San Diego, CA
Ben Foster turned away from San Diego bar on Wrexham tour for poor ‘attitude’
Ben Foster started against his former club Manchester United in goal for Wrexham, even though he had been spotted hitting the tiles in San Diego the night before.
Phil Parkinson, the Wrexham manager, has been encouraging his players to experience San Diego as part of their promotional tour of the US but told them to stay out of the bars.
Yet just hours after Parkinson’s explicit instruction to his squad, Foster was seen in the company of three other companions trying to gain entry to a bar in the city’s popular Gaslamp district.
The former England goalkeeper, 40, and friends tried to get into the Barley Mash bar only to be refused entry by a doorman, who said the quartet were asked for ID and turned away because of their “attitude”.
The incident occurred around 9.30pm local time on Monday, less than 24 hours before Foster appeared in the first half of Wrexham’s impressive 3-1 win over a United Under-21 side.
Parkinson had made it clear before then that he wanted his players to stay out of the bars.
“We’ve tried to give the lads an experience everywhere we’ve been,” the Wrexham manager said. “They had a coach trip around Hollywood and Beverly Hills. We don’t want the lads to come on this trip, be in the hotel and say ‘lads, you’ve just got to sleep’.
“We’ve tried to let them go out into the local area – not the bars, I hasten to add – but the local areas, to get a feel for everything.”
Dressing room protocol
Marcus Rashford has revealed a new dressing room protocol at Old Trafford. It turns out that any player in charge of choosing the music will lose the right to do so if the team lose a game.
“Sometimes it’s Sanch [Jadon Sancho] but then, so we have a rule where if someone plays the music and we lose the game then they’re off,” the United striker explained to Gary Neville on The Overlap. “You’ve got to go off. Sometimes we’re listening to some Portuguese music and we’re winning, all the English lads are sat there fuming.”
David De Gea was often in charge of the music when he was at the club but not all of his choices were popular.
San Diego, CA
San Diego FC holds first ever practice at Sycuan training facility
SAN DIEGO, CA (KGTV) — San Diego was awarded an MLS expansion franchise back in May of 2023. Since then they have revealed a team name and colors, built a training facility, and built a coaching staff and roster. Today they tool the practice field for the very first time.
“It gets real, and then real, and then really real as each step has been special. When you get players here that’s what it’s all about,” says San Diego FC CEO Tom Penn.
It’s been 20 months in the making, as San Diego FC took the practice field today at their Sycuan training facility.
“It’s been a lot on whiteboards until now but we think we have an idea of what our strengths and weaknesses are going to be,” says SDFC head coach Mikey Varas. “Now is the time we get to start to see it so we are really excited to get them on the field this first week and get that base ready.”
“I’m going to get really close to Tyler because he is the one who did all the work on this,” says Penn. “I just want to see his pride, as he is the one who signed all these players which is hard.”
On day one of training for San Diego FC, the team says there goal is to compete for an MLS title. It really helps when you have a state of the art training facility like they do at Sycuan in El Cajon.
“This is such a special place Sycaun’s tribal land. It’s the home of their ancestral village, and now to have this kind of youth development and high performance academy here is amazing,” says Penn.
“This facility is unbelievable for what it is. I will tell you that it is unbelievable. I hope that nobody takes it for granted,” says SDFC head coach Mikey Varas.
The roster of 26 players is still a work in progress. Varas says the goal from day one is to get these players to mesh, and build team chemistry before the season opening game in late February.
“That’s priority number one to get a group of strangers, who just got to know each other and introduce themselves to each other just a couple of days ago, to start understanding each other on and off the field and that’s and that’s an amazingly exciting objective.”
The season opener is Februarty 23rd against the Los Angeles Galaxy.
San Diego, CA
Tom Krasovic: Predictable finish to Chargers’ season feels the same and yet somehow different
So now that Jim Harbaugh’s first season with the Chargers is in the books with Saturday’s defeat in a wild-card playoff game, it’s time to answer a big question.
Are the Chargers the same Chargers they’ve always been?
The answer is no.
And yes.
The first answer will be the longer one, because that’s where the 17-game season points.
Over those four months, they weren’t the same old Chargers.
One, they Chargered far less.
Instead of goofing up winnable games, a habit that introduced Chargering into NFL speech, they forced opponents to beat them. They finished among the leaders in fewest turnovers and fewest penalties. No team threw fewer interceptions. In field-goal percentage and net punting, the Chargers landed in the top half. This team didn’t beat itself very often.
Two, in establishing a reputation for physical play, the Chargers broke from the franchise’s norms over the years since Marty Schottenheimer was fired.
Physicality isn’t easily quantified, but in leading the NFL in fewest points allowed, Harbaugh’s defense asserted itself at all three levels.
It takes good tackling, setting the edge and displacing blockers to allow the fewest rushing touchdown, as L.A. did.
A high number of defensive holding penalties, reflecting greater physicality, was the cost of doing business for a unit that finished fourth in net yards allowed per pass attempt.
On offense, Harbaugh and coordinator Greg Roman emphasized slam-bam football — even if it could be tedious.
They often deployed either of two massive fullbacks/wingbacks/tight ends, each weighing close to 300 pounds. Sixteen percent of the offense’s snaps came with a tight end and two running backs, one of them a huge mauler; only three offenses went with that personnel grouping more often.
They weren’t the same old Chargers. They were the Harbaugh Chargers, resembling the coach’s physical, sound teams at Stanford, Michigan and with the San Francisco 49ers.
It wasn’t surprising that Harbaugh changed so much about the franchise’s identity.
He commanded more power than any coach hired in the Spanos era, which goes back almost four decades. He was able to hire his own general manager, breaking from Spanos tradition, and also brought in a pair of coordinators, several positional coaches and a much-praised strength coach.
A former NFL quarterback, Harbaugh took a hands-on approach with Justin Herbert.
The regular-season results took a big jump: from five victories to 11 victories. And Herbert set career marks in victories, passer rating and interception rate, while also assembling his second-best Total Quarterback Rating, an ESPN statistic that accounts for rushing.
The Chargers’ only playoff game under Harbaugh?
That was a different story.
That look was Same Ol’ Chargers.
Notwithstanding stretches of defensive dominance, Harbaugh’s Bolts echoed the Chargers’ futility of many other postseason defeats.
The names were different, but two key areas of underperformance were familiar: interceptions thrown and failed kicking attempts.
Recalling Chargers Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Fouts, Herbert threw four interceptions, exceeding his regular-season total by one. Fouts was more prone to interceptions in the playoffs than in the regular season. Sixteen of his passes were picked off in his seven playoff games. To be fair, interceptions then were common throughout the NFL, and Fouts led the Chargers to a few playoff wins with sparkling play. Still, his interception rate per passing attempt was 30% higher in the postseason than in the regular season.
Along with the offense’s poor game, the Chargers’ kicking game plummeted Saturday, too.
Fortunate that a deflected punt took a favorable bounce, the Chargers would later allow a blocked one-point attempt that the Texans returned for two points. A three-point swing, the sequence ballooned the fourth-quarter deficit to 13 points.
And it summoned the ghosts of Chargers kicking failures in Januarys past.
Several errant kicks by Nate Kaeding contributed to San Diego Chargers playoff defeats. An 86.2% kicker on field goals for his career in the regular season, Kaeding made just 8 of 15 field goals in the postseason, a rate of 53.3%.
It was just one game, but Saturday’s playoff defeat punctured some of Harbaugh’s mystique he’d built up in the regular-season run to the first wild card.
The sheer bizarreness of the three-point blunder made for vintage Chargering.
After his kick was blocked sky-high, Cameron Dicker, who a had bright season, camped under it and tried to bat it down instead of catching the live ball. Dicker got clobbered for his effort. Unfortunately for him, points weren’t given for comic relief. “OMG Chargers kicker! hahahahaha,” former Chiefs All-Pro tackle Mitchell Schwartz posted on social media.
The outing in total wasn’t a full-on Chargering performance. The Texans’ defense, which has stars at all three levels, was simply too good on several plays. The Chargers were favored by three points, but as the game unfolded, Houston coach DeMeco Ryans’ defense — better than almost every unit the Chargers had faced — showed how limited their offensive personnel was.
But, this was eerie: the Chargers’ most consequential errors recalled the franchise’s first playoff game of the Super Bowl era — a 17-14 loss in December 1979.
On that afternoon at sunny San Diego Stadium, where thousands of San Diegans wore gold “Charger Power” T-shirts, Fouts threw five interceptions against a franchise from Houston, the Oilers.
Cue up the spooky music, while pondering another parallel tidbit: Chargers kicker Mike Wood’s 26-yard field goal try in the second quarter was blocked, and Houston returned it 56 yards. That led to a short field goal for Houston, making it a six-point swing. Four more interceptions by Fouts would follow, and the Chargers, eight-point favorites, walked into the afternoon shadow with a stunning defeat.
Harbaugh’s team, in contrast, was playing with house money. Defense aside, it got exposed at several positions.
On to the offseason.
Originally Published:
San Diego, CA
Family of San Diego resident loses home in Eaton Fire
Altadena native Carolyn Scharf-Waller lives in San Diego but has deep roots in her hometown of Altadena, located in Los Angeles County.
“Altadena is near and dear to my heart,” Scharf-Waller said.
On Jan. 7 when the Eaton fire began, she began to worry.
“At like 5:30 I saw Eaton Canyon Fire, Altadena, 400 acres, and I thought, ‘Oh that’s not good. So then I called my mom and sister, and I said, ‘Hey I know you guys don’t have power, but there’s a fire in Eaton Canyon so get your stuff ready,’” Scharf-Waller said. “Literally like 20 minutes after I talked to them on the phone she called me back and was like, ‘I think we’re getting evacuated.’”
The fire that tore through the community destroyed the homes of many people.
“It looks almost like someone took a bomb to the area. I don’t even know how to explain it. Nothing is left,” Scharf-Waller said.
Marla Reyes who grew up with Carolyn in Altadena said she also has family members devastated by the fires.
She explained the day-to-day essentials that many people are in need of.
“Right now, it’s basic things. Underwear, socks, toothbrushes,” Reyes said.
As many people sort through what’s left and navigate insurance paperwork to submit a claim, they’re hoping Altadena returns to its full form soon.
“My hope is that Altadena can rebuild,” Scharf-Waller said.
As of Monday, the Eaton Fire was at 14,117 acres with containment at 33%.
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