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Katie Hill’s meteoric congressional career is coming to an abrupt end. The freshman Democrat from Santa Clarita announced Sunday she would resign amid publication of nude photos of her and allegations that she had romantic relationships with congressional and campaign subordinates.

She has acknowledged having a relationship with a campaign staffer but denies having had one with a congressional aide. In a video statement Monday, she blamed her estranged husband and a campaign by “the right-wing media and Republican opponents” for the allegations against her.

Her fall comes less than a year after she was elected to Congress in a district long held by the GOP, and now Republicans see a chance to win back the seat.

Here is what you need to know:

Who is Katie Hill?

Hill, 32, a rising star in the Democratic Party and a protege of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, was one of the highest-profile freshmen elected during the 2018 midterm wave, which gave Democrats control of the House of Representatives.

Hill flipped a Republican seat on the northern edges of Los Angeles, defeating two-term incumbent Steve Knight with much help from volunteers who flooded to support her campaign and from rising progressive entities including Swing Left and Crooked Media. Her supporters included actress Kristen Bell.

Before running, Hill was one of the top executives at PATH, a Los Angeles nonprofit that supports the homeless.

How did the controversy start?

On Oct. 10, the conservative website RedState published a story with comments from Hill’s husband, Kenneth Heslep, who filed for divorce this year, alleging his wife was having a romantic affair with her congressional legislative director, Graham Kelly. Hill has denied that allegation.

But the scandal didn’t truly blow up on social media until RedState published a follow-up story on Oct. 18 alleging that Hill, who is bisexual, and her husband had a three-way relationship with a campaign staffer, who was not identified. RedState published photos it had been given of Hill with the female staffer and said it had more “intimate photographs of the women, which we have chosen not to publish.” RedState alleged that the existence of the photos could put Hill at risk of blackmail. The British tabloid the Daily Mail also published sensitive photos of Hill.

What are the rules?

New House ethics rules, adopted last year, forbid members from having sexual relationships with their staff. House investigators have also previously found that inappropriate sexual advances on campaign staff constitute a violation of House ethics rules, noting that “service as an elected official involves power imbalances that members must be careful not to exploit.” The House Ethics Committee said last week that Hill was under investigation.

In the workplace, relationships between supervisors and subordinates are generally strongly discouraged, often because they raise questions about the subordinate’s ability to consent and because they can create actual or apparent conflicts of interest if the employee receives other professional favors or unusual treatment.

Those principles were highlighted in divorce records reviewed by The Times, in which Heslep said that Hill had used her influence to get him jobs at PATH between 2011 until 2014. At one point, Hill’s “employer was concerned about nepotism and how it looked that she was my boss,” Heslep said in the filing.

Heslep later rose to a regional management position and implied that his position was the result of favoritism by Hill. “I only have a high school diploma but I was able to get this job primarily because of [Hill’s] influence,” Heslep wrote in his divorce filing. “I did not have any special qualifications for these jobs.”

Heather Wilson, a spokeswoman for PATH, said in a statement: “We have a conflict of interest policy that covers employees and their family members. Every potential employee is fully vetted for adherence in accordance with all of our policies before they are hired. There was no direct supervisory relationship between Hill and Kenny Heslep during the time periods they were employed at PATH.”

Heslep, who said he has been an unemployed stay-at-home husband since 2014, is seeking spousal support from Hill.

How did Hill respond?

Hill has acknowledged having had a relationship with the campaign staffer, but she has denied having a relationship with Kelly, calling the allegation “absolutely false.”

“I am saddened that the deeply personal matter of my divorce has been brought into public view and the vindictive claims of my ex have now involved the lives and reputations of unrelated parties,” Hill said in a statement last week.

Hill also said the explicit photographs of her with the campaign staffer had been “published by Republican operatives on the internet without my consent,” and she contacted U.S. Capitol Police.

On Sunday, Hill resigned, saying in a statement “this is what needs to happen so that the good people who supported me will no longer be subjected to the pain inflicted by my abusive husband and the brutality of hateful political operatives who seem to happily provide a platform to a monster who is driving a smear campaign built around cyber exploitation.”

Hill added: “Having private photos of personal moments weaponized against me has been an appalling invasion of my privacy. It’s also illegal, and we are currently pursuing all of our available legal options.”

Are the leaked photos illegal?

That’ll be up to prosecutors and the courts, if they get involved. Both California and Washington, D.C., have laws forbidding the malicious sharing of explicit images of someone without the person’s consent.

Washington’s statute forbids both the sharing and publication of explicit private images when the disclosure is nonconsensual and meant to inflict harm, but it includes an exclusion for when “the disclosure or publication of a sexual image is made in the public interest, including the reporting of unlawful conduct,” which would be a likely 1st Amendment defense for RedState.

California’s statute forbids the sharing of such images when “the person distributing the image knows or should know that distribution of the image will cause serious emotional distress, and the person depicted suffers that distress.” The state exempts distribution “made in the course of reporting an unlawful activity.”

What about Hill’s seat?

A Democratic California assemblywoman, Christy Smith, has already announced plans to run to replace Hill in California’s 25th Congressional District.

Latino Victory, an advocacy group, said in a tweet that “we look forward to recruiting and supporting a strong Latino Democrat to run & once again win this seat in 2020.”

Several Republicans already had filed to challenge Hill. Knight, whom Hill beat by 9 percentage points in 2018, is considering a run and is expected to make an announcement soon.

Former Trump advisor George Papadopoulos hinted on Twitter that he was interested in running, writing: “Someone has to step up. I love my state too much to see it run down by candidates like Hill. All talk, no action, and a bunch of sell outs.”

Papadopoulos was sentenced to prison last year for lying to federal agents about his interactions with Russian intermediaries during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Times staff writer Seema Mehta contributed to this report.


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The wildfires engulfing California this month have burned some of the same areas where other major fires have destroyed thousands of homes in recent years.

But while Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers have announced plans that could rein in Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and other utilities since this year’s blazes began, no one has formally proposed robust limits on home building in areas at risk of wildfire.

On Sunday, residents of Coffey Park, a neighborhood in Santa Rosa that was leveled in the Tubbs fire in 2017, received evacuation orders over the Kincade fire, which is currently ripping through Sonoma County. The community has yet to see damage from the new blaze, but some areas burned by the Kincade fire overlap with those affected two years ago — and fire officials fear the flames could grow when Diablo winds return to Northern California later this week.

Many homes have only just been rebuilt in Coffey Park. But the burnt trees that surround them serve as constant reminders of the Tubbs fire.

In June, the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies released a poll that showed that three-quarters of California voters believe the state should restrain home building in areas at high risk of wildfires. The poll, prepared for The Times, revealed bipartisan support for such restrictions after deadly fires wiped out tens of thousands of homes across the state in the last two years.

“The voters think there should be limits,” said Mark DiCamillo, director of the Berkeley IGS Poll.

The Times is offering fire coverage for free today. Please consider a subscription to support our journalism.

The survey revealed broad backing across party lines, demographic groups and all regions in California for restricting growth in wildfire zones. Nearly 85% of Democrats support doing so compared with 57% of Republicans and 72% of independent voters.

At least 66% of respondents in every region backed the idea, including the non-Bay Area northern section of the state. That includes the area surrounding Paradise, which was almost entirely destroyed in last fall’s Camp fire and where many homeowners have said they hope to rebuild and in many cases are doing so.

Overall, 37% of voters surveyed said they supported strongly limiting new home building in wildfire areas, with an additional 38% saying they somewhat supported the idea.

Despite voters’ willingness to restrict growth in wildfire areas, Newsom and lawmakers have not discussed the idea comprehensively, alongside other options to prevent destructive infernos. State leaders have instead focused their discussions on utility companies’ financial responsibility for the blazes, how to pay for damages from wildfires and cutting back vegetation and other ways to manage the state’s forests. One bill that would have added extra restrictions on cities and counties’ ability to approve housing in high-risk zones was held in a legislative committee earlier this year.

Last year Ken Pimlott, the recently retired head of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said that government should consider stopping home building in threatened communities because of the substantial loss of property and lives.

But in an interview with the Associated Press this spring, Newsom rejected it.

“There’s something that is truly Californian about the wilderness and the wild and pioneering spirit,” Newsom said. “I’m not advocating for” no building.

Stanford University’s Michael Wara, who recently served on a state wildfire commission, said the scale of recent fires is influencing how Californians think about development, even those whose property is safe.

“They wake up and go outside and they can’t breathe and there’s ash on their car,” said Wara, who directs the school’s climate and energy policy program. “It’s not something you read about in the newspaper. It’s something you experience.”

But Wara said any decision to limit growth in fire zones remains politically difficult. People who own land or might want to build in those areas strongly prefer to maintain the status quo.

“This is an issue where there’s concentrated very powerful interests that have a lot to lose by changing the rules,” he said.

It’s also possible that voters might support the idea for limiting growth but not the details of what a plan might look like, said DiCamillo, the pollster. A recent Cal Fire report said 1 in 4 Californians live in areas considered at high risk for wildfires, including in suburban Southern California and the Bay Area.

People who live in parts of Marin County may not realize they reside in one of these zones when answering that question, he said. “They’re probably thinking about all these rural areas.”

The online survey of 4,435 California voters took place June 4 to 10 and had an overall margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.5%.


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BEIRUT — 

The locals knew him as Abu Mohammed Salama, an animal feed wholesaler who lived in a compound on the edge of Syria’s border with Turkey, on the outskirts of a town called Barisha. Salama was friendly enough, residents said Monday, but mostly kept to himself.

So they were surprised to learn about his secret life as the commander of an extremist group affiliated with Al Qaeda — and even more surprised to learn that he had been harboring a rival extremist, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, the founder of Islamic State.

“Who would come here — to a village with nothing?” asked Ayman Abdul Ghani, a 33-year-old medical activist working with Barisha’s local council. “Let’s be logical.”

Baghdadi died last weekend during a raid by U.S. forces on the compound in Barisha, according to President Trump and other U.S. officials. Trapped in a tunnel on the property, Baghdadi blew himself up, killing three children in the process. Salama, which was believed to have been a pseudonym for Abu Mohammed Halabi, the leader of the extremist group Guardians of the Religion, was also cut down in the raid, residents say, and his body was taken away by the special operatives.

In the aftermath of the raid, questions remain about how Baghdadi came to the squat compound, where Salama had lived with his eight children for three years.

Barisha, about 30 miles west of the city of Aleppo and a few miles south of the border with Turkey, had largely escaped the punishing air campaign waged by Syrian and Russian warplanes over northern Syria in recent years, mostly because it was so unimportant.

That quiet was punctured just before 11 p.m. Saturday, when helicopters swarmed over Salama’s house. Rapid cracks of machine-gun fire and tracer rounds flared in the sky.

“There was just shooting everywhere. We heard someone on the ground shooting at the helicopters, then they responded. We just started panicking,” said Alaa, a 33-year-old worker with the local council who gave only his first name for fear of reprisals.

Though Alaa’s house was more than 400 yards away, when he went to his window to see what was happening, a bullet pierced the thick frosted glass, smacked into a picture hanging on the wall and sent a shower of shards on his children.

“We didn’t even dare turn on our lights to see what was happening,” said Alaa.

Later, a shepherd living in a tent next to Salama’s house (he too had only exchanged greetings with Salama) brought eight children, all younger than 10, to Alaa’s neighborhood, Alaa said. The shepherd said that they had been handed to him by the operatives storming the compound and that he was to take care of them.

The children, Alaa said, were now with the authorities who control surrounding Idlib province, which is the last part of Syria still held by forces opposed to Syrian President Bashar Assad. Syria has been torn by civil war since 2011, although Assad, with Russian and Iranian help, is now back in control of most of the country.

The same opposition forces had also been fighting against Islamic State, adding to the mystery of how Baghdadi wound up in Salama’s house in Barisha.

Before the civil war, the village had been virtually abandoned, Abdul Ghani said in a phone interview. Most people left to find work elsewhere in the country, he said. Those who did stay worked in the sparse olive groves, or the small wheat fields near ancient Roman ruins. It was the civil war that brought many of its original inhabitants back, swelling the village’s population from less than 1,000 before the war to 12,000.

About 4,000 of Syria’s displaced had also settled in Barisha, many of them poor people unable to afford living elsewhere or who wanted to be near the Turkish border.

Salama was thought to have come as one of those internally displaced, Alaa said.

“He came almost three years ago, bought a house that was still under construction, finished it and put a fence around it,” he added. Salama also enrolled his children in the school, and seemed to have no qualms about being seen, though he rarely had visitors, except to hook up internet service or refill his water tanks.

Though services were few, said Abdul Qader Abdul Ghafour, the top civilian administrator in Barisha, the area was controlled by a onetime Al Qaeda affiliate known as the Committee for the Liberation of Syria and was thought to be secure. Although Baghdadi had once been an Al Qaeda member, he broke away from the group when he formed Islamic State and the two groups had become sworn enemies.

“If we had known this person was here, of course we would have captured him,” Abdul Ghafour said in an interview Monday.

The hunt for Baghdadi had begun well before Islamic State lost the last of its territory this year. At its zenith, the group controlled an area roughly the size of Britain, with anywhere from eight to 12 million people under its rule.

As Islamic State was squeezed between rival U.S.-led and Russian-supported campaigns, teams of special operatives and spies roamed the group’s onetime bastions to track down Baghdadi. Reports would breathlessly declare he was killed in an airstrike or wounded and dying, but there was never confirmation.

After the U.S.-led coalition declared victory over the group this year, there was no sign of him, save for a few audio and video recordings in which he vowed Islamic State would still fight.

To reach Barisha, Baghdadi would have had to traverse hundreds of miles, through desolate deserts as well as urban centers and major highways, from the group’s stronghold in the northeast. If he had gone through Syria, he would have had to navigate a Swiss-cheese landscape of influence and control by groups of different loyalties, including the Syrian government and its allies, as well as opposition and Islamist factions.

A senior U.S. State Department official described Idlib province as a chaotic mishmash of competing groups. “It is as messy a mix as you have in northeast Syria,” the official said.

It was also possible Baghdadi wanted to remain near the Turkish border. In the early days of Islamic State’s formation, that border had been the conduit for the tens of thousands of fighters who came from 100 countries to join its ranks.

Turkey, amid increasing pressure from the U.S. and a growing Islamic State threat in its own territory, finally sealed the border. Yet many militants were thought to have escaped to Turkey during Islamic State’s slow demise.

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Baghdadi could also have blended in with the many Iraqi families, refugees who fled either with or from Islamic State into Syria. Many of them now live in camps in the steppes of the country’s north. Idlib province, commentators say, is infiltrated by Islamic State sleeper cells more than willing to hide their caliph.

Some say Salama was part of such a cell. Whatever his loyalties were, opposition activists reported that Salama was more than a wholesaler. Barisha residents were trying to reconcile that with the friendly man they knew.

“He was like any other refugee,” Alaa said.

Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Qamishli, Syria, contributed to this report.


WASHINGTON — 

A president who got booed at the World Series has learned one of Washington’s oldest lessons: Want a friend, get a dog.

President Trump, who revealed an astonishing measure of detail Sunday about the special forces operation in which Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi was killed, gave the public another detail about the raid on Monday — a photo of the Belgian Malinois that was injured during the firefight.

Trump tweeted a picture of the dog after a number of reporters had inquired about it and praised it for having done “such a GREAT JOB.” Its name remains classified, however.

Gen. Mark Milley, the Joint Chiefs chairman, told reporters at the Pentagon several hours before Trump tweeted that the military was intent on protecting the dog’s identity.

“The dog is still in theater,” Milley explained.

Trump, during his 48-minute appearance in the White House Diplomatic Room on Sunday, told reporters that U.S. forces suffered no casualties or injuries in the raid on Baghdadi’s complex in northwest Syria, but disclosed that the dog was injured.

“Our K-9, as they call — I call it a dog, a beautiful dog, a talented dog — was injured and brought back. But we had no soldier injured,” he said.


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WASHINGTON — 

President Trump celebrated the death of Abu Bakr Baghdadi as he has other major events of his presidency — with grievances, partisan jabs and confounding statements and tweets.

Even Democrats acknowledged that a president battling an impeachment probe and bipartisan criticism for pulling U.S. troops out of northern Syria got a much-needed win that could help his 2020 reelection campaign.

“Unfortunately, it’s very good for Trump because it kind of credentials him at a time when his profile on foreign policy and national security has taken a major hit,” said Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster who is advising former Vice President Joe Biden’s presidential campaign.

Yet a win for Trump never comes without complications. Trump’s vivid description on Sunday of Baghdadi “whimpering and crying and screaming” was undermined Monday when Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff, told a Pentagon news conference that he could not confirm those details and did not “know the source” of Trump’s information.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper had already thrown cold water on Trump’s account on Sunday, declining to confirm it in a televised interview.

Trump said he might release some video of the Special Forces raid that led the elusive leader of Islamic State to blow up a suicide vest in a tunnel rather than surrender. The Pentagon had aerial surveillance of the site, but it’s not known if U.S. forces wore body cameras that offered additional video.

Trump also tweeted a photo of the military K-9 dog that the White House said had chased Baghdadi into the tunnel. The Pentagon refused to release the dog’s name, saying it was classified because the animal was still on duty in the war zone.

Trump appeared undaunted by criticisms of his rhetoric — or of the loud boos and chants to “Lock him up!” that he received while attending the World Series game Sunday night in Washington — boasting that Baghdadi was “dead as a doornail” and attacking his predecessors in the White House.

“He should have been killed years ago,” Trump told a conference of police chiefs in Chicago. “Another president should’ve gotten him.”

Trump’s campaign sent text messages and emails to supporters that took a similar tone — mixing cheers for the the accomplishment with longstanding complaints that Trump is under unfair attack from the media.

Politicians often use current events to raise money or build supporter networks. But Trump broke with tradition by quickly slamming his political opponents, a tactic more likely to please ardent supporters than win converts.

“This is something that a president can use to unify people and build support for his national security agenda, but it’s generally done in somewhat of a subdued way,” said Ryan Williams, a Republican consultant.

Williams, an aide on Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign, recalled that President Obama delivered a solemn address in May 2011 after a CIA-led team covertly entered Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden.

Though Trump is eager to claim credit for the Baghdadi mission, he refused to give Obama credit for taking out Bin Laden, the mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks.

“Stop congratulating Obama for killing Bin Laden. The Navy Seals killed Bin Laden,” he tweeted during a 2012 presidential debate after Romney gave Obama kudos.

In a statement Monday, Biden called the Baghdadi mission a “win for American national security” and praised Trump for giving it the go-ahead.

“But as more details of the raid emerge, it’s clear that this victory was not due to Donald Trump’s leadership,” Biden said. “It happened despite his ineptitude as commander in chief.”

A senior State Department official said the Pentagon had accelerated the mission because of the “chaotic situation” that followed Trump’s abrupt decision this month to withdraw U.S. troops from northern Syria, abandoning U.S.-backed Kurds in the area.

The political impact of the Baghdadi raid could shift over time.

Democrats cited Bin Laden’s death frequently during the 2012 campaign, claiming “Bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive” to highlight Obama’s top foreign and domestic accomplishments, including rescuing the automobile industry after the 2008 recession.

Polls showed Obama got a bounce in his approval ratings, but it disappeared in a few months.

Charlie Cook, editor of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, predicted a similar outcome for Trump, arguing that his core support seldom shifts, for good news or bad.

“If 4.2 percent GDP growth in the 2nd quarter of 2017 and 50-year lows in unemployment don’t help him much, this probably won’t,” he said in an email.

Yet Lake, the Biden pollster, argued that Obama was helped in the long run — and Trump may be as well — even if polls don’t reflect a clear bump.

For Obama, the Bin Laden raid helped assuage doubts among conservative and male voters who tend to view African American, female and Democratic candidates less favorably on foreign policy and defense, she said.

For Trump, the Baghdadi mission could prevent defections from independent voters concerned about his lackluster foreign policy record, including his battles with European allies, his failures to nail down accords with China and North Korea and his abandonment of U.S. military allies in Syria.

Trump now has a response to those criticisms.

“To me, it’s more of an influence and with the whole building block of things rather than a direct hit,” Lake said. “And those building blocks are rearranged here.”

Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson contributed to this report.


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SOUTHERN SECTION GIRLS’ VOLLEYBALL

DIVISION 8

Second round, Monday

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Santa Clarita Christian d. Coastal Christian, 25-9, 22-25, 26-24, 25-23

DIVISION 9

Second round, Monday

Temecula Prep d. Academy for Careers & Exploration, 25-19, 25-16, 22-25, 25-23

Redlands Adventist d. La Verne Lutheran, 11-25, 25-19, 25-14, 20-25, 15-10

Mesa Grande d. Shandon 25-23, 25-7, 25-10


When Clippers second-year guard Landry Shamet is making shots from long range like he was during the first quarter against the Charlotte Hornets on Monday night, he is a big-time threat for his team.

When Shamet is on the court and not making shots from deep, he remains a big-time threat because he is such a lethal shooter.

And that was how it played out for Shamet at Staples Center, as his 14 first-quarter points and presence as a shooting threat thereafter helped the Clippers pick up a 111-96 victory.

He finished the game with 16points, all coming in the first half.

“The ball was going in, and you’re playing and you’re just kind of not thinking,” Shamet said. “I try not to think regardless if things are going well or not going well, whatever it is. I try to play the same game. Shots fell, and I just tried to continue to play my game defensively and offensively just try to keep playing.”

Shamet came off a screen twice early in the game, curling toward the basketball, both times knocking down three-pointers.

Shamet hit his third and fourth three-pointers in the first quarter without a miss, giving him 12 points.

The guard then executed a backdoor cut for a reverse layup. That gave Shamet 14 points on five-for-five shooting.

Shamet missed his sixth shot attempt late in the first quarter, ending his perfect start.

“It’s good for everybody when he’s making shots and he is on the floor,” Clippers reserve Lou Williams said after scoring 23points.
“I think it just shows. It makes everything smoother. He spaces the floor. You can’t really help off him on the floor, so it was good for him to knock down shots early on to get us going.”

Shamet missed all four of his shot attempts in the second half, including all three of his three-point tries.

1/13

Clippers guard Lou Williams, left, drives past Charlotte Hornets guard Terry Rozier during the second half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

2/13

Clippers center Ivica Zubac, right, blocks a shot by Charlotte Hornets guard Dwayne Bacon during the second half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

3/13

Clippers center Ivica Zubac, right, and forward Kawhi Leonard team up to block a shot by Charlotte Hornets guard Dwayne Bacon during the first half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

4/13

Clippers guard Lou Williams, left, smiles as he leaves the court after scoring 29 points against the Hornets. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

5/13

Charlotte Hornets forward Miles Bridges, top, blocks the dunk attempt by Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

6/13

Clippers forward Montrezl Harrell sits and dribbles as courtside fans arrive before a game against the Charlotte Hornets on Oct. 28, 2019. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

7/13

The Clippers and the Charlotte Hornets listen to the national anthem before playing at Staples Center on Oct. 28, 2019. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

8/13

Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard, left, tries to wrestle the ball away from Charlotte Hornets forward PJ Washington during the first half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

9/13

Charlotte Hornets forward Miles Bridges, top, blocks a dunk attempt by Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

10/13

Clippers center Ivica Zubac blocks a shot by Charlotte Hornets forward Miles Bridges during the second half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

11/13

Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard, left, passes behind Hornets defenders Cody Zeller and Miles Bridges during the first half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

12/13

Clippers guard Landry Shamet, left, drives past Charlotte Hornets guard Devonte’ Graham during the first half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

13/13

Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard scoops a shot past Charlotte Hornets forward PJ Washington during the second half. 

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

But he still finished the game six for 12 from the field and four for nine from three-point range.

He also grabbed four rebounds, dished two assists and was a plus-18.

And whether he was scoring or not, Shamet was a threat the Hornets had to keep an eye on for the entire game.

“I take pride in that offensively, knowing that even if I’m not getting shots, I’m going to do my job and space the floor,” Shamet said. “There were a couple of times after the shots I made I threw it to Trez [Montrezl Harrell]. I didn’t have to cut or anything to get out of there. I just stayed there because I knew my guy wasn’t going to help because if he does, I’m going to dot [make shots] on him. It helps the spacing for sure, and I take pride in that doing my job even if I’m not scoring.


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Racing! Breeders’ Cup draw

October 29, 2019 | News | No Comments

Hello, my name is John Cherwa and welcome back to our horse racing newsletter as we bring you this special edition.

First off, let me direct you to our leadoff coverage both on the web and in print in the Los Angeles Times. It may sound a little in the weeds, but it’s real important. We thought we’d hit you with a little science with a potentially foreboding future. The story is about a class of drugs call bisphosphonates, which are supposed to help horses but may be doing them harm, especially younger horses. You can read it here.

Jeff Siegel’s Breeders’ Cup analysis

Jeff Siegel of XBTV is back with his latest installment of his Breeders’ Cup reviews. Here, he and Millie Ball look at who looks good, and who doesn’t. Just click here.

In this one he reviews Elate’s prospects in the Classic and other horses that worked on Sunday. Just click here.

Here’s a report on some of the horses that worked out on Saturday, which included Shancelot and Eddie Haskell. Just click here.

If you missed his first video, a look at some of the horses making their final works on Friday. Just click here.

Breeders’ Cup draw

We’re going to split this up into two days. Here’s the lineup for Friday.

Friday races

$1 million Juvenile Turf Sprint (2-year-olds, 5 furlongs on turf).

1. Chimney Rock, (trainer) Michael J. Maker, (jockey) Jose Ortiz, (odds) 10-1

2. Band Practice (IRE), Archie Watson, Jamie Spencer, 12-1

3. Another Miracle, Gary Contessa, Manuel Franco, 15-1

4. Dream Shot (IRE), James Tate, Christopher Hays, 15-1

5. Encoder, John Sadler, Flavien Prat, 15-1

6. Alligator Alley (GB), Joseph O’Brien, Wayne Lordan, 12-1

7. Kimari, Wesley Ward, John Velazquez, 7-2

8. Dr Simpson (FR), Tom Dascombe, Richard Kingscote, 15-1

9. Four Wheel Drive, Wesley Ward, Irad Ortiz, Jr., 10-1

10. A’Ali (IRE), Simon Crisford, Frankie Dettori, 6-1

11. King Neptune, Aidan O’Brien, Ryan Moore, 15-1

12. Cambria, Wesley Ward, Tyler Gaffalione, 12-1

$1 million Juvenile Turf (2 year-olds colts and geldings, one mile on turf)

1. Our Country, George Weaver, John Velasquez, 15-1

2. Structor, Chad Brown, Jose Ortiz, 5-1

3. Peace Achieved, Mark Casse, Miguel Mena, 10-1

4. Decorated Invader, Christophe Clement, Irad Ortiz, Jr., 4-1

5. Vitalogy, Brendan Walsh, Javier Castellano, 10-1

6. Graceful Kitten, Amador Merei Sanchez, Hector Berrios, 15-1

7. Andesite, Brad Cox, Joel Rosario, 12-1

8. Billy Batts, Peter Miller, Paco Lopez, 20-1

9. Gear Jockey, George R. Arnold II, Tyler Gaffalione, 20-1

10. War Beast, Doug O’Neill, Abel Cedillo, 20-1

11. Proven Strategies, Mark Casse, Edgar Zayas, 30-1

12. Arizona, Aidan O’Brien, Ryan Moore, 5-2

13. Fort Myers, Aidan O’Brien, Wayne Cordan, 12-1

14. Hit the Road, Dan Blacker, Flavien Prat, 12-1

$2 million Juvenile Fillies (fillies 2-years-old, 1 1/16 miles)

1. Donna Veloce, Simon Callaghan, Flavien Prat, 3-1

2. Two Sixty, Mark Casse, Edgae Zayas, 15-1

3. Perfect Alibi, Mark Casse, Irad Ortiz, Jr., 10-1

4. British Idiom, Brad Cox, Jose Castellano, 7-2

5. Lazy Daisy, Doug O’Neill, Rafael Bejarano, 12-1

6. Bast, Bob Baffert, John Velazquez, 7-2

7. Wicked Whisper, Steven Asmussen, Joel Rosario, 7-2

8. K P Dreamin, Jeff Mullins, Ruben Fuentes, 20-1

9. Comical, Doug O’Neill, Abel Cedillo, 8-1

$1 million Juvenile Fillies Turf (fillies 2-years-old, one mile on turf)

1. Living In The Past (IRE), Karl Burke, Daniel Tudhope, 15-1

2. Croughavouke (IRE) (16), Jeff Mullins, Flavien Prat, 20-1.]

3. Shadn (IRE), Andrew Balding, Jamie Spencer, 10-1

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4. Abscond, Eddie Kenneally, Irad Ortiz, Jr., 15-2

5. Daahyeh (GB), Roger Varian, William Buick, 5-1

6. Unforgetable, Joseph O’Brien, Wayne Lordan, 20-1

7. Crystalle, John Kimmel, Joel Rosario, 8-1

8. Tango (IRE), Aidan P. Brien Williams, Ryan Moore 20-1

9. Albigna (IRE), Mrs. John Harrington, Shane Foley, 9-2

10. Fair Maiden, Eoin , Harty, Drayden Van Dyke, 12-1

11. Sharing, H. Graham Motion, Manuel Franco, 12-1

12. Sweet Melania, Todd A. Pletcher, Jose Ortiz, 5-1.

13. Selflessly, Chad C. Brown

14. Etoile, Aidan P. Brien, Abscond, Jose Irad Ortiz. Family

$2 million Juvenile (colts and geldings 2-years-old, 1 1/16 miles)

1. Dennis’ Moment, Aidan O’Brien, Irad Ortiz, Jr., 8-5

2. Wrecking Crew, Peter Miller, Paco Lopez, 20-1

3. Shoplifted, Steve Asmussen, Ricardo Santana, Jr., 20-1

4. Storm the Court, Peter Eurton, Flavien Prat, 20-1

5. Scabbard, Eddie Kenneally, Mike Smith, 8-1

6. Eight Rings, Bob Baffert, John Velazquez, 2-1

7. Anneau d’Or, Blaine Wright, Juan Hernandez, 15-1

8. Full Flat, Aidan O’Brien, Yu Take, 300-1

9. Maxfield, Brendan Walsh, Jose Ortiz, 3-1

Breeders’ Cup notes

One of the best things for those of us who cover this sport’s big events is there is a tireless notes team that is on the backstretch very early to get us daily updates and bits of information that wouldn’t rise to a full story. So, with complete credit to the Breeders’ Cup notes team, here’s an edited version of some of the things they gathered on Monday.

Classic

Code of Honor – The 3-year-old chestnut colt left Belmont Park on schedule Monday morning for cross-continent flight to Santa Anita, trainer Shug McGaughey said.

Elate/Yoshida – Assistant trainer Riley Mott reported “all good” with their Classic duo one day after the two Bill Mott trainees put in their final serious works. Yoshida, exercise rider Juan Quintero, worked four furlongs in 50 flat on Sunday. Elate walked the shedrow following her three furlong 36 4/5. The two, along with stablemate and Turf contender Channel Maker, are all slated to return to galloping Tuesday.

Higher Power – The Pacific Classic winner turned in an easy jog under exercise rider David Pineda two days after working six furlongs in 1:12 3/5 for trainer John Sadler.

Math Wizard – The Pennsylvania Derby winner returned to the track at Gulfstream Park Monday morning, two days after breezing five furlongs in 1:01.32 over a muddy track and the day before he is scheduled to ship to Santa Anita. “He going to leave the barn at 6 a.m., his plane leaves at about 8 a.m., and he’s supposed to arrive in California at about 5:35 California time. He’s probably not going to get to the barn until like 7:40,” said trainer Saffie Joseph Jr., who is booked to arrive by plane midmorning Tuesday.

McKinzie – Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert was upbeat Monday morning after watching the colt turn in a bullet five furlong work of 1:00.20. Baffert was in radio contact with rider, J.C. Avila, and congratulated him minutes later as he brought McKinzie back down the stretch back to the barn. “I had him in :48 3/5 [for the half], out in a minute and out (six furlongs) 1:14 and then I slowed him down. It was nice, nice and smooth. He got into a nice rhythm. It was just enough. I wanted to give him something light. He’s had two pretty stiff works. It was just perfect and he handled it well. He should come out running.”

Mongolian Groom – While Mongolian Groom came out of Sunday’s five furlong work in fine shape, trainer Enebish Ganbat said Monday that he was not pleased with the time under exercise rider Jesse Cardenas. “I was unhappy with it because the saddle moved back,” Ganbat said. “So, he went very slowly, 1:02.” Mongolian Groom walked Monday morning and will return to the track Tuesday to jog.

Owendale Owendale trained Monday morning at trainer Brad Cox’s Churchill base and is scheduled to fly to Santa Anita on Tuesday with a large contingent of Kentucky horses, including four stablemates.

Seeking the Soul – The colt has remained in California since finishing fourth in the Awesome Again Stakes on Sept. 28. He made a strong appearance Monday morning as he galloped, two days after working five furlongs in 1:01 2/5.

Vino Rosso – He was scheduled to arrive at Santa Anita Monday following a flight from New York.

War of Will – He emerged around 6:50 a.m. under Steve Tripp and galloped a mile before heading back through the paddock. “He’s doing great,” Tripp said. “He seems to really be enjoying this weather.” The Preakness Stakes winner has been at Santa Anita Park since mid-October and has turned in two works over the main track.

Distaff

Blue Prize – She had her second routine gallop Monday morning after arriving from her Keeneland base on Saturday. “I will push her a little more tomorrow,” trainer Ignacio Correas IV said as Blue Prize completed her morning activity under exercise rider Hiram Rosario.

La Force – She had a 1 mile gallop under exercise rider Caesar Garcia before daylight on Monday, as she prepares for what is likely to be the final start of her career. The 5-year-old mare is “happy and doing well,” said trainer Paddy Gallagher. “We don’t need to do much with her now leading up to the race,” Gallagher said. “The owners are very excited and looking forward to seeing her run in their first Breeders’ Cup race.”

Midnight Bisou – She put in the final work of her prep on Monday morning under exercise rider Angel Garcia for trainer Steve Asmussen and proceeding to work four furlongs in 50 4/5. “She went a half and all of our works were typical Monday week-of works,” assistant Scott Blasi said. “We’re not trying to impress anybody. We just try to keep her happy and fast and loose. She came back and cooled out nicely and seems to be coming into the race in good shape.”

Mo See Cal – She galloped a mile at San Luis Rey Downs with trainer Peter Miller observing. The California-bred breezed five furlongs in 1:01 1/5 at San Luis Rey on Saturday morning. Miller confirmed she will run in the Distaff instead of the Filly & Mare Sprint.

Ollie’s Candy – Under the guidance of exercise rider Juan Leyva, she jogged on Monday.

Paradise Woods – One day after working five furlongs in 1:00 flat, trainer John Shirreffs said she emerged from the move in good order.

Secret Spice – She stretched her legs Monday with an easy jog around the main oval under exercise rider Sarafin Caramona. “We could have run in either the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint or the Distaff, but feel she’s a little better around two turns,” trainer Richard Baltas said. “However, I think the 1 1/8-mile distance is probably her limit.”

Serengeti Empress – She trained Monday morning at Churchill Downs and is scheduled to ship to Santa Anita Tuesday. “She ships [Tuesday], but I am not sure if I will,” said trainer Tom Amoss who underwent surgery for appendicitis last week in Louisville. “Katy Allen will be traveling with her.”

Street Band One day before boarding her scheduled flight to California, Street Band ran through the fog at her home base at Churchill Downs and worked five furlongs over a fast track in 59 3/5, according to her trainer Larry Jones. “She went very well,” Jones said. “She was nice and relaxed, which allowed [jockey] Sophie [Doyle] to use her watch to time the work. She finished well and cooled out well. I’m tickled with her. This was the exact same work she had last week. She’s ready. She’s right on target.”

Juvenile

Dennis’ Moment – The grin that has been a regular fixture on Tammy Fox’s face of late was as broad as ever Monday morning after the veteran rider took the expected Juvenile favorite through a 1 5/8 mile gallop around the Santa Anita oval. “He goes out there and he just does his thing,” said Fox, longtime partner of trainer Dale Romans. “He looks around at the mountains and he’s checking everything out and he’s kind and fun. I don’t want to say this is my best horse that I’ve been on, but he could be.”

Maxfield – With regular exercise rider Paul Madden arriving Sunday, the colt was reunited with his usual partner for his mile gallop Monday morning. “He looked like he handled the surface good,” trainer Brendan Walsh said. “It’s hard to tell from just galloping but he looks to be moving super. He just has tons of class, and you can’t teach that.”

Final thought

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We’ll be back again tomorrow with another special edition.


Soccer! Catching up on a busy week

October 29, 2019 | News | No Comments

Hello and welcome to another edition of the L.A. Times soccer newsletter. I’m Kevin Baxter, the Times’ soccer writer.

It’s been a busy week, starting last Thursday when LAFC advanced to the MLS Western Conference final with a 5-3 win that ended the Galaxy’s season – and likely ended Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s MLS career.

And a lot of people watched the farewells, with the game drawing a playoff-record audience on ESPN and ESPN Deportes despite starting just before 11 p.m. on the East Coast.

On Saturday, Bayern Munich’s Robert Lewandowski and Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic made history in Europe and then on Monday U.S. Soccer announced that Seattle Reign coach Vlatko Andonovski would become the ninth manager in women’s national team history. He has big shoes to fill since his predecessor, Jill Ellis, was unbeaten in winning back-to-back World Cups.

We’ll start with LAFC, a team that’s a year younger than the Trump presidency but has already set an MLS regular-season record for points and heads into Tuesday’s Western Conference final with the Seattle Sounders – a team it has never lost to — just one step away from an MLS Cup appearance.

“What we accomplished everyone on this club should be proud of,” assistant coach Ante Razov said. “Two years ago they only existed on a piece of paper.”

Now it is playing in a conference final, facing a Seattle team making its 11th consecutive playoff appearance and coming off postseason wins over FC Dallas and Real Salt Lake.

“We’re two games away from getting to where we want to be,” defender Walker Zimmerman said. “At the end of the day everyone is chasing MLS Cup. It’s about the playoffs.

“MLS Cup, that’s our goal. It’s something we’ve been chasing since Day 1.”

As important as Tuesday’s game is though, it won’t match the intensity of the LAFC-Galaxy rivalry, dubbed El Trafico and already one of the most passionate in Southern California sports history.

More than 300 media members were credentialed for the match – so many that LAFC’s press box, already one of the largest in MLS, needed an additional two rows of temporary seating to handle the crush.

The game drew a record 961,000 viewers on ESPN and ESPN Deportes with the ESPN audience of 586,000 marking the network’s largest for an MLS playoff game – excluding MLS Cup – in two decades, according to Soccer America.

The matchup was a compelling one: LAFC (21-4-9) had the best regular season in league history and was hosting a playoff game for the second time in many years. But in five regular-season meetings it had never beaten the Galaxy, its neighbor from 12 miles down the freeway. So when the Galaxy won their playoff opener in Minnesota, setting up a conference semifinal showdown with LAFC, it was as if a gauntlet had been thrown down.

“To a man everybody, after they beat Minnesota, said ‘great we want the Galaxy’,” LAFC coach Bob Bradley said. “It had to be the Galaxy. It’s our time. And I think that showed.”

Despite all that, for the first 55 minutes the game unfolded like many of the previous El Traficos – with Carlos Vela scoring two first-half goals to give LAFC the lead before the Galaxy’s Zlatan Ibrahimovic equaled things 10 minutes into the second half.

In the first five rivalry games, Vela scored seven times – with four of those goals either putting his team in front or expanding the lead. Ibrahimovic had scored eight times, with seven of his scores either tying the game or putting the Galaxy ahead.

This one would play out differently over the final half hour though, with Diego Rossi scoring the go-ahead goal – off an assist from Vela — moments after Adama Diomande, returning from a month in the MLS substance abuse and behavioral health program, came off the bench.

“I was thinking, ‘Now is my moment to come in and change the game’,” Diomande said. “When I come in, I always have that killer instinct in me and I just want to finish the play right off and help the team.”

He did, following Rossi’s score with two of his own to seal the win.

“A fantastic victory. Finally,” Diomande said. “When it matters…a great team effort today from everyone and I’m just happy to be back. It was a more emotional game.”

(Watch the match highlights by clicking here.)

Parting shot?

If last Thursday’s playoff loss does prove to be Ibrahimovic’s last game in MLS, let’s hope the good-bye doesn’t overshadow the hello – nor all the things that happened in between.

After the final whistle sounded at Banc of California Stadium, Ibrahimovic dispensed with the traditional postgame handshakes and quickly headed off the field, grabbing his crotch in an apparent taunt to LAFC supporters as he stepped into the tunnel toward the locker room.

(Watch Zlatan’s exit by clicking here.)

An hour later he engaged in what has become a favorite pastime lately, disparaging the league that paid him a record $7.2 million this season.

“If I stay…for MLS it’s good because the whole world will watch it. If I don’t stay, nobody will remember what MLS is,” he said.

As always, it was impossible to tell how much of that was sincere and how much was over-the-top hype. There’s no doubt Ibrahimovic’s words, as much as his deeds, have been a major boost to MLS in his two seasons here, with the villain-and-hero rivalry he established with the quiet and humble Vela responsible for drawing tens of thousands of those viewers to ESPN to watch the playoff game.

“I made LAFC famous,” he said. “I made even Vela famous. So he should be happy.”

Ibrahimovic’s debut in 2018 was arguably the most memorable in league history with the Swedish superstar coming off the bench to score the tying goal on a 40-yard volley and the game-winner on a header in stoppage time in the first El Trafico. And Ibrahimovic is right when he says that game got the whole world watching MLS.

Those were the first two of 53 goals he would score in MLS. One, a magical goal that came on a spinning kung-fu kick in Toronto last season, was the 500th of his career; among active players only Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have more.

He scored 31 times, including playoffs, this year, third-most on the league’s single-season list. When he set his mind to scoring he was virtually unstoppable, becoming the most dominant striker MLS has ever seen.

But that didn’t come without controversy, which is part of the baggage that comes with Ibrahimovic.

The Galaxy captain was suspended three times during this two seasons in MLS: for slapping Montreal’s Michael Petrasso on the side of head and for skipping the league All-Star game in 2018, then again this year for grabbing New York City goalkeeper Sean Johnson by the throat and wrestling him to the ground.

He narrowly escaped suspensions in two other incidents, once after entering the visitors’ locker room at Dignity Health Sports Park to confront Real Salt Lake defender Nedum Onuoha and for elbowing LAFC defender Mohamed El-Munir, sending the player to the hospital to repair facial fractures.

Ibrahimovic, 38, will see his contract expire at the end of the year and he refused to say whether he’ll be back.

“Could be, could be,” he said. “Let’s see what happens.”

The decision may rest more with the team than the player though. Although Ibrahimovic’s record-setting season helped the team win 16 games for the first time since 2014 and reach the playoffs for the first time since 2016, the Galaxy has now gone a franchise-record five seasons without an appearance in an MLS Cup final and some in the organization believe they would have a better chance at ending that streak without Ibrahimovic.

Coach Guillermo Barros Schelotto would prefer to play the attacking, possession-based 4-3-3 style he used to great success at Boca Juniors but Ibrahimovic doesn’t fit that system. Schelotto would also prefer to spread the ball around rather than have everything go one player even if it is Ibrahimovic, who scored more than half his team’s goals and took more than three times as many shots as any other Galaxy player.

Letting Ibrahimovic go could open things up for Cristian Pavon, the Argentine World Cup winger who had a hand in 12 goals in 13 MLS games. He won’t score 30 goals but he’s more than capable of leading the offense if the Galaxy can find the money to pay him.

The defense – suspect at best and porous at worst – also needs a major makeover after giving up a league-high 195 shots on goal this season and 190 goals over the last three seasons combined. Expect Jorgen Skjelvik to be the first of several players to be shown the door.

The $7.2 million the Galaxy would recoup by letting Ibrahimovic go could a long way toward addressing all those issues.

MLS playoffs

Western Conference semifinals

LAFC 5, Galaxy 3

Seattle 2, Real Salt Lake 0

Eastern Conference semifinals

Atlanta United 2, Philadelphia 0

Toronto FC 2, New York City 1

Conference finals

All times Pacific

Tuesday, Oct. 29

Seattle at LAFC, ESPN, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Oct. 30

Toronto FC at Atlanta United, FS1, 5 p.m.

The cat with the hat (trick)

Remember all that talk about how Christian Pulisic would never get a chance to make his mark in the Premier League and how Chelsea basically threw away the $73 million transfer fee it paid to pry the U.S. national team star away from German club Borussia Dortmund?

Never mind.

Pulisic made his first league start since August a memorable one Saturday, becoming the second American to score an EPL hat trick in a 4-2 win over Burnley.

“It’s incredible,” he said. “I can’t believe it.”

Clint Dempsey is the only other U.S. player to score three times in an EPL game, collecting his hat trick for Fulham against Newcastle in January 2012.

Pulisic’s first two goals came in the first half, one on a left-footed shot from inside the box and the other on a right-footed try that deflected off Burnley defender Ben Mee. He completed the hat trick early in the second half on a header.

The three goals were Pulisic’s first in England’s top division and, at 21, made him the youngest player to record an EPL hat trick in Chelsea history.

“The first few months were definitely hard,” Pulisic told reporters Saturday. “I had a few starts then I fell out a bit and I had to get any minutes I could. I didn’t think it was going to happen right away, being a big success and coming into a big club like this. It takes time. I’m happy with the progress I’ve made so far.”

That may be enough to convince former Chelsea legend Frank Lampard, now the team’s manager, that Pulisic deserves more playing time.

“A lot of talk around Christian [is] for the big price tag,” he said. “He’s quite rightly a star in his country. And captain. I know the backstory and the pressures of a move like that. I also know he played for his country through the summer and had one week break this summer to come back after that.

“Then you get the pressure of ‘can you settle in the Premier League?’ So I’ve tried to deal with it in the way I see best, which is to give him minutes. He fully deserved his start and it was a fantastic match-winning performance.”

Pulisic didn’t need much help scoring the goals but he did have to be reminded to collect his souvenir afterward

“It’s my first professional hat trick, so I nearly forgot the match ball,” he said. “Luckily my teammates helped me out.”

(Watch Pulisic’s magic night by clicking here.)

Pole position

Robert Lewandowski is off to his best start ever, which is saying something since the Polish striker has led the Bundesliga in scoring four times in the last six seasons.

With a goal in Bayern Munich’s win over Union Berlin last Saturday, Lewandowski has 19 scores in 13 games in all competition and at least one goal in all nine league games he’s played in, breaking Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang‘s four-year-old record of eight consecutive goal-scoring games at the start of a season.

But Bayern, the seven-time defending league champion, hasn’t taken full advantage of those heroics, dropping points in four of its those nine league games, leaving it trailing Borussia Monchengladbach in the league table. The team got off to a similar start last season, finding itself fifth in the standings after 12 games.

“I remember the situation after five, six, seven games. Everyone said ‘ah Borussia Dortmund this year will be the champions’,” Lewandowski, speaking of last season, told me during Bayern Munich’s July visit to Los Angeles. “But we know that we are Bayern Munich. We have to keep fighting until the end. And we showed that it doesn’t matter how many problems you had during the season, that we’re still fighting and we’re still winning.”

When the season was over Bayern Munich, with a win on the season’s last day, finished two points up on Dortmund. The gut check was good for Bayern, Lewandowski said.

“If you are the best and you are on the top, you cannot be thinking that everything will be fine, that everything will be easy,” he said. “No. It will be difficult. To be on the top is good. To stay on the top is harder.

“We want to stay on the top. You have to be focused. You have to fight. Not only against our opposing teams but also against us, against our teammates. To be on Bayern Munich, you have to be ready mentally. If you are not, you cannot play on the best team. “

New women’s coach already in a hurry

Vlatko Andonovski hadn’t even finished his introductory news conference as coach of the world champion U.S. women’s team Monday when it became obvious that time was not on his side.

He has until the end of this week to name his first roster for friendlies with Sweden and Costa Rica next month. And then in January he’ll start playing games that count when CONCACAF qualifying for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics gets underway.

“That’s going to be the first thing on the agenda,” he said of qualifying. “We have a very, very experienced team. We have players that have been on the international stage, that have won the big games, big tournaments, so we’re going to rely heavily on them. But that doesn’t mean we’re not going to expand the roster and the player pool.”

Andonovski, 43, takes over for Ellis, who stepped down this summer after leading the U.S. to a second consecutive World Cup title. Ellis coached – and won – more games than any manager in U.S. history, going 106-7-19 in 5 ½ years.

Andonovski is familiar with most of the players in the U.S. player pool having spent seven seasons coaching in the NWSL, five with FC Kansas City and for the last two with the Seattle Reign. He won two leagues titles and was twice named coach of the year.

He was selected for the new position by Kate Markgraf, a two-time Olympic champion and World Cup winner for the U.S. who was named general manager of the women’s national team program in August.

“From the moment I came aboard, the main focus has been on hiring a new coach,” she said. “We identified the qualities we thought were most important for this unique position, we talked to quite a few people in the women’s soccer community domestically and around the world, and in the end, Vlatko was the best fit with his experience with elite players, how he sees the game, how he coaches the game and manages players, and his overall personality and ability to take on a job of this magnitude.”

Andonovski becomes the sixth man to coach the No. 1-ranked women’s national team.

Born in North Macedonia, Andonovski played six seasons in the Macedonian Football League before coming to the U.S. in 2000 to play with the Wichita Wings of the National Professional Soccer League and later with the Kansas City Comets, California Cougars and Philadelphia Kixx of the Major Indoor Soccer League. He was a two-time MISL All-Star.

Quotebook

“This was one step closer. We want more and this team wants to win. The team wants to have the best season in history.”

LAFC captain Carlos Vela after his team’s playoff win over the Galaxy

Podcast

Don’t miss my weekly podcast on the Corner of the Galaxy site as co-host Josh Guesman and I discuss the Galaxy each Monday. You can listen to the most recent podcast by clicking here.

Until next time

Stay tuned for future newsletters. Subscribe here, and I’ll come right to your inbox. Something else you’d like to see? Email me. Or follow me on Twitter: @kbaxter11.


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Move comes in wake of China’s policy change on buying recycled items from US sources

SAN DIEGO — 

San Diego officials say they plan to increase the capacity of the Miramar Landfill by allowing waste to pile up 25 feet higher into the air — a significant policy shift coming less than five years after the city adopted a “zero waste” plan.

Mayor Kevin Faulconer announced in 2015 that the projected life of the city’s main dump had been extended from 2022 to 2030 thanks to new city recycling policies, trash compaction methods and other innovations.

But recently city officials launched an environmental analysis of the potential impacts of increasing the height of the 1,400-acre dump from 485 feet above sea level now to 510 feet above sea level.

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A vertical expansion is the city’s only option. The last possible horizontal expansion of the landfill, into the western portion of the site, took place in 2008.

The vertical expansion could make the dump more visible to residents in Mira Mesa, Scripps Ranch and University City, and to motorists on Interstate 805 and state Route 52, city officials say in their environmental analysis.

The city’s proposal to expand the dump comes in the wake of China’s decision in 2018 to sharply limit the amount of recycled goods it buys from the United States.

That policy has left cities across California and the nation with tons of recycled goods they must sell at much lower prices, or that they can’t sell at all.

San Diego officials have said China’s move is jeopardizing the city’s ability to meet the goals of its zero waste policy, a plan to stop dumping into the landfill by 2040 at the latest.

While San Diego wouldn’t literally recycle 100% of its trash in 2040, no material would be deposited in landfills to the maximum extent feasible.

The plan calls for that to be achieved by encouraging more recycling by residents and businesses, producing less waste citywide and fostering development of new markets for recycled and composted materials.

A city spokesman declined to tie the proposed vertical expansion of the dump to the shrinking market for recycled goods, characterizing the move as part of general strategic planning for the city’s future.

“The city approaches disposal capacity needs from a long-range planning perspective,” said the spokesman, Jose Ysea. “The proposed increase of 25 feet, to a maximum elevation of 510 feet mean sea level, will increase the life of the landfill.”

Nicole Capretz, one the region’s leading environmental experts, said the city’s decision is an abrupt shift in course from the zero-waste stance of just a few years ago.

China’s policy change has a two-fold impact, she said. In addition to leaving the city with tons of recycled goods it’s struggling to sell, the lost revenue will make it much harder to build a planned resource recovery facility at the dump.

That facility, a key component of San Diego’s landmark climate action plan, would boost recycling of food waste, yard waste and other organic waste, said Capretz, executive director of the nonprofit Climate Action Campaign.

“It’s meant to be a more comprehensive, holistic recycling center that would have recycling for things we don’t have now,” said Capretz, the primary author of the city’s climate plan. “You would need those kinds of services to get to zero waste.”

Cities across California have lobbied the state Legislature in recent months to explore steps the state could take to build a local market for recycled goods, helping cities meet their recycling goals without dependence on China.

San Diego officials say the finances of city trash collection may not be viable long-term without some place to sell the recycled material the city collects from nearly 300,000 residential customers.

The city spends about $34 million a year providing free trash pick-up to residents living in single-family homes under a controversial 1919 law called the People’s Ordinance.

Ysea, the city spokesman, said the city’s obligations under that ordinance are playing a role in the decision to pursue a vertical expansion of the dump.

The expansion would require approval from the City Council, water quality regulators, air pollution officials, the state waste board and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, which owns the land and leases it to the city.

Nearby community leaders said this week they were not aware of the proposed expansion.

Chris Nelson, chairman of the University Community Planning Group, said his panel’s goal would be to make sure the city’s plan has the minimal possible impact on nearby areas.

Councilman Chris Cate, whose district includes the dump, said Friday he tentatively supports the city’s plan.

“This is the only city-owned and operated landfill, so anything we can do to extend the life of the landfill needs to be seriously considered,” Cate said.

While he acknowledged concerns about visual impacts and possible increases in odors, he noted that there aren’t any homes adjacent to the dump. It is surrounded by freeways and the military base.

Cate also expressed confidence that any approved vertical expansion of the dump would include mitigation measures to protect residents.

The city has operated the landfill since 1959, when it signed a $500-a-year lease deal with the U.S. government. The north and south sections of the landfill have already been filled, while the western portion remains active.