You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.
By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.
Please enter a valid email address.
U.S. women’s soccer star Korbin Albert heard boos from fans in Colorado Saturday as she subbed into a game for Lindsey Horan during the team’s match against South Korea.
Albert checked into the match in the 71st minute.
Advertisement
Albert didn’t score in the 4-0 win over South Korea, but the boos were something she’d heard before, dating back to the team’s appearance against Japan in the SheBelieves Cup in April.
South Korea midfielder Ji Soyun (10) dribbles against United States midfielder Korbin Albert (5) during a match June 1, 2024.(Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
VIEW THE MOMENT ON X.
The ire stemmed from Albert’s posts on the LGBTQ+ community.
Advertisement
According to The Athletic, one TikTok video she reposted included a sermon that said being gay and “feeling transgender” is wrong.
According to the report, another surfaced screenshot showed Albert liking an Instagram post mocking Megan Rapinoe’s injury accompanied by the statement, “God taking time off performing miracles to make sure Megan Rapinoe sprains her ankle in her final ever game.”
She faced criticism from Rapinoe over the posts at the time.
Korbin Albert of the United States during USWNT training at Prentup Field May 30, 2024 in Boulder, Colo.(Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)
FRENCH LEAGUE SUSPENDS MONACO PLAYER FOR COVERING UP LGBTQ PATCH DURING SOCCER MATCH
Advertisement
Albert offered an apology for the posts but still has heard boos.
She entered the match while she wore the U.S. women’s soccer team’s LGBTQ+ pride jersey. The team wore it to kick off Pride Month in June.
The win also marked Emma Hayes’ first victory as coach of the U.S. team. She took over after leading Chelsea to seven FA Women’s Super League titles.
Korbin Albert of the United States dribbles during USWNT training at Prentup Field May 28, 2024, in Boulder, Colo.(Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)
Advertisement
In Saturday’s match, Mallory Swanson and Tierna Davidson each scored two goals.
Follow Fox News Digital’ssports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
There is a specific kind of joy that only a store cat can deliver. You go in for a tallboy or a bag of cat litter (the irony is not lost on anyone) and you leave having made eye contact with a sphinx asleep on the register. It costs nothing. For a few seconds, the city is just a warm animal ignoring you, and that is enough.
In 2022, the designer and transit gadfly Chris Arvin did the civic work nobody asked for and everybody needed: Arvin mapped them. “San Francisco Store Cats,” stars next to the particularly friendly ones, a polite note reminding you not to wake the sleeping ones.
Photo from Chris Arvin’s Instagram.
Four years later, we wanted to see who was still on shift, and so did San Francisco. A single thread on r/sanfrancisco, started by a tourist hunting a bodega cat for their kid, turned into a sprawling, lovingly argued census of who is still working which counter. Arvin, the map’s own maker, showed up in the replies to admit it was overdue for a refresh. We took that as an assignment.
What follows is bigger than the original; the thread handed us dozens of cats with names and corners, so we tracked down addresses for the ones we could and sorted everyone by how sure we are. Most turned up in recent reports, this week’s thread especially, though we’re trusting those accounts rather than having staked out each counter. A few we are still taking on the 2022 map’s good word. One is gone, in a way that became, briefly, the whole city’s argument with itself. And the newest is a flower-market cat who survived a five-day catnapping the same week all of this blew up.
Advertisement
San Francisco Shop Cats Map
‘;
if (!s.cat) html += ‘
Catu2019s name not recorded
‘;
html += ‘
Advertisement
‘ + (s.cat ? s.store + ‘ ‘ : ”) + s.street + ‘
‘;
html += ‘
‘;
html += ‘
Neighborhood‘ + s.hood + ‘
‘;
html += ‘
Advertisement
Store type‘ + s.type + ‘
‘;
html += ‘
‘;
if (s.note) html += ‘
‘ + s.note + ‘
‘;
if (!s.exact) html += ‘
Advertisement
Approx. location
‘;
if (s.link) {
html += ” + esc(s.linkLabel || ‘Visit’) + ”;
} else if (s.status === ‘memoriam’) {
html += ‘Gone, not forgotten‘;
}
html += ‘
‘;
return html;
}
var markers = CATS.map(function(s){
var icon = L.divIcon({ className: ”, html: ”, iconSize: [22,22], iconAnchor: [11,11], popupAnchor: [0,-11] });
var m = L.marker([s.lat, s.lng], { icon: icon });
m.bindPopup(popupHTML(s), { closeButton: true, autoPan: true, autoPanPadding: [24,24], keepInView: false });
return { marker: m, data: s, on: false };
});
function visible(s){ if (!state[s.status]) return false; return true; }
function render(){
var shown = 0;
markers.forEach(function(o){
var show = visible(o.data);
if (show && !o.on) { o.marker.addTo(map); o.on = true; }
else if (!show && o.on) { map.removeLayer(o.marker); o.on = false; }
if (show) shown++;
});
document.getElementById(‘cat-count’).innerHTML = ‘Showing ‘ + shown + ‘ of ‘ + markers.length + ‘ cats’;
}
var chipWrap = document.getElementById(‘cat-chips’);
Object.keys(STATUS).forEach(function(key){
var st = STATUS[key];
var chip = document.createElement(‘div’);
chip.className=”chip ” + st.cls + ‘ on’;
chip.innerHTML = ‘‘ + st.label;
chip.addEventListener(‘click’, function(){ state[key] = !state[key]; chip.classList.toggle(‘on’, state[key]); chip.classList.toggle(‘off’, !state[key]); render(); });
chipWrap.appendChild(chip);
});
Advertisement
document.getElementById(‘cat-foot’).innerHTML =
‘Sources: Chris Arvinu2019s 2022 u201CSan Francisco Store Catsu201D map, a May 2026 ‘ +
‘r/sanfrancisco thread, ‘ +
‘SFGATE, the S.F. Chronicle, plus 2024u20132026 listings. Cat residencies change over time.’;
render();
function fix(){ map.invalidateSize(true); }
setTimeout(fix, 200); setTimeout(fix, 800);
window.addEventListener(‘resize’, fix);
}
if (document.readyState === ‘complete’) initMap();
else window.addEventListener(‘load’, initMap);
On the color codes: Green (“reportedly around”) means the cat turned up in a recent account: this week’s thread, a recent review, or some other 2024-to-2026 sign. Cats are old, or wander, or get whisked off in a stranger’s Honda, so a green pin marks a recent mention, not a guarantee the cat will be there when you are. Amber means the cat was on Arvin’s 2022 map and didn’t resurface, so visit on faith. A single ember-red pin is for the one we lost.
Still on patrol, reportedly
Number Five at Grace Nursery, inside the San Francisco Flower Market, 901 16th St (Potrero Hill).
Advertisement
Number Five is a round-faced gray cat who has supervised the wholesale flower market for three years, the fifth pet of florist Grace Su; the name nods to the Chinese tradition of birth-order nicknames, and, she has said, to Chanel No. 5. He patrols the vendor stalls like a floor manager who suspects everyone is slacking.
In May 2026 he was scooped off the floor in the middle of the pre-Mother’s Day rush and driven across the Bay Bridge by catnappers. His admirers found him five days later, perched on a forklift in an Emeryville warehouse, and the police brought him home. He came back a little skinny and a little jumpy, but he came back.
Dogg at George’s Market, 702 14th St (Duboce Triangle).
A senior gray tabby; Arvin’s writeup and George’s regulars both call her “she.” She’s getting on in years, so she’s out front less than she used to be, but she remains a sweetheart, and people in this week’s thread were still checking in on her. There’s a tribute to her on the storefront mural.
FuFu at S&S Grocery, 1461 Grant Ave (North Beach).
A white cat with blue eyes and a job, which is lying in wait near the door to ambush passing dogs. Reviews still mention him doing exactly this, so the post appears to be filled.
Keanu at O’Looney’s Market, 588 Haight St (Lower Haight).
A goofy orange cat who guards the front in the afternoons, then heads out on neighborhood walkabouts, so he’s hit or miss. The visiting family whose post kicked off this week’s thread came looking for him and missed him; the owner tried to track him down anyway. Arvin’s map listed him as “Kiano,” but the block calls him Keanu.
We noted another kitty at this location, per Yelp.
Advertisement
Alex at S&A Liquor, 98 Sanchez St (Duboce Triangle).
A neighborhood favorite a half-block from Duboce Park; the kind of cat people post about just to say they love him.
Toasty & Meow Meow at Seven, 2345 Irving St (Outer Sunset).
Um this may be a couple of cats the writers of this actually saw. At least one of them. Seven is a home-goods store, not a corner store, and it still keeps a couple of very sweet cats. On Arvin’s map the pair was Toasty (who got a friendly star) and Meow Meow; the current cats may have rotated, but cats there are.
Lilly at Michaelis Wine & Spirits, 2198 Union St (Cow Hollow).
The cat of a wine and spirits shop open since 1986, which is a deeply correct place for a cat to be. She looks like she has a great time there.
Mojito at California & Lyon Market, 3100 California St (Presidio Heights).
A friendly cutie who hops onto the counter for pets, a short walk from the Presidio and the Palace of Fine Arts.
Whiskey & Tequila at New Star-Ell Liquor, 501 Divisadero St (NoPa). Whiskey is gray, Tequila is orange.
Reportedly, Tequila was briefly catnapped and came home. Neither is out front all the time, so you take your chances.
Buffy at Buffalo Whole Food & Grain, 598 Castro St (Castro).
Advertisement
Given how young Buffy is, this could be her or just a random kitty in the store that day. From Google reviews.
A playful kitten, about six months old, brand new to the beat.
Not pictured but still on patrol, reportedly:
Shadow at Randa’s Market, 3131 16th St (Mission). Reported in this week’s thread as Randa’s cat now, in the months after KitKat. Same counter, same corner.
Cinnamon at Stewart’s Market, 2498 Sutter St (Lower Pacific Heights). A corner-grocery cat at Sutter and Broderick.
Cookie at Oak Fair Market, 999 Oak St (Lower Haight). A tabby holding the counter on the Alamo Square edge; one thread regular went and said hi mid-conversation, then reported back.
Tiger & Bella at Hing Fung Trading Co., 717 Vallejo St (Chinatown). Tiger is a very friendly orange cat; Bella is around too, if you’re lucky. A herb-and-dry-goods shop near Stockton.
The Amro Market cat at 2901 Van Ness Ave (Marina). A very friendly cat at the corner of Van Ness and Chestnut.
From the 2022 map
These were on Arvin’s map and didn’t come up in this week’s thread, so we can’t promise they’re still on shift. Worth a look, but go in hopeful rather than certain.
Chucky and unnamed kitty at Flora Grubb Gardens, 3rd & Jerrold (Bayview).
The resident cat at the city’s prettiest plant nursery, which means Chucky lives somewhere that looks like a magazine spread and almost certainly does not appreciate it. On their Instagram, we’ve noticed two kitties. One is orange.
Boots at Hey Neighbor Café, 2 Burrows St (Portola).
A white-pawed cafe cat who was once pictured on the shop’s own website wearing his crown sideways, as a king does. We’ve seen mentions of shop dogs at Hey Neighbor nowadays. This Instagram post from 2022 says Boots had been traumatized.
Not pictured, but also from the 2022 map:
The Sun Sun Trading cat at 1226 Stockton St (Chinatown). A cat among the ginseng, dried seafood, and Chinese remedies of a Chinatown trading shop. No name on record.
Ruby at Amity Market, 3350 Taraval St (Parkside). White and button-nosed, way out where the avenues run quiet and the fog wins most arguments. A later addition to Arvin’s map.
In memoriam
KitKat at Randa’s Market, 3131 16th St (Mission).
The most famous of all of them, and the reason this map reads a little differently in 2026 than it did in 2022. KitKat was a tabby that Randa’s took in as a stray to keep the rodents down, and over six years he became the opposite of pest control: the reason people came in. Customers brought him toys, blankets, food. He was a “particularly friendly” star on Arvin’s map.
In October 2025, KitKat was killed by a Waymo outside the store. The neighborhood built a memorial at the door. For a couple of weeks he became the face of every feeling this city has been holding about robotaxis and tech and who gets a say in the streets, and then he became what he’d always been, which was a cat somebody loved. Randa’s Instagram bio still reads “Remember KitKat.” We do.
Advertisement
More sightings worth chasing
The Reddit thread turned up more cats than we could pin to a name and a verified address. Treat these as leads, not promises: the corner store at Central and Hayes, where someone once met a cat named Coco; Dad & Son Market at Fillmore and Lombard, said to keep two; a Chinese dry-goods store at Broadway and Stockton with three young cats; Unimart at 8th and Howard, where a mother and two kittens hang around; Larkin Corner Market, whose cat is shy about office hours; Key Food at Fillmore and Oak, which has both a cat and a dog named Major; and a maybe-cat in a corner store at 22nd and Guerrero. And one that isn’t a store at all: Lamont, who holds court at Pop’s, the 1937 dive bar at 2800 24th Street. Not a bodega cat, but a beloved one.
Saul Sugarman is editor-in-chief and owner of The Bold Italic. He is proud stepmother to a senior kitty, Xena, who is warrior princess of San Francisco’s Forest Knolls neighborhood.
The Bold Italic is a not-for-profit media organization, and we publish first-person perspectives about San Francisco and the Bay Area. We operate under a fiscal sponsorship of a 501(c)(3).
You can become a paid subscriber. Or donate. Or learn more about us.
DENVER (KDVR) — Temperatures continue to warm for the Sunday with the Denver weather forecast featuring temperatures returning to the 80s for a few days.
Memorial Day will be warm and pleasant with a slight chance for a shower or storm. Rain chances will be slightly higher in the high country, but don’t let that ruin your plans.
Denver weather tonight: Mostly clear
Quiet conditions overnight Saturday.
Tranquil weather will be the theme overnight Saturday. Skies across the area will be mostly clear and temperatures will be a touch milder than normal with lows around Denver only falling into the upper 40s to low 50s.
Denver weather tomorrow: Warmer with increasing clouds
Warmer Sunday.
Sunday starts with sunny skies, but clouds will increase through the afternoon. Temperatures will be the warmest they’ve been in a little bit with highs expected to reach the middle 80s in the city. A few pop-up showers or storms will be possible in the afternoon, but any rain should be brief, and severe weather is not expected.
Looking ahead: Daily rain chances next week
Memorial Day will again be in the middle 80s and likely the warmest day of the week. There will be another opportunity for some afternoon showers or storms, but the highest likelihood will remain in the high country. Dry weather will return overnight Monday.
Daily chances for rain to end May.
The final week of May features daily opportunities for showers and storms. The mid-week sees the best chance for scattered showers and storms, particularly in the high country where it’s needed the most. Temperatures will hold steady in the upper 70s, slightly above normal.
After a promising start to his Seattle Seahawks career, injuries plagued veteran edge rusher Uchenna Nwosu for two seasons.
Bump has his eye on 2 players as Seattle Seahawks begin OTAs
Nwosu played just six games apiece during the 2023 and 2024 campaigns. But this past season, the Seahawks finally got a healthy version of the USC product again.
The 29-year-old Nwosu returned from offseason knee surgery in Week 2 and didn’t miss a game the rest of the way through their run to a Super Bowl title. He finished the regular season with seven sacks, seven tackles for loss and 46 total pressures in 16 games. And in the Super Bowl, he got to cap his bounce-back year with a moment he’ll never forget, returning a interception 45 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter to put an exclamation point on Seattle’s 29-13 victory over the New England Patriots.
Advertisement
Nwosu’s year was a positive sign after two lost seasons, but former NFL wide receiver Michael Bumpus is hoping to see even more from the veteran in 2026.
“With the departure of Boye Mafe (in free agency), you need a guy like Uchenna Nwosu just to get back to who he is,” Bumpus said Friday during his Four Down Territory segment on Seattle Sports’ Bump and Stacy. “He didn’t have a bad season at all, not at all. But I didn’t feel the impact that we’re used to having with Uchenna Nwosu. So I’m looking at Uchenna and just that defensive line, that box in general. If you can get a veteran like Uchenna and Dante (Fowler Jr.) to step it up one more notch and hold things down, I like where this defense is going to go.”
What Bumpus is hoping to see from Nwosu is something closer to his breakout first year with Seattle in 2022. In 17 games that season, Nwosu produced 12 tackles for loss, 9.5 sacks, three forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries. His 61 pressures were also the 16th most of any defender league-wide, per Pro Football Focus.
“He has it in him,” Bumpus said. “… That’s the guy that we need. He’s 29 years old, he’s still young. I think he’s capable. If he has a good offseason (and) comes back healthy, I think Uchenna is primed for a good year. “
Hear the full conversation at this link or in the audio player near the top of this story. Listen to Bump and Stacy weekdays from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or find the podcast on the Seattle Sports app.
Advertisement
More on the Seattle Seahawks
• NFL commish pushes back on reports about Seahawks sale • Ranking second-year Seahawks by potential ’26 impact • Brock: Seattle Seahawks may host Cowboys in joint practice