Arizona
Arizona enters final Pac-12 weekend playing its best (defensive) baseball
There isn’t any award given by the Pac-12 for Most Improved Protection, in any other case Arizona can be in line to say that honor.
The Wildcats (35-18, 16-11 Pac-12) enter this weekend’s regular-season finale sequence at Oregon (32-21, 15-12) having gone eight consecutive video games with out committing an error. Courting again to the 1998 season that’s the longest streak of errorless play for this system, which for a minimum of the previous decade hasn’t been identified for its protection.
Since 2012, Arizona has averaged increased than one error per recreation in seven of 10 seasons and is a shade over that this spring (54 errors in 53 video games). The Wildcats’ fielding share, .973, is 89th in Division I, however in Pac-12 play they’re third-best at .978.
Having a solidified infield has definitely helped.
Tony Bullard, Nik McClaughry and Garen Caulfield have began practically each recreation the final month at third, shortstop and second, respectively, whereas Tommy Splaine has gotten the majority of the begins at first base. Daniel Susac has began all however seven video games behind the plate.
That’s a far cry from earlier within the season when accidents and inexperience made Arizona’s infield play an journey from recreation to recreation.
“I feel when everybody’s of their extra pure place there’s just a bit bit extra confidence on the market,” mentioned Caulfield, who started the season at third base when Bullard was unavailable attributable to a shoulder damage. “We had been actually working arduous at it to form of piece that infield collectively on the time, and it was robust at occasions. Getting Tony again actually helped us with getting guys in there extra pure positions and begin making performs for our guys.”
It additionally helps that McClaughry, who must be the frontrunner for Pac-12 Defensive Participant of the Yr, covers a lot floor at brief. He leads the convention with 164 assists and has been a part of 34 of Arizona’s conference-leading 49 doubles performs which are tied for seventh nationally.
UA coach Chip Hale mentioned McClaughry’s unimaginable footwork units the tone for all the things else he does.
“Your ft make your fingers good,” mentioned Hale, who performed second base on the UA within the Eighties and each second and third throughout his skilled profession. “Some persons are born with actually good ft.”
Susac, although he’s been charged with 9 handed balls (seven in Pac-12 play) and has 5 errors, has been key in limiting opponents’ operating recreation. Arizona has solely allowed 21 stolen bases all season, whereas convention foes have tried simply seven steals in 27 video games.
Oregon State, which averages multiple steal per recreation in Pac-12 play, didn’t try one final weekend when the Wildcats took two of three at Hello Corbett Area. Oregon has 57 steals this season, swiping six (with out a caught stealing) in a sequence win at ASU final weekend.
Not permitting additional baserunners or bases due to protection is important in a sequence that figures to be pretty high-scoring. The Geese are the second-highest scoring staff in Pac-12 play (Arizona is fifth) and each have a convention ERA over 5.1.
Oregon is 22-10 this season at PK Park, the place the fences have been moved in and the place 75 residence runs have been hit in 32 video games. Of Arizona’s 56 homers this season, 34 have been hit in 22 street or neutral-site video games.
Pac-12 Match eventualities
Arizona has clinched a spot in subsequent week’s inaugural Pac-12 tourney, which runs Might 25-29 in Scottsdale, however relying on what occurs this weekend it might find yourself anyplace from the No. 2 to No. 5 seed.
If the Wildcats get the No. 4 or No. 5 seed—the most definitely situation—it might play within the first recreation of the tourney Wednesday at 9 a.m. PT at Scottsdale Stadium, the Spring Coaching residence of the San Francisco Giants. And their most definitely opponent in that 4/5 recreation can be their foe this weekend, Oregon.
To get the No. 2 seed, the UA would want to comb the Geese and have two of the three groups above it—Oregon State, Stanford and UCLA—have a nasty last weekend. UCLA is at OSU, whereas Stanford hosts last-place USC, so No. 3 could be the excessive mark however provided that Arizona pulls off a sweep.
Arizona
Court orders Arizona to release list of voters whose citizenship hasn't been verified
PHOENIX — Arizona’s secretary of state office must release a list of tens of thousands of voters who were mistakenly classified as having access to the full ballot because of a coding glitch, a Maricopa County Superior Court judge ruled Thursday.
Secretary of State Adrian Fontes’ office initially denied a public records requests for the list 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.
Judge Scott Blaney said 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 noon 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.
Arizona is among the most closely watched states given its presidential battleground status, and both campaigns have ramped up their presence in recent weeks to court undecided voters. The coding glitch doesn’t impact federal races. But it led to a decision from the state Supreme Court in September that the misclassified voters — representing about 5% of all undecided voters — still could vote the full ballot even though officials haven’t confirmed whether they are U.S. citizens.
That number of voters could tip the scales in tight local and state races, as well as fiercely competitive ballot measures on abortion and immigration. The voters are nearly evenly registered as Democrats, Republicans or with neither of those parties.
Fontes has said he has the list of 98,000 voters but not a more expansive one despite declaring many more were affected. His office said Thursday that it’s reviewing Blaney’s decision and weighing its options.
Blaney restricted Strong Communities Foundation and its legal counsel, America First Legal, from distributing information they receive from Fontes’ office ahead of Election Day on Tuesday to anyone but county recorders, the Arizona Senate president and speaker of the Arizona House and members of the elections committee.
America First Legal’s counsel, James Rogers, said in a statement Thursday that the group is hopeful the records could be used to verify the citizenship of voters on the list.
“It is unfortunate that Secretary Fontes so aggressively opposed our common-sense efforts to help restore trust in our state’s election system,” Rogers said.
The ruling also requires Fontes’ office to release communications and data transmissions with a number of government agencies, including the Arizona Department of Transportation and Gov. Katie Hobbs’ office.
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.
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 state considers drivers’ licenses issued after October 1996 to be valid proof of citizenship. However, the system coding error marked 218,000 voters who obtained licenses before 1996, mistakenly, as full-ballot voters, state officials said.
Arizona
How Mormons could be Kamala Harris’ secret weapon in Arizona
Traditionally conservative members of the Church of Latter-day Saints in Arizona are being turned off from former President Donald Trump, in part because of his language around immigrants.
With around 400,000 Mormons in the battleground state — roughly 6 percent of its population — both Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have sought to win them over in the hope of securing Arizona’s 11 Electoral College votes, but the key issue of immigration has become divisive.
Tyler Montague, a political consultant with the Public Integrity Alliance and a LDS member, told Newsweek that while many members of the church will vote for Trump, a growing number will either leave their presidential vote blank or swing all the way to Harris.
He pointed to LDS’ immigrant-friendly attitude, highlighted by the missionary programs many young Mormons take part in.
“A lot of them are in Latin America, a lot in Africa, Asia, so you have people exposed to these other cultures and other languages and they develop understanding and empathy,” Montague said. “So, you have a group that’s sympathetic toward immigrants, legal or otherwise.”
A growing discomfort around Trump’s immigration rhetoric
The Arizonan said that Trump’s rhetoric on immigration – promising mass deportations and characterizing migrants as criminals or those stealing jobs – did not sit well with those who had connections to countries where immigrants were from, or who worked and lived alongside them in their communities.
The Harris campaign has sought to tread a line between tightening border security, while also avoiding demonizing migrants writ large.
The LDS community in Arizona has voiced its opposition to anti-immigrant legislation in the past, including legislation in 2010 known as the “show me your papers” bill, which the church rejected parts around enforcement.
Some Evangelical Christians have also expressed discomfort around the lack of empathy for refugees and immigrants within the GOP, as Newsweek reported earlier in October, though the voting bloc is still expected to go for Trump by wide margins.
Are Mormons switching to Harris?
Montague told Newsweek that discomfort is going to matter among a group that sees voting as its civic duty, which could swing results in a state which was decided on around 10,000 votes in 2020.
“It’s not just the immigration issue. The culture of the church, the culture of Christ-like service-style leadership is just in contrast with the braggadocio style of Donald Trump,” Montague said. “That’s off-putting.
“The thing that keeps people in his camp, there are plenty of people that don’t like him, but they’re turned off by the abortion issue, which Kamala Harris is touting.”
Mormon support across the U.S. for Republican candidates has dropped in recent decades, according to the Pew Research Center in 2016, with George W. Bush receiving 80 percent support in 2004, compared to 61 percent for Trump in 2016.
That does not mean those votes are automatically going to the Democratic Party, though, with some feeling issues like abortion leave them with no viable presidential candidate.
Montague pointed to high-profile LDS members who could sway members of the church, including Mitt Romney, the senator from Utah who ran against Barack Obama in 2012, and former Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers. Both Romney and Bowers have openly voiced their opposition to Trump.
Arizona
Opinion: Ludicrous tax ruling may force us to stop selling auto parts in Arizona
An appeals court says we must pay more in state sales taxes than we earned in 20 years selling auto parts to Arizonans, even without a local store.
U.S. retail sales increase solidly in September
STORY: U.S. retail sales increased more than expected in September, another sign that economic growth remained strong in the third quarter. A report from the Commerce Department out Thursday showed sharp increases in receipts at retailers ranging from clothing outlets to book stores, grocers to gardening centers. Online sales jumped, as did receipts at bars and restaurants. Economists view
I am president of RockAuto, a Wisconsin-based online auto parts store that my family and I started in 1999.
We ship parts to DIY and professional mechanics worldwide.
Since 2019, when a new law taxing out-of-state businesses took effect, RockAuto has paid Arizona sales taxes, even though we have never had an Arizona store.
Unsatisfied, the Arizona Department of Revenue recently convinced an appeals court that we were physically present in Arizona before 2019 without knowing it and owed millions of dollars in taxes under the old law.
Arizona wants more money than we earned
Somehow, according to the ruling, every Arizona factory and wholesaler selling parts to us became our branch office when we asked them to ship directly to our customers.
Address labels became stores, refrigerator magnets became salespeople and, magically, RockAuto was in Arizona.
No previous court case has found a retailer “physically present” without employees or assets or someone making in-state contact with customers.
The revenue department’s own publications even say that “drop-shipping” from Arizona suppliers — asking manufacturers or wholesalers to ship their products directly to a retailer’s customers instead of to the retailer’s store — does not create tax liability.
Still, the department persists in demanding six years of taxes (which we didn’t collect from customers) plus interest and penalties — far more money than we earned in 20 years selling auto parts to Arizonans.
We’ve petitioned the Arizona Supreme Court to review the case. The Arizona Tech Council and state Rep. Michael Carbone have written letters pointing out that tax laws come from the Legislature, not the revenue department’s imagination.
RockAuto may have to stop selling in Arizona
Because Gov. Katie Hobbs did not create this situation (it began before she took office), thousands of our Arizona customers have appealed to her to restrain the department.
Empowered by the appeals court, however, the revenue department has not responded.
To protect the livelihoods of our families from future attack, we’ve stopped buying from Arizona suppliers. We may be forced to stop selling to customers in Arizona.
Dismantling relationships that took decades to build is heartrending. But we can’t work for free or live in fear of the next random, retroactive ruling.
Other online retailers that bought from Arizona suppliers in past decades or today could be next on the department’s hit list.
Do you or your business depend on any of them?
Jim Taylor is president of RockAuto, an online parts store based in Madison, Wisc. Reach him at service@rockauto.com.
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