Month: October 2019

Home / Month: October 2019

Share

14th Oct 2019

It’s no secret Qantas has some of the best in-flight food out there. Thanks to a long running partnership with Neil Perry and his Rockpool team, the Australian national carrier has gained a reputation as one of the tastiest airlines to fly with — no matter your class of travel. 

Now, the Qantas spring menu for 2019 has arrived, and with it some seriously impressive ingredients. Taking inspiration from some of Australia’s greatest native ingredients, Rockpool chefs drew on the country’s own produce to inspire some of the newer dishes. 

Among them, a tasty cheese board for first class passengers, complete with Woodside goat’s cheese dressed with native green ants. Adding a punch of citrus (for the unacquainted, green ants taste sort of like limes, but with legs), the crushed ants are sprinkled over a roll of local chèvre and served with a tomato chutney, house-pickled vegetables and prosciutto. Flavours of the earth, eaten in the sky. 

For passengers in economy, spring means a fresh new salad. Available now, a new black bean, smoked salmon and edamame salad will be an option for economy customers, complete with zucchini noodles and dressed with a zesty, light sauce. Seriously tasty without compromising on health, the salad is all part of the airline’s commitment to serving fresh, non-processed foods on board long-haul flights in order to help with jet lag. 

For economy and premium economy customers, the new spring menu also includes a carrot crudite and beetroot hummus duo, complete with fresh carrot sticks and a tasty beetroot dip. 

The updated menu will be available all throughout spring on Qantas’s international flights.

Click Here: kanken kids cheap

Unlike many dog walkers, Emily Ratajkowski does wear Crocs, sweatpants and large sunglasses while taking her pooch out for exercise. Instead, the 28-year-old model, actress and entrepreneur elevates her New York City outings with her pup, Colombo, to the status of dog-walking style icon — the likes of which haven’t been seen since Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s Manhattan strolls with Friday, her Canaan dog, during the 1990s.

Over the summer, Ratajkowski’s moodboard-worthy sightings have ranged from a cinching, ocre mini-dress paired with Nike sneakers, to cargo-pants-plus-plunging-vest, and a silken pencil skirt. For autumn, the duo have returned with the street-style set’s most-wanted autumn look: the beige blazer.

Click Here: mochila fjallraven

Gone are the sportswear-heavy outfit combinations — the 1990s wardrobe hero, which Bessette-Kennedy herself endorsed, is currently championing a return to understated polish during daylight hours.

At Milan Fashion Week, we spotted cappuccino-hued jackets teamed with delicate, white knee-length skirts (a combination also favoured by fashion editors at NYFW), while in Paris and London the thigh-skimming blazer was accessorised with bare legs and almond-toe ankle boots. The final upscale detail? A go-anywhere mini bag in supple butterscotch leather.

Ratajkowski herself hit one of autumn’s other key trends: dressing-up her denim with a neat, white polo neck, chunky-gold hoop earrings and buffed-tan boots in a nod to the bourgeois mood that commanded the autumn/winter ’19/’20 catwalks at Celine, Burberry and Chloé. The verdict: Exemplary grooming, no?

At Moët & Chandon Spring Champion Stakes Day at Royal Randwick Racecourse, which occured on Saturday October 12, pastel hues were aplenty, each and every shade of pink was worn loud and proud, and florals upped the ante on fun and flirty ensembles. Putting their best foot forward, racegoers attended the day in absolute style. 

The annual event—which also serves as the welcome of return of spring racing season—welcomed seasoned sports presenter and Australian journalist Abbey Gelmi (above) trackside as an ambassador, and invited the fashion set to take to the field in their most race-worthy styles. Because, as Gelmi puts it, Stakes Day is the “fashion day of the spring racing carnival”.

“With spring, it’s about floral, lace, silk, and straw hats with millinery,” the presenter explained to Vogue, confessing she prefers to opt for practical looks that are glamorous yet comfortable. On the day, Gelmi stepped out wearing a voluminous ivory belted Aje dress, which she accessorised with pink Billini heels and an oversized blush bow by Ann Shoebridge.

Click Here: mochila fjallraven

Taking heed of Gelmi’s advise, many racegoers descended upon Royal Randwick Racecourse wearing ensembles that were simple, yet stylish. Stiletto heels were traded in for block heels and shorter kitten heels, fascinators were swapped for hats and headbands or hair clips, and over-the-top outfits were substituted for a series of chic, minimalistic styles. 

Frills were worn by countless attendees in the form of shoulder detailing, skirting layers and sleeve styles, while power suits reigned supreme for those that wanted to deliver maximum effect with minimal effort. For more, scroll on to take a look at best street style from Moët & Chandon Spring Champion Stakes Day.

Watch Maddison Brown channel old Hollywood glamour in this light-hearted video for Vogue and Piaget166891

Covered head to toe in sparkling jewels by Piaget, Australian actor Maddison Brown explores what life would be like as an old Hollywood star in this humorous video.

  • 04 Oct 2019

Share

10th Oct 2019

“Thanks for coming, by the way, to my humble abode,” says Australian actor Maddison Brown as she greets the camera in-character as an old Hollywood starlet. “I love coming home and spending time in Australia, I love spending time in my garden, it really is my sanctuary,” she shares as she trims the hedges in the grounds of her Sydney mansion, while dripping in Piaget jewellery

While it’s easy to imagine the model-turned-Dynasty star in this setting, enjoying an off-duty moment in diamond earrings, in fact, Brown is playing a part. With more than 442,000 followers on Instagram and a season of a cult TV show up her sleeve, Brown is surprisingly down to earth, and yet, that’s what makes this video all the more fun. Having settled into her role as Kirby Anders on Dynasty, Brown has proved no role is too difficult for her to immerse herself in and so we invited her to take this to the next level, exaggerating her own story of success in Hollywood in this daring video.

Click Here: mochila fjallraven

“Fans of mine include the likes of Marlon Brando, Meryl Streep, Jack Nicholson,” she rattles off. “People often do tell me that I’m talented and my response is always I would never say that I’m talented, I would say that I’m very talented,” Brown adds, demonstrating one of her many talents as she plays a grand piano with her Piaget timepiece on show.

As Brown knows, Piaget is a classic brand born out of the late 1800s and has been at home in the wardrobe of glamorous Hollywood stars for centuries. The Swiss luxury watchmaker and jeweller, founded in 1874 in La Côte-aux-Fées, has just released its new timepiece collection, Limelight Gala, inspired by one of its historic watches from the golden age of Hollywood — the 1960s — and reimagined for the modern woman. Brown perfectly encapsulates this iconic style, accessorising her timepiece — and her many outfits — in this video with Piaget’s Possession and Sunlight collections. These pieces speak to a sense of timelessness, something Brown channels with her natural beauty and her radiance both on and off screen. In particular, Brown favours the hoop earrings from the Sunlight collection, which are set with 90 diamonds that are designed to shimmer to emulate the look of the sun reflected on water.

Brown’s own rise to fame has been swift and so it’s easy to imagine her encapsulating this glamour and the essence of celebrity — but this video proves there might just be more to her than meets the eye.

“You’re still here? Let’s wrap it up,” Brown says in scene-stealing fashion. Watch the light-hearted video above and prepare to channel your own inner starlet in picture-perfect Piaget pieces. 

Los Angeles City Council members are pushing for emergency provisions against evictions and large rent increases amid concerns landlords are aiming to remove their tenants before a new state law takes effect in January.

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who represents neighborhoods from Echo Park to Atwater Village, said the city must act to prevent a spate of evictions that could force out tenants prior to a statewide cap on annual rent increases going into effect.

“We just want to make sure that there’s not price gouging by predatory landlords,” O’Farrell said. “We know that that could very well happen.”

Click Here: Aston Villa Shop

On Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 1482, which limits annual rent increases across the state to 5% plus inflation for the next decade. The legislation also prevents tenants from being evicted without documented lease violations once they’ve lived in an apartment for a year. The law exempts apartments built within the last 15 years and single-family home rentals unless they’re owned by corporate investors.

The law, however, doesn’t take effect until Jan. 1. In the meantime, landlords can still remove tenants without cause as long as the notice to vacate expires before that time.

Earlier this month, prominent attorney Dennis Block spoke at a trade group of Los Angeles-area landlords, advising them to evict tenants paying below-market rents prior to the law taking effect.

Rene Christian Moya, director of the Housing Is A Human Right advocacy group, said his organization has heard from tenants who have received eviction notices in nearly 200 apartments in half a dozen complexes across the city. Some of the notices, Moya said, explicitly mention the new state law as the reason for the eviction.

“We think this is very, very urgent to prevent thousands of people literally becoming homeless in the next couple months,” Moya told the Los Angeles City Council on Friday.

Council members introduced multiple emergency measures on Friday. Under one, authored by O’Farrell and Councilman Curren Price, landlords would not be allowed to issue no-fault evictions on the properties covered by the new state law. A second by Councilwoman Nury Martinez would limit rent increases to what is allowable when the cap takes effect in January.

The council must vote on the measures twice, and O’Farrell is hoping to receive final approval for his emergency proposal no later than the end of next week. O’Farrell, said he is aiming to make the eviction moratorium retroactive to when the governor signed the bill.

At an event earlier this week in Los Angeles, the rent cap’s author, Assemblyman David Chiu (D-San Francisco), said he was concerned about evictions occurring prior to the law taking effect, but couldn’t figure out how to make the anti-eviction provisions in the law apply before 2020.

“If you want to be greedy, you can continue to do what unfortunately some landlords have been doing, which is in part why we’re in the situation we’re in right now,” Chiu said.

Once the law takes effect in January, landlords will be required to roll back any rent hike to what tenants paid in March 2019 plus the allowable increase of 5% plus inflation — 8.3% in Los Angeles this year — under the cap.

But until January, landlords remain able to increase rents in excess of the cap. Tenant activists are worrying that such large rent increases continue to provide a backdoor means of evicting renters even if the city’s emergency anti-eviction ordinance passes.

Diana Castellanos, who lives in South Los Angeles, told the City Council on Friday that her landlord increased the rent on her two-bedroom apartment in April from $800 to $1,500 and now is planning to raise it to $2,400 next month.

“We’re asking for help because there’s no way that we can pay these prices,” Castellanos said.

Martinez’s proposal aims to address that concern.

“Our goal is to protect renters from rent gouging and getting thrown out into the streets and we need to look for any and all options on how to do that now and in the future,” Martinez said in a statement.

There are some questions about how far City Council members might be allowed to go in addressing rent hikes. Though Martinez’s effort aims to halt large rent increases, O’Farrell said his proposal would not because doing so would violate state law. The Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act prevents cities and counties from limiting rent hikes on buildings constructed after a certain date, which is October 1978 in Los Angeles.

“We need to exert more local control on the universe of predatory landlords,” O’Farrell said.


SEATTLE — 

President Trump’s man in Brussels found events spinning out of control when he arrived in Washington, D.C., expecting to testify before House committees this week.

Gordon Sondland, appointed U.S. ambassador to the European Union after contributing $1 million to Trump’s inauguration, was to be deposed in the impeachment inquiry for his apparent role in pushing Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden. But the White House blocked Sondland from testifying at the last minute Tuesday, prompting the committees to subpoena him.

Democrats expressed anger as the Trump administration has shut down cooperation with the impeachment inquiry. On Wednesday, Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) called for a boycott of the Portland-based hotel chain that Sondland founded.

“The public is outraged that he’s not following through on his responsibility as an American citizen to testify,” and to provide documents to the House, Blumenauer said, even as Sondland’s lawyer described him as “profoundly disappointed” about not being allowed to do so.

“No one who cares about America should do any business or stay at any of Gordon Sondland’s hotels until he fulfills his duty as a citizen to testify & turn over all relevant documents to the House. Here’s a list of his hotels,” Blumenauer tweeted. “Share if you agree!”

On Friday, attorney Robert Luskin said Sondland would testify before three committees, defying instructions from the State Department, which won’t let him provide documents.

House committee members want to ask Sondland on Thursday about the effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate Biden as the White House held up military aid authorized by Congress. He’s bound to be asked about texts he wrote to other diplomats, including one that read like a White House talking point after a call he made to Trump, saying that “the President has been crystal clear no quid pro quo’s of any kind.”

The political cauldron of impeachment is an unlikely landing point for a wealthy hotelier little known until recently outside the Northwest. But Sondland courted influence for years on a smaller stage in Oregon. He used contributions and connections to cozy up to politicians and jump lines of authority as he appears to have done for Trump in Ukraine, which is not a member of the 28-nation EU and therefore is outside his territory.

Sondland, 62, grew up in Seattle, the son of Jewish parents who married in Germany when his mother was 15 and fled the Holocaust. The family ran a dry-cleaning business, living in an upscale neighborhood where Sondland lacked the means of many of his schoolmates.

He studied at the University of Washington and later worked as a real estate broker. In 1985, he assembled an investment group that bought an old hotel.

Now the Hotel Theodore, the chic hotel is one of 14 properties owned by Provenance Hotels, which Sondland and his wife, Katherine Durant, built into a boutique chain that continues expanding. The couple have a family philanthropic foundation that’s given millions of dollars to organizations for the arts, homeless people and other causes.

In 2008, the foundation gave $1 million for a fund that continues to provide free admission to the Portland Art Museum for children 17 and younger.

Sondland has donated heavily to Republican political candidates, but he has also crossed party lines, serving in 2002 on the transition team for Oregon Democratic Gov.-elect Ted Kulongoski.

Click Here: Aston Villa Shop

Once in office, Kulongoski appointed him to head the Oregon Film board, where he served for 13 years, cultivating Hollywood connections to attract film and television productions to the state.

Sondland stood out at Portland receptions, hobnobbing in the orbit of elected officials and maneuvering to appear in photographs with them. He boasted of working behind the scenes to foster ties between Kulongoski and then-President George W. Bush, saying that he helped the governor get federal money for projects.

In a 2016 interview, he portrayed himself as a master of the quid pro quo, the practice he would later deny in his text concerning the Ukraine matter. “We would make these requests and they were done quietly,” he told the Portland Business Journal.

“They were done with rifle precision and there was always a quid pro quo,” Sondland said in the interview. “The governor would help the president with something, and the president would help the governor with something. And it was very transactional.”

Sondland spoke with nostalgia, saying bipartisan transactions had dwindled, but Anna Richter Taylor, who was Kulongoski’s spokeswoman at the time, disputes his account.

“If the governor needed to speak with the president or someone in the White House, he didn’t need an outside party to facilitate it,” she said.

Sondland did not return a call for comment this week, and his Portland attorney, Jim McDermott, said he would not grant an interview.

Provenance spokeswoman Ellen Carmichael said Friday that Sondland was no longer affiliated with the company, where Durant is chairwoman.

On Saturday, Carmichael released a letter that Provenance President Bashar Wali sent Friday to the company’s 1,100 employees mentioning that Sondland remained an investor in the company, a role that Wali cited as the basis of a congressional ethics complaint. The complaint he filed Friday said that by seeking to harm Sondland financially by a boycott, Blumenauer broke rules prohibiting members of Congress from threatening government officials with reprisal.

Sondland raised big donations for now-Utah Sen. Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns, said David Nierenberg, a Portland-area investment advisor who coordinated regional fundraising. Nierenberg said Sondland confided a personal goal during a conversation toward the end of Romney’s 2012 campaign.

“He shared with me his ambition to become an ambassador, ideally to a German-speaking nation,” Nierenberg said. “That would square the circle” of being the son of Holocaust survivors, he said.

But political appointments to ambassadorships are plum positions, typically reserved for a president’s biggest supporters.

In 2016, Sondland picked his favorite in the presidential race, becoming Trump’s Oregon campaign finance chairman. His name appeared as an organizer of a big-ticket fundraiser that August in Seattle.

But Sondland and Wali pulled out of the event and renounced their support after Trump publicly feuded with Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the parents of a slain Muslim American soldier.

“In light of Mr. Trump’s treatment of the Khan family and the fact his constantly evolving positions diverge from their personal beliefs and values on so many levels,” Provenance spokeswoman Kate Buska said in a statement at the time, “neither Mr. Sondland or Mr. Wali can support his candidacy.”

But after Trump was elected, Sondland quietly resumed his support, donating $1 million for the inauguration, not in his own name but through four limited liability companies. The president selected him in March 2018 for the ambassadorship. He was confirmed by the Senate that June.

In Portland, Sondland’s intention to testify Thursday has not mollified his critics. Demonstrators planned to march through downtown Portland on Sunday to protest in front of the Heathman Hotel, a Provenance property.

“Sondland’s text messages show that he is a complicit Trump crony and is implicated in Trump’s crimes,” said Kate Sharaf, a member of Stand on Every Corner PDX, the organization coordinating the protest.

Managers of Salt & Straw, a Portland artisanal ice cream company, said Thursday they were pulling their products from Provenance Hotels.

A Provenance spokeswoman said that boycotting the hotels, in response to Blumenauer’s call, would hurt its employees.

But customers such as Katie Reichard, a Seattle woman who had recommended one of the hotels for guests invited to her Portland wedding in April, have already made other plans, citing Sondland’s role in the Ukraine affair.

“If he chose to acknowledge corruption in the administration and really explain what happened, we’d definitely consider changing our minds,” she said.


BATON ROUGE, La. — 

Joe Burrow passed for 293 yards and three touchdowns, and fifth-ranked LSU scored three straight touchdowns after falling behind early in the second half to emerge with a 42-28 victory over No. 7 Florida on Saturday night.

Facing a Florida defense that came in leading the nation in interceptions and leading the Southeastern Conference in sacks, the Tigers (6-0, 2-0 SEC) totaled 511 yards without giving up a sack or committing a turnover.

Ja’Marr Chase had 127 yards receiving and the last of his two touchdowns was a 54-yarder to give LSU a two-score lead with 5:43 left. Justin Jefferson caught 10 passes for 123 yards and a touchdown.

Burrow, meanwhile, went 21 of 24, meaning he had the same number of touchdown tosses and incomplete passes. Clyde Edwards-Helaire rushed for 134 yards and two scores on 13 carries.

The Tigers still have yet to score fewer than 42 points in a game this season.

Kyle Trask was 23-of-39 passing for 310 yards and three touchdowns for Florida (6-1, 3-1), but was done in by freshman Derek Stingley Jr.’s interception in the LSU end zone in the fourth quarter, when the Gators were trying to tie the game. Soon after, Burrow spotted Chase running free down the right sideline, and a Tiger Stadium crowd more than 100,000 strong was in virtual delirium.

Florida led 28-21 after opening the second half with an eight-play, 75-yard scoring drive that ended with Van Jefferson’s second touchdown catch of the game.

But LSU tied it less than four minutes later on Edwards-Helaire’s 5-yard run. Tryron Davis-Price put the Tigers back in front with a 33-yard run on LSU’s next possession.

The first half was played to a 21-all tie with Florida using methodical drives to answer each of the first three touchdowns scored by LSU’s high-octane attack.

LSU’s first touchdown, a 9-yard pass to Chase, took two plays and 32 seconds, starting with Edwards-Helaire’s 57-yard run. The Gators responded with a 12-play drive that took more than six minutes, capped by Trask’s 5-yard pass to Trevon Grimes.

After Justin Jefferson’s 7-yard TD catch capped a five-play drive that covered 82 yards in just 2:09, Florida answered with a 13-play drive that consumed nearly seven minutes, ending with Emory Jones’ fourth-and-goal pass under pressure to Lamical Perine, who deftly corralled the ball after it was tipped by linebacker Patrick Queen.

LSU took the lead just 1:29 later when Edwards-Helaire scored on a 39-yard run, and Florida tied it again with an 11-play drive that finished with Van Jefferson’s first touchdown on a 6-yard pass from Trask.


Click Here: Newcastle United Shop

Markese Stepp carries a bigger load for USC

October 13, 2019 | News | No Comments

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — 

For weeks, his carry count remained confusingly stagnant.

And so, as an even backfield split continued, the questions kept coming, as well: Why wasn’t Markese Stepp, USC’s redshirt freshman running back, carrying a larger load?

On Saturday night, those questions were never louder, as Stepp averaged more than eight yards per carry, scored a touchdown, andat one point, literally carried a pile of Notre Dame defenders latched onto his back.

In his homecoming to the state of Indiana, against the school to which he was once committed, Stepp ran as strong as he has all season, leading the team with 82 yards rushing in a 30-27 loss to the Fighting Irish.

Still, as Stepp strapped the Trojans’ rushing attack on his shoulders, USC’s coaches again approached his carry count with an odd amount of caution. When asked why Stepp didn’t get more carries, just as he seemed to find his stride, USC coach Clay Helton was defiant in suggesting that he had.

“He had a bigger role tonight,” Helton said. “He did a wonderful job with 82 yards on the night. His role got bigger.”

Stepp still rotated with USC’s two other backs, Stephen Carr and Vavae Malepeai, who combined for 90 yards rushing and each averaged about five yards per carry.

But the redshirt freshman was undoubtedly more effective in a game he played in front of a host of family and friends. Whether that progress will lead to something more, though, remains to be seen.

Questioning the call

On a third down in the third quarter, as linebacker Palaie Gaoteote collided with Notre Dame quarterback Ian Book, a key personal-foul flag was thrown, extending a scoring drive that otherwise would’ve stalled.

Helton did his best not to question the call after the game, but his tone was clear. He did not agree.

“Referees have very hard jobs. And at full speed some calls are hard,” Helton said. “I see it one way, another man may see it and you have to live with those calls as coaches…. But that crew out there is a pro crew. They do a great job out there and some calls go your way, some calls don’t. That call didn’t go our way.”

Click Here: Newcastle United Shop

Another call, or lack thereof, raised questions. As USC attempted an onside kick at the end of the game, one of Notre Dame’s coaches was on the field, Helton said. It was Brian Kelly. Helton asked whether the call could be reviewed, but was denied.

“Should have been a flag,” Helton said.

Hufanga returns

After a week in concussion protocol, and another week spent in a no-contact jersey, recovering from a shoulder injury, Talanoa Hufanga returned to the field on Saturday.

But the standout sophomore safety wasn’t quite himself in his first game back.

Two missed tackles from the Trojans’ best tackler led to big plays in the second quarter.
Hufanga’s miss on an option pitch allowed running back Tony Jones to scamper for 43 yards.

Four plays later, Book hit tight end Cole Kmet near the goal line, and Hufanga again missed a tackle.

Defensive injuries

As USC mounted a comeback in the second half, it lost a number of key players on defense to injury, a few of whom managed to fight through their ailment.

Cornerbacks Greg Johnson and Isaac Taylor-Stuart both left hobbled in the second half. Gaoteote also left the game briefly, after spending several minutes on the ground with an injury.


High school football scores for Saturday, Oct. 12

October 13, 2019 | News | No Comments

Saturday’s results

SOUTHERN SECTION

CAMINO LEAGUE

Camarillo 34, Bishop Diego 0

CITRUS COAST LEAGUE

Fillmore 38, Hueneme 0

DEL REY LEAGUE

Harvard-Westlake 27, St. Genevieve 21

FOOTHILL LEAGUE

Golden Valley 31, Saugus 7

GOLD COAST LEAGUE

Viewpoint 47, Campbell Hall 34

MISSION LEAGUE

Bishop Amat 31, Chaminade 21

OLYMPIC LEAGUE

Cerritos Valley Christian 20, Heritage Christian 17

RIVER VALLEY LEAGUE

Jurupa Valley 40, La Sierra 28

NONLEAGUE

Fairmont Prep 63, Excelsior 6

Oak Park 40, Brentwood 30

INTERSECTIONAL

Sacramento Johnson 42, Santa Rosa Academy 8

8 MAN

SOUTHERN SECTION

EXPRESS LEAGUE

St. Michael’s Prep 49, La Verne Lutheran 6

MT. PINOS LEAGUE

Faith Baptist 54, Thacher 50

VICTORY LEAGUE

United Christian 38, Desert Chapel 36

Friday’s results

CITY

CENTRAL LEAGUE

Bernstein 21, Contreras 7

Hollywood 10, Mendez 0

Marquez 62, Belmont 6

COLISEUM LEAGUE

Crenshaw 64, Hawkins 0

Fremont 38, View Park 14

Locke 27, Dorsey 0

EASTERN LEAGUE

Garfield 45, Legacy 6

Los Angeles Roosevelt 8, Bell 0

South Gate 13, Huntington Park 7

EXPOSITION LEAGUE

Jefferson 26, Angelou 20

Manual Arts 54, Santee 0

Washington 49, West Adams 7

MARINE LEAGUE

Carson 41, Gardena 6

San Pedro 41, Wilmington Banning 16

METRO LEAGUE

Los Angeles Jordan 45, Rancho Dominguez 15

NORTHERN LEAGUE

Franklin 49, Los Angeles Marshall 0

Lincoln 49, Eagle Rock 6

WESTERN LEAGUE

Fairfax 21, Westchester 17

Los Angeles Hamilton 14, Los Angeles University 0

SOUTHERN SECTION

ALMONT LEAGUE

Alhambra 55, Montebello 48

Bell Gardens 53, San Gabriel 33

Schurr 52, Keppel 20

AMBASSADOR LEAGUE

Aquinas 82, Bermuda Dunes Desert Christian 0

Arrowhead Christian 50, Western Christian 20

Ontario Christian 21, Linfield Christian 14

BASELINE LEAGUE

Chino Hills 28, Damien 25

Rancho Cucamonga 54, Etiwanda 3

Upland 35, Los Osos 7

BAY LEAGUE

Mira Costa 35, Peninsula 27

Palos Verdes 48, Compton Centennial 0

Redondo 24, Leuzinger 6

BIG VIII LEAGUE

Eastvale Roosevelt 43, King 7

Norco 63, Corona Santiago 14

CAMINO LEAGUE

Grace Brethren 56, Moorpark 14

CHANNEL LEAGUE

Lompoc 56, Dos Pueblos 0

San Marcos 46, Lompoc Cabrillo 0

Santa Barbara 34, Santa Ynez 0

CITRUS BELT LEAGUE

Cajon 49, Redlands East Valley 2

Carter 35, Yucaipa 26

Citrus Valley 37, Redlands 0

CITRUS COAST LEAGUE

Santa Paula 34, Carpinteria 14

DEL REY LEAGUE

St. Anthony 27, La Salle 21

DEL RIO LEAGUE

El Rancho 65, Whittier 46

La Serna 45, California 7

DESERT EMPIRE LEAGUE

Palm Desert 28, Palm Springs 10

Rancho Mirage 30, Xavier Prep 14

DESERT SKY LEAGUE

Granite Hills 32, Barstow 14

DESERT VALLEY LEAGUE

Banning 32, Cathedral City 13

Coachella Valley 55, Desert Mirage 0

Yucca Valley 40, Desert Hot Springs 6

EMPIRE LEAGUE

Cypress 24, Placentia Valencia 7

Garden Grove Pacifica 35, La Palma Kennedy 20

Tustin 44, Crean Lutheran 6

FOOTHILL LEAGUE

Valencia 29, Hart 27

West Ranch 36, Canyon Country Canyon 11

FREEWAY LEAGUE

La Habra 44, Fullerton 20

Sunny Hills 49, Buena Park 8

Troy 20, Sonora 12

GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE

Garden Grove Santiago 27, Rancho Alamitos 0

Loara 35, Bolsa Grande 0

GOLDEN LEAGUE

Highland 72, Lancaster 0

Knight 20, Littlerock 6

Quartz Hill 26, Antelope Valley 6

Palmdale 35, Eastside 0

HACIENDA LEAGUE

Charter Oak 22, West Covina 0

Diamond Ranch 21, Los Altos 14

INLAND VALLEY LEAGUE

Canyon Springs 42, Perris 0

Orange Vista 34, Riverside Poly 15

Riverside North 41, Lakeside 34

MARMONTE LEAGUE

Oaks Christian 56, Newbury Park 16

Westlake 34, St. Bonaventure 7

MIRAMONTE LEAGUE

La Puente 56, Garey 0

MISSION LEAGUE

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 17, Gardena Serra 6

MISSION VALLEY LEAGUE

El Monte 26, Arroyo 21

Gabrielino 35, Mountain View 0

South El Monte 51, Rosemead 28

MOJAVE RIVER LEAGUE

Oak Hills 68, Ridgecrest Burroughs 10

Serrano 17, Apple Valley 7

MONTVIEW LEAGUE

Duarte 14, Gladstone 7

MOORE LEAGUE

Compton 48, Millikan 42

Long Beach Poly 68, Long Beach Cabrillo 0

Long Beach Wilson 46, Long Beach Jordan 12

MOUNTAIN PASS LEAGUE

Beaumont 14, Hemet 10

Citrus Hill 37, Tahquitz 7

San Jacinto 41, West Valley 0

MOUNTAIN VALLEY LEAGUE

Moreno Valley 41, Miller 0

Pacific 27, Rubidoux 21

Vista del Lago 77, San Bernardino 0

MT. BALDY LEAGUE

Chaffey 49, Montclair 3

Diamond Bar 53, Chino 13

Ontario 21, Don Lugo 14

OCEAN LEAGUE

Culver City 32, Lawndale 27

El Segundo 41, Beverly Hills 8

Santa Monica 36, Hawthorne 6

ORANGE LEAGUE

Anaheim 49, Century 14

Santa Ana Valley 41, Savanna 3

ORANGE COAST LEAGUE

Orange 43, Costa Mesa 0

PACIFIC LEAGUE

Pasadena 44, Arcadia 10

PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE

Beckman 35, Irvine 12

Northwood 21, Woodbridge 14

Portola 46, Irvine University 14

PACIFIC VIEW LEAGUE

Buena 14, Channel Islands 13

Oxnard 36, Oxnard Pacifica 27

Ventura 42, Rio Mesa 7

PALOMARES LEAGUE

Ayala 13, Glendora 7

Claremont 25, Alta Loma 17

PIONEER LEAGUE

Inglewood 77, West Torrance 0

North Torrance 55, Morningside 0

South Torrance 64, Torrance 0

RIO HONDO LEAGUE

Monrovia 48, Temple City 7

San Marino 10, South Pasadena 7

RIVER VALLEY LEAGUE

Norte Vista 27, Hillcrest 20

SAN ANDREAS LEAGUE

Eisenhower 35, Rialto 0

Jurupa Hills 34, Rim of the World 7

San Gorgonio 28, Arroyo Valley 0

SAN GABRIEL VALLEY LEAGUE

Dominguez 28, Gahr 0

Paramount 48, Downey 22

Warren 56, Lynwood 6

SEA VIEW LEAGUE

San Juan Hills 35, Aliso Niguel 7

Trabuco Hills 42, Dana Hills 14

SOUTH COAST LEAGUE

Mission Viejo 63, Capistrano Valley 13

San Clemente 42, El Toro 3

SOUTH VALLEY LEAGUE

California Military Institute 62, Sherman Indian 8

SOUTHWESTERN LEAGUE

Great Oak 37, Murrieta Mesa 20

Murrieta Valley 51, Temecula Valley 49

Vista Murrieta 37, Chaparral 17

SUNKIST LEAGUE

Kaiser 37, Fontana 6

Summit 37, Colton 0

SUNSET LEAGUE

Corona del Mar 42, Edison 7

Los Alamitos 42, Fountain Valley 7

Newport Harbor 34, Huntington Beach 3

TRINITY LEAGUE

Mater Dei 56, Servite 11

St. John Bosco 49, JSerra 10

VALLE VISTA LEAGUE

Northview 57, Hacienda Heights Wilson 6

Rowland 41, Covina 20

San Dimas 43, Baldwin Park 26

NONLEAGUE

Bishop Montgomery 33, Pioneer 28

Capistrano Valley Christian 49, Southlands Christian 12

Firebaugh 22, Temecula Prep 20

Heritage 38, Temescal Canyon 12

Mary Star 35, Verbum Dei 0

Ocean View 48, Cerritos 14

Paloma Valley 36, Arlington 27

Paraclete 38, St. Francis 33

Pasadena Poly 42, Saddleback Valley Christian 6

Rancho Christian 28, Salesian 6

Rancho Verde 55, Elsinore 7

Rio Hondo Prep 52, Laguna Beach 14

Riverside Notre Dame 44, Valley View 28

Simi Valley 59, Nordhoff 14

St. Pius X-St. Matthias 40, Godinez 14

Yorba Linda 47, Brea Olinda 7

INTERSECTIONAL

Santa Maria St. Joseph 35, St. Margaret’s 24

Spokane (Wash.) Mead 63, Marina 27

8 MAN

CITY

CITY LEAGUE

Animo Robinson 74, New Designs University Park 34

USC Hybrid 36, Dymally 22

SOUTHERN SECTION

AGAPE LEAGUE

Sage Oak 40, Hesperia Christian 0

COAST VALLEY LEAGUE

Coast Union 61, Maricopa 6

Cuyama Valley 66, Santa Maria Valley Christian 60

EXPRESS LEAGUE

Avalon 80, Downey Calvary Chapel 40

OMEGA LEAGUE

Beacon Hill 50, Calvary Baptist 16

VICTORY LEAGUE

Bloomington Christian 56, Public Safety Academy 20

NONLEAGUE

Chadwick 69, Malibu 16

Flintridge Prep 52, Moreno Valley Riverside County Education Academy 36

Santa Clara 41, Noli Indian 0

Windward 47, Lucerne Valley 0

INTERSECTIONAL

Lancaster Desert Christian 51, Trona 26

TEACH Tech 36, Blair 0

Thursday’s results

CITY

METRO LEAGUE

New Designs Watts 28, Maywood CES 16

SOUTHERN SECTION

BIG VIII LEAGUE

Corona Centennial 69, Corona 7

DESERT EMPIRE LEAGUE

Shadow Hills 26, La Quinta 7

DESERT SKY LEAGUE

Silverado 47, Victor Valley 0

DESERT VALLEY LEAGUE

Twentynine Palms 46, Indio 0

GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE

Westminster La Quinta 29, Los Amigos 21

HACIENDA LEAGUE

South Hills 40, Walnut 0

MIRAMONTE LEAGUE

Ganesha 35, Bassett 21

MOJAVE RIVER LEAGUE

Hesperia 36, Sultana 14

MONTVIEW LEAGUE

Sierra Vista 54, Nogales 15

Workman 21, Azusa 20

ORANGE LEAGUE

Katella 47, Magnolia 7

ORANGE COAST LEAGUE

Estancia 34, Saddleback 0

Santa Ana 35, Santa Ana Calvary Chapel 6

PALOMARES LEAGUE

Bonita 21, Colony 8

RIVER VALLEY LEAGUE

Ramona 33, Patriot 7

SOUTH VALLEY LEAGUE

Nuview Bridge 34, Anza Hamilton 0

SUNKIST LEAGUE

Grand Terrace 41, Bloomington 21

TRINITY LEAGUE

Orange Lutheran 28, Santa Margarita 14

NONLEAGUE

Esperanza 34, Anaheim Canyon 21

Foothill 10, El Modena 0

Laguna Hills 35, Garden Grove 0

Trinity Classical Academy 26, Vasquez 18

Villa Park 39, El Dorado 0

Western 34, Artesia 23

Westminster 47, Silver Valley 35

8 MAN

SOUTHERN SECTION

EXPRESS LEAGUE

Sage Hill 62, Brethren Christian 6

NONLEAGUE

San Jacinto Valley Academy 58, Indio Riverside County Education Academy 0


Click Here: Newcastle United Shop

The Times' top 25 high school football rankings

October 13, 2019 | News | No Comments

A look at The Times’ top 25 high school football teams in the Southland.

Rk. SCHOOL (Rec.) Result | Next game (last rank)

1. MATER DEI (7-0) def. Servite, 56-11 | at Santa Margarita at Trabuco Hills, Friday (1)

2. ST. JOHN BOSCO (7-0) def. JSerra, 49-10 | vs. Orange Lutheran at Orange Coast College, Friday (2)

3. CORONA CENTENNIAL (5-2) def. Corona, 69-7 | vs. Norco, Friday (3)

4. MISSION VIEJO (8-0) def. Capistrano Valley, 63-13 | vs. San Clemente, Oct. 25 (4)

5. NARBONNE (6-1) idle | at Gardena, Friday (6)

6. JSERRA (5-2) lost to St. John Bosco, 49-10 | at Servite at Orange Coast College, Thursday (5)

7. GRACE BRETHREN (7-0) def. Moorpark, 56-14 | vs. Thousand Oaks at Cal Lutheran U., Friday (7)

8. CORONA DEL MAR (7-0) def. Edison, 42-7 | at Fountain Valley at Huntington Beach, Thursday (9)

9. SERVITE (4-3) lost to Mater Dei, 56-11 | vs. JSerra at Orange Coast College, Thursday (8)

10. CALABASAS (5-2) idle | vs. Newbury Park, Friday (10)

11. SIERRA CANYON (6-1) idle | vs. San Pedro at Pierce College, Friday (11)

12. SAN CLEMENTE (7-1) def. El Toro, 42-3 | vs. Capistrano Valley, Friday (12)

13. BISHOP AMAT (5-1) def. Chaminade, 31-21 | at Gardena Serra, Friday (13)

14. BISHOP ALEMANY (5-1) idle | at Chaminade, Friday (14)

15. LA HABRA (5-2) def. Fullerton, 44-20 | at Sunny Hills at Buena Park, Friday (15)

16. CAMARILLO (6-0) def. Bishop Diego, 34-0 | vs. Moorpark at Moorpark College, Friday (16)

17. SO NOTRE DAME (5-2) def. Gardena Serra, 17-6 | vs. Loyola, Friday (20)

18. TESORO (6-1) idle | vs. El Toro, Friday (21)

19. CULVER CITY (7-0) def. Lawndale, 32-27 | at El Segundo, Friday (22)

20. RANCHO VERDE (6-1) def. Elsinore, 55-7 | at Valley View, Friday (23)

21. NORCO (6-1) def. Corona Santiago, 63-14 | at Corona Centennial, Friday (24)

22. LA SERNA (8-0) def. California, 45-7 | at Santa Fe at Pioneer, Friday (25)

23. OXNARD (6-1) def. Pacifica, 36-27 | at Channel Islands, Friday (NR)

24. ORANGE LUTHERAN (4-3) def. Santa Margarita, 28-14 | vs. St. John Bosco at Orange Coast College, Friday (NR)

25. CHAPARRAL (6-1) lost to Vista Murrieta, 37-17 | vs. Murrieta Mesa, Friday (18)


Click Here: Crystal Palace Shop