San Diego, CA
Opposition scouting report: San Diego FC
San Diego FC are currently mired in an eight-game winless run in which they’ve collected just three points. But this is still largely the same team that looked dominant both last year and in the early stages of this season. To help us make sense of that, we asked Dmitry Ansimov of SDFC Nation to provide this scouting report:
Notable injuries
Jeppe Tverskov, the heart of SDFC midfield is most likely out until after the World Cup due to a leg injury he suffered on April 25 in a 1–0 loss to the Portland Timbers. Goalkeeper CJ Santos has also been ruled out after a collisionwith.
Team form
The team has been in dismal form. Winless in their last seven and having lost five straight, they finally got a point at home when they tied LAFC’s rotated squad due to their CCC matchup against Toluca. However, SDFC was leading 2–0 and squandered points on a last-minute equalizer at home. Ever since the loss at Toluca, SDFC has not been the same. Toluca exemplified a gameplan that worked well to break down the SDFC high-possession, play-out-of-the-back style and MLS teams followed. Head coach Mikey Varas refuses to change tactics and lives and dies by his 4–3–3 system which makes the team very predictable. SDFC has squandered decisive late goals in back-to-back matches.
Key players
The key players to watch for are Marcus Ingvartsen, who’s found his form this season at the 9. After being out most of last season, Ingvartsen is leading the team in goals scored (7). He’s been clinical in the air and on the ground. The other player to watch for is Anders Dreyer. Dreyer is having a good season again, leading the team in goals+assists (10). Last season’s league MVP candidate is not quite where he was last year, but remains the pillar in SDFC’s attack. Defensively — Manu Duah and Luca Bombino. Duah (CB) just got his first call-up to the Ghana national team and has been fantastic this season. SDFC has seen the difference of when he’s on and when he’s off the field (due to the couple of red cards he’s received this season due to sloppy challenges). Luca Bombino patrols the LB position where he’s been extremely effective. Breaking into the team last year, Bombino has been a regular starter for SDFC since. He’s dealt with an injury that forced him out of two matches – when he came back last match, SDFC looked much better on defense, further clarifying how important he is to the team.]
One thing opposing fans should know
If San Diego wants to get a result, they’ll need to be far more clinical in the final third and far more composed in the closing moments of the match. Possession alone won’t be enough; turning control into goals is the next step. More than anything, this match is about mentality. SDFC has shown they can go toe-to-toe with top teams, but now they need to prove they can finish the job—especially away from home in a tough environment like Seattle. If they can build on the positives from the LAFC performance, stay disciplined defensively, and avoid the late-game lapses that have cost them points, this could be the moment their season finally turns back in the right direction.
Projected lineup
4–3–3: Furree; Bombino, Duah, McVey, Verhoeven; Vazuez, Godoy, Valakari; Morgan, Ingvartsen, Dreyer.
San Diego, CA
San Diego City Council will vote on fiscal year 2027 budget
Following a lengthy and at times combative process, the San Diego City Council will vote Tuesday on the fiscal year 2026-27 budget during a special session.
The proposed budget is based largely on Mayor Todd Gloria’s May revisal, which found additional revenue sources to help preserve some library and recreation center hours, shoreline bathrooms and “December Nights,” compared to the initial proposal.
“Even in a difficult budget year, we continued looking for ways to protect neighborhood services responsibly,” Gloria said. “My May revise restores targeted services in some of our historically underserved communities while still maintaining our focus on the fundamentals for San Diegans: keeping you safe, fixing infrastructure, reducing homelessness and building more homes.”
Gloria’s proposed additions include protecting recreation center and library hours in Council Districts 4, 8 and 9, Monday hours at Carmel Valley Library and preventing the North Clairemont Library Branch from closing, protection of staffing support for December Nights planning and operations, another $500,000 for youth drop-in centers, and allocating opioid settlement funds toward treatment and support programs through UC San Diego and the San Diego LGBT Community Center.
However, arts funding could still be gutted based on the May revise. Last week, City Council President Pro Tem Kent Lee was joined by Budget Committee Chair Henry Foster III with County Supervisor Monica Montgomery Steppe and representatives of the Prebys Foundation to announce a public- private proposal to restore San Diego’s arts funding, which would have the foundation put up $3 million for arts and culture programs slashed in the current proposed budget.
“Arts are essential to our city,” Lee said. “Music, film, artistic expression — this is what makes us human, and it’s what transforms a city into a community. Our arts programs create jobs, attract visitors and help define what it means to be a San Diegan. This is not about funding some abstract luxury, it’s about protecting one of San Diego’s greatest strengths.”
The proposal also would adopt recommendations from the city’s Independent Budget Analyst’s office to shift $6 million from San Diego’s Transient Occupancy Tax — essentially a hotel tax — to arts programs, as well as restoring $1.3 million in grants.
“Arts and culture belong in all of San Diego and this funding supports local artists, small businesses, jobs and the community spaces that keep our neighborhoods connected,” Foster said. “In District 4, the San Diego Black Arts and Culture District shows why this work matters by honoring history, creating opportunity and making sure culture isn’t forgotten. As budget chair, I truly believe this proposal is a responsible way to protect funding that matters to our residents and our local economy.”
It would cover around $10.35 million of the nearly $12 million cut under the proposed budget as the city looks to tighten its belt around a $118 million structural budget deficit.
“Our investment is intended to encourage the city to restore arts funding, honor the competitive grants process already underway and strengthen regional support for arts and culture,” said Grant Oliphant, CEO and president of the Prebys Foundation. “For decades, San Diego’s artists and cultural organizations have been promised a reliable source of public funding. It is time to deliver on that promise, and today marks an important step forward.”
Gloria said new sources of revenue to cover the non-art additions include an increase in tourism occupancy tax — charged to those who stay in the city’s hotels — and a $4.3 million boost to revenue by recovering rent from the city’s golf courses.
“Every private golf course in San Diego pays rent for the land it sits on,” he said. “Our public courses sit on public land owned by the people of San Diego. The new legal guidance allows us to properly account for the value of that land, and to make sure the public benefits when the courses succeed.”
George Duardo, president of the San Diego City Firefighters, said some cuts slated for the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department were worrying — such as bomb squad staffing, the community resource officer, the recruitment and retention officer, fire information officer position and fire academy instructor.
“While (it’s) good the city found additional money in the budget, it is unfortunate that it wasn’t directed to reverse the proposed cuts to Fire- Rescue staffing and operations,” he said. “We are hopeful the council and mayor can truly make public safety a priority and not compromise fire staffing and response times via the cuts on the table.”
Council members will also have to weigh significant decisions made Monday evening, when the council voted unanimously to end paid parking at Balboa Park by the end of the year and reduce trash fees for single-family homes.
Paid parking will end on Dec. 31 and the trash fees will be reduced to $38.75 starting next year for the “typical” 95-gallon bin bundle — a number adjusted for inflation from the initial proposal in 2021. Those using 65-
or 35-gallon bins will pay “proportionally less.” That amount will increase to $39.91 on July 1, 2028.
The decisions Monday mean the city must find the lost revenue — or slash existing services — from somewhere else. A possible reduction of services includes the elimination of bulky item pickup and delay of an electric vehicle rollout.
“Today’s City Council action reflects a compromise reached to protect the city from prolonged litigation and the risk of even deeper financial consequences that could have resulted in far more significant cuts to core services,” Gloria said.
“Faced with the potential total loss of more than $150 million and the prospect of additional cuts to police, fire protection, libraries, parks, and neighborhood services, I supported a compromise that helps protect the city’s financial stability and allows us to avoid a much more damaging outcome.”
The city will immediately stop selling yearly passes for the parking, will stop selling quarterly passes on Sept. 30 and monthly passes by Nov. 30. Those who have already purchased a yearly pass will get a prorated refund from the city.
Single-family refuse pickup is funded by the city’s general fund, which all residents pay into through property tax — whether they rent or own a single-family home, a condominium or an apartment. The city takes away 300,000 tons of trash and 150,000 tons of recycling, compostables and yard waste annually.
The San Diego City Council will convene at 1 p.m. Tuesday to discuss and vote on the budget.
San Diego, CA
Reds still looking for answers as losing streak hits 5 in San Diego
Manager Terry Francona on 3 straight bunt plays, Reds’ loss to Padres
Three straight misplays by Reds on three straight bunts by Padres led to the go-ahead run scoring in the Reds’ 5th straight loss, 6-2 in San Diego.
SAN DIEGO – Cincinnati Reds manager Terry Francona had nowhere else to go, no inclination to sleep and nothing on his mind but trying to fix the growing number of Reds problems.
So he went to the ballpark more than eight hours before the first pitch of the Reds’ series against the San Diego Padres.
“Why was I here at 10:30 in the morning? I can’t (expletive) do anything,” Francona said. “I was miserable sitting in my room.”
It wasn’t long before misery got some company when general manager Brad Meador joined Francona to talk how to solve such problems as their injury-addled roster and most walk-prone bullpen in the majors.
The morning start to the game that night came less than 24 hours after Francona gathered the team for a rare meeting after a dispiriting sweep at the hands of the Cardinals over the weekend – a series that included blown leads all three games and that dropped the Reds record under .500 for the first time since March.
“I think they feel a lot like I do. They desperately want to win,” Francona said. “We’re kind of vastly different than we were even a couple weeks ago. And that’s not an excuse. We’re trying to figure things out as we go. And it’s been challenging. No getting around that.”
No Elly De La Cruz (hamstring). No Hunter Greene (elbow). And no relief in sight – with closer Emilio Pagán and setup men Graham Ashcraft and Pierce Johnson all on the injured list as well.
And then the Reds put the right guy on the mound in the right place at the right time – only to see another late lead go away in another loss in Monday night’s series opener.
Hot-pitching starter Andrew Abbott, who had a sub-1.00 career ERA against the Padres entering the game, took a 2-1 lead into the seventh before issuing back-to-back doubles and exiting.
What followed was the anything-that-can-go-wrong-will stuff of struggling teams.
Three consecutive bunts by the bottom of the Padres’ MLB-worst lineup led to three consecutive misplays by the Reds and two more runs in the Reds’ 6-2 loss at Petco Park.
It was the Reds fifth straight loss, fourth straight day they’ve held a lead only to lose the game, and dropped them to a season low-water mark of three games under .500.
One day after losing in St. Louis on back-to-back errors in the eighth inning, this is how the Reds lost when the Padres tried to bunt into outs in the seventh:
- Jase Bowen’s bunt with a runner at second died on the grass just to the left of the mound, where reliever Tejay Antone prepared to pick it up, just as first baseman Sal Stewart charged in to win the tussle for the ball – before throwing late to second baseman Edwin Arroyo covering first.
- Then with runners at the corners Samad Taylor bunted 20 feet toward first. Stewart charged and whiffed on the scoop attempt to get the runner at the plate as the go-ahead run scored.
- Then with runners at first and second and still nobody out, Freddy Fermin bunted toward the mound, and Antone lost the handle trying to pick up the ball. Bases loaded, nobody out.
“They say when it rains it pours,” Stewart said.
Antone eventually escaped without further damage on a shallow pop to right, chopper to third and sharp play at short by Matt McLain.
But the damage was done. And by the time the Padres scored three two-out runs of Zach McCambley in the seventh, the Reds had their ninth loss in 11 games – against a team that ranked last in the majors in scoring, hitting, slugging and on-base percentage.
In fact, the Padres were on their own 2-11 skid coming into the series.
No telling how early Francona arrives at the park for the next game.
“It’s hard. It’s a little challenging at times — (expletive), there’s no getting around that,” the manager said, praising the dedication of his coaches and the desire of his players. “We care about what we do.
“This is way more than a job. It’s your whole life.”
It’s starting to flash before their eyes, at least when it comes to where this season of high expectations might be headed.
Reds’ Sal Stewart on fateful 7th-inning bunt plays in loss to Padres
The Padres bunted 3 straight times; the Reds failed to get an out on any of them as San Diego took the lead, eventually handing Reds 5th loss in row.
“When a guy pitches bad or not up to their standards, or they’re not hitting, that doesn’t mean they don’t care,” said Francona, who preached a similar message during tough stretches late last season before the Reds squeezed into the playoffs on the final day.
“I think we’re in a society now where it’s too easy to just say people suck,” he added. “And it’s not just baseball. It’s society. I think it’s people have gotten way too comfortable saying stuff like that. We have a good group. I know that.”
Where do they go from here? With 98 games and a fork in the road staring them in the face.
“Frustration’s a big part of our game,” Francona said. “So how you handle that kind of can define your season. And you’ve just got to fight through it. Not fight each other. But you’ve got to fight through it.”
Asked about the message and intent behind his rare unscheduled meetings, Francona recalled the one he had late in September last year after the Reds got manhandled in a sweep by the Athletics in West Sacramento.
“I’m not big on looking backwards,” he said. “But when we left (Sacramento), we were (expletive) struggling. I remember telling them, ‘Hey, man, when it’s hard to believe, that’s when you gotta believe.’
“I said, ‘If we play the game the way we can, we’re gonna pop some champagne.’ And we did.”
This moment seems to carry more gravity than an early June stretch of adversity, given the strength of the league and the depth of the Reds’ injuries.
Andrew Abbott on his start vs. Padres in 6-2 loss, state of Reds
Reds starter Andrew Abbott retired 12 of 13 to take a 2-1 lead to the 7th until back-to-back doubles leading off the inning ended his night.
“It feels like we’re treading in quicksand a little bit,” Stewart said. “We’re right there in games, but they’re not going our way. We just have to stay the course.”
Said Abbott: “We’re not panicking. Maybe we’re not playing our best baseball right now. But we know that it’s a long season. We were in the same spot or worse, or maybe a little bit better, last year. And then we turned it on. So it’s not unfamiliar territory.
“To know that we have 98 of them left, I think more often than not we’re going to come out and we’re goign to play really good, sound, fundamental baseball. And we’re going to come out on the right end of this.”
San Diego, CA
University of California pushes for $12B scientific research bond to counter federal cuts
This story was originally published by EdSource. Sign up for their daily newsletter.
David Boyer is stuck in a waiting game. For more than 18 months, silence from the National Institutes of Health on a crucial grant decision has thrown his research developing treatments for Alzheimer’s disease into uncertain territory.
His application received a favorable impact score, the main metric used for NIH funding decisions, so the postdoctoral scholar at UCLA figured he would hear good news by spring of 2025. Instead, he has heard nothing.
Without the funding, he has less to spend on his experiments, which require thousands of dollars worth of materials, including advanced microscopes. In a worst-case scenario, it’s possible he could lose his job if the grant doesn’t come through.
“It’s really up in the air whether I would be able to continue getting funded,” said Boyer, who is part of UCLA’s Eisenberg Lab.
Boyer is not alone. Federal funding for scientific research, from agencies such as NIH and the National Science Foundation, has been upended under the Trump administration, with fewer grants being awarded and some existing grants being canceled altogether. Even researchers with stable funding worry that their grants could get suspended or will not be renewed.
But now, Boyer and other researchers at California universities have some hope that they could get a reprieve — from California voters.
The University of California is pushing to get a $12 billion state bond on the November ballot that would fund scientific research projects at California universities, research institutes and private companies. In addition to UC and California State University campuses, private universities such as Stanford and the University of Southern California would also be eligible for the bond money.
For the bond to appear on the ballot, the state Legislature first needs to approve Senate Bill 895. The bill’s sponsors include UC and UAW 4811, the union representing 48,000 academic workers at UC, including thousands of researchers.
The bill was approved last week by the Senate and now heads to the Assembly. It must be passed and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom by June 25 to make the ballot.
“As the federal government cuts and destroys scientific funding, as it creates long-term instability and uncertainty, as science has now become a political football in this country, let’s make sure that California retains and expands our leadership in scientific research,” state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, said on the Senate floor last week just before the vote. Wiener is one of the authors of the bill.
If passed and approved by voters, the measure would create the California Foundation for Science and Health Research, which would award the grants using “an open, competitive, scientific peer review process,” according to the bill.
The bond would not be a cure-all for research funding if federal spending continues to dwindle. UC alone gets nearly $6 billion annually in federal support for research.
“There is nobody else who can substitute for research funding on the scale the federal government supplies,” said Simon Atkinson, vice chancellor for research at UC Davis.
Still, Atkinson and other proponents of the bond agree that it would benefit researchers in California not to rely so much on the federal government, especially under the Trump administration, which proposed a $5 billion cut to NIH for 2027. Last week, The New York Times reported that NSF had slowed funding to Harvard and other institutions targeted by the White House, though the impact on California campuses is unclear.
Having another potential funding source would be welcome news to Ximena Anleu Gil, a plant biologist at UC Davis who researches how to breed more plants in environmentally friendly ways.
There is one year remaining on the grant that funds Gil’s position in UC Davis’ Meyers Lab. The prospect of not having the funding renewed is stressful for Gil, who is the main provider for her family, which includes her partner and 7-month-old daughter.
“I’m very scared of what could happen. If I’m laid off, we’re screwed,” Gil said. “But having another source of potential funding, that would already feel like a big relief.”
If voters approve the bond, the legislation requires that priority be given to replacing funding slashed by the federal government.
In California, 782 grants have been terminated by the federal government since January 2025, according to the website Grant Witness, a project tracking terminations under the Trump administration.
Most of those grants have been restored under court orders, but dozens remain canceled, including one at UC San Francisco’s Center for AIDS Research that paid for training for undergraduate students.
Under that grant, students from nearby Hispanic-Serving Institutions, including San Francisco State University, would spend the summer at UCSF doing HIV research. At the end of the summer, the center would hold a symposium where undergraduates present their findings.
The idea was to expose those students to the field and get them interested in HIV research, said Monica Gandhi, director of the center.
“There are fewer and fewer people going into infectious disease research at a time when infectious diseases are all over,” Gandhi said. “It really just got them excited, and we thought it would help grow our biomedical research workforce in a really important topic.”
If California’s bond goes through, Gandhi said she expects the center would immediately apply for a grant to restart that program.
Federal funding remains intact for the rest of the AIDS research center, which organizes all HIV research across UCSF. But it’s not clear how long that will be the case. Gandhi said the center is waiting for a formal notice from NIH to apply for a grant renewal, which she said normally would have come by now.
“There are all these little ways they are making it harder to get funding,” she said. “Having a California-based initiative that isn’t political and will have the grants be judged on their scientific merit would be amazing. And I think it will go a long way.”
EdSource is California’s largest independent newsroom focused on education.
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