Blue Jays’ 50/50 raffle has become known for its eye-popping jackpots and life-changing winnings. The jackpots have caught the eyes of many in baseball, including former Cleveland Guardians manager Terry Francona, who saw the $82,000 total during the 2016 ALCS and told catcher Mike Napoli, “We gotta get in on that.”

The 50/50 raffle, run by Jays Care Foundation, the charitable arm of the Blue Jays, awards half of the ticket sales to a winner, while the other half goes to charity. It has crowned nine millionaires so far. Already the biggest raffle of its kind in Major League Baseball, it strives to set new records every year.

One of those nine millionaires is a man named Andrew. He had just gotten home from the cardiologist when his phone rang. Thankfully, his heart was in good condition when a representative from Jays Care called.

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When Andrew answered, he was asked if he received a call earlier that day and was told to check his voicemail. When he did, there was a message from Blue Jays broadcaster Buck Martinez. In his unmistakable raspy voice, Martinez informed Andrew that he was the lucky winner of $2.6 million.

“It was quite an amazing moment,” said Andrew, who asked to be identified only by his first name to protect his privacy.

The win came at an especially opportune moment for Andrew, who said he had been dealing with personal challenges.

“It’s been a very sombre last few years, and it was nice to get some extremely good news,” Andrew said. “And this money would help me do a lot of positive things.”


Andrew, above, initially missed the call informing him that he was a 50/50 winner. (Courtesy of Jays Care)

The introduction of online 50/50 ticket sales across Ontario in 2019 helped expand the raffle’s reach. When the pandemic hit in 2020, and the Blue Jays played their games away from the Rogers Centre, Jays Care pivoted from daily draws to homestand jackpots and mega-jackpots, a move that allowed the pots to grow larger and increased the interest. Together, those changes ushered in an era of massive growth with the Jays Care 50/50, producing the top-10 biggest jackpots in MLB history — all since 2019.

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“That’s something we’re extremely proud of,” said Jays Care executive director Robert Witchel. “We want to make our programs the best in class. We want to reach as many kids as possible.”

In 2021, the Jays Care 50/50 recorded $12 million in total tickets sold — with half going to the winners and the other half to the charity. By 2023, total ticket sales were up to $33 million, culminating with an Ontario- and MLB-record jackpot of $5.9 million last September. (Congratulations to Mini from Toronto.)

Already this season, the 50/50 has awarded four grand prize jackpots totaling more than $4.3 million, along with hundreds of early-bird prizes that include signed memorabilia, Blue Jays tickets and smaller cash prizes. Next month’s Canada Day mega-jackpot will award 10 grand prize winners who will evenly split the pot, an idea that came from fan feedback, and will include 157 early-bird prizes to commemorate Canada turning 157 years old.

Part of what makes the Jays Care 50/50 stand out is its ambassadors — the red-shirted, eclectic and cheerful employees stationed throughout the Rogers Centre concourse who sell 50/50 tickets until the final out is made.

The ambassadors’ day typically begins a couple of hours before first pitch. In the minutes before the stadium gates open, they gather in a classroom-sized room tucked inside Gate 3. On this Tuesday evening in May, Kelly Woodman, an event manager with the 50/50 team, begins by going over their sales from the previous evening before instructing them on the sales goals for that night’s game.

Finally, before they hit the concourse, it’s time for their cheer.

“50/50!”
Clap clap clap clap clap
“Sell them tickets!”
Clap clap clap clap clap
“Raise that money!”
Clap clap clap clap clap
“Let’s go!”

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“They come from all different walks of life,” said Woodman. “It became like a really close-knit family. Everybody knows everybody and their spouses and their kids and their grandkids… They’re just really invested in each other, which is nice.”

Once out on the concourse, the ambassadors spread out. There are 60 this season, but on average, 30 to 40 work each game. Each ambassador develops a unique style for attracting customers. Some are loud and vocal: “50/50 tickets! Come support the Jays Care Foundation!” Others, like Tracey Lung, take a more curated approach.

“I’m really good at reading people,” said Lung, who is in her second year of selling. “How they approach me or whether they’re looking down or looking right at me, I know whether or not I’m going to be trying to sell them on a ticket, they’re going to get a ticket or I can upsell them.”

Before a prospective sale, an ambassador will educate the prospective buyer on the charitable initiatives before running down the various ticket options — 5 for $10, 25 for $25, 100 for $50 or 300 for $125, the best deal and best odds.

Anna Cappuccitti, another ambassador, said there’s a key to being an effective seller. “I’m not afraid of rejection,” she said with a laugh.

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In 2023, the ambassadors were responsible for more than $6.7 million in gross ticket sales, a record year. There is friendly competition among the sellers, who track their nightly sales; the ultimate bragging rights belong to whoever sells a jackpot-winning ticket. Cappuccitti has yet to sell a grand prize ticket, but hopes her luck will change.

“People tell me I have this vibe about me, I feel lucky, so they buy from me,” she said. “I always say, ‘Hey, I wish you win. I’ll say a prayer for you.’ I get their names. I write it. I put it in my phone and I’ll say a prayer and they love it.”

No matter their sales tactic, what connects everyone involved in the 50/50 is the cause.

Jays Care is responsible for running programming for marginalized and underprivileged children across Canada, and they’re projected to reach more than 60,000 kids this year. Their programs include initiatives such as Girls At Bat, which is designed to reduce barriers anyone identifying as a girl may face accessing the sport, and Challenger Baseball, an adaptive baseball program for kids living with physical and/or cognitive disabilities to learn the game in a safe and encouraging environment. Jays Care has twice received MLB’s Allan H. Selig Award for Philanthropic Excellence and has been named one of the nation’s top 100 charities by Charity Intelligence Canada, a non-profit charity watchdog.

Ten years ago, the 50/50 contributed about 10 percent of the charity’s overall fundraising. Today, the draws are responsible for nearly half of the funds raised, according to Witchel.

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And there are plans to keep growing. This year, Jays Care expanded online ticket sales to Nova Scotia after the province’s premier attended a Blue Jays game and remarked on how large the prize was.

“I said, ‘Well, would you like to bring that to Nova Scotia?’ And he was all ears,” Witchel said.

There are legal hurdles to clear, but the eventual hope is that the 50/50 will be open across Canada, which will provide more funding for children nationwide.

There is a unique enthusiasm in Canada for 50/50 raffles, engrained deep in the national DNA. Many Canadians grew up participating in their local hockey rink’s 50/50 raffles. Another potential reason? Canadians are not taxed on their 50/50 winnings.

While raising funds for the charity is Jays Care’s main priority, Witchel said informing the lucky winners of their prize is also rewarding. “We definitely have changed lives,” he said.

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Helping people like Andrew and Thomas is a satisfying part of the job for Lung, one of the ticket sellers.

“It’s tough out there. The fact that we can change somebody’s life just by them coming to a game… we’re also helping more kids,” she said. “It’s just this amazing trickle effect.”

Andrew, the jackpot winner from April, has yet to decide what he may want to splurge on — a new set of golf clubs is one idea — but primarily, he’s grateful that he can now prepare better for his retirement.

Thomas, the winner of half a million dollars, isn’t looking to buy a new house or a luxury car. He’s not planning to make an impulse buy. “I wish I had a more entertaining answer for you,” he said when asked what he’d do with the money.

He grew up in Toronto as the son of immigrants. They didn’t have a lot of money, he said, and his parents were careful about their spending. He stressed that he remembers a wonderful childhood, but he strives to give his two children — aged six and nine — more than he had. Beyond using his winnings to invest in their future education and help pay off a mortgage and line of credit, he hopes to spend it on family vacations that will create lasting memories.

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“It gives us that peace of mind going forward,” he said. “I think that’s the biggest thing for me. Since (I won), I just felt a little bit more relaxed. It doesn’t change my job. I’m still motivated the same amount at work and with family life. But that overall comfort and peace of mind is great to have.”

(Top Image: Daniel Goldfarb / The Athletic; Photos: iStock) 

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Ex-Patriots star Julian Edelman 'excited' about Drake Maye: 'Could be a great thing for New England'

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Ex-Patriots star Julian Edelman 'excited' about Drake Maye: 'Could be a great thing for New England'

Before the NFL Draft, Julian Edelman wondered if the New England Patriots, his former team, would get “sexy” with the third overall pick and trade it to fill more holes.

Teams were calling, but New England stayed put and selected North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye.

It was the safe pick, and now that Maye is in Foxborough, Edelman is a fan of what the Pats did.

Julian Edelman is a fan of the Patriots taking Drake Maye. (Getty Images)

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“This is a quarterback league,” Edelman told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. “Ultimately, it’s going to come down to the guys who are developing him. … It’s gonna come down to this offensive staff to get him going. They have a lot of holes, but the quarterback in this day and age is probably the most important role. I’m excited with Drake Maye.

“Just hearing the stories about how much he likes to compete. He comes from a sports family. His brothers are all legends. I think it could be a great thing for New England. He seems like a guy that’s willing to work, and it’s just about how they’re gonna develop him.”

Drake Maye at OTAs

Drake Maye of the New England Patriots throws during practice May 29, 2024, in Foxborough, Mass. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

HARRISON BUTKER PLAYED VITAL ROLE IN SAVING BJ THOMPSON DURING SEIZURE AND CARDIAC ARREST, CHIEFS STAFFER SAYS

Jacoby Brissett, Maye’s likely backup, should help Maye get accustomed to the NFL, and Edelman said Maye is in good hands with Brissett, Edelman’s former teammate.

“I think having Jacoby Brissett as his backup is a great guy for Drake to learn from. Jacoby’s been around the block. He’s won football games in the National Football League for multiple teams, and he’s a professional,” Edelman said.

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The Pats have new life with head coach Jerod Mayo, who is replacing Bill Belichick after 24 years.

“Having a smart, hungry, young head coach that knows players, knows how to communicate with players in Jerod Mayo, and we’ll see what this offensive staff can do,” Edleman said.

“I’m excited for the situation that they’re in. A lot of people are saying they’re gonna be terrible, this and that, whatever. This is the National Football League. Everyone gets paid. A lot of crazy things can happen. I’m excited for this upcoming season for the Pats.”

Drake Maye posing

Quarterback Drake Maye of the North Carolina Tar Heels poses for portraits after being selected third overall in the first round by the New England Patriots during the 2024 NFL Draft April 25, 2024, in Detroit.  (Todd Rosenberg/Getty Images)

New England had its worst season in a generation last year, going 4-13. It was the first time the Patriots picked inside the top 10 of a draft in over a decade. They have missed the playoffs in three out of the four post-Tom Brady seasons.

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Corey Seager provides the offense as Rangers defeat the Dodgers

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Corey Seager provides the offense as Rangers defeat the Dodgers

The first time Dodgers fans saw Corey Seager in the dugout this week, they cheered.

The first time they saw the former Dodger shortstop on the field, however, Seager gave them no choice but to boo.

In his first game as a visiting player at Dodger Stadium — three years since he left the franchise that drafted him, where he first became an All-Star and World Series champion — Seager led the Texas Rangers to a 3-2 win, providing the decisive blow in his first game back from a hamstring injury with a three-run home run off Walker Buehler in the fifth inning.

“We missed him,” Rangers manager Bruce Bochy said, after Seager missed the previous five games. “It’s good to have him back.”

His old club couldn’t say the same.

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The Dodgers almost salvaged the game in the ninth inning, when Jason Heyward nearly tied the score on a double with two runners aboard. But the trail runner, Andy Pages, was thrown out at home on a bang-bang play at the plate after running through a stop sign from third base coach Dino Ebel.

The Dodgers requested a challenge to see if Rangers catcher Jonah Heim was blocking the plate. But after a video review, the call was confirmed.

Game over.

Another night at Dodger Stadium, decided by the swing of Seager.

“It sucks that he’s my buddy and he clipped me,” Buehler said of Seager, his former Dodgers teammate before the Rangers signed him for $325 million two winters ago. “But at the end of the day, people don’t just give out 300 million for no reason. He’s as good as there is in this game.”

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Twenty-four hours earlier, Seager was welcomed back to Chavez Ravine with a warm reception Tuesday, getting a video tribute and extended ovation from his former fan base before the start of this week’s three-game series.

Because of a hamstring injury, however, Seager didn’t play in that game.

Only on Wednesday did Seager actually return to the lineup. And in his second at-bat, he reminded his old club of exactly what it let get away.

With the Dodgers leading by one in the fifth inning, thanks to Shohei Ohtani’s 17th home run in the first inning, Seager came to the plate with two on — one via an error by newly acquired Cavan Biggio, who started at third base — and got into a full-count battle with Buehler.

The first payoff pitch: a slider that Seager fouled off.

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The next: a dead-red, down-the-middle fastball.

Andy Pages, representing the tying run, is tagged out at the plate by Rangers catcher Jonah Heim to end the game.

(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Seager didn’t miss.

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With an explosive swing and two-handed finish — the same silhouette that defined Seager’s decorated Dodgers career — the slugger belted his go-ahead, three-run blast deep into the right-field pavilion.

“I tried to go in,” said Buehler, who gave up no other runs in a five-inning, seven-hit, two-strikeout start, “and kind of left it over the plate.”

The blast was Seager’s 13th home run of the season. It marked the 60th long ball of his career at Dodger Stadium. And, in what almost certainly was a first for the 30-year-old veteran, it triggered a reaction he’d never before received at Dodger Stadium.

Boos. Lots of them.

“I guess it kind of comes with the territory,” Seager said postgame with a shy grin. “I mean, I don’t blame them. I get it.”

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The Rangers’ 3-1 lead stood until the ninth, when the Dodgers fell just short of a last-gasp comeback on Pages’ close call at the plate.

With two on and two out, Heyward lined a double into center field that easily scored Will Smith from second, and was bobbled by the Rangers’ Leody Taveras in center field.

Having started the play on first base, Pages saw the bobble, then decided to go for the tying run.

What Pages didn’t see: Ebel holding up a one-handed stop sign at third base, running right past the base coach en route to being thrown out on an impressive relay play by Rangers infielder Marcus Semien.

“As soon as I saw the center fielder misplay it a little bit, I just thought about scoring that tying run,” Pages said in Spanish. “You learn from those things. Unfortunately, those things have to happen for you to get better.”

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Manager Dave Roberts said that Dodgers coaches weren’t upset with Pages, the 22-year-old rookie outfielder who has given the club much-needed production at the bottom of the lineup.

After all, it was Pages’ two-out walk that even allowed Heyward to come to the plate.

“It’s one thing to be defiant and to run through a stop sign when you see it, and there’s another thing of trying to make a play and try to be aggressive, seeing the ball in the outfield, and that’s what he did,” Roberts said, noting the Rangers still had to perfectly execute their relay play to get him. “It’s certainly not a reprimand situation. It’s just a teaching moment.”

One that also ensured Seager’s boo-inducing blast remained the decisive blow in the game.

“He certainly deserves all the applause from Dodgers fans, he helped us win a championship,” Roberts said of his former shortstop. “But he also deserved those boos after the three-run homer.”

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