Month: December 2019

Home / Month: December 2019

Ce mardi 14 mai, Alessandra Sublet était aux commandes de C’est Canteloup, aux côtés de Nicolas Canteloup sur TF1. L’animatrice a fait sensation avec son nouveau collier. Découvrez où l’acheter.

Elle a fait sensation ! Tous les regards ne sont pas uniquement tournés vers le Festival de Cannes et son tapis rouge. Ce mardi 14 mai, Alessandra Sublet était aux commandes d’un nouveau numéro de C’est Canteloup sur TF1. Cette fois, ce n’est pas à cause d’une remarque de Nicolas Canteloup que l’animatrice a fait parler d’elle. Mais pour un bijou. Lumineuse dans un pull jaune, la sublime femme de 42 ans portait un collier de surfeur – de quoi sans doute lui rappeler ses vacances passées sous le soleil de Saint-Barth – qui n’est pas passé inaperçu.

Difficile en effet de le louper. De couleur jaune et vert, il attire le regard. Il s’agit d’un bijou de la marque All the must, dont le prix des colliers oscillent entre 60 euros et 125 euros. Ces derniers sont en vente sur leur site internet mais aussi sur de nombreux points de vente dont les Galeries Lafayette ou le BHV Marais.

Ce n’est pas la première fois que le look de la maman de Charlie, bientôt âgée de 7 ans et Alphonse, bientôt 5 ans est scruté de près. Il y a quelques jours encore, l’ex-compagne de Clément Miserez recevait de nombreux messages de fans voulant arborer le même t-shirt qu’elle. Comme quoi, pas besoin d’être à Cannes pour créer la tendance.

Story Instagram All the must

Crédits photos : doc TF1

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson et l’équipe de Jumanji ont posté des photos et une vidéo depuis le tournage. Et apparemment, l’ambiance est bonne !

Le tournage du nouveau film Jumanji se poursuit dans la bonne humeur ! Le casting s’en donne à coeur joie sur les réseaux sociaux avec le comique Kevin Hart montrant bien la différence de carrure entre la star du film et lui :

Please don’t look at my knees in this picture ???? Having a blast as usual on the set of Jumanji with my brother @therock #SetLife #Jumanji

Une photo publiée par Kevin Hart (@kevinhart4real) le 30 Sept. 2016 à 14h28 PDT

Dwayne Johnson s’amuse de ses camarades (Hart, Jack Black et Karen Gillian) qui se rendent à pieds sur le plateau alors qu’il est en voiture :

Where else can I drive down a jungle dirt road and find @nickjonas, @karengillanofficial, @kevinhart4real callin’ me a motherf*cker and Jack Black happily enjoying ice cream. ? Luv these guys. What a motley crew we’ve assembled. Havin’ a blast. #OnLocation #Hawaii #Jumanji #WhyWalkWhenYouCanDrive?

Une vidéo publiée par therock (@therock) le 30 Sept. 2016 à 10h48 PDT

Enfin, Gillian pose avec ses doublures :

Three Martha’s ready to kick some ass in the jungle. @jahnelly and Emily #JumanjiMovie #roundhouse

Une photo publiée par Karen Gillan (@karengillanofficial) le 30 Sept. 2016 à 10h25 PDT

A noter que sur cette photo, le nom du personnage de Gillian serait Martha, sauf qu’il a été annoncé depuis qu’elle jouerait un avatar nommé Ruby Roundhouse. On se souvient que la mère des enfants du film original s’appelait Martha Shepherd. Dès lors, toutes les suppositions sont possibles…

Ce Jumanji devrait rendre hommage à l’original et surtout à l’inoubliable Robin Williams. Il montrera l’intrigue sous un nouveau jour, tout en restant fidèle à l’esprit du film de 1995, nous avait indiqué l’équipe du film. Sortie prévue le 2 août 2017.

Edité pour la première fois en 2013, le livre “Stan Lee : Homère du XXème siècle” est récemment ressorti en librairie. L’occasion de plonger dans la vie et l’oeuvre de cette figure controversée de Marvel.

De Stan Lee, vous connaissez ses apparitions très attendues dans les films Marvel, ou certaines des créations, de Spider-Man aux Quatre fantastiques en passant par Hulk. Des enfants dotés de super-pouvoirs, mais dont la véritable origine a plus d’une fois été remise en question, comme le rappelle le livre de Jean-Marc Lainé, intitulé “Homère XXème”.

Une expression que l’essayiste et traducteur reprend à son compte mais qu’il agrémente d’exemples montrant comment cette figure incontournable du milieu de la bande-dessinée a contribué à créer sa propre légende, quitte à faire des raccourcis ou enjoliver certains événements. Publié une première fois en 2013, l’ouvrage a très récemment été réédité, alors que les longs métrages issus de la Maison des Idées continuent de régner sur le monde des blockbusters.

Génie ou imposteur ?

Mi-biographie, mi-analyse, le livre se penche sur diverses étapes de la carrière de Stan Lee, et notamment sa relation avec les dessinateurs Jack Kirby et Steve Ditko, dont il ne partageait pas nécessairement les points de vues (sur l’identité du Bouffon vert dans Spider-Man notamment, qui correspond à la façon de faire de Lee en matière de twists). Evoquant également l’importance du masque chez lui, ou les différentes formes que peuvent prendre ses personnages (à commencer par le “polymathe” qui, comme Thor, a une double identité lorsqu’il est sur Terre), l’auteur ne signe pas une hagiographie dans la mesure où il n’évacue pas l’aspect critique.

Et c’est ainsi que les novices pourront découvrir en quoi Stan Lee est une figure aussi adulée que controversée, et dont l’image est bien resumée par ces deux phrases situées dans l’introduction : “Pour certains, c’est un génie. Pour d’autres, c’est un imposteur.” Dans quel camp vous situerez-vous après avoir lu “Homère du XXème siècle” ?

“Stan Lee – Homère du XXème siècle” de Jean-Marc Lainé – Edité par Huginn & Muninn – Disponible – 25 euros

Quelles sont les meilleures apparitions de Stan Lee au cinéma ?

Top 5 Emissions Bonus

WASHINGTON — 

A House freshman from New Jersey who has been planning to break with his party and vote against impeaching President Trump will become a Republican, a GOP official said Saturday.

Top House Republicans have been told of Rep. Jeff Van Drew’s decision, according to a GOP official familiar with the conversations. The lawmaker had discussed switching parties in a meeting with Trump at the White House on Friday, an administration official said Saturday.

Van Drew’s decision underscores the pressures facing moderate Democrats from Trump-leaning districts as next week’s impeachment vote approaches. Van Drew won his southern New Jersey district by 8 percentage points last year, but Trump carried it by 5 points in 2016, and Van Drew was considered one of the more vulnerable House Democrats going into next November’s congressional elections.

There are 31 House Democrats who represent districts Trump carried in the 2016 election, and many of them have been nervous about the political repercussions they would face by voting to impeach Trump. The House Republican campaign committee has already run ads targeting many of them, but most are expected to support Trump’s impeachment.

A senior Democratic aide said Van Drew had not notified House Democratic leaders about his decision. All the aides spoke on condition of anonymity to describe private conversations.

The senior Democratic aide provided what was described as a poll conducted earlier this month by Van Drew’s campaign showing that, by more than a 2-1 margin, people in his district would prefer a different candidate than Van Drew in the Democratic primary and general election.

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Rumors surfaced last week that Van Drew might switch parties, and he repeatedly denied them to reporters. But he reaffirmed his plan to oppose impeachment, barring new evidence.

“It doesn’t mean that I agree with everything the president may have said or done. It means that I don’t believe that these are impeachable offenses,” he said in an interview Thursday.

Van Drew and a spokesperson did not answer their cellphones or return text messages on Saturday.

Trump put out a congratulatory tweet early Sunday. “Thank you for your honesty Jeff. All of the Democrats know you are right, but unlike you, they don’t have the ‘guts’ to say so!”

Even with his defection, there remains no doubt that the Democratic-controlled House will vote to impeach Trump on a near party-line vote.

Democrats will still control the chamber by 232-198, plus an independent and four vacancies. Until now, Van Drew and Rep. Collin Peterson of Minnesota were the only Democrats expected to vote against impeachment, with perhaps a handful of others joining them. House Republicans seem on track to oppose impeachment unanimously.

Van Drew was a longtime state senator. His congressional district had been under Republican control for nearly two decades before he was elected.

The House is set to approve two articles of impeachment against Trump this week. Democrats, who hold the majority, expect support from all but a few of their members. No Republicans are expected to join them.

The Republican-controlled Senate is then all but certain to acquit Trump after a trial in January.

Van Drew has argued that the process is likely just to further divide the country and that it would be better to let voters decide Trump’s fate in next year’s election.

In the first article of impeachment, Trump is accused of abusing his presidential power by asking Ukraine to investigate his 2020 rival Joe Biden while holding military aid as leverage. In the second article, he’s accused of obstructing Congress by blocking the House’s efforts to investigate his actions.


Scuffles broke out Saturday during a Glendale town hall event on Armenian genocide that was attended by Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), who is at the center of the effort to impeach President Trump.

The event at the Glendale Central Library was meant for an Armenian organization to thank U.S. government officials for their support of resolutions recognizing the Armenian genocide. Schiff is a co-sponsor of a resolution.

As Schiff began speaking, a man and two women held up signs reading,”Don’t Impeach.” When they were asked to take down the signs, they refused.

Then, about a dozen people scattered throughout the auditorium began yelling, “Liar!”

When some in the audience asked them to refrain from yelling, scuffles broke out throughout the room. The audience members who were yelling at Schiff removed their jackets, revealing shirts supporting Trump.

After about 15 minutes, the scuffles settled down, and the event continued.

There were three Glendale police officers at the event who helped deal with the situation, according to the Police Department. No injuries were reported, police said.

The event was organized by the Armenian National Committee of America — Western Region to thank the U.S. House of Representatives for recently passing a resolution affirming its recognition of the Armenian genocide and celebrating the U.S. Senate’s passage of the resolution.

The measure’s passage is considered a rebuke to Trump, who had sought its delay, and to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who had lobbied the White House to block the designation. The Turkish government disputes that a genocide took place.

Erdogan, in an Oval Office visit last month, warned of dire consequences for the Washington-Ankara relationship if the “genocide” term were to be formalized. The Senate resolution declared it U.S. policy “to commemorate the Armenian Genocide through official recognition and remembrance” and “reject efforts to enlist, engage, or otherwise associate the United States government with denial of the Armenian Genocide or any other genocide.”

Southern California is home to an estimated 200,000 Armenian Americans, the largest community in the U.S.

Schiff said he appreciated the opportunity to take part in the event.

“I was grateful for the opportunity to share in the community’s celebration of the historic passage of the Armenian Genocide resolution in both the House and Senate, and thankful for the recognition of the efforts of so many people who made this day possible,” he said in a statement.

“Unfortunately, some came to the event with the intent to disrupt, but the Armenian community has had to overcome far greater challenges along the road to recognition than to be deterred by a few angry voices,” said Schiff, who as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee has helped lead the Trump impeachment investigation.

In a statement, the Armenian committee said what made the interruptions that much more “egregious” was that descendants of genocide survivors were in the room, many of them elderly, who had waited for the passage of such resolutions their entire lives and had attended the event to express their gratitude to all those who supported the cause for decades.

“While, as Americans, we value our right to freedom of speech, today’s actions by a select few were designed to disrupt an event that had no connection to recent political divisions and disrespected the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide,” the statement said.

The committee said the issue transcended partisan politics in its appeal to properly honor and acknowledge the 1.5 million Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians who were massacred from 1915 to 1923 under the Ottoman Empire, now modern-day Turkey.


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WASHINGTON — 

As the House prepares to vote this week to impeach President Trump, leaders of the Senate began sparring Sunday over which witnesses each party might call in a trial, with both sides aware that opening a spigot of testimony could result in damaging counterattacks.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), the Senate minority leader, laid out his opening gambit in a letter to Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the majority leader, urging that several senior Trump aides be summoned to testify before the Senate, including Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff, and former national security advisor John Bolton.

Earlier Sunday, several key Senate Republicans publicly diverged over how to conduct the impeachment trial, which is expected to begin in January, with some calling for allegations against Trump to be summarily quashed and others advocating a lengthier process that would include summoning witnesses for fresh testimony.

Schumer’s letter said a Senate trial must “pass the fairness test with the American people.”

At the same time, however, Democrats want to avoid having a trial that’s intended to focus on Trump’s conduct devolve into a venue for airing Trump’s attacks against former Vice President Joe Biden, a potential Trump rival in 2020, and his son, Hunter.

Key Democrats in the House of Representatives, meanwhile, insisted that Trump’s all-but-certain acquittal in the Senate would not brand as a failure the House proceedings against the president. The House is expected to vote Wednesday to impeach Trump, with the resolution likely to pass on an almost entirely party-line vote.

The House Judiciary Committee last week approved two articles of impeachment against Trump, for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. A full House vote to adopt those articles would make Trump only the third U.S. president to be impeached.

In a round of appearances on Sunday’s news-talk shows, senior Republicans dealt with continuing fallout over McConnell’s assertion last week that there was “no chance” that Trump would be removed from office.

McConnell said in a Fox News interview that he was coordinating with — and taking cues from — the president’s lawyers on ground rules for the Senate showdown. Democrats protested that his statement disqualified him from being an impartial juror in an impeachment trial.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of Trump’s most vociferous defenders, declared Sunday that he had already made up his mind, so there was no need for a drawn-out trial on whether Trump improperly pressured Ukraine’s president to dig up dirt on the former vice president.

“I’m not trying to hide the fact that I have disdain for the accusations in the process, so I don’t need any witnesses,” the South Carolina Republican said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Other Republicans, though, suggested the underlying facts needed airing, even while suggesting Trump would prevail.

“I think it would be extremely inappropriate to put a bullet in this thing immediately when it comes over,” Sen. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Toomey signaled an emerging strategy for some GOP senators of broadly accepting Democratic assertions about the president’s actions while disagreeing on their gravity.

“There might be a lot of agreements” on facts, he said, but “I think there’s a big disagreement about what rises to a level of impeachment.”

Trump opposes that line of argument because it concedes that at least some of his actions toward Ukraine were inappropriate. He continues to insist that his conduct was “perfect” and wants an extended trial in which his lawyers could demand testimony from Hunter Biden and other Democrats he has accused of misdeeds. He continued that strategy Sunday in a blizzard of tweets.

Some Republican senators have signed on to the idea of an extensive trial with the apparent aim of impugning the fairness of the House impeachment proceedings and attempting to tar the Bidens. Others, like Toomey, have said they aren’t prepared to say yet whether the Senate trial should include any live testimony.

On Sunday, that division among Republican senators remained apparent.

“If the president wants to call Hunter Biden, or wants to call the whistleblower, the Senate should allow [him] to do so,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said on ABC’s “This Week.” A whistleblower’s complaint in August raised serious concerns about a July 25 phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, setting the impeachment process in motion.

During House hearings, public testimony by a dozen witnesses, including diplomats and current and former administration officials, portrayed an irregular foreign-policy back channel steered by the president’s personal lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani, with the alleged knowledge of several of Trump’s most high-level aides.

But the White House has blocked demands for documents and testimony from current and former senior administration figures including Mulvaney, Bolton and Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo.

Many Democrats, in both the House and Senate, have said that if Trump’s team had had any witnesses whose testimony would help clear him, they would have been allowed to appear already.

Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois said on “Face the Nation” that witnesses should be called in the Senate trial, but “it appears to me there are no witnesses the president would want to call to exonerate himself.”

Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, interviewed on “Meet the Press,” decried what he called Republicans’ refusal to consider the facts of the case.

“It’s why I’m so disappointed in my colleagues,” he said, “this ‘see no evil, hear no evil’ attitude that they don’t want to look at anything … that might disagree with their worldview of Republicanism and this president.”

Prospects for a near-party-line vote in the House appeared unchanged, although with the twist that one anti-impeachment Democrat, Rep. Jefferson Van Drew of New Jersey, is now reportedly preparing to switch his party affiliation — a step Trump tweeted Sunday would be “very smart.”

Van Drew, a conservative Democrat in his first term, faced polls in his southern New Jersey district that showed he would probably lose a Democratic primary if he voted against impeachment. He hopes Trump’s backing will enable him to win the Republican nomination for a second term.

Only one other Democrat, Rep. Collin C. Peterson of Minnesota, is considered a likely vote against impeachment, although a couple of others who represent districts Trump carried in 2016 are still undeclared.

Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, who left the Republican Party to become an independent after he announced his support for impeachment, is the only non-Democrat expected to vote for impeachment.

Rep. Will Hurd of Texas, a Republican who is retiring and had initially seemed open to the idea that Trump’s actions were cause for concern, signaled he would probably stay in the Republican fold.

“You can vote against impeachment but still disagree with some of the policies and some of the behavior,” the former CIA officer said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

With an end to the House proceedings in sight, the two principal committee chairmen handling the issue — Reps. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank) and Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) — said the prospect of Trump winning acquittal in the Senate did nothing to diminish the effort.

“It isn’t a failure — at least it’s not a failure in the sense of our constitutional duty,” Schiff, the head of the Intelligence Committee, said on “This Week.” On the same program, Nadler, who heads the Judiciary Committee, said Trump’s pattern of behavior amounted to a continuing menace.

“He poses a continuing threat to our national security and to the integrity of our elections, to our democratic system itself,” Nadler said. “We cannot permit that to continue.”


5 aides to party-switching House lawmaker resign

December 16, 2019 | News | No Comments

WASHINGTON — 

Five aides to a House Democrat who plans to become a Republican are resigning, saying his party switch “does not align with the values we brought to this job when we joined his office.”

The staffers wrote the letter on Sunday, a day after a Republican official said GOP House leaders had been informed that New Jersey Rep. Jeff Van Drew was planning the switch. Van Drew, a freshman, has said he will vote “no” this week when the House decides whether to impeach President Trump, a decision that puts him at odds with nearly every other Democrat.

“Over the past year, Trump Republicans have sided with special interests over the needs of working people,” the five wrote to Van Drew’s chief of staff, Allison Murphy. “Worse, they continue to aid and abet Trump as he shreds the Constitution and tears the country apart. They have refused to grapple with how the President of the United States has jeopardized our national security for his own political advantage.”

The staffers said they respect Van Drew but “are deeply saddened and disappointed by his decision. As such, we can no longer in good conscience continue our service in the Congressman’s employ.”

It is unusual for members of Congress to switch parties, especially to move from the majority to the minority party, which has vastly less power in the House. And while it is not uncommon for aides to quit if a lawmaker switches parties, the staffers’ decision underscores the deep rifts between Democrats and Republicans over Trump and his conduct in office.

Van Drew represents a southern New Jersey district that he won by 8 percentage points last year but that Trump carried by 5 percentage points in the 2016 election. Van Drew was expected to face a difficult reelection next year, and polling showed he would also be vulnerable in a Democratic primary for the nomination for his seat.

The five resigning aides are deputy staff chiefs Edward Kaczmarski and Justin M. O’Leary, legislative director Javier Gamboa, spokeswoman MacKenzie Lucas and legislative assistant Caroline Wood.

Despite Van Drew’s planned defection, Democrats will retain their House majority.

The chamber seems certain to impeach Trump this week, probably Wednesday, in a near party-line vote over charges that he pressured Ukraine to help him in next year’s election by investigating former Vice President Joe Biden, who is vying for the Democratic presidential nomination. Unanimous GOP opposition to impeachment is considered likely.

The GOP-led Senate seems certain to find Trump not guilty and keep him in office.


ARLINGTON, Texas — 

The Dallas Cowboys were not going to let Todd Gurley do it again.

Two years ago at AT&T Stadium, Gurley scored on an electrifying catch-and-run play that helped the Rams beat the Cowboys. In an NFC divisional-round playoff victory over the Cowboys last season, Gurley rushed for more than 100 yards and a touchdown.

On Sunday, Gurley caught a short touchdown pass, but rushed for only 20 yards and a late touchdown in 11 carries in the Rams’ 44-21 defeat.

“They came in and shut us down pretty quick,” Gurley said.

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Coach Sean McVay had put the ball in Gurley’s hands with greater frequency in three of the Rams’ previous four games. The strategy paid off with performances by the offense that gave players, coaches and fans optimism about the team’s playoff chances.

The Cowboys had lost three games in a row, but shut down Gurley and limited him to 1.8 yards per carry.

“We weren’t able to get into any sort of rhythm and get things going in the run game,” McVay said.

Gurley has rushed for 744 yards and 10 touchdowns this season. He has 29 receptions, two for touchdowns.

The Rams play the San Francisco 49ers on Saturday at Levi’s Stadium. Gurley sat out a 20-7 loss to the 49ers on Oct. 13 because of a thigh injury. The loss started a three-game losing streak.

“I’m excited,” Gurley said. “Didn’t get a chance to play against those guys last time. Saturday night game.

“We got to try and get right.”

Tyler Higbee sets team record

Tyler Higbee caught a career-best 12 passes for 111 yards to become the first tight end in Rams history to have three consecutive games with 100 yards receiving.

Higbee caught seven passes for 107 yards and a touchdown in a 34-7 victory over the Arizona Cardinals. He caught seven passes for 116 yards in a 28-12 victory over the Seattle Seahawks.

Higbee has 52 catches for 546 yards and two touchdowns this season.

Receiver Cooper Kupp caught six passes for 41 yards and a touchdown and eclipsed 1,000 yards receiving in a season for the first time.

“Right now it doesn’t really mean much,” Kupp said.

Kupp, a third-round draft pick in 2017, has 83 receptions for 1,031 yards and seven touchdowns.

In 2018, receivers Brandin Cooks and Robert Woods each amassed more than 1,000 yards receiving. Kupp might have done the same had he not suffered a season-ending knee injury.

Troy Hill is injured

Cornerback Troy Hill suffered a hand injury during the first quarter and did not return. Darious Williams played in Hill’s spot.

Hill moved into the starting lineup after Aqib Talib suffered a rib injury during an Oct. 3 loss against the Seahawks. Talib was later traded to the Miami Dolphins.

Hill had two interceptions in the last four games. Williams made five tackles Sunday.

Tavon Austin scores

In April 2018, the Rams traded receiver Tavon Austin to the Cowboys for a sixth-round draft pick.

Austin, the No. 8 pick in the 2013 NFL draft, scored Sunday on a 59-yard pass from Dak Prescott in the second quarter. The play started a run of 30 consecutive points by the Cowboys.

1/12

Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Tavon Austin carries the ball past Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald during the first half. 

(Associated Press)

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Rams quarterback Jared Goff is stopped short of the goal line by Dallas Cowboys outside linebacker Sean Lee, left, as safety Xavier Woods (25) moves in during the first half. 

(Associated Press)

3/12

Rams quarterback Jared Goff looks to pass during the first quarter against the Dallas Cowboys. 

(Getty Images)

4/12

Rams linebacker Samson Ebukam, left, breaks up a pass by Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott during the first quarter. 

(Getty Images)

5/12

Rams coach Sean McVay watches from the sideline during the first half against the Dallas Cowboys. 

(Getty Images)

6/12

The Dallas Cowboys flag team runs onto the field after a second-quarter touchdown. 

(Getty Images)

7/12

Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott goes airborne after being hit by Rams defenisve tackle Sebastian Joseph-Day (69) during the second quarter. 

(Getty Images)

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Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott scores a touchdown against the Rams in the second quarter. 

(Getty Images)

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Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott runs past the Rams’ defense during the second half. 

(Getty Images)

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Dallas Cowboys running back Tony Pollard sprints away from the Rams’ defense during the second half. 

(Getty Images)

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Dallas Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee runs with the ball after picking off a pass from Rams quarterback Jared Goff. 

(Getty Images)

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Rams coach Sean McVay speaks with tight end Tyler Higbee (89) and center Austin Blythe during the second half of a 44-21 loss to the Dallas Cowboys. 

(Getty Images)

Prescott kept the play alive by using his strength and mobility to elude edge rusher Dante Fowler. As Austin crossed the field from right to left, Williams collided with safety Taylor Rapp, enabling Austin to break free. Prescott passed him the ball and Austin turned upfield to the end zone.

“Tavon crossed the field, two guys ran at each other and he did the rest,” Prescott said.

Etc.

The last time the Rams’ Greg Zuerlein played in AT&T Stadium, he kicked seven field goals in a 35-30 victory. On Sunday, he did not attempt a field goal. … Former Rams end Robert Quinn had one quarterback hit for the Cowboys.


COLUMBUS, Ohio — 

A minor panic set in on Twitter on Saturday evening. The game feed on the ESPN App was out, so viewers trying to watch Chatsworth Sierra Canyon’s much-anticipated game against Akron (Ohio) St. Vincent-St. Mary saw only a message about technical difficulties.

It only served to highlight the clamor for Sierra Canyon boys’ basketball.

Because of the frenzy that follows them, the Trailblazers have found themselves in big-game situations where opponents target them, fans greet them as if they were more than a group of high school kids, and a national audience watches their games.

Some might consider it a distraction. Sierra Canyon coach Andre Chevalier considers it preparation.

“I don’t know why I was crazy enough to come to everybody’s city and play a top team,” Chevalier said. “But I think they can handle it. And it’s going to prepare us for the playoffs and hopefully be the thing that propels us to win a CIF state championship.”

Until Saturday, their biggest stage had been against Texas high school Duncanville, where around 12,000 people saw Sierra Canyon‘s 66-63 victory. The Trailblazers have plenty more awaiting them. Remaining on their schedule are nationally ranked teams The Patrick School, Paul VI and Long Island Lutheran — all games that will be nationally broadcast.

“I knew it was going to be big,” said Brandon Boston Sr., the father of five-star senior wing B.J. Boston. “But I didn’t know it was going to be this big.”

Sierra Canyon, which hosted a midnight madness in the style of college teams and a media day this year, is not new to fielding talented basketball players.

The prep school, which opened its high school in 2006, made headlines with the arrival of Marvin Bagley III, who transferred there for 2016-17 and became the No. 2 NBA draft pick in 2018 after a year at Duke. Sons of former NBA stars Scottie Pippen and Kenyon Martin helped Sierra Canyon win the first of consecutive CIF Open Division state titles in 2017 and ’18.

The national interest in Sierra Canyon comes for a variety of reasons. This season’s team features the sons of LeBron James and Dwyane Wade, Bronny and Zaire. It also features two five-star 2020 prospects in Boston and Ziaire Williams, and highly rated guard Amari Bailey, who will be part of the class of 2022.

Boston enrolled at Sierra Canyon this year after starting his high school career in his home state of Georgia. His parents, sister and cousin moved with him and all three children attend the school. He’ll play at perennial powerhouse Kentucky next year.

“It’s going to be a smooth transition,” Boston’s mother, Alissa, said. “He has that advantage coming in. He’ll be used to bright lights and big stages.”

Two kids who were used to the glare of the spotlight before Sierra Canyon were Bronny James and Zaire Wade.

Chevalier made it clear when they joined the team this year they weren’t going to get any special treatment. As the season’s gone on, he’s learned that they don’t want it.

“He don’t really like the attention. He wants to be a basketball player. I don’t think he wants to be dealing with the people,” Chevalier said of James, after the freshman played his best game of the season Saturday against his father’s alma mater.

“A lot of times he just keeps his head down and goes out to warm up and wants to do well. Every day he’s learning and every day he’s getting better. You see his confidence start to bolster and his head is coming up.”

Saturday night’s game was their most well attended of the season, with LeBron James sitting courtside for the first time. And as often happens for the Trailblazers, who have only played two of their seven games as the home team, and just one on their own campus, the crowd was against them.

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It was on the older players to make sure the team was ready for the moment.

“I just tell them there’s a lot of people here, we’ve gotta play like we’ve been here before,” Boston said.

Chevalier’s message of collaboration has resonated.

“You have to win collectively as a unit,” Bailey said. “Coach says it all the time, we’re not good enough to win by ourselves, so that’s all that matters.”

In the 17 years since LeBron James’ first nationally broadcast high school game, things sure have changed. Back then, organizers had to convince networks that it was a good idea.

Now there is demand.

Sierra Canyon‘s coaches and players hope that demand sharpens them.


Racing! Happy holidays to everyone

December 16, 2019 | News | No Comments

Hello, my name is John Cherwa and welcome back to our horse racing newsletter as we finish up the final newsletter of this racing year. And, I didn’t miss a one.

Well, this does it for this year, and by year I mean racing year. Sure, we’ll be back on Dec. 26 of this year but I always look at that like next racing year. It has no doubt been the most challenging of my four years covering this sport. I don’t see things changing the early part of next year. My hope is to be writing about how racing has completely changed the safety paradigm for next year.

So, with that, I wish all of our readers the best holiday season, even those of you who think I am an idiot.

Stewards’ rulings

We’ve got the first set of stewards’ minutes from Los Alamitos although none of them are really from Los Alamitos. So, let’s get right to the few we have.

–Apprentice jockey Victor Flores was granted an extension of 219 days to his apprentice status or until he reaches 40 wins, whichever comes first. Because of injuries, Flores missed 219 days. He provided medical documentation to that fact. His apprenticeship was supposed to expire on July 14, 2020 because he won his fifth race on July 15, 2018. He will now retain his apprentice status until Feb. 18, 2021. Flores has ridden nine winners when the ruling was issued.

–Jockey Eswan Flores was fined $300 for use of the riding crop after his horse, Rigoletto, was clearly out of the ninth race at Del Mar on Dec. 1. Rigoletto finished eighth in a nine-horse race. Flores did not show for the hearing but did admit he made an error while talking to stewards after the race.

–Groom Pedro V. Ledezma has been reinstated after completing his Winners’ Foundation program. Ledezma was suspended on Aug. 31 at Del Mar after he was found passed out in the vegetation near the race track. He was taken into custody by the San Diego County Sherriff’s Office. In the original ruling, trainer Alfredo Marquez said he would employ Ledezma.

Say what?

We don’t cover stewards’ rulings from Northern California but eagled-eyed Steve Andersen of the Daily Racing Form spotted this one. You can read his story here. It’s something I’ve never seen before. Maybe you, but not me.

Jockeys Julien Couton and Silvio Amador were both suspended 30 calendar days for sharing a whip in a race at Golden Gate. Say what? Now, it’s also significant the suspension was calendar days because there is no racing between now and Dec. 26, so that part of the suspension could be called vacation. (Yes, they are missing out on riding horses in the morning, which can lead to mounts.)

According to Andersen, Coulton was riding Olive You More and Amador was riding Belle Magie in Thursday’s sixth race.

Here’s how Steve described it: “Couton dropped his whip on the second turn while racing in sixth place. In early stretch, Couton and Amador could be seen talking briefly while racing side-by-side before Amador handed his whip to Couton. Belle Magie (13-1) was fading from contention at the time. Olive You More (the 7-2 favorite) closed with interest to finish 1 1/2 lengths behind race winner Mila’s Dream [in third place].”

The ruling on Amador was for “failure to give his best effort by voluntarily relinquishing his riding crop to a rival jockey in the stretch.” The Couton ruling read “soliciting and gaining control of a rival jockey’s crop in the stretch.”

Just when you’ve thought you’ve heard it all.

Remember the $16 million Pegasus?

The Pegasus World Cup, initially offered in 2017 as a $12 million race where the purse money was supplied by the entrants, has completely reinvented itself as a $3 million medication-free race with the purse money supplied by The Stronach Group.

The Pegasus, which grew to $16 million in 2018, was never really the success the Stronach family thought it would be. That was when Frank and Belinda Stronach were not suing each other. As the event went on, TSG was cutting deals to cover the entry fee.

This year, it went to a $9 million World Cup and a $7 million Turf Invitational. This coming January, it’s $3 million and $1 million races. Good thing TSG sent its executives to the Arc in Paris to recruit turf horses for a, uh, $1 million race. That’s where Mike Rogers, president of TSG’s racing division, told Ron Flatter of VSiN and the Ron Flatter Racing Pod, that except for the deaths, Santa Anita had a pretty good meeting.

But, you have to admit, it’s a tough thing to swallow if you planned to come to the race with a mega-purse and find out it’s just a really good purse. TSG needs to be criticized for making the move with a little more than a month before the race. I don’t know if horses have a $200 airplane change fee ($300 international) but it might alter my plans.

“Cutting the purse to $3 million is an absolute game-changer,” Gary West, co-owner of Maximum Security, told Bob Ehalt of the Bloodhorse. “I wasn’t thinking about the Saudi Cup, but why should I run for $3 million when I can run for $20 million four weeks later? That’s a substantial change, and we don’t know what we’re going to do. There’s now a better than 50/50 chance we’ll go to the Saudi race.”

The real takeaway here is that Belinda Stronach is obsessed with horse safety. And who can argue that’s a bad thing? She’s made it a medication-free race, which is now consistent with the house rules at Gulfstream. I’ve taken a lot of criticism here for saying positive things about Belinda, but I believe her goals are genuine. I do not believe her grand plan is to sell Santa Anita, at least for now. And she has been the leader in trying to promote racing as safe as it can be. As a bonus, 2% of the purses will be donated to thoroughbred aftercare.

It’s good that TSG is throwing away the pretense that the Pegasus is this mega-million racing experience. It’s a pretty good race, but the purse is less than a couple Breeders’ Cup races.

It’s all a look at how in 2020 racing is going to change. Yes, change is word of choice. We’ll see how it goes.

Who goofed, I’ve got to know

I did, of course. In Sunday’s newsletter I said the death of Mighty Elijah was the eighth fatality this year for trainer Jerry Hollendorfer. In fact, it was the eighth in the last 13 months. River of Doubt died at Golden Gate on Nov. 11 of last year.

Los Alamitos daytime review

The $100,000 King Glorious Stakes for Cal-bred 2-year-olds going a mile became an even shorter field when Rookie Mistake made a rookie mistake by sitting down in the gate before the start. He was scratched and it was a field of five, with no show betting.

Club Aspen ran a smart race just off the pace of the heavily favored Tap Back and then in mid-stretch went to the front, eventually winning by 2 ½ lengths. Club Aspen paid $19.40 and $4.80. Tap Back was second followed by Papster, Dapper and Govenor Cinch.

Here’s what the winning connections had to say.

Craig Lewis (winning trainer) “He looked like the winner to me every jump of the way. I never had a doubt he would handle the two turns. He’s had some excuses. In his turf race (sixth in the Zuma Beach, Oct. 6) he never had a chance to run. He was in trouble from start to finish, and in the [Golden State Juvenile, Nov. 1] he was compromised by drawing the inside post in a huge field. I think both of those races were better than they appear on paper and I think he showed it today.’’

Jorge I. Velez (winning jockey): “[Tap Back] was the horse to beat, so I wanted to follow him around the track and see if I could beat him.”

Big races review

A look at graded stakes or races worth $100,000 on Sunday.

Aqueduct (8): $500,000 New York Stallion Series Stakes (8), NY-bred fillies, 2-years-old. Winner: A Freud of Mama ($48.20)

Woodbine (9): Grade 3 $125,000 Valedictory Stakes, 3 and up, 1 ¾ miles. Winner: Pumpkin Rumble ($3.50)

Los Alamitos (7): $100,000 King Glorious Stakes, Cal-bred 2-year-olds, 1 mile. Winner: Club Aspen ($19.40)

Remington (8): $100,000 Trapeze Stakes, fillies 2-years-old, 1 mile. Favorite: Princessinha Julia ($5.40)

Remington (9): $100,000 She’s All In Stakes, fillies and mares 3 and up, 1 mile, 70 yards. Winner: Magical ($40.60)

Final thought

Always looking to add more subscribers to this newsletter. Can’t beat the price. If you like it, tell someone. If you don’t like it, then you’re probably not reading this. Either way, send to a friend and just have them click here and sign up. Remember, it’s free, and all we need is your email, nothing more.

Any thoughts, you can reach me at [email protected]. You can also feed my ego by following me on Twitter @jcherwa

Now, here’s the star of the show, Sunday’s results. We’ll see you on Dec. 26.

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Los Alamitos Race Course Charts Results for Sunday, December 15.

Copyright 2019 by Equibase Company. Reproduction prohibited. Los Alamitos Race Course, Los Alamitos, California. 7th day of a 8-day meet. Clear & Fast

FIRST RACE.

5½ Furlongs. Purse: $28,000. Starter Allowance. Fillies and Mares. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $50,000. Time 21.97 45.40 57.32 1:03.80


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ 3/8 Str Fin Jockey $1

6 Girona 122 6 2 2–1 3–hd 1–½ 1–1½ Pereira 0.90
5 Sybil’s Kitty 122 5 1 1–hd 1–hd 2–1 2–nk Delgadillo 7.30
1 Tinsel Town Queen 122 1 4 3–hd 4–½ 3–2 3–nk Maldonado 15.80
3 Miss Lady Ann 122 3 5 5–hd 5–½ 4–1 4–2 Cedillo 3.40
4 Little Bolor 117 4 6 6 6 5–2 5–5 Diaz, Jr. 16.70
2 Smiling Annie 124 2 3 4–½ 2–2 6 6 Talamo 3.40

6 GIRONA 3.80 3.00 2.60
5 SYBIL’S KITTY 5.60 3.20
1 TINSEL TOWN QUEEN 4.40

$1 EXACTA (6-5)  $9.50
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (6-5-1-3)  $13.09
$1 TRIFECTA (6-5-1)  $64.00

Winner–Girona Dbb.f.3 by Alternation out of Just Waiting, by More Than Ready. Bred by Jack Huckabay (KY). Trainer: Paul G. Aguirre. Owner: Wongs Stable. Mutuel Pool $78,667 Exacta Pool $39,681 Superfecta Pool $23,500 Trifecta Pool $27,590. Scratched–none.

GIRONA advanced four then three wide and engaged leader on the turn, dueled outside that rival well into the stretch then edged away in final sixteenth under steady hand encouragement. SYBIL’S KITTY sped to short lead while three wide, came in bit early on the turn, resisted when challenged later on the bend and into the stretch, could not match winner in final sixteenth but gamely held the place. TINSEL TOWN QUEEN stalked from along the rail early, came out some in upper stretch and went willingly to the wire. MISS LADY ANN tracked leaders from between rivals, raced three wide into the lane, continued on same path and missed third from outside rival. LITTLE BOLOR caught four abreast into the bend, continued outside around the turn and lacked needed late response. SMILING ANNIE between foes early, stalked on two wide path, remained between rivals after leaving the turn then weakened some in the drive. Half mile split was hand timed.

SECOND RACE.

5 Furlongs. Purse: $15,000. Maiden Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $20,000. Time 21.89 44.90 56.88


Pgm Horse Wt PP St 3/16 3/8 Str Fin Jockey $1

7 Spendaholic 117 5 1 3–1 1–½ 1–2½ 1–6 Velez 0.80
4 Silver Fury 124 3 4 5–3½ 4–1½ 4–3½ 2–2 Fuentes 4.90
8 Onebadrooskie 122 6 6 4–1 3–1 3–½ 3–½ Cedillo 2.10
5 Tizalwaves 122 4 2 1–hd 2–1½ 2–1 4–1 Payeras 22.20
2 Its All On Slew 124 2 5 6 6 5–8 5–20 Espinoza 9.80
1 Street Machine 124 1 3 2–hd 5–3 6 6 Guce 65.70

7 SPENDAHOLIC 3.60 2.40 2.10
4 SILVER FURY 3.20 2.10
8 ONEBADROOSKIE 2.20

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (6-7)  $9.00
$1 EXACTA (7-4)  $5.70
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (7-4-8-5)  $3.59
$1 TRIFECTA (7-4-8)  $10.40

Winner–Spendaholic B.g.3 by Square Eddie out of Cash Shredder, by Sightseeing. Bred by Reddam Racing, LLC (CA). Trainer: Edward R. Freeman. Owner: Albert, Darrin and Freeman, Edward R.. Mutuel Pool $92,102 Daily Double Pool $21,566 Exacta Pool $42,241 Superfecta Pool $25,891 Trifecta Pool $29,131. Scratched–Bold Eagle, Rough Ride.

SPENDAHOLIC dueled three deep on the backstretch then outside a rival on the turn, took the lead in upper stretch, opened a clear advantage in midstretch and drew away in the final furlong. SILVER FURY chased off the rail throughout, rallied between horses in the final furlong and was up for the place. ONEBADROOSKIE broke a step slow, then moved up four wide, stalked the pace three deep on the turn, came into the lane three wide, lacked the needed rally but held third. TIZALWAVES dueled between horses on the backstretch then inside the winner on the turn and weakened through the lane. ITS ALL ON SLEW chased on the outside throughout and did not rally. STREET MACHINE dueled on the inside on the backstretch, fell back some on the turn and gave way in the lane. HAND TIMED

THIRD RACE.

5½ Furlongs. Purse: $12,000. Claiming. Fillies and Mares. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $6,250. Time 22.35 45.67 57.50 1:03.99


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ 3/8 Str Fin Jockey $1

4 Darpa 119 2 4 4–1½ 4–2 4–5 1–ns Velez 2.20
7 Copper Cowgirl 124 5 1 1–½ 1–1 2–½ 2–nk T Baze 2.50
6 Fairly Lucky 122 4 3 3–1 3–1 1–1 3–½ Cedillo 2.60
9 Luv Is All U Need 124 6 2 2–½ 2–½ 3–½ 4–7 Hernandez 3.30
3 I B Buzzin 124 1 6 5–½ 5–1½ 5–2 5–1¼ Sanchez 14.50
5 Why Are U So Sweet 122 3 5 6 6 6 6 Figueroa 38.30

4 DARPA 6.40 3.40 2.40
7 COPPER COWGIRL 3.80 2.60
6 FAIRLY LUCKY 2.60

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (7-4)  $13.80
$1 EXACTA (4-7)  $8.70
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (4-7-6-9)  $3.02
$1 TRIFECTA (4-7-6)  $19.60

Winner–Darpa B.f.4 by Super Saver out of Shopping Again, by Awesome Again. Bred by White Fox Farm &Terrazas Thoroughbreds, LLC (KY). Trainer: John W. Sadler. Owner: Hronis Racing LLC. Mutuel Pool $71,295 Daily Double Pool $7,368 Exacta Pool $38,532 Superfecta Pool $26,409 Trifecta Pool $27,689. Scratched–Discrete Stevie B, Jabber Now, Panshir.

$1 Pick Three (6-7-4) paid $11.70. Pick Three Pool $27,220.

DARPA three wide into the bend, moved up outside on the turn then was caught four wide entering the lane, rallied under strong right handed urging and nailed inside rivals in final strides. COPPER COWGIRL sped to the front then came in slightly early on the turn, retained lead on two wide path into the stretch, relinquished command past three-sixteenths marker, fought back under right handed urging and just missed from between rivals at the finish. FAIRLY LUCKY angled over and tracked pace under patient handling from the inside, roused departing the turn, rallied along the rail, reached front three-sixteenths out, edged away but could not hold top pair nearing the wire. LUV IS ALL U NEED forced the early issue while outside pacesetter, continued on three wide path and prominent into the lane, drifted out bit later in the drive and gave ground grudgingly. I B BUZZIN angled over and chased from the inside then along the rail on the turn, came back out leaving the turn and did not menace. WHY ARE U SO SWEET settled off the rail, chased two or three wide to the stretch and did not threaten.

FOURTH RACE.

6½ Furlongs. Purse: $45,000. Allowance Optional Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $40,000. Time 21.86 44.72 1:08.49 1:14.97


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ ½ Str Fin Jockey $1

3 Adens Dream 122 3 2 1–hd 1–1 1–4 1–6 Figueroa 1.40
6 Union Ride 122 6 1 5–1 3–hd 2–2½ 2–4 Flores 4.30
4 Shades of Victory 122 4 4 4–hd 6 4–hd 3–nk Franco 9.50
5 Touching Rainbows 122 5 6 6 4–hd 3–2½ 4–1½ Figueroa 2.20
2 Make It a Triple 122 2 5 3–hd 5–2½ 5–2 5–8 Bednar 5.70
1 Lucky Romano 117 1 3 2–1½ 2–½ 6 6 Velez 27.10

3 ADENS DREAM 4.80 3.40 3.20
6 UNION RIDE 3.40 3.20
4 SHADES OF VICTORY 4.20

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (4-3)  $17.20
$1 EXACTA (3-6)  $10.60
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (3-6-4-5)  $12.15
$1 TRIFECTA (3-6-4)  $48.50

Winner–Adens Dream Ch.g.6 by Wildcat Heir out of Missunitednations, by Peace Rules. Bred by Laurence Leavy (FL). Trainer: John W. Sadler. Owner: Hronis Racing LLC. Mutuel Pool $102,904 Daily Double Pool $9,366 Exacta Pool $48,777 Superfecta Pool $32,626 Trifecta Pool $38,601. Scratched–none.

$1 Pick Three (7-4-3) paid $19.80. Pick Three Pool $11,422.

ADENS DREAM dueled outside a foe on the backstretch, put away that rival on the turn and drew away through the lane. UNION RIDE stalked three deep on the backstretch, came into the lane three wide, could make no impact on the winner but was clearly second best. SHADES OF VICTORY stalked between horses on the backstretch and four deep on the turn, improved his position in the lane and gained 3rd late. TOUCHING RAINBOWS hopped at the start to be off slowly, chased on the outside, came into the stretch four wide, lacked the needed rally and was edged for third on the wire. MAKE IT A TRIPLE was off slowly, stalked a bit off the rail on the backstretch, saved some ground around the turn, came out in the lane and did not rally. LUCKY ROMANO dueled inside the winner on the backstretch, could not keep pace with that foe on the turn and weakened through the lane.

FIFTH RACE.

5½ Furlongs. Purse: $12,000. Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $6,250. Time 21.86 44.78 56.63 1:03.18


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ 3/8 Str Fin Jockey $1

5 Polar 117 3 4 2–hd 2–3 1–hd 1–1 Diaz, Jr. 3.40
2 Captain N. Barron 124 2 5 1–hd 1–hd 2–4 2–6 Hernandez 1.70
8 Verynsky 122 6 7 4–1 3–2½ 3–4 3–1¼ Cedillo 1.10
11 Steven Decatur 124 9 1 8–3 6–2 5–3 4–3½ Dominguez 85.60
1 Papa Caballero 124 1 6 5–1½ 5–½ 4–hd 5–1¾ E Garcia 19.90
6 Dutt Bart 124 4 3 7–hd 7–2½ 6–2 6–4 Locke 86.90
7 Skagit River 124 5 9 9 9 8–3 7–7 Aragon 43.40
9 U S Lawman 122 7 8 6–1 8–2 9 8–1½ Rojas Fernandez 39.00
10 Street Punk 114 8 2 3–1 4–1 7–hd 9 Mussad 69.00

5 POLAR 8.80 3.60 2.20
2 CAPTAIN N. BARRON 3.40 2.20
8 VERYNSKY 2.10

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (3-5)  $18.20
$1 EXACTA (5-2)  $12.60
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (5-2-8-11)  $15.41
$1 TRIFECTA (5-2-8)  $17.80

Winner–Polar Grr.g.3 by Graydar out of Witch Princess, by Exchange Rate. Bred by Amy Bayle & Allen Racing LLC (KY). Trainer: Michael W. McCarthy. Owner: Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners. Mutuel Pool $128,243 Daily Double Pool $15,759 Exacta Pool $91,379 Superfecta Pool $75,048 Trifecta Pool $76,779. Claimed–Polar by Novo-Normanly, Rebecca and Wallace, II, Jerry. Trainer: Jerry Wallace, II. Claimed–Verynsky by 4 Hares Racing, Inc. Trainer: Keith Craigmyle. Scratched–Monceros, Scullyism, Walk On Water.

$1 Pick Three (4-3-5) paid $39.80. Pick Three Pool $23,047. $1 Pick Four (3/6/7-1/2/4/8-3-5) 4 correct paid $79.70. Pick Four Pool $59,831. 50-Cent Pick Five (6-3/6/7-1/2/4/8-3-5) 5 correct paid $97.15. Pick Five Pool $314,705.

POLAR forced then challenged outside rival on the turn, dueled outside same foe well into the lane, gained slim advantage nearing eighth pole then edged away under steady handling. CAPTAIN N. BARRON set pressured pace early from along the fence, resisted when challenged on the turn, dueled inside well into the stretch, could not match winner late but was clearly second best. VERYNSKY bumped leaving the gate, angled over early, tracked leaders from just off the rail, angled out some leaving the turn and safely held the show. STEVEN DECATUR shifted in and chased from between foes early, drifted out four wide leaving the bend and gained a minor award. PAPA CABALLERO stalked from the inside, saved ground into and through the stretch and never seriously threatened. DUTT BART broke out and bumped rival, angled in early, chased from the inside, shifted back out some in upper stretch and did not menace. SKAGIT RIVER was bumped from both sides in a slow start, chased three wide into and on the turn, came out further into the stretch and did not rally. U S LAWMAN was crowded at the start, chased outside, came six wide into the stretch and failed to reach contention. STREET PUNK broke inward, tracked pace three wide to the stretch and weakened.

SIXTH RACE.

1 Mile. Purse: $15,000. Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Prices $10,000-$9,000. Time 23.42 46.68 1:10.71 1:22.81 1:35.81


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ ½ ¾ Str Fin Jockey $1

3 Buster Douglas 124 3 1 2–1½ 1–hd 1–2 1–4 1–7 Franco 14.20
2 Toothless Wonder 114 2 2 3–½ 3–½ 2–2 2–1½ 2–1¾ Velez 1.30
4 Brimstoned 124 4 4 4–3½ 4–4 3–2½ 3–5 3–7 Blanc 1.90
6 Roaring Rule 124 5 5 5 5 5 4–1 4–2 Talamo 3.10
1 Dr. Bagley 119 1 3 1–hd 2–1½ 4–1½ 5 5 Cedillo 8.50

3 BUSTER DOUGLAS (BRZ) 30.40 9.60 3.60
2 TOOTHLESS WONDER 3.80 2.40
4 BRIMSTONED 2.40

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (5-3)  $121.60
$1 EXACTA (3-2)  $46.70
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (3-2-4-6)  $17.11
$1 TRIFECTA (3-2-4)  $95.30
$2 CONSOLATION DOUBLE (5-7)  $9.80

Winner–Buster Douglas (BRZ) Dbb.h.7 by Yagli out of Built To Last (BRZ), by Knifebox. Bred by Haras Interlagos Ltda. (BRZ). Trainer: Milton G. Pineda. Owner: Lizeth Medina. Mutuel Pool $114,678 Daily Double Pool $12,609 Exacta Pool $54,651 Superfecta Pool $22,579 Trifecta Pool $32,633. Scratched–Bitter Ring Home, Ipray, Tiz Love.

$1 Pick Three (3-5-3) paid $173.80. Pick Three Pool $22,962. $1 Consolation Pick Three (3-5-7) paid $13.70.

BUSTER DOUGLAS (BRZ) forced the early pace outside rival then pulled alongside on the backstretch, shook loose around the last turn, came three wide into the lane and padded margin in final quarter under hand urging and few right handed taps. TOOTHLESS WONDER tracked leaders while outside rival, moved up bit while three wide on the second bend and four wide into the stretch, lost contact with winner in upper stretch but held the place. BRIMSTONED stalked from the inside then two wide, chased between rivals leaving the last bend and was out finished for second. ROARING RULE tossed his start while breaking inward and step slow, reserved early while taken to the rail, later came off the fence and did not threaten. DR. BAGLEY stepped to short lead on initial turn, dueled inside winner into second turn, dropped back around that bend and weakened.

SEVENTH RACE.

1 Mile. Purse: $100,000. ‘King Glorious Stakes’. 2 year olds. Time 22.96 46.00 1:09.91 1:23.07 1:36.28


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ ½ ¾ Str Fin Jockey $1

3 Club Aspen 117 3 2 2–1½ 2–1 2–5 2–6 1–2½ Velez 8.70
2 Tap Back 121 2 3 1–1½ 1–1½ 1–1 1–hd 2–3½ Van Dyke 0.60
6 Papster 117 5 1 5 5 4–hd 3–3½ 3–6 T Baze 2.90
1 Dapper 117 1 4 3–hd 3–hd 5 5 4–5 Franco 11.50
5 Govenor Cinch 117 4 5 4–3 4–4 3–1½ 4–hd 5 Fuentes 7.00

3 CLUB ASPEN 19.40 4.80
2 TAP BACK 2.40
6 PAPSTER

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (3-3)  $174.60
$1 EXACTA (3-2)  $17.10
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (3-2-6-1)  $7.48
$1 TRIFECTA (3-2-6)  $42.40
$2 CONSOLATION DOUBLE (3-4)  $27.40

Winner–Club Aspen Ch.c.2 by Clubhouse Ride out of Aspen Gal, by Talkin Man. Bred by Harris Farms (CA). Trainer: Craig Anthony Lewis. Owner: Lawrence D. Lewis. Mutuel Pool $142,922 Daily Double Pool $17,269 Exacta Pool $80,508 Superfecta Pool $27,436 Trifecta Pool $43,832. Scratched–Rookie Mistake.

$1 Pick Three (5-3-3) paid $470.30. Pick Three Pool $39,820. $1 Consolation Pick Three (5-3-4) paid $53.10. Consolation Pick Three Pool $39,820. $1 Consolation Pick Three (5-7-3) paid $29.50. Consolation Pick Three Pool $39,820. $1 Consolation Pick Three (5-7-4) paid $5.30.

CLUB ASPEN was closest in pursuit from off the rail, continued three wide, moved up under asking on last turn, bid in upper stretch, came in bit through the drive, had rider lost his whip at eighth pole then took command and drew clear approaching the wire. TAP BACK was quickly sent to the front, dictated pace while well off the rail to the second bend, came in bit to the stretch, dug in when challenged in upper stretch but was unable to match winner in final sixteenth. PAPSTER reserved while taken to the rail, raced inside to second turn, came back out leaving that turn and clearly bested others. DAPPER settled inside, content to stalk from along the rail to second turn, dropped back some into the stretch and lacked needed late response. GOVENOR CINCH chased from off the rail, continued on three wide path on the last turn and into the stretch then weakened from between rivals. Three-quarter split was handtimed.

EIGHTH RACE.

1 Mile. Purse: $40,000. Maiden Special Weight. Fillies. 2 year olds. Time 23.21 47.41 1:12.27 1:24.34 1:36.67


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ ½ ¾ Str Fin Jockey $1

4 Paige Anne 122 4 1 1–1 1–1 2–hd 1–hd 1–hd Talamo 3.60
5 Storie Blue 122 5 3 3–hd 4–1 3–1 2–3 2–3½ Van Dyke 1.20
2 She’s So Special 122 2 7 4–1½ 3–½ 4–½ 3–hd 3–1½ Cedillo 4.90
9 Go Big Blue Nation 122 9 5 8–4 5–hd 1–hd 4–3 4–6 Figueroa 16.60
8 I Give Up 122 8 8 5–½ 7–3 7–3 6–½ 5–2 Pereira 10.50
3 Awesome Drive 122 3 6 7–1 6–hd 6–1 7–2 6–¾ Fuentes 20.70
6 Going to Vegas 122 6 2 2–1 2–1 5–2 5–½ 7–nk T Baze 12.20
1 Amalfi Queen 117 1 9 9 9 8–8 8–12 8–24 Diaz, Jr. 14.00
7 Slew’s Screen Star 122 7 4 6–hd 8–3 9 9 9 Flores 54.50

4 PAIGE ANNE 9.20 4.40 3.20
5 STORIE BLUE 3.40 2.40
2 SHE’S SO SPECIAL 3.20

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (3-4)  $92.80
$1 EXACTA (4-5)  $13.10
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (4-5-2-9)  $45.04
$1 TRIFECTA (4-5-2)  $48.10

Winner–Paige Anne B.f.2 by Take Charge Indy out of Forbidden Brew, by Milwaukee Brew. Bred by Richard Peardon (KY). Trainer: Simon Callaghan. Owner: Feghali, Elie, Feghali, Lori R. and Mathiesen, Mark. Mutuel Pool $188,630 Daily Double Pool $25,079 Exacta Pool $89,127 Superfecta Pool $61,644 Trifecta Pool $63,853. Scratched–Sentimental.

$1 Pick Three (3-3-4) paid $695.60. Pick Three Pool $20,162. $1 Consolation Pick Three (3-4-4) paid $51.40.

PAIGE ANNE had good early foot and dictated the pace from the inside, inched away early on second turn, resisted when challenged in upper stretch, battled inside rival and held sway under strong left hand urging. STORIE BLUE stalked from off the rail, moved up and bid three wide and between rivals entering the stretch, battled outside winner through prolonged duel and was denied. SHE’S SO SPECIAL pulled early then stalked from the inside, shifted out on the last turn, came four wide into the stretch and edged away for minor award. GO BIG BLUE NATION chased four then three wide, moved up three deep on the second turn, challenged four wide into the stretch, gained brief lead then weakened in the drive. I GIVE UP between rivals early then chased three or four wide into the stretch and failed to summon needed late response. AWESOME DRIVE settled inside, saved ground into the stretch and also lacked any stretch response. GOING TO VEGAS dueled then forced the pace outside rival, secured the rail on the last turn and weakened from the inside. AMALFI QUEEN came out leaving first turn, raced three then four wide to the stretch and failed to reach contention. SLEW’S SCREEN STAR settled off the rail, chased three wide to the second bend, dropped back around that turn, was eventually eased in late stages and walked off.

NINTH RACE.

5½ Furlongs. Purse: $17,000. Maiden Claiming. Fillies. 2 year olds. Claiming Prices $30,000-$28,000. Time 22.37 46.74 58.94 1:05.45


Pgm Horse Wt PP St ¼ 3/8 Str Fin Jockey $1

9 For My Brother 120 6 1 2–hd 2–hd 1–1½ 1–4 Pereira 8.90
8 Alexis Thunder 122 5 7 7–6 6–2 4–5 2–nk Hernandez 8.20
6 Fierce Kitty 122 4 3 5–½ 4–1½ 3–hd 3–½ Maldonado 1.40
10 Chromes Lil Sis 120 7 2 4–1½ 3–1½ 2–½ 4–3 Payeras 14.60
5 Subtle Ride 117 3 8 8 8 5–2½ 5–10 Velez 7.40
1 Mother Supreme 122 1 5 3–hd 5–½ 6–hd 6–½ Cedillo 2.10
11 Devilish Sunset 122 8 4 6–1 7–2 7–1 7–8 Guce 25.20
4 Gracie’s Girl 120 2 6 1–1½ 1–2½ 8 8 Dominguez 49.60

9 FOR MY BROTHER 19.80 8.20 3.80
8 ALEXIS THUNDER 7.40 3.20
6 FIERCE KITTY 2.60

$2 DAILY DOUBLE (4-9)  $93.60
$1 EXACTA (9-8)  $70.40
10-CENT SUPERFECTA (9-8-6-10)  $104.00
$1 SUPER HIGH FIVE (9-8-6-10-5)  $7,395.30
$1 TRIFECTA (9-8-6)  $226.60

Winner–For My Brother Dbb.f.2 by U S Ranger out of Chalula One, by Bertrando. Bred by Liberty Road Stables (CA). Trainer: Juan Carlos Lopez. Owner: Lopez, Juan Carlos and Hernandez, Luis Jr.. Mutuel Pool $123,056 Daily Double Pool $46,841 Exacta Pool $65,022 Superfecta Pool $52,801 Super High Five Pool $49,926 Trifecta Pool $53,718. Scratched–Aurora Night, Swift Socks, Tiene Tumbao.

$1 Pick Three (3-4-9) paid $398.00. Pick Three Pool $85,424. $1 Pick Four (3-3-4-9) 4 correct paid $7,642.30. Pick Four Pool $330,456. $2 Pick Six (3-5-3-3-4-9) 5 out of 6 paid $6,651.40. Pick Six Pool $94,997.

FOR MY BROTHER three wide early then came in slightly leaving backstretch, stalked inside rival, between rivals passing quarter marker, gained lead in the drive and drew clear under hand urging. ALEXIS THUNDER angled over early, gained the rail, shifted back out into the stretch then came back in through the drive and was along late for second. FIERCE KITTY settled between foes, swung four wide leaving the turn, rallied from the far outside and was up for third. CHROMES LIL SIS three wide early then stalked outside winner around the turn, continued on same path but weakened in the drive. SUBTLE RIDE hesitated then hit side of gate in a slow start, dropped far back early, hugged the rail into the stretch and improved placing. MOTHER SUPREME bumped at the start, close up early inside, steadied nearing three-eighths marker, dropped back and never recovered. DEVILISH SUNSET five wide into the turn, chased four wide around the bend, came in some in upper stretch and weakened. GRACIE’S GIRL broke in and bumped rival, quickly recovered and sped to the front, was overtaken passing quarter marker and gave way inside.