Arizona
15-foot spoon stolen from Arizona Dairy Queen found by Pokémon Go player
A 15-foot spoon stirred up an Arizona group when the large pink utensil was stolen from an area Dairy Queen and disappeared for greater than per week.
Phoenix residents have been served a spoonful of thriller till a person looking for digital Pokémon stumbled upon the larger-than-life cutlery close to a center faculty baseball area about two miles from the scene of the heist.
Michael Foster, 52, was enjoying the cell recreation Pokémon Go when he noticed the large pink spoon — valued at $7,000 — on the grass round 7 a.m.
“The very first thing I did was ship an image to my spouse and I stated, ‘It’s the spoon.’ She stated name the police,” Foster advised The Related Press.
Cops responded to the scene and scooped up the dear spoon after a college upkeep employee and Foster bought it over the fence.
The officers then strapped it to the highest of their police cruiser like a Christmas tree, Foster stated.
“I can verify the Dairy Queen ‘pink spoon’ was positioned and recovered this morning,” Sgt. Brian Bower stated in an e mail Monday.
Foster stated nobody else was round when he got here throughout the large piece of silverware.
“I did type of go searching and was like ‘What?’ One man did lastly come by and was like, ‘Is that what I feel it’s?’ Yeah, that’s the spoon,” he stated.
The large spoon had been lacking since March 25 when two males and one girl eliminated it from its base exterior the Dairy Queen and lifted it onto a big flatbed related to a pickup truck, in response to surveillance footage launched by Phoenix police over the weekend.
Police are nonetheless looking for the three suspects.
The over-the-spoon Dairy Queen, Raman and Puja Kalra, stated getting one other made, delivered and put in would put them out greater than $7,000.
The massive pink spoon show is a nod to DQ’s follow of placing plastic pink spoons of their signature blended soft-serve treats generally known as Blizzards. It’s additionally a well-liked Instagram photograph backdrop.
They printed T-shirts for employees that stated “The place’s my spoon?” and supplied a reward of free Blizzards, albeit normal-sized, for anybody who helped carry again the large spoon.
Raman Kalra stated he picked up his big utensil from the police Monday.
“We’re pleased to have our spoon again and we’re trying ahead to the neighborhood creating extra smiles and tales with this now world-famous spoon,” he stated in an e mail.
With Put up wires
Arizona
Arizona Diamondbacks 2024 Player Review: Ryan Thompson
This article is part of a series chronicling the individual seasons of players who appeared for the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2024.
Reviews for players who still have rookie eligibility for 2025 will appear in our prospect season reviews. Players are presented in the reverse order of their aWAR, an average of Baseball Reference and FanGraphs WAR.
2024 Contract status: Arbitration, $1,350,000
When the Diamondbacks signed right-handed reliever Ryan Thompson to a minor league deal midway through the 2023 season, no one, except perhaps general manager Mike Hazen, had any idea of how impactful the move would be.
Thompson brought consistent stability to Arizona’s bullpen, immediately stepping into a high-leverage role, with his devastating arsenal and confounding sidearm angle baffling opposing hitters and pitching to a stellar 0.69 ERA with the D-backs in the regular season.
When 2024 began, Thompson slotted back into his high-leverage role. And for the first several months, the righty was just as dominant as he had been the prior season. He allowed just three earned runs over his first 22 appearances, pitching to a 1.14 ERA through May.
He was quite effective in June as well, up until June 28, where he gave up three hits, a walk and a home run, leading to a three-run day against the Oakland A’s. He settled back in quickly enough, giving up just two runs in July, and giving up just a .143 average for the month.
Unfortunately, like many of the D-backs’ other arms, his effectiveness took a hit as the latter months began. And, as with much of Arizona’s pitching staff, once Paul Sewald began to stumble out of his closer’s role, the rest of the high-leverage arms lost their groove.
It was oddly definitive for Thompson when this began to break down, correlated directly with Sewald’s removal from the ninth inning.
On July 31, Sewald had loaded the bases with a thin lead on the Washington Nationals. To avoid disaster, manager Torey Lovullo pulled his closer, and turned to Thompson to finish the job. It was a nail-biting finish, but the sidewinder sealed the win, and the sweep.
Two days later, Sewald was officially demoted, and Thompson’s struggles began to take hold. He allowed a run in his first three outings to begin August (including a blown save), and while the right-hander’s ERA was still an objectively excellent number at 2.30, it had more than doubled in just over a month.
He gave up just one unearned run over his next three outings, but on August 16, he suffered a blow to his confidence.
Facing the Tampa Bay Rays, in what was a sloppy series, filled with errors, the normally lockdown reliever gave up a walk and four hits. While a couple of them were cheap hits that could or should have been outs, Thompson only managed to record two outs, giving up three runs and giving up the lead.
He then delivered six more scoreless appearances, though they did look more labored. His pitch counts saw some spikes, and his command looked less sharp than it normally had been, with location mistakes on his slider and sinker frequently flying way outside the zone.
After a two-run outing against the Los Angeles Dodgers to close down the month, Thompson’s August ERA was an unsightly 6.17. Unfortunately for both he and the D-backs, September would open with his worst outing of the season, as he gave up four runs on four hits and a walk in San Francisco.
His once-sparkling ERA ballooned to a still-respectable but closer to average 3.26 as the season closed, with September marking his second straight 6.00+ ERA month.
Now, the illustration of these late struggles aren’t to say his season should be looked at negatively. Thompson was, by all metrics, a very effective arm for the D-backs, and, in many cases, he was asked to carry a major part of the bullpen workload.
The sidewinder eclipsed his previous season-high innings by 23.2, pitching 66.1 innings over 67 appearances in 2024. His FIP was 3.30, suggesting he pitched about as well as his results showed, though, as a pitcher who thrived on weak contact, he was susceptible to plenty of cheap hits, and occasionally bitten by poor defense.
Both his slider and sinker, two of his primary soft-contact pitches, began to lose some of their movement. Fatigue appeared to be taking its toll on the righty, and some poor luck made it a bit of a difficult stretch.
That said, the D-backs’ bullpen would certainly have been in worse shape without Thompson’s efforts. He may have struggled as the year progressed, but remains one of the most important members of Arizona’s relief corp, dating back to his contributions to 2023’s World Series run.
2025 Contract status: Arbitration, estimated $3,070,000 per Spotrac
The big right-hander is still arbitration eligible, and is estimated to earn $3,070,000 next season. There’s very little doubt he’ll return to the D-backs in 2025, and will likely retain his spot in higher-leverage situations, even if an addition is made.
Despite being 32 years old, Thompson won’t be a free agent until 2027. Barring injury or severe deterioration, Arizona will be happy to see the big sidewinder back on the mound at Chase Field next season.
With an off-season to recover, and hopefully a more permanent ninth-inning solution, it’s quite possible Thompson pitches closer to his 2023 and early-2024 self than his poorer recent months.
Arizona
Non-partisan campaign encourages Latinos to vote in Arizona
PHOENIX (AZFamily)— Multiple organizations gathered Monday night in Downtown Phoenix to host a rally to encourage Arizona Latinos to vote.
It’s all part of a non-partisan campaign called Si Se Vota, Latino Loud.
“We often hear Latinos do not vote, and so we want to make sure we change that narrative,” said Alicia Nuñez, President and CEO of Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC). “We’re big on culture and we want to make sure that we create our environment and our culture to teach our children how important it is to vote.“
CPLC, The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), Mi Familia Vota and UnidosUS were among the organizations that put on the rally.
“We want everyone to vote, but we’re particularly paying attention to young Latino voters because we’re trying to change behavioral patterns of Latinos,” said Joseph Garcia, the Executive Director for Si Se Vota CPLC Action Fund.
One study found that Arizona has the fourth-largest Latino voter bloc, at 1.3 million, making up a quarter of the state’s electorate.
However, even though Latinos register to vote, they don’t always cast their ballot.
“Latinos have not voted in the numbers and percentages that they should,” said Garcia. “They may not have seen a parent vote and may not understand the importance of voting, so if voting is not spoken in your house, you don’t pick that up.”
The campaign, which began a couple of years ago, aims to change that pattern by reaching out to eligible voters, especially younger ones.
“We’re not telling you how to vote. The important thing is that you learn about the issues, you see how they connect with your life, in your community and you vote,” said Garcia.
Janet Murguia, the President and CEO of UnidosUS, said she’s also hoping to encourage voters to participate in all city and state elections.
“We (UnidosUS) want to create a culture of being informed voters. We think, ultimately, that’s going to be the best way to have an impact in the future policies that impact our community,” Murguia said.
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Arizona
Appeals court says Arizona should release list of voters with unverified citizenship
PHOENIX — The Arizona Court of Appeals on Monday affirmed a decision by a lower court that required the Secretary of State’s office to release a list of tens of thousands of voters who were mistakenly classified as having access to Arizona’s full ballot because of a coding glitch.
The court rejected an appeal by Secretary of State Adrian Fontes’ office that sought to reverse the lower court’s order or at least suspend it. A group had sued in an effort to verify whether those on the list are in fact eligible to cast full ballots.
Arizona is unique among states in that it requires voters to prove their citizenship to participate in local and state races. Those who haven’t but have sworn to it under the penalty of law are allowed to participate only in federal elections.
The misclassification of voters from federal-only to full-ballot voters was blamed on a glitch in state databases involving drivers’ licenses and the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division.
Several tight races in the battleground state are expected to be decided by razor-thin margins. While the batch of about 218,000 potentially affected voters won’t impact the outcome of federal contests, they could influence tight state and local races.
Fontes’ office had initially denied a public records requests for the list of voters that was filed by America First Legal, a group run by Stephen Miller, a onetime adviser to former President Donald Trump. Fontes’ office cited concerns over the accuracy of the list and the safety of the voters included.
Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Scott Blaney ruled last week that the court received no credible evidence showing the information would be misused or encourage violence or harassment against the voters whose citizenship hasn’t been verified.
Blaney set a deadline of Monday for Fontes’ office to release a list of 98,000 voters and information Fontes relied on when announcing in early October that even more voters had been impacted — for a total of 218,000.
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