Arizona
Arizona Diamondbacks’ pitching, defense struggles in loss to Padres
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Bob Melvin was again on the highest step of the dugout for the primary time in 12 video games and his San Diego Padres welcomed him again with a sloppy but satisfying win.
Jurickson Profar had 4 hits, drove in two runs and scored twice for the Padres, who jumped on Madison Bumgarner early in a 10-4 victory in opposition to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday for a three-game sweep.
Melvin returned after lacking 11 video games whereas in COVID protocols. All-Star slugger Manny Machado missed his third straight sport with a sprained left ankle.
“I used to be simply completely satisfied I used to be on the market. It was a tough 10 days,” Melvin stated. “I’m glad we received, clearly. However simply getting again on this ballpark. It’s one factor to look at it on TV and also you miss the thrill and the followers and all that goes on right here. So to have the ability to get within the dugout and sort of see all that once more and get a win on high of it was nice.”
The Padres greeted Melvin with some runs. After Mike Clevinger escaped a bases-loaded jam to get out of a tedious high of the primary inning unscathed, the Padres scored 4 runs in opposition to Bumgarner.
“That first inning was an enormous inning,” Melvin stated. “They’d us on the ropes and get nothing, after which it appears like we get somewhat momentum coming again into our dugout and unexpectedly we placed on a four-spot. First inning was big one, for Clev to get out of it and for us to reply within the backside half.”
Jorge Alfaro, whose walk-off single within the tenth inning Tuesday night time gave the Padres a 3-2 win, hit a solo homer within the sixth. Rookie José Azocar fell a house run wanting the cycle in his first profession three-hit sport.
Bumgarner (3-8) bought his 2,000th profession strikeout however in any other case it was a tricky day for the 32-year-old left-hander. The Padres led 4-0 after the primary inning and 6-0 after the second at hand MadBum his fifth loss in six begins.
Adrian Morejon (1-0) pitched 1.1 innings for the win and Nick Martinez pitched the ultimate 3.2 innings for his first save. Martinez additionally dedicated two of the Padres’ 4 errors. He got here on with the bases loaded with one out within the sixth and bought out of the jam.
Profar had 4 straight singles after which was hit on the left hamstring by a pitch from Caleb Smith within the seventh. Profar angrily flung his bat and it skidded down the dust virtually all the best way to first base. Profar was changed with a pinch runner.
Profar, the leadoff batter, reached and scored in every of the primary two innings. The Padres scored 4 runs with two outs within the first. Austin Nola hit a two-run, bases-loaded single and Trent Grisham and Azocar adopted with RBI singles.
Luke Voit hit an RBI single within the second and one other run scored on Alfaro’s double-play ball.
Profar hit a two-run single with two outs within the fifth.
Voit whiffed within the fourth to provide Bumgarner 2,000 strikeouts for his profession. Bumgarner lasted solely 4 innings, giving up six runs, 4 earned, and 4 hits. He struck out 5 and walked none.
Clevinger, making his first begin and second look since coming off the COVID injured checklist, additionally went 4 innings. He allowed one run and 4 hits whereas placing out three and waliing two. He threw 29 pitches within the 20-minute first inning and loaded the bases with one out however bought out of the jam unscathed.
Clevinger stated it’s “big” the best way the Padres have responded in Machado’s absence. “It simply exhibits the sort of camaraderie now we have on this clubhouse. It’s all the time the next-man-up mentality right here. It’s not going to be a ‘poor me,’ it’s going to be ‘let’s go get it with what we’ve bought.’ It’s wonderful to see on this clubhouse.”
Arizona’s Alek Thomas homered deep into the right-field seats main off the third, his fifth. Christian Walker homered off Nick Martinez with two outs within the seventh, his nineteenth.
BOMEL IS BACK
Melvin returned to the dugout after being sidelined by COVID protocols because the second sport of a doubleheader on June 11. Melvin says he’s been asymptomatic for the final 9 days. The Padres went 6-5 in Melvin’s absence. High quality management coach Ryan Flaherty managed 10 video games in Melvin’s absence and bench coach Ryan Christenson was cleared from protocols in time to handle Tuesday night time. Christenson went into protocols the identical time as Melvin.
TRAINER’S ROOM
– Diamondbacks LF David Peralta was scratched for the third straight sport with decrease again tightness.
– Padres’ Melvin stated Machado is strolling round and doesn’t foresee the slugger happening the injured checklist.
– San Diego SS Fernando Tatis, rehabbing his surgically repaired left wrist, took some dry swings and hit just a few balls off a tee Tuesday night time. He hasn’t been cleared to take batting follow.
“We’re looking for out how he feels. We’re simply making an attempt to take inventory of the place he’s at. We’re not pushing something.,” Melvin stated.
UP NEXT
Arizona returns to Chase Discipline to host the Detroit Tigers on Friday night time at 6:40 p.m. on 98.7 FM Arizona’s Sports activities Station.
Arizona
NFL moves Vikings-Rams playoff game to Arizona
As wildfires continue to rage in Los Angeles, the NFL has made the only decision it could.
Monday’s Wild Card playoff game between the Vikings and Rams has been moved to Arizona. The NFL announced the relocation of the game on Thursday night.
“The decision was made in consultation with public officials, the participating clubs and the NFLPA,” the league said in a statement.
The game still begins on Monday at 8:00 p.m. ET.
Tickets will go on sale at 10:00 a.m. PT on Friday through Seatgeek.com, for Rams season-ticket holders. At 12:00 p.m. PT, the tickets will be available to the general public.
The 10-7 Rams had earned home-field advantage by winning the NFC West. The 14-3 Vikings are the NFC’s No. 5 seed.
Arizona
Water, climate, justice: Environmental groups outline priorities for 2025 Legislature
Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs talks about 2025 legislative session
Gov. Katie Hobbs talks about affordability, safety, Arizona’s water future and building relationships with new members of the state Legislature.
A coalition of environmental organizations has described what it wants to see from Arizona lawmakers this year.
During a news conference on Wednesday, the coalition of 35 organizations laid out its vision for Arizona’s 2025 legislative session. The group, coordinated by the Sierra Club, also released a written set of priorities.
Sandy Bahr, director of the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter, said the organizations are already working on legislation to address most of the stated priorities. Many organizations in the coalition regularly advocate their policy preferences at the state capitol and work with legislators on new laws.
“We will collaborate with our elected leadership at every level to work towards having cleaner air and heat mitigation efforts to ensure a future where Arizonans don’t face extreme heat for longer periods of time in the years ahead,” said Vania Guevara, advocacy and political director at Chispa Arizona.
Organizations and some lawmakers bemoaned what they described as a pattern of inaction from Arizona’s historically Republican-dominated Legislature.
“I call on my Republican counterparts, as the majority in this Legislature, to hear the bills we introduce … and to pass them. Will this session in 2025 be a departure from prior activity?” said Arizona Senate Democrat and Minority Leader Priya Sundareshan of Tucson.
No Republican lawmakers spoke at the conference.
The coalition, which includes some faith-based and social issue groups as well as environmental organizations, called on the Legislature to address climate change, protect the state’s water resources, protect vulnerable populations, and add more environmental considerations to state and local government actions.
Arizona’s legislative session begins Monday. Republicans will have a 17-13 majority in the Senate and a 33-27 majority in the House, making both bodies redder than they were in 2024.
Climate, water, environmental justice are on the list
The coalition’s specific priorities include:
- Support Gov. Katie Hobbs’s Office of Resiliency. The coalition wants legislators to put more money toward the governor’s response to extreme heat and the office’s work to develop a climate action plan for the state. The groups would also like the removal of Arizona laws keeping the state from measuring or limiting greenhouse gas emissions.
- Electrify transportation. The coalition wants Arizona lawmakers to pass bills that promote investment in transportation electrification, including electric school and transit buses and more robust electric-vehicle charging infrastructure.
- Regulate rural groundwater: The coalition wants laws enabling the measurement and limitation of groundwater pumping throughout Arizona, including in rural areas where pumping has contributed to land subsidence and depleted stream flows. Bahr told The Arizona Republic in an email that the coalition is involved with a bill to accomplish this goal.
- Protect riparian ecosystems: The coalition wants amendments to Arizona laws to protect water in Arizona’s waterways specifically to support local ecosystems. Specifically, the groups want the Legislature to modify the state’s surface water quality program to include seasonal streams and washes. The group also wants lawmakers to appropriate more funding for the state to address a backlog of polluted water systems and put them on a path to meeting water quality standards. The coalition is working on legislation to accomplish these goals and to establish “ecological” flows in streams and rivers as a beneficial use, so water rights holders can legally use their water to prop up ecosystems.
- Support vulnerable groups: The organizations want a state-level version of the Biden Administration’s Justice40 Initiative, ensuring that 40% of state investments in areas like renewable energy and housing go to communities already grappling with pollution and/or a historic lack of investment. The groups also want the state to pass legislation that defines “overburdened communities” in Arizona as those with “with significant non-white, non‒English-speaking, or low-income populations” and require companies seeking air quality, waste, and water quality permits in those communities to prepare “Environmental Justice Impact Statements.” The coalition is working on a bill to do that, according to Bahr.
- Consider environmental impacts to government actions: The groups want a state-level version of the federal National Environmental Policy Act, which would require the state and local governments to assess the environmental impacts of proposed actions before committing to them. Those processes would involve public participation and consultation with tribes. The groups also want a state-level endangered species program to protect species not addressed under the federal Endangered Species Act.
Austin Corona covers environmental issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Laura Gersony covers national politics for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Send tips or questions to austin.corona@arizonarepublic.com or laura.gersony@gannett.com.
Environmental coverage on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Sign up for AZ Climate, our weekly environment newsletter, and follow The Republic environmental reporting team at environment.azcentral.com and @azcenvironment on Facebook and Instagram.
Arizona
What Bill Self Said About Kansas’ Insane Defensive Performance vs. Arizona State
LAWRENCE, Kan. — On Wednesday night, the Kansas Jayhawks secured their second Big 12 victory of the season in dominant fashion, shutting down Arizona State 74-55 with a suffocating defensive display.
The Jayhawks trailed early in the first half but came alive defensively after the break, holding the Sun Devils to just 13 points in the second half. Kansas forced 18 turnovers, collected 13 steals, and blocked five shots in what head coach Bill Self described as an “exceptional” defensive effort.
“Well, we were great defensively. I mean, who would have thought we shot the ball worse the second half from two, we shot it worse from three, and basically held them to 11,” Self said. “And then they get the layup there right at the very end, but, yeah, that was exceptional.”
Self also pointed out that Arizona State’s lack of depth played a role in their struggles.
“Now, granted, they didn’t have as much depth tonight, so their guys got tired, I thought,” Self said. “But Rylan [Griffen] was terrific. And, you know, [Shakeel Moore] is a difference-maker defensively […] and then everybody else was better the second half.”
Despite the defensive heroics, Kansas had its own offensive challenges. Big man Hunter Dickinson had a rough night, shooting just 5-for-15 from the field. Self acknowledged the uneven offense but praised his team for stepping up on the other end of the floor.
“I don’t think we played great by any stretch offensively. [Hunter Dickinson] is 5-for-15, and some different things, but defensively, that’s about as turned up as I’ve seen a team for an entire half,” Self said.
The win improved Kansas to 11-3 overall and 2-1 in Big 12 play, giving the Jayhawks back-to-back victories after a tough conference-opening loss to West Virginia.
AJ Storr Struggles Again: What Went Wrong for Kansas Guard Against Arizona State
Kansas Overwhelms Arizona State in Dominant Second Half
What Bill Self Said About Flory Bidunga’s Monster UCF Performance
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