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Afternoon Briefing: Activist punched by Chicago cop in line for settlement

Afternoon Briefing: Activist punched by Chicago cop in line for settlement

Yahoo10-03-2025
Good afternoon, Chicago.
A protester punched by a Chicago police officer at a heated 2020 demonstration is now in line to get a $280,000 settlement from the city.
Activist Miracle Boyd lost a front tooth at a protest near Grant Park's Christopher Columbus statue when former Officer Nicholas Jovanovich struck her phone, causing it to hit her face, according to a report from the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. Finance Committee aldermen advanced the proposed settlement today, setting it up for a final vote Wednesday.
Here's what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices.
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As Chicago police continue to investigate the death of a woman found last year in the stairwell of a South Loop high-rise, a judge ordered her estranged husband to be extradited to Michigan where a bench warrant was issued in connection to preexisting domestic violence charges he faces there. Read more here.
More top news stories:
Anthony Quezada front-runner for 35th Ward seat as Mayor Brandon Johnson outlines selection process
Photos: Chicago's rally and march for International Women's Day
The 1,122-square-foot pie house, which sits on an oddly shaped, 0.09-acre lot at the corner of Chestnut Street and Hazel Avenue, has drawn national attention — including from 'The Tonight Show's' Jimmy Fallon. Read more here.
More top business stories:
Northwestern dining hall workers go on strike
Today in Chicago History: Target puts Marshall Field's up for sale
Given a chance to continue building around quarterback Caleb Williams, Bears general manager Ryan Poles started the offseason with a focus on the offensive line — and the overhaul of the interior continued when the NFL's negotiating window opened today. Read more here.
More top sports stories:
Cactus League report: White Sox see Miguel Vargas as 'an important piece' — and Cubs' Kyle Tucker finally hits
'A fun experiment': Chicago White Sox get a close look at Automated Ball-Strike System testing at Camelback Ranch
Stefania Marzelia remembers taking her first sip of coffee over 10 years ago at a diner with her paternal grandfather, who she described as a 'huge coffee drinker.' Now, Marzelia, 25, is the founder and owner of Sips, a business she started in October that offers freshly made syrups with minimal ingredients for coffee and other foods. Read more here.
More top Eat. Watch. Do. stories:
Neal Francis celebrates new album like a true Chicagoan — with hot dogs and a free show
Biblioracle: New book on Anne Frank considers both the person and the cultural pawn she's become
In President Donald Trump's idealized framing, the United States was at its zenith in the 1890s, when top hats and shirtwaists were fashionable and typhoid fever often killed more soldiers than combat. Read more here.
More top stories from around the world:
Ontario slaps 25% tax increase on electricity exports to US in response to Trump's trade war
Elon Musk claims X being targeted in 'massive cyberattack' as service goes down
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Sunday's ball-strike calls in Giants game are why robo umps can't get here soon enough
Sunday's ball-strike calls in Giants game are why robo umps can't get here soon enough

San Francisco Chronicle​

timea day ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Sunday's ball-strike calls in Giants game are why robo umps can't get here soon enough

I never thought I'd be the guy crying out for more technology, but enough human error is enough. Sunday afternoon, the San Francisco Giants got fed up with the ball-strike stylings of umpire Chad Whitson, leading to an ejection. Dave Flemming, calling the game on TV for Roku, sounded like he was ready to charge home plate to confront Whitson. The reason why? Whitson was interpreting the strike zone the way Picasso interpreted the human form. Just another day at the ballpark. Inconsistent ball-strike calling is a plague on Major League Baseball, an increasingly glaring defect of the game. Next season will be better, right? The rumble is that MLB will bring in the robo ump, also known as ABS, the Automated Ball-Strike System. Each team will get two challenges per game, appealing to the robot when frustrated by perceived human error. Two? Just two? So they're going to slap a band-aid on a shark bite. Let me tell you what should happen. But first: The Giants did not lose Sunday because of Whitson. According to Umpire Scorecards, 11 of Whitson's 51 called strikes were true balls. The Giants lost by two runs, and that website's analytics say that Whitson's errant eye made a 1.69 run difference. So if Whitson had had a perfect day, the Giants might have lost anyway, because nobody scores by the hundredths of a run in baseball. Still, Whitson was a party pooper. He punched out Rafael Devers on a 3-2 pitch outside the zone. A 3-0 pitch to Matt Chapman was two baseballs outside the zone, but called a strike. 'That was a very generous call,' Flemming fumed. 'What a weird strike zone today.' Same deal next inning, with Brett Wisely at bat. Flemming: 'Very friendly call (in the pitcher's favor), Wisely didn't like that one. Just another example of a strike zone that has been all over the place. When you're seeing the ball well, you see a pitch, you know it's out of the strike zone, yet it's called against you, that's not really that close, it jars you as a hitter.' Apparently it also jars you as a pitcher who isn't pitching. Future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander, on a day off, got tossed by Whitson for protesting from the dugout. Verlander was getting his info off a tablet, which displayed, in delayed time, the umpire's (many) goofs. So a guy sitting in the dugout, and everyone in the park with a cell phone, had access to technology unavailable to the ump. The thing is, Whitson called an OK game, for a human being. In a study conducted by Boston University and published in 2018, data showed that big league umpires blew 14 ball-strike calls per game, or 1.6 per inning. Whitson on Sunday had a 92% accuracy on ball-strike calls (per Umpire Scorecards). If you protest that the coming of the robo ump deprives baseball of a cool human element, tell me you'll smile and embrace it as a colorful part of life when Amazon delivers your package to the correct address 92% of the time. You got someone else's underwear? Makes life more fun! The challenge system next season will be wildly popular with players and fans, although maybe not with umps. To challenge a call, the batter or pitcher simply taps his helmet or cap. Within a few seconds, almost instantly, the verdict is rendered on the ballpark video screen. I believe that MLB will fast-track ABS for next season, because Rob Manfred and the boys have seen that most fans and players embrace positive change. The pitch clock has been a big success. Even though batters no longer have time to re-Velcro their batting-glove straps after every pitch, miraculously, not one single glove has flown off! Surely that's a sign from above. Do you miss the defensive shift? The ghost runner in extra innings isn't universally beloved, but it also hasn't ruined the game. Point is, MLB now knows that the change can be beneficial and widely accepted, if it improves the game. The ABS system has been tried in the minors, to widespread acclaim of players and fans. The problem with the two-challenge system, though, is that it's like ordering popcorn at the movie theater and they give you two popped kernels. Since we know there will be 1.6 blown calls per inning, how about one challenge per inning, per team? This would add, by my amateurish calculations, about 15 minutes to each game. Time well spent. At the very least, give each team a bonus challenge in the ninth inning, and in every extra inning. The BU study found that in that 2018 season, 55 games ended on incorrect calls. The study also found that umps have a dramatic bias toward pitchers on two-strike calls, that umps have blind spots in their strike zones, and that younger umps outperform older and more experienced umps. In short, human umpires are just too damn human. The two-challenge system will be a success, and it will be expanded, and eventually every pitch will be called by the robot. Real people will still do the pitching and hitting, and isn't that mainly what you came to the ballpark to see? This is not to say home-plate umpires can be entirely replaced. After all, you can't trust a ballboy to do a proper job of whisking dirt off the plate.

2025 NFL Odds: Early Week 1 Best Bets For Chargers-Chiefs, Vikings-Bears
2025 NFL Odds: Early Week 1 Best Bets For Chargers-Chiefs, Vikings-Bears

Fox Sports

time5 days ago

  • Fox Sports

2025 NFL Odds: Early Week 1 Best Bets For Chargers-Chiefs, Vikings-Bears

Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025. That date might seem a long way away since many of us are enjoying the warm summer months and burning ample vacation days. Don't you worry, though. NFL games will light up our television screens very, very soon. I'm mostly an underdog bettor in the regular season and am almost magnetically attracted to divisional underdogs in Week 1. And there's just something about a team catching a small number against a public darling. Here are three NFL dogs to consider for opening week. Los Angeles Chargers (+2.5) vs. Kansas City Chiefs To Sao Paulo we go for this Friday night tilt. Las Vegas oddsmakers opened this game just shy of a field goal, and it hasn't budged one bit. There's clearly built-in respect to open a team +2.5 instead of +3, and it's a good sign for the Chargers it hasn't ticked up yet. You might have heard the stat about Patrick Mahomes being 19-4 as a starting quarterback in the month of September and surely, it's not ideal to be on the other side of that. But trends were meant to be broken. I will have my money on Jim Harbaugh and the Bolts as a very live 'dog in Brazil. If you want to hold out for a +3, so be it. PICK: Chargers (+2.5) to lose by fewer than 2.5 points or win outright Atlanta Falcons (+2.5) @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers Please get the best number in this one. BetMGM and DraftKings are dealing Atlanta +2.5, while Pinnacle and South Point are at +1.5, CRIS and SuperBook are +1 and Circa has a pick 'em. I have little sympathy for anybody who bets Falcons PK instead of +2.5. Seriously. All Atlanta hype revolves around second-year quarterback Michael Penix Jr., a southpaw with an absolute rifle under center. The Falcons have been accumulating skill players for years, but they thought Kirk Cousins, off an Achilles injury, was the solution in 2024. Close but no cigar. The market feels some type of way about the Falcons, as some of the world's sharpest shops have already been hit. I loved them taking defensive studs Jalon Walker (Georgia) and James Pearce Jr. (Tennessee) in Round 1. Go grab that +2.5 while you still can. PICK: Falcons (+2.5) to lose by fewer than 2.5 points or win outright Minnesota Vikings (+1.5) @ Chicago Bears After gambling on the NFL Thursday, Friday and Sunday, we get one more crack Monday night between Caleb Williams and J.J. McCarthy. As a native Chicagoan, I need two hands to count the amount of times the Bears won the draft or offseason and expectations were unfairly high all summer. It's not that I don't believe in Williams or new head coach Ben Johnson, I want to be patient with a QB learning another new system. Meanwhile, McCarthy spent his entire rookie season learning Kevin O'Connell's system after tearing his meniscus last August. He'll be playing behind an improved offensive line with Aaron Jones, Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Rondale Moore and T.J. Hockenson at the skill positions. It's difficult to put a young quarterback in a better spot. Minnesota's 53-man roster is one of the best in the league and I think the Vikings go into Soldier Field and leave with a victory. PICK: Vikings (+1.5) to lose by fewer than 1.5 points or win outright Sam Panayotovich is a sports betting analyst for FOX Sports and the BetMGM Network. He previously worked for WGN Radio, NBC Sports and VSiN. Follow him on Twitter @spshoot. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! recommended Item 1 of 3 Get more from the National Football League Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more

MLB's Robot Umpire Reverses 4 of 5 Challenged Calls in All-Star Game Debut
MLB's Robot Umpire Reverses 4 of 5 Challenged Calls in All-Star Game Debut

Fox Sports

time7 days ago

  • Fox Sports

MLB's Robot Umpire Reverses 4 of 5 Challenged Calls in All-Star Game Debut

Cal Raleigh was just as successful with the first robot umpire All-Star challenge as he was in Monday night's Home Run Derby, in which he slugged his way to the championship. Seattle's catcher signaled for an appeal to the Automated Ball-Strike System in the first inning of the National League's win Tuesday night, getting a strikeout for Detroit's Tarik Skubal on San Diego's Manny Machado. "You take 'em any way you can get 'em, boys," Skubal said on the mound. Four of five challenges of plate umpire Dan Iassogna's calls were successful in the first All-Star use of the ABS system, which could make its regular-season debut next year. Athletics rookie Jacob Wilson won as the first batter to call for a challenge, reversing a 1-0 fastball from Washington's MacKenzie Gore in the fifth inning that had been called a strike. Miami's Kyle Stowers lost when ABS upheld a full-count Andres Munoz fastball at the bottom of the zone for an inning-ending strikeout in the eighth. Mets closer Edwin Diaz earned a three-pitch strikeout against Randy Arozarena to end the top of the ninth on a pitch Iassogna thought was outside. Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk used ABS to get a first-pitch strike on a 100.1 mph Aroldis Chapman offering to Brendan Donovan with two outs in the bottom half. "The fans enjoy it. I thought the players had fun with it," NL manager Dave Roberts of the Los Angeles Dodgers said. "There's a strategy to it, if it does get to us during the season. But I like it. I think it's good for the game." Skubal had given up Ketel Marte's two-run double and retired the Dodgers' Freddie Freeman on a groundout for his first out when he got ahead of Machado 0-2 in the count. Skubal threw a 89.5 mph changeup, and Iassogna yelled" "Ball down!" Raleigh tapped his helmet just before Skubal tipped his cap, triggering a review by the computer umpire that was tested in spring training this year and could be adopted for regular-season use in 2026. "Obviously, a strike like that it was, so I called for it and it helped us out," Raleigh said. An animation of the computer analysis was shown on the Truist Park scoreboard and the broadcast. Roberts laughed in the dugout after the challenge. "I knew it was a strike," Machado said. Skubal doesn't intend to use challenges during regular-season games if the ABS is put in place. He says he'll rely on his catchers. "I was joking around that I was going to burn two of them on the first balls just so that way we didn't have them the rest of the game," he said. "I'm just going to assume that it's going to happen next year." Before the game, baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred indicated the sport's 11-man competition committee will consider the system for next season. "I think the ability to correct a bad call in a high-leverage situation without interfering with the time of game because it's so fast is something we ought to continue to pursue," Manfred said. ABS decisions may have an error of margin up to a half-inch. "Our guys do have a concern with that half inch, what that might otherwise lead to particularly as it relates to the number of challenges you may have, whether you keep those challenges during the course of the game," union head Tony Clark told the Baseball Writers Association of America. "Does there need to be some type of buffer zone consideration? Or do we want to find ourselves in a world where it's the most egregious misses that we want focus in on?" Manfred sounded less concerned. "I don't believe that technology supports the notion that you need a buffer zone," he said. "To get into the idea that there's something that is not a strike that you're going to call a strike in a review system, I don't know why I would want to do that." MLB sets the top of the automated strike zone at 53.5% of a batter's height and the bottom at 27%, basing the decision on the midpoint of the plate, 8 1/2 inches from the front and 8 1/2 inches from the back. That contrasts with the rule book zone called by umpires, which says the zone is a cube. "We haven't even started talking about the strike zone itself, how that's going to necessarily be measured, and whether or not there are tweaks that need to be made there, too," Clark said. "So there's a lot of discussion that still needs to be had, despite the fact that it seems more inevitable than not." Manfred has tested ABS in the minor leagues since 2019, using it for all pitches and then switching to a challenge system. Each team gets two challenges and a successful challenge is retained. Only catchers, batters and pitchers can call for a challenge. "Where we are on ABS has been fundamentally influenced by player input," he maintained. "If you had two years ago said to me: What do the owners want to do? I think they would have called every pitch with ABS as soon as possible. That's because there is a fundamental, very fundamental interest in getting it right, right? We owe it to our fans to try to get it right because the players as I talked to them over a couple of years really, expressed a very strong interest or preference for the challenge system that we decided to test." Skubal wondered is all contingencies had been planned for. "If power goes out and we don't have ABS — sometimes we don't have Hawk-Eye data or Trackman data. So what's going to happen then?" he said. "Are we going to expect umpires to call balls and strikes when it's an ABS zone?" The Associated Press contributed to this report. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! recommended Item 1 of 3 Get more from the Major League Baseball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more

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