Inside China’s internment camps: tear gas, Tasers and textbooks

On state television, the vocational education centre in China’s far west looked like a modern school where happy students studied Mandarin, brushed up their job skills, and pursued hobbies such as sports and folk dance.

But earlier this year, one of the local government departments in charge of such facilities in Xinjiang’s Hotan prefecture made several purchases that had little to do with education: 2,768 police batons, 550 electric cattle prods, 1,367 pairs of handcuffs, and 2,792 cans of pepper spray.

The shopping list was among over a thousand procurement requests made by local governments in the Xinjiang region since early 2017 related to the construction and management of a sprawling system of “vocational education and training centres”.

The facilities have come under international scrutiny, with rights activists describing them as political re-education camps holding as many as one million ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities.

Beijing had previously denied their existence. But a global outcry, including from the UN and the US, sparked a PR counter-offensive.

Government propaganda insisted the centres were aimed at countering the spread of separatism, terrorism and religious extremism through “free” education and job training.

However, an AFP examination of more than 1,500 publicly available government documents – ranging from tenders and budgets to official work reports – shows the centres are run more like jails than schools.

Thousands of guards equipped with tear gas, Tasers, stun guns and spiked clubs keep tight control over “students” in facilities ringed with razor wire and infrared cameras, according to the documents.

The centres should “teach like a school, be managed like the military, and be defended like a prison”, said one document, quoting Xinjiang’s party secretary Chen Quanguo. 

To build new, better Chinese citizens, another document argued, the centres must first “break their lineage, break their roots, break their connections, and break their origins”. 

‘Detain those who should be detained’            

The centre featured on state broadcaster CCTV last week is one of at least 181 such facilities in Xinjiang, according to data collected by AFP. 

Participation is voluntary, according to CCTV, which showed contented “students” wearing matching uniforms, studying Mandarin and learning trades like knitting, weaving and baking.

The centres first appeared in 2014, the year that authorities launched a new “strike hard” campaign against “terrorism” after deadly violence in Xinjiang.

But the buildup began in earnest in early 2017, with local governments in predominantly Uighur southern Xinjiang ordered to speed up the construction of “concentrated educational transformation centres for focus groups” – a euphemism for the religious, the poor, the uneducated, passport holders, and virtually all men of military age.

Shortly after, Xinjiang’s regional government issued regulations on managing “religious extremism”.

Extremists could be hiding anywhere, officials warned, instructing cadres to be on the lookout for 25 illegal religious activities and 75 signs of extremism, including such seemingly innocuous activities as quitting smoking or buying a tent.

“Detain those who should be detained to the greatest extent possible”, cadres were told.

Detentions surged, catching local governments unprepared.

In 2017, spending by justice bureaus throughout Xinjiang exploded, driven largely by huge outlays for building and running vocational centres.

The offices spent nearly three billion yuan ($432m) – at least 577 percent more than planned – according to AFP’s calculations.

Counties in the south closed the gap with a special fund earmarked for centres in the region.

At least some of that money came directly from the Communist Party’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission – the group in charge of the nation’s legal authorities – budget documents showed.

‘Wolf’s teeth’ 

Around April 2017, local governments began posting a wide variety of tenders related to the facilities.

Some orders – furniture, air conditioners, bunk beds, cutlery – would not seem out of place at a typical Chinese university.

China has deployed security members to its ‘vocational centres’ where Uighurs are detained [Ng Han Guan/AP Photo]

But others resembled prison equipment: sophisticated surveillance systems, cameras for recording students in their rooms, razor wire, a system for eavesdropping on phone calls, and infrared monitoring devices.

The centres also bought police uniforms, riot shields and helmets, pepper spray, tear gas, net guns, stun guns, electrified batons, billy clubs, spears, handcuffs and spiked clubs known as “wolf’s teeth”.

At least one centre requested “tiger chairs”, a device used by Chinese police to restrain interrogation subjects.

The gear was necessary, party officials in the regional capital Urumqi argued in an emergency request for Tasers, to “guarantee staff members’ personal safety”.

Non-lethal weapons, it said, were important for “reducing the possibility of accidental injury in some situations where it is not necessary to use standard firearms”.

Despite repeated attempts by AFP, local authorities could not be reached for comment.

‘Self-criticisms’ 

At the end of 2017, “higher authorities” issued directions to standardise the facilities’ operations.

New “vocational education and training service management bureaus” were set up, headed by officials experienced in running prisons and detention centres, according to local government websites.

Students would be tested on their knowledge of Mandarin and propaganda on a weekly, monthly and “seasonal” basis, and write regular “self-criticisms”, one bureau wrote in a memo.

They would spend their days “shouting slogans, singing red songs and memorising the Three Character Classic”, it said, referring to an ancient Confucian text.

Their files lodged in a centralised database, students were sorted into categories based on their offences and levels of accomplishment.

Criminals who had completed a prison sentence were released directly into the centres, under the principle of “putting untrustworthy people in a trustworthy place”.

Students who performed well would be allowed to call their families or even visit them in special rooms at the centres.

Officials were ordered to regularly visit students’ families at home to give them “anti-extremism” lessons and check for signs of anger that could harden into opposition to the Communist Party.

The new bureaus also ensured “absolute security” against “troublemaking” in the centres, including preventing “escapes”, one local management bureau wrote in a breakdown of its duties.

In addition to ex-prisoners and those charged with religious extremism, local governments were also ordered to ensure that at least one member of each household received vocational education for a minimum of one to three months – a measure ostensibly aimed at alleviating poverty in the region of 24 million.

While China has rejected estimates that upwards of one million are held in the centres, tender documents hint at huge numbers.

In a one-month period in early 2018, Hotan county’s vocational education bureau, which oversees at least one centre, ordered 194,000 Chinese language practice books.

And 11,310 pairs of shoes.

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Why is oil-rich Kirkuk so poor?

Kirkuk, Iraq – On the way from Erbil to Kirkuk, it starts smelling of oil even before one gets near the oil-rich Iraqi city. Smoke can be seen rising from the white chimneys of small oil refineries on each side of the highway, while heavy oil trucks line up at checkpoints separating Kirkuk province from the Kurdish semi-autonomous region.

Petrol stations and small shops selling gasoline in plastic containers dot the road, alternating with small vegetable stands.

Kirkuk’s complicated politics become clear at the entrance to the city, where a large statue of a Peshmerga fighter in traditional Kurdish dress waves an Iraqi flag.

When it was unveiled in early 2017, the statue held the KRG flag: red, white, green and a sun in the middle. Two and a half years earlier the KRG – which claims the ethnically mixed Kirkuk as historically Kurdish territory – took control of the city after dispatching its Peshmerga forces to prevent Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from capturing it.

In October 2017, after Erbil held an independence referendum that angered Baghdad and its foreign allies, Iraqi counter-terrorism forces and Shia Popular Mobilisation Units (PMUs) took over the city and replaced the statue’s flag with an Iraqi one.

Today, Kirkuk and its oil continue to be at the centre of a major dispute between Baghdad, the KRG, and local political forces, which has paralysed the provincial administration, shaken the local economy, and angered residents.

The statue of a Peshmerga fighter was erected in 2017 at the entrance of Kirkuk [Mariya Petkova/Al Jazeera] 

No power in oil-rich Kirkuk

A year after the takeover of Kirkuk, ordinary people seem to have borne the brunt of the punitive measures Baghdad undertook in response to the Kurdish independence referendum. They have worsened pre-existing grievances of resource mismanagement. 

Although Kirkuk sits on Iraq’s third biggest oil reserves estimated at 13.5 billion barrels, its residents complain they have not seen much of that oil wealth spent on improving city infrastructure, services and the local economy.

“We haven’t had electricity since the morning,” says 73-year-old Fahima Abu Bakir on an October afternoon, sitting in her small grocery shop in Kirkuk. The city has always had a problem with electricity, but recently its gotten more frequent.

“I also haven’t been able to stock my shop with goods to sell. Prices went up so much because of the checkpoints,” she says.

After Baghdad’s takeover of the city, its forces established checkpoints on the highways to Erbil and Sulaymaniyah, the KRG’s second biggest city, collecting arbitrary dues on goods entering Kirkuk province. The two highways have been the lifeline of Kirkuk and its main transport arteries for imported goods.

Down the road from Abu Bakir’s shop, Alan Nejmeddin Abdulla, 27, also complains of the same troubles.

“We had to spend the hot summer with less than 10 hours of electricity per day,” he says, adding other basic services such as garbage collection have deteriorated.

Fahima Abu Bakir says power cuts happen regularly in her neighbourhood in Kirkuk [Mariya Petkova/Al Jazeera] 

But Abdulla, who is an ethnic Kurd, was not happy about the situation in the city even when it was governed by the KRG. Former Kurdish governor and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) member Najmiddin Karim was replaced by an Arab, Rakan al-Jabouri, appointed by Baghdad.

“High positions in the administration were filled by people who were not from the city. The previous Kurdish governor is from Kirkuk but he hadn’t lived in the city for a long time when he took the post. He was living in the US,” he says. “I want a governor who lives here, knows the suffering of the people, and would serve all groups – Kurds, Turkoman and Arabs.”

Kurdish journalist Zaniyar Jumaa also says Kurdish parties – which held the majority of seats in the provincial council and key positions of council head and governor until October 2017 – didn’t do much to improve the lot of Kirkuk’s residents.

“The political parties here are all running after their own interests and trying to steal the money and oil of the city,” says Jumaa.

Yet he also rejects what he sees as “military rule” in the city. Although the appointed governor of the province is a civilian, Jumaa says the counter-terrorism forces still deployed in the city are very much in charge. His brother Adham, an independent activist, was arrested earlier in October for calling a protest against military interference in civilian affairs.

“They came to arrest him at 1:30am from our house. There were problems during Karim’s time too. I also was summoned to the police station, but it was always done according to Iraqi law. Now the military has all the power and they do whatever they want in public,” Jumaa explains.

Zaniyar Jumaa says the two main Kurdish parties are competing for power in Kirkuk [Mariya Petkova/Al Jazeera] 

When Kurds, Turkoman and Arabs can’t agree

A year after the takeover of Kirkuk, relations between Baghdad and the KRG continue to be strained. The Iraqi government has so far resisted calls to withdraw its forces from the province and allow for a local security arrangement to be established. 

Negotiations for the resumption of oil production and export through the Kurdistan pipeline have also stalled, despite continuous efforts by Kurdish officials to conclude a deal. Baghdad stopped oil extraction in Kirkuk’s fields almost completely in October last year, accusing the KRG of illegally exporting oil through its pipeline to Turkey. Earlier this year, the Iraqi parliament also launched an investigation into Kurdish exports of Kirkuk oil. For its part, the KRG has said this has cost the Iraqi state some $5bn in lost revenue.

The political chaos in Kirkuk has also been fed by the continuing inability of the main political players in the city to agree on how to proceed with its administration.

Turkoman and Arab parties in the province have rejected full Kurdish control over the city, while the two major Kurdish parties – PUK and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) – have been engaged in a squabble for power.

The PUK sees Kirkuk as its territory but it stands accused by the KDP of “giving up” the city to Baghdad by unilaterally withdrawing the Peshmerga in October last year.

“This is an empty accusation. There were a lot of warnings by international players against the referendum, but the KDP proceeded with it. This is what caused the Iraqi forces to take over the city,” said Ahmed al-Askari, a PUK member of the Kirkuk provincial council.

According to Askari, the provincial council has been unable to convene and deliberate on the appointment of a new governor to replace Jabouri – who won a seat in the Iraqi parliament in May’s national elections – because the KDP has prevented its members from returning to the city.

Responding to that accusation, Ahmed Mayi, a KDP press secretary, said the city is “occupied” and for that reason KDP council members cannot go back.

But even if the local council convenes, it might not be able to elect a new governor. The other two forces – the Turkoman and Arabs – do not agree with the current political set-up.

Ali Mahdy, a council member from the Iraqi Turkmen Front, told Al Jazeera the Turkoman insist on sharing administrative positions equally between the three main ethnic groups in the city. Currently, the provincial council has 26 seats held by the Kurds – divided equally between PUK and KDP – nine by the Turkoman, and six by the Arabs.

Peshmarga forces are seen near Altun Kupri between Kirkuk and Erbil [File: Azad Lashkari/Reuters]

The Arabs, on the other hand, are asking for new council elections – a move the rest are reluctant to undertake. Unlike other provinces that hold provincial elections every four years, Kirkuk has not had one since 2005. This is because key provisions of the 2004 Iraqi constitution covering disputed areas, such as Kirkuk, have not been implemented.

Kurdish parties still insist on holding a referendum, but the Turkoman and Arabs reject the idea.

Iraqi Kurds have claimed Kirkuk as historically Kurdish and so have the Turkoman. Each side has accused the other of trying to engineer demographic change in the region.

The only hope for a resolution to the political deadlock seems to be the upcoming formation of governments in Baghdad and Erbil. Inter-party negotiations at the national and regional levels are likely to include Kirkuk.

Mayi told Al Jazeera he expects some kind of a resolution after the announcement of both cabinets.

Until then, Kirkuk’s residents will continue to suffer the consequences of the political and administrative chaos in the oil-rich province.

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Red Sox’s Unstoppable Offense Primed to Overwhelm Dodgers on Road to Title

Boston Red Sox's Eduardo Nunez, right, celebrates after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-4 in of Game 1 of the World Series baseball game Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, in Boston. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola

Elise Amendola/Associated Press

BOSTON — How about we just stop right here, as even a freaking pinch hitter for the Boston Red Sox unleashed a screaming line drive that jackhammered its way through the cold, wet night air and over the Green Monster.

If it wasn’t before, it should be monster-ishly clear now in the aftermath of Eduardo Nunez’s three-run blast in the seventh inning to crack wide-open Boston’s 8-4 Game 1 World Series win over the Los Angeles Dodgers here Tuesday night that these Red Sox are setting up as a team for the ages.

This lineup is relentless in all the right ways. It boasts power, contains contact hitters and it can, as they love to say in Beantown, #DoDamage throughout, from Nos. 1 through 9, from leadoff hitter Mookie Betts to the very end of manager Alex Cora’s bench.

This team, the one that started 17-2, won a franchise-record 108 games, blitzed the New York Yankees in an American League Division Series and crushed the Houston Astros in the AL Championship Series…how exactly are the Dodgers supposed to handle it?

Other than not scoring four or five runs in a two-run first inning in which three of the first four Red Sox to face Kershaw cracked singles off him, “it was about as perfect as you can draw it up,” Red Sox reliever Matt Barnes said. “[Nunez’s] ability to come off the bench and hit a three-run homer is incredible. It was huge.”

David J. Phillip/Associated Press

The last two times out now, the Red Sox have pelted Astros ace Justin Verlander and bloodied Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw. This is what they do.

“We have a great group of guys, and we don’t fear anybody,” Betts said. “They put their pants on the same way we do.”

Welcome to Fenway Park, Mr. Kershaw. Check your pockets before they’re picked.

It was his first-ever appearance in this storied museum. His first-ever matchup with the Red Sox. And one he will not soon forget. The Sox pantsed him immediately, scoring those two runs in the first, another in the third, and then, after manager Dave Roberts hooked Kershaw following a walk and a single to start the fifth, Ryan Madson allowed both of those inherited runners to score.

“I don’t think he had the fastball command that he typically has,” Roberts said. “He was missing up in the zone. I don’t think his slider had the depth that we’re used to seeing.

“And those guys, to their credit, they put some good at-bats on him. And we didn’t play the defense we typically do.”

Absolutely true. And that made the Dodgers’ climb in this World Series opener even steeper.

What helped set up Boston’s first inning was first baseman David Freese’s failure to catch Betts’ pop foul on the muddy warning track behind first base. Right fielder Yasiel Puig rifled a throw home instead of hitting the cutoff man, which allowed Andrew Benintendi to take second—and score two batters later. On the mound, Kershaw looked perplexed. Then, in the fifth, Madson’s wild pitch bounced past catcher Austin Barnes to help set up two more runs.

David J. Phillip/Associated Press

By that fifth inning, seven of the nine Red Sox hitters had reached base. Even light-hitting catcher Sandy Leon finished with two knocks. No wonder there was a gorgeous rainbow over Fenway Park when the between late-afternoon rain showers.

And when the merry-go-round is spinning like that, if you’re playing defense, you simply cannot give up extra outs.

Against this particular Boston club, it’s a death sentence.

“It was huge,” Betts said of scoring twice in the first inning. “From the beginning, we played aggressively and let them know that we’re not going to ease into it.

“Right off the bat, go 100 miles an hour.”

Did they ever. When the season started, when the playoffs started and now in the World Series. Ace starter Chris Sale didn’t last any longer than Kershaw—he, too, failed to get an out in the fifth inning. But the Boston lineup (mostly) and the Dodgers’ sloppiness (minimally) gave Sale more slack than Kershaw.

It’s been this way all season. One enormous difference between these two clubs: The Red Sox can beat you in so many ways because they can hit for power and average. The Sox ranked 26th in the majors in strikeouts this season; only Pittsburgh, Seattle, Houston and Cleveland fanned fewer times. The Dodgers, whose offense has been all or nothing much of the time, ranked eighth in the majors in whiffs.

The Dodgers hit the second-most home runs in the majors—a franchise-record 235, which led the National League—while Boston ranked ninth. But the Dodgers also ranked 29th in batting average with runners in scoring position—their .199 tied the lowly Baltimore Orioles.

Part of that relates to the inordinately high number of strikeouts contained in the Los Angeles lineup—and the Dodgers whiffed 12 times in Game 1 (the Red Sox checked in with 12, too). But while the Dodgers scored 24 runs this postseason via the homer and 22 runs when they didn’t put the ball out of the park, Boston keeps coming at you in various ways.

“Overall, we’re pretty relentless,” president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said during a conversation before Game 5 of the ALCS in Houston the other day. “We battle. And we can win in different ways.

“It’s nice we hit more home runs this year than we did in the past. But we’re athletic, we use the whole field, we score from first on a double—the majority of guys, not all of them—we score from second, we take extra bases. There’s a lot of different stuff that we do.

“We’re also a good defensive club. First base, second base, catching—we’re really good. So, we win games in different ways.”

Dodger president Stan Kasten joked about payrolls after his team eliminated Milwaukee.

“I’m a little concerned about having to play these high payroll teams,” Kasten quipped, referring to Boston ranking second in the majors this year with a $206 million payroll while the Dodgers were 11th at $157 million. “It seems unfair to make us do that. But we’re going to give it our best anyway.”

What was unfair in Game 1 was the stacked Boston lineup that destroyed the Dodgers from various angles. Nunez’s homer came against lefty Alex Wood, once a starter but now a reliever in the playoffs. Pedro Baez was doing just fine in relief, and Roberts left himself open to questioning with that move. It was the third homer Wood has allowed this postseason.

By the end of the mauling, the Fenway Park crowd was roaring that age-old favorite chant in Boston. As “Beat LA! Beat LA!” carried deep into the night, the notion of beating these Red Sox seemed as difficult as stopping those echoes.

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Clayton Kershaw on Game 1 Struggles: ‘I Made Some Mistakes’ vs. Red Sox

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw leaves the game during the fifth inning of Game 1 of the World Series baseball game against the Boston Red Sox Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, in Boston. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Matt Slocum/Associated Press

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw couldn’t point to one thing that caused his struggles against the Boston Red Sox in Game 1 of the World Series on Tuesday:

USA TODAY Sports @usatodaysports

#Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw on what went wrong in Game 1 of the #WorldSeries. https://t.co/0mynAH6T8F

“I made some mistakes, but you know, like I said, my slider wasn’t very good tonight, didn’t have a lot of depth on it,” Kershaw said. “Yeah, I made some mistakes in the zone, too, that they made me pay for. Yeah, just all the way around, it wasn’t a great night.”

The Dodgers ace allowed five runs on seven hits in four innings in the Red Sox’s 8-4 win.

Manager Dave Roberts agreed on the problems with the pitcher’s stuff Tuesday.

“Slider didn’t have depth, fastball command wasn’t there,” Roberts said of Kershaw, per Arash Madani of Sportsnet.

The left-hander finished with three walks in limited action, the most in any game this postseason. Only six times all season did he walk more than one batter in a start, and only three times did he register more than two walks.

Of course, these types of postseason struggles aren’t new for Kershaw, as Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times noted:

Bill Shaikin @BillShaikin

Clayton Kershaw’s career postseason ERA: 4.28.

He has pitched 145 career postseason innings. That is not a small sample size.

Considering he has a 2.39 career ERA in the regular season, this is a significant drop for the three-time Cy Young Award winner.

In the 2018 postseason, Kershaw has failed to escape the fifth inning in two of his four starts, although the other two were absolute gems.

There is no denying the pitcher is as good as they come when he is at his best. However, the inconsistency in the postseason has hurt the Dodgers once again.

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J.D. Martinez, Eduardo Nunez Power Red Sox to World Series Game 1 Win vs Dodgers

Boston Red Sox's Rafael Devers hits an RBI single to score Andrew Benintendi during the fifth inning of Game 1 of the World Series baseball game Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, in Boston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

David J. Phillip/Associated Press

The Boston Red Sox struck first in the 2018 World Series.

The Sox defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-4 in Tuesday’s Game 1 at Fenway Park and moved a step closer to their fourth championship in 15 seasons. In a showdown of aces and generational talents, Chris Sale allowed three earned runs on five hits and two walks with seven strikeouts in four innings for Boston.

Counterpart Clayton Kershaw allowed five earned runs on seven hits and three walks with five strikeouts in four innings. Eduardo Nunez provided the offensive fireworks for the Red Sox with a pinch-hit three-run homer in the seventh to push a one-run advantage to four, while J.D. Martinez went 2-for-3 with two RBI and a run, and Andrew Benintendi went 4-for-5 with one RBI and three runs.

MLB @MLB

NOON TIME.

#WorldSeries https://t.co/IFWyZwsix1

Kershaw’s Struggles Will Doom Dodgers’ World Series Hopes

Kershaw is a surefire Hall of Famer, but his postseason struggles are a defining chapter of his resume and may leave him ringless. The southpaw has an MVP, three Cy Young Awards and seven All-Star appearances to go with a 2.39 career regular-season ERA, but his playoff ERA was 4.09 before Boston lit him up Tuesday.

It isn’t incompetence but rather inconsistency that has derailed his Octobers.

According to Baseball Reference, his nine playoff starts of six or more innings with zero or one earned run are the most in the game from 2013 through 2018. However, he was also tied for the most starts with five or more runs (seven) in playoff history coming into Game 1, and he added to that tally with another disappointing showing.

FOX Sports: MLB @MLBONFOX

Another tough World Series start for Clayton Kershaw. https://t.co/1psC1Sxk04

Buster Olney @Buster_ESPN

Kershaw first 17 pitches: No swings-and-misses

Jeff Passan @JeffPassan

Clayton Kershaw’s fastball is sitting at 90 mph, and the Red Sox are teeing off on it. It’s now 2-0. More troublesome is that his slider is 88-89. The lack of separation between the pitches could be awfully problematic.

It is not fair to label him a playoff choker with so many dazzling starts, but he has not put forth the consistent production the Dodgers are looking for from the best pitcher of this era.

Tuesday’s start would have been even worse if a blistered ball by Jackie Bradley Jr. with runners on the corners in the second didn’t deflect off the mound to a waiting Manny Machado for a double play.

The only way the Dodgers will win the World Series is if they counter a Red Sox lineup that led MLB in runs (876), hits (1,509), doubles (355), batting average (.268), on-base percentage (.339) and slugging percentage (.453). The best way to do that is with a shutdown ace who can take the mound three times in a series, but Kershaw wasn’t up for the challenge.

His failure exacerbated the pressure on the other options in the rotation.

Walker Buehler was brilliant this season but is just a rookie with a 5.40 ERA in three playoff games this year. Hyun-Jin Ryu has a 4.40 ERA in three playoff appearances this year.

That is not exactly what Los Angeles wants on the mound in must-win scenarios against mighty Boston, but Kershaw is unreliable at this point. The National League champions just don’t know which version of him they will get on a given night in October.

J.D. Martinez Primed to Win World Series MVP

The Boston lineup is full of threats and got the big blow from Nunez, but Martinez is already positioned to win the World Series MVP Award.

Dan Mullen of ESPN noted the slugger entered Game 1 with a head-turning .455/.500/1.091 slash line in 13 at-bats versus Kershaw, and he delivered with two hits and two RBI against the Dodgers ace. One of the hits was a long double into center field that would have found the seats in many ballparks.

Daren Willman @darenw

JD Martinez vs Clayton Kershaw tonight has hit a single 105.9 MPH
and a double 109.1 MPH. 🔥🔥🔥

Bob Nightengale @BNightengale

JD Martinez is underpaid. Even teammates joke he’s worth $100 million more than the production he’s provided this season

Martinez figures to face Kershaw in at least one more game, if not more, which will give him the opportunity to continue smashing his pitches. He will be no slouch against the rest of the Los Angeles rotation either; he challenged for a triple crown with a .330/.402/.629 slash line to go with 43 home runs and 130 RBI during the regular season.

While he will have challengers—such as Benintendi—Martinez’s power and prowess against the Los Angeles ace put him in pole position to win MVP. Also, Nunez isn’t consistently in the lineup, so his homer will be a memorable moment instead of a launching point to MVP.

Martinez will also benefit from the fact Sale was uninspiring. The Boston ace was the MVP favorite coming into the series at +550 (bet $100 to win $550), per Bovada (h/t OddsShark). Martinez was not far behind at +700 and looks like a great bet after one game.

Alex Cora’s Brilliant Moves Make Red Sox Heavy Favorites

The most important moment of Game 1 featured a back-and-forth battle between the two managers.

After Benintendi started the bottom of the seventh with a double, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts turned to the flame-throwing Pedro Baez. Baez proceeded to strike out Mitch Moreland and Xander Bogaerts with an intentional walk to Martinez thrown in, but Roberts chose left-hander Alex Wood to face Rafael Devers.

Alex Cora countered by pinch-hitting Nunez, who hit just 10 home runs this season.

Chalk one up for Cora because Nunez blasted Wood’s second offering over the Green Monster in left field to all but clinch Game 1.

Jon Tayler, Smiling Politely @JATayler

Alex Cora turned a baffling Eduardo Nuñez pinch-hitting appearance into a three-run home run, just make Cora the president of the universe now.

Christopher Smith @SmittyOnMLB

Eduardo Nunez pinch hits for Rafael Devers, the Red Sox’s hottest hitter.
Nunez hits a home run.
Alex Cora wins again.

Paul Flannery @Pflanns

Alex Cora is always right. It’s really amazing.

The Red Sox have the best offense in the majors, a dominant ace in Sale and home-field advantage following 108 regular-season wins. It seems unfair to throw in a manager who is pushing all the right buttons, but that is exactly what Boston has in Cora.

The Red Sox are in full control, and they have just the man to lead them to three more victories.

What’s Next?

Boston will turn to David Price for Wednesday’s Game 2 at Fenway Park, while Los Angeles will go with Ryu.

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Who Is the Worse Teammate: Rajon Rondo or Chris Paul?

Los Angeles Lakers' Rajon Rondo (9) defends on Houston Rockets' Chris Paul during the first half of an NBA basketball game Saturday, Oct. 20, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press

You didn’t think the Spitgate beef between Rajon Rondo and Chris Paul would just fade off into the sunset, did you?

Suspensions have been doled out, but animosity still lingers and grade-school jabs continue to be thrown. The latest haymaker comes not from Brandon Ingram’s Play-Doh arms but Rondo’s mouth…again.

“Of course, the NBA went with [Paul’s] side because I got three games and he got two,” Rondo told ESPN. “Everyone wants to believe Chris Paul is a good guy. They don’t know he’s a horrible teammate. They don’t know how he treats people. Look at what he did last year when he was in L.A.; trying to get to the Clippers’ locker room. They don’t want to believe he’s capable of taunting and igniting an incident.”

Whoa. You might say this is Rondo—[puts on sunglasses]—[promptly whips off sunglasses]—spitting some hot fire. (Thank you.)

This karate chop to Paul’s resume might seem juvenile, because it absolutely is. All of this he-said-that, he-spit-this business is fodder for monkey-bar talk at recess. And we’re here for all of it. 

So, it is with profound purpose that we seek to answer the following question: Who would you rather have as a teammate, Chris Paul or Rajon Rondo?

Darren Abate/Associated Press

Rondo is not alone in assessment of Paul’s people skills. Glen “Big Baby” Davis, who played with both point guards, has already come out in support of his stance:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Big Baby chimes in 🍿 https://t.co/v1UG8ZBcp1

So has Ryan Hollins:

Alex Kennedy @AlexKennedyNBA

Ryan Hollins played with Chris Paul for two seasons in the NBA. I asked Hollins what he thought of Paul as a teammate, given the recent negative comments from Rajon Rondo and Glen Davis.

“He has some growing to do,” Hollins said of Paul. “Everything that glitters ain’t gold.” https://t.co/OYWpM6LmXN

Others who have played with Paul, mainly during his time on the Clippers, share similar sentiments. Consider the following musings from Kevin Arnovitz’s 2017 profile for ESPN.com on Lob City’s relatively joyless, obviously tense culture.

“Paul demands from his teammates a conformity and insists they absorb criticism at any moment, according to several teammates,” he wrote. “Blow a coverage, you’re going to hear about it, even after you’ve offered a ‘my bad’ and even if the replay shows something to the contrary.”

That’s from when Paul was still on the Clippers. The rumblings grew louder once he forced his way to the Houston Rockets. 

He might’ve had issues with the way Doc Rivers treated his son, Austin Rivers. He definitely had issues with Blake Griffin. DeAndre Jordan almost left for the Dallas Mavericks during 2015 free agency at least in part because of him. Doc is on record admitting that the dynamic between Los Angeles’ former Big Three wasn’t great, and that Paul was far from the perfect teammate.

“I thought when Chris rubbed guys the worst was when he messed up, because when you mess up, you gotta take it,” Rivers told ESPN’s Jackie MacMullan last October. “I didn’t really think he did.”

Petulant. Determined. Insufferable. Invaluable. A flopper. An all-time great. Paul has been called all of it. He is so many things to so many different people, both fans and those around the league. That happens with superstars. They’re divisive outside of their own franchise.

Paul’s legacy is unique in that he’s seldom escaped criticism inside his bubble. He didn’t leave New Orleans under the best circumstances, and the murmurs emanating from Los Angeles often mutated into deafening roars. 

Houston has been a different story. Rockets head coach Mike D’Antoni doesn’t view interacting with Paul as a daily challenge. Other than a small sideline tiff during last year’s playoff push, James Harden has not indicated he feels any differently.

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

CP3 and Harden 👀 (via princejohndouglas/Instagram) https://t.co/ihtshKJ39R

“I don’t mean to sound too mushy or whatnot,” Harden said in April of his chemistry with Paul, “but it was like love at first sight.”

At least we know Paul is a better teammate than Dwight Howard. Which, well, never mind.

Rondo does fail to properly sabotage Paul’s image on one level. Last year’s secret-tunnel tussle is first and foremost objectively hilarious. It also sheds Paul in the opposite light.

He Ocean’s Eleven‘d his way into the Clippers locker room along with other Rockets players to confront Griffin and Austin for contentious behavior toward him and his new team. His motives were hardly selfless, but he wasn’t acting on his own or undermining his same-jersey brethren. Los Angeles had long since become the enemy by that point.

LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 20:  Rajon Rondo #9 of the Los Angeles Lakers handles the ball against the Houston Rockets on October 20, 2018 at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloadin

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

Another player might have a clear edge over Paul after pillaging through his iffy track record. Rondo isn’t one of them.

Time and again, he’s been billed as uncoachable. Boston Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck described him as stubborn in 2014. Rivers, who coached Rondo for seven years in Beantown, joked last season about how he and his point guard would want to choke each other. 

Ray Allen was first moved to the Celtics bench because Rondo stopped passing to him, according to Ray Allen. Paul Pierce has noted that Rondo didn’t always bring it on a daily basis. A half-season stint with the Dallas Mavericks, meanwhile, ended with the team traveling great lengths to deny his existence in the midst of the playoffs.

“The truth was that the Mavs didn’t want Rondo, who was going to be replaced in the starting lineup regardless, pouting and rubbing off on other players, [Monta] Ellis in particular,” ESPN.com’s Tim MacMahon wrote. “Essentially, the Mavs made a drastic move in an attempt to do damage control on a chemistry crisis.”

Eddie Sefko @ESefko

Multiple sources: Rajon Rondo did not receive a playoff share from the Dallas Mavericks.

Rondo’s lone season with the Chicago Bulls was weird. Their inexperienced whippersnappers took to him, but he blasted the leadership tact of both Jimmy Butler and Dwyane Wade. His stay with the Sacramento Kings didn’t include any prominent locker room quarrels, but closed-door dysfunction is, as Rondo himself pointed out, the status quo for that organization. (He was also suspended one game while in Sacramento for directing anti-gay slurs at referee Billy Kennedy.)

For his part, Rondo seems to take pride in aspects of his renegade reputation.

“I don’t think there’s not one coach I’ve played with that I haven’t got into it with,” he said while with the Mavericks, per the Star-Telegram‘s Dwain Price. “I like to test where the coaches are at and I think they like to test me. So I’ve gotten into a shouting match with a lot of my coaches in my past years. It started when I was around 6 years old. I got into it with my Little League football coach.”

Checkered relationships have not prevented Rondo from gaining the respect or entering the good graces of many around the league. Mavericks head coach Rick Carlisle has recommended Rondo’s services to multiple teams since his time in Dallas, per Price. Hollins still loves him:

Ryan Hollins @TheRyanHollins

Hands down one of my favorite teammates EVER💯 https://t.co/A82CGmKJwc

And unlike Allen, Rondo is on speaking terms with Pierce, Kevin Garnett and the rest of that 2007-08 championship Celtics team:

KG’s Area 21 @KGArea21

“It was more than basketball for us… It felt like a sour breakup.”

Pierce, KG, Rondo, Big Baby & Perk share their thoughts on Ray Allen. https://t.co/8JYRWmxm0i

Bouncing around the NBA has to some degree warped how Rondo is portrayed. The game has moved away from ball-dominant point guards who don’t knock down jumpers off the dribble.

Seesawing engagement doesn’t help his case. Paul is celebrated as a fierce competitor day in and day out, while Rondo’s defensive effort verges on listless for games at a time. Fair or not, it renders him less likable from afar.

Character flaws are easier to overlook or repackage as misunderstandings when they’re considered symptoms of obsessive interest. Rondo is competitive, just like all professional athletes. But he’s been plagued by inconsistency and an outmoded style since the dissolution of the Big Three-era Celtics. Selling him as a genuine figurehead is more difficult under the circumstances.

LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 20:  Chris Paul #3 of the Houston Rockets reacts to a foul from Rajon Rondo #9 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the second quarter at Staples Center on October 20, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.  (Photo by Harry How/Getty Image

Harry How/Getty Images

Star power grates on those along for the ride.

Michael Jordan punched Steve Kerr in the face. LeBron James helped push Kyrie Irving out of Cleveland. Look at what has happened in Minnesota with Jimmy Butler. 

Controversy is not uncommon amid lofty ambitions. Not everyone can be Stephen Curry, an egoless MVP who endures and sacrifices more than he inflicts. 

Rondo and Paul are examples of the rule, not exceptions. They are stubborn, maybe entitled, because marquee names have egos. Teams ferry their baggage because they’re worth it.

Except, well, Rondo isn’t a star anymore. His ship sailed out of the best-point-guard conversation many moons ago, and it was only docked there for a brief time.

That doesn’t exonerate Paul in this discussion. Both he and Rondo have their warts. Judging from Rondo’s uneventful season in New Orleans and Houston’s hero-worshipping of Paul, both have also worked at becoming more manageable team members.

Something about Rondo still doesn’t feel totally authentic, though. This most recent feud has only accentuated that superficiality.

Ingram apologized to the Lakers for his role in Saturday’s schoolyard scuffle, per the Orange County Register‘s Kyle Goon. Paul likewise told the Rockets he was sorry about how it unfolded, per the Los Angeles TimesAndrew Greif.

As for Rondo…well, he didn’t think he owed his teammates an explanation:

Tania Ganguli @taniaganguli

Rajon Rondo said he didn’t address his teammates about the fight. “Everybody knows who I am … I think they still respect me for what I do and what I bring to this team.” When asked what started it, he said, “Basketball. The game.” https://t.co/yHfb2IWC0J

Maybe he’s since talked to his Lakers fam. He isn’t obligated to tell us anything. And Paul is no boy scout. In many ways, from their intractable personalities to their high-IQ aplomb, he and Rondo are the same. 

And all dramatics being equal, who are you going to ride with: Rondo or Paul? 

This shouldn’t be a question. Paul is near the height of his powers—one of the 10 or 12 best players in the league. Rondo has a ring, but he’s never been that player. Nor has he ever been further away from being that player. 

Daryl Morey @dmorey

https://t.co/EdyjirWqFO

Besides, Paul might yet win the likability battle free and clear. Past bridges have been burned, but before his final season with the Clippers, people around the team told Arnovitz that Paul has “mellowed” over time. 

“He just can’t be wrong,” one player said to Arnovitz at the time. “But if I had to go to war, I’m going with Chris every day.”

Ditto.

Unless otherwise noted, stats courtesy of NBA.com or Basketball Reference. Salary and cap-hold information via Basketball Insiders and RealGM.

Dan Favale covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter (@danfavale) and listen to his Hardwood Knocks podcast, co-hosted by B/R’s Andrew Bailey.

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Rick Scott battles the pollsters in Florida Senate race


Rick Scott

Gov. Rick Scott’s campaign excoriated Quinnipiac University’s survey showing his opponent, Sen. Bill Nelson, with a 6-point lead. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Elections

‘So, after the election, will they release an apology or a retraction of some sort?’

MIAMI — Florida governors expect a boost in public opinion surveys after managing a natural disaster, but so far Rick Scott has received no appreciable bump after Hurricane Michael. In three consecutive Senate polls released after the governor earned wall-to-wall media coverage for managing the storm, Scott trails Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson.

Scott’s team isn’t buying it. His campaign excoriated Quinnipiac University’s survey Monday showing Nelson with a large lead of 6 points, and argued instead that the governor is in fact leading by 5 points.

Story Continued Below

The poll-truthing, however, revealed a deeper concern that’s long gnawed at some Republicans — including GOP donors from Scott’s well-heeled hometown of Naples: Scott should be doing far better given his cash advantage over Nelson.

“A lot of these people are essentially neighbors of Gov. Scott,” said Trey Radel, a former Republican congressman from Naples who’s a political consultant and radio show host. “And the fear they have — and that they keep expressing — is that Gov. Scott, like his first election, has loads of money that he has pumped in and that these donors have given, and yet Rick maintained only a small lead even before these polls came out with Nelson [ahead]. And they believe he should be burying Bill Nelson in the polls.”

The Senate race took a backseat Tuesday after reports surfaced that Democratic gubernatorial nominee and Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum accepted tickets to the Broadway show “Hamilton” from an undercover FBI agent leading a probe into the city’s economic development agency.

In the run-up to the Aug. 28 primary, Scott’s campaign and Republican backers spent more than $33.8 million on TV compared with less than $12.3 million for Nelson. Scott gained a small marginal lead over Nelson in polling.

But after the primary, Democrats had kept enough powder dry to begin firing back — and they’ve spent almost as much as the Republicans in the Senate race on TV: $17 million compared with the GOP’s $18.4 million. Factoring in ads that have been run and reserved, Democrats now edge Republicans in Senate race TV spending $54 million to $53 million — putting Florida on course to spend $153 million on air and become the most expensive Senate race in the country.

As the Democrats’ message sank in, Nelson started to pull ahead of Scott in many polls.

Then, on Oct. 10, came an event that appeared to be a political boon for Scott — Hurricane Michael. The governor was seemingly everywhere in the Panhandle hurricane zone and on state and national television.

In the days before and during the weeklong aftermath of the storm’s landfall, Scott was either mentioned or interviewed on television 6,417 times, according to media monitoring services TVEyes and Critical Mention. That burst of earned media represented a huge spike in attention compared with Scott’s prestorm media footprint and was about six times greater than that of Nelson, who seemed relatively to disappear.

It was also an opportunity for Scott to showcase some of his best executive skills in managing a disaster, techniques credited with boosting his approval ratings by 8 percentage points in a Mason-Dixon Polling & Research survey after Hurricane Irma in 2017.

Scott announced he might hold no more campaign events in order to focus on hurricane recovery. Meanwhile, his campaign kept churning out ads, some using behind the scenes images of Scott responding to the crisis.

Then, on Sunday, CNN released a poll showing Nelson leading Scott 50-45 among likely voters.

The Democrat’s advantage, within the survey’s margin of error, was easy to write off at the time because pollster SSRS had interviewed what appeared to be too many independents and too few Republicans relative to Democrats for a Florida midterm.

The next day, Quinnipiac’s poll landed, and it again showed Nelson up by 5 points — 52-46 percent. Unlike the SSRS survey, the Quinnipiac poll reflected a fairly typical Florida midterm turnout and interviewed more Republicans than Democrats or independents. The Nelson lead was also within the poll’s margin of error.

Shortly after Quinnipiac’s survey was released Monday, SurveyUSA followed up with its own poll showing Nelson with a 49-41 percent lead over Scott that’s outside the survey’s margin of error. Unlike the Quinnipiac and SSRS polls, SurveyUSA’s sampled voters online.

Scott’s campaign immediately swung into action. It released a memo sent to supporters that said the governor led Nelson by 5 — rather than trailed by 6 in the Quinnipiac poll — and that the governor’s advantage was outside the margin of error. Campaign officials also say Scott was ahead before the hurricane struck.

“Rick Scott is ahead by 5 points. This poll is more than 10 points off. It’s a complete joke,” Scott’s top adviser, Curt Anderson with OnMessage Media, wrote on Twitter to Quinnipiac. “So, after the election, will they release an apology or a retraction of some sort? I will remind them and keep you updated.”

The campaign’s memo also said Democrats “know they are behind, and are throwing everything they can at the Governor, with their trademark disregard for facts or truth. Some things never change of course, but the voters of Florida are not falling for it.”

Chris Hayden, a spokesman for the Nelson-backing Senate Majority PAC, said Scott’s ad campaign was doomed from the start because he’s running as a Washington outsider, despite holding office for two terms and being backed by the GOP establishment.

Chris Hayden, a spokesman for the Nelson-backing Senate Majority PAC, said Scott’s ad campaign was doomed from the start because he’s running as a Washington outsider, despite holding office for two terms and being backed by the GOP establishment.

A fourth poll, released Sunday by the Democratic firm SEA, had positive news for Scott, relatively speaking, and found he had an inside-the-error-margin lead of 2 points over Nelson.

Considering Florida’s history of razor-thin elections margins — the past four top-of-the-ticket races were decided by 1.2 percentage points or less — the SEA poll is the most in line with historical trends.

Radel, the former congressman from Naples, said there’s only so much stock Republicans put in polls. After all, Trump won Florida when most surveys showed he trailed Hillary Clinton by an inside-the-error-margin amount. And Scott also won his races for governor in 2010 and 2014 when many polls indicated he wouldn’t.

Also, Radel said, there’s just the tribal nature of politics at play.

“We believe in the polls that are good for us, just like we believe the boldface lies that my party tells me, just like I don’t believe the boldface lies of the other party,” Radel laughed.

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Dodgers vs. Red Sox: Live Updates and Score for 2018 World Series Game 1

  1. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Batting Stance Guy @BattingStanceG

  2. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    FOX Sports @FOXSports

    And just like that, the @RedSox take the first lead in Game 1! https://t.co/GCmLt2h32j

  3. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Andy McCullough @McCulloughTimes

    David Freese couldn’t make a play on a twisting foul ball. Granted another strike, Mookie Betts singled, stole second and scored on a single by Andrew Benintendi. 1-0, Sox.

  4. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

    Big boos for Machado from the Boston crowd. They must not be fans of the hair I guess. https://t.co/qYhpwCK5xQ

  5. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    MLB @MLB

    🎵 CAAAAAAAAARL Yastrzemski … CAAAAAAAAARL Yastrzemski … The man they call Yaz. 🎵

    #WorldSeries https://t.co/KyiOnzIb3m

  6. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Jose de Jesus Ortiz @OrtizKicks

  7. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Albert Breer @AlbertBreer

  8. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Evan Drellich @EvanDrellich

  9. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

    Sale’s slider seems to be working. Hasn’t had it consistenly this postseason. But some bad swings from the Dodgers in his 21-pitch first inning.

  10. Clock Icon13 minutes ago

    J.P. Hoornstra @jphoornstra

    Chris Sale will not throw a no-hitter today.

  11. Clock Icon12 minutes ago

    via Bleacher Report

  12. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Pete Abraham @PeteAbe

  13. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Joel Sherman @Joelsherman1

  14. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Claire McNear @claire_mcnear

  15. Clock Icon18 minutes ago

    Jen McCaffrey @jcmccaffrey

    Sale tops out at 94mph and strikes out Dozier looking to get things underway.

  16. Clock Icon22 minutes ago

    You Ready for This?

    Kershaw’s first start in Boston. Sale’s first in the World Series.

    Let’s go!

  17. Clock Icon24 minutes ago

    MLB @MLB

    Boston loves Dave Roberts. #WorldSeries https://t.co/jwZ0T0qtSy

  18. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Baseball Reference @baseball_ref

  19. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Jared Carrabis @Jared_Carrabis

  20. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Bill Plunkett @billplunkettocr

  21. Clock Icon28 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report MLB @BR_MLB

    IT’S ALMOST TIME.

    Who ya got? https://t.co/5ZUuvRb5Sm

  22. October 23, 2018
  23. Clock Icon39 minutes ago

    Ryan Hannable @RyanHannable

    As expected, during pregame intros Dodgers manager Dave Roberts gets loud applause, while Manny Machado gets loud boos.

  24. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    MLB Stat of the Day @MLBStatoftheDay

    Xander Bogaerts is the lone position player left from the 2013 @RedSox #WorldSeries roster.

    Will he get his 2nd ring? https://t.co/WLtgNeRkVi

  25. October 24, 2018
  26. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Dodgers Nation @DodgersNation

  27. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Marc Topkin @TBTimes_Rays

  28. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Chris Cotillo @ChrisCotillo

  29. October 23, 2018
  30. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Alanna Rizzo @alannarizzo

    Despite earlier rain, lightning & thunder, we are scheduled to start on time. 5:09 PM PT/8:09 PM EDT.

  31. Clock Icon11:26 pm

    Cut4 @Cut4

    Goodbye, tarp. Hello, World Series Game 1! https://t.co/yrUfsXc2lK

  32. October 24, 2018
  33. Clock Icon29 minutes ago

    via NBC Sports Boston

  34. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Alex Speier @alexspeier

  35. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Red Sox Stats @redsoxstats

  36. October 23, 2018
  37. Clock Icon11:21 pm

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

    Roaring applause as the tarp comes off at Fenway Park.

  38. Clock Icon11:12 pm

    MLB Network @MLBNetwork

    Game One Lineups are set. #MLBTonight

    #WorldSeries https://t.co/k9cXJ2AncN

  39. October 24, 2018
  40. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Daren Willman @darenw

  41. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Boston Red Sox @RedSox

  42. October 23, 2018
  43. Clock Icon10:42 pm

    Yahoo Sports MLB @MLByahoosports

    They’ve cleared the stands at Fenway Park because a lightning warning and this is what the concourse looks like right now ⚠ https://t.co/azRjIcjcZt

  44. Clock Icon10:54 pm

    via Boston.com

  45. October 24, 2018
  46. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Michael Silverman @MikeSilvermanBB

  47. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Bill Plunkett @billplunkettocr

  48. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Bob Nightengale @BNightengale

  49. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Pedro Moura @pedromoura

  50. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Ian Browne @IanMBrowne

  51. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Buster Olney @Buster_ESPN

  52. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Evan Drellich @EvanDrellich

  53. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

  54. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Rob Bradford @bradfo

  55. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Dodger Blue @DodgerBlue1958

  56. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Ian Browne @IanMBrowne

  57. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Marc Topkin @TBTimes_Rays

  58. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Christopher Smith @SmittyOnMLB

  59. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

  60. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Evan Drellich @EvanDrellich

  61. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Jeff Passan @JeffPassan

  62. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    Dodger Blue @DodgerBlue1958

  63. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Cut4 @Cut4

  64. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Ian Browne @IanMBrowne

  65. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Darren Rovell @darrenrovell

  66. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Alex Speier @alexspeier

  67. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Dodgers Nation @DodgersNation

  68. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Travis Sawchik @Travis_Sawchik

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Dodgers vs. Red Sox: Live Updates and Score for 2018 World Series Game 1

  1. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Batting Stance Guy @BattingStanceG

  2. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    FOX Sports @FOXSports

    And just like that, the @RedSox take the first lead in Game 1! https://t.co/GCmLt2h32j

  3. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Andy McCullough @McCulloughTimes

    David Freese couldn’t make a play on a twisting foul ball. Granted another strike, Mookie Betts singled, stole second and scored on a single by Andrew Benintendi. 1-0, Sox.

  4. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    Cespedes Family BBQ @CespedesBBQ

    Big boos for Machado from the Boston crowd. They must not be fans of the hair I guess. https://t.co/qYhpwCK5xQ

  5. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    MLB @MLB

    🎵 CAAAAAAAAARL Yastrzemski … CAAAAAAAAARL Yastrzemski … The man they call Yaz. 🎵

    #WorldSeries https://t.co/KyiOnzIb3m

  6. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Jose de Jesus Ortiz @OrtizKicks

  7. Clock Iconless than a minute ago

    Albert Breer @AlbertBreer

  8. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Evan Drellich @EvanDrellich

  9. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

    Sale’s slider seems to be working. Hasn’t had it consistenly this postseason. But some bad swings from the Dodgers in his 21-pitch first inning.

  10. Clock Icon13 minutes ago

    J.P. Hoornstra @jphoornstra

    Chris Sale will not throw a no-hitter today.

  11. Clock Icon12 minutes ago

    via Bleacher Report

  12. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Pete Abraham @PeteAbe

  13. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Joel Sherman @Joelsherman1

  14. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Claire McNear @claire_mcnear

  15. Clock Icon18 minutes ago

    Jen McCaffrey @jcmccaffrey

    Sale tops out at 94mph and strikes out Dozier looking to get things underway.

  16. Clock Icon22 minutes ago

    You Ready for This?

    Kershaw’s first start in Boston. Sale’s first in the World Series.

    Let’s go!

  17. Clock Icon24 minutes ago

    MLB @MLB

    Boston loves Dave Roberts. #WorldSeries https://t.co/jwZ0T0qtSy

  18. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Baseball Reference @baseball_ref

  19. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Jared Carrabis @Jared_Carrabis

  20. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Bill Plunkett @billplunkettocr

  21. Clock Icon28 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report MLB @BR_MLB

    IT’S ALMOST TIME.

    Who ya got? https://t.co/5ZUuvRb5Sm

  22. October 23, 2018
  23. Clock Icon39 minutes ago

    Ryan Hannable @RyanHannable

    As expected, during pregame intros Dodgers manager Dave Roberts gets loud applause, while Manny Machado gets loud boos.

  24. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    MLB Stat of the Day @MLBStatoftheDay

    Xander Bogaerts is the lone position player left from the 2013 @RedSox #WorldSeries roster.

    Will he get his 2nd ring? https://t.co/WLtgNeRkVi

  25. October 24, 2018
  26. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Dodgers Nation @DodgersNation

  27. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Marc Topkin @TBTimes_Rays

  28. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Chris Cotillo @ChrisCotillo

  29. October 23, 2018
  30. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Alanna Rizzo @alannarizzo

    Despite earlier rain, lightning & thunder, we are scheduled to start on time. 5:09 PM PT/8:09 PM EDT.

  31. Clock Icon11:26 pm

    Cut4 @Cut4

    Goodbye, tarp. Hello, World Series Game 1! https://t.co/yrUfsXc2lK

  32. October 24, 2018
  33. Clock Icon29 minutes ago

    via NBC Sports Boston

  34. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Alex Speier @alexspeier

  35. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Red Sox Stats @redsoxstats

  36. October 23, 2018
  37. Clock Icon11:21 pm

    Jason Mastrodonato @JMastrodonato

    Roaring applause as the tarp comes off at Fenway Park.

  38. Clock Icon11:12 pm

    MLB Network @MLBNetwork

    Game One Lineups are set. #MLBTonight

    #WorldSeries https://t.co/k9cXJ2AncN

  39. October 24, 2018
  40. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Daren Willman @darenw

  41. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Boston Red Sox @RedSox

  42. October 23, 2018
  43. Clock Icon10:42 pm

    Yahoo Sports MLB @MLByahoosports

    They’ve cleared the stands at Fenway Park because a lightning warning and this is what the concourse looks like right now ⚠ https://t.co/azRjIcjcZt

  44. Clock Icon10:54 pm

    via Boston.com

  45. October 24, 2018
  46. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Michael Silverman @MikeSilvermanBB

  47. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    Bill Plunkett @billplunkettocr

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Silicon Valley silent on Saudi money amid Khashoggi scandal


Ro Khanna

“In addition to pulling out of the conference, Silicon Valley needs to be quite clear that they’re not going to accept any additional Saudi investment,” said Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), whose district encompasses the headquarters of Apple, Tesla and Intel. | Reed Saxon/AP Photo

Technology

Some Democrats want tech companies to reevaluate all their dealings with Riyadh in light of journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s death.

Tech executives withdrew in scores from a high-profile Saudi investment summit amid the uproar over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi — but top Silicon Valley companies show no signs they plan to unwind their lucrative business ties with the country.

The oil-rich kingdom, with its long history of human rights violations, is the single largest funding source for U.S. startups — and a financial pipeline for companies like Uber, Twitter and Tesla.

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Now some Democrats want tech companies to reevaluate all their dealings with Riyadh in light of Khashoggi’s death, even after executives from companies like Uber and Google pulled out of their planned appearances at the Saudi-led Future Investment Initiative summit that kicked off Tuesday.

“In addition to pulling out of the conference, Silicon Valley needs to be quite clear that they’re not going to accept any additional Saudi investment,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), whose tech-heavy district encompasses the headquarters of Apple, Tesla and Intel, told POLITICO.

In a Facebook post, Khanna said: “We must lead with our values.”

The Saudi furor adds to a long list of political headaches for the tech sector, which has come under fire in Washington for everything from Russian social media interference to data privacy violations to Republican complaints that major internet companies are biased against conservatives.

But the fallout from the Khashoggi killing threatens the bottom line of the tech industry, which has looked to Saudi Arabia’s deep pockets for money to grow its businesses.

Ride-hailing services Uber and Lyft have struck major investment deals with Saudi investors in recent years, and Twitter counts Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal as one of its top shareholders. The Saudi financial fingerprint also extends to other well-known brands such as Snap and Tesla.

Twitter declined to comment on Tuesday about whether it planned to sever ties with Saudi leaders in light of the scandal. Uber, Lyft and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment on the matter. Snap declined to comment.

Saudi investors have poured at least $14.1 billion into U.S. companies as of 2017, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis data that counted only cases where Saudis have a 10 percent or higher voting ownership.

Exactly how much of that money was funneled to tech is difficult to ascertain, as some industry-specific data is not disclosed. But the kingdom’s investors have taken part in high-profile venture capital deals like the $963 million investment round this year for Magic Leap, a maker of augmented reality headsets.

While Silicon Valley has been largely quiet about the Saudi money, some voices are questioning the industry’s reliance on the kingdom’s wealth.

“If you’re taking billions of dollars from people whose values are incompatible with yours, you can’t say with a straight face that you disagree or dissent,” said Wesley Chan, managing director at Silicon Valley-based Felicis Ventures, who previously held a variety of positions at Google.

“You can’t say you believe in free speech and political debate, and then all of a sudden take money from folks who may have been involved in the horrendous and hideous murder of a respected journalist,” Chan said. “It results in massive moral peril for people that choose to associate with them.”

The Khashoggi affair isn’t the first time Silicon Valley has been pressed to reckon with Saudi Arabia’s record on human rights. The tech sector ran into similar questions over its ties to Saudi Arabia last year after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman detained numerous members of the Saudi royal family at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh.

A United Nations report in August added to the pressure on the tech industry. U.N. analysts found that a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates may have committed war crimes in Yemen, where thousands of civilians have been killed in airstrikes.

“There’s plenty of money in Silicon Valley and we don’t need to take investments that are tainted with the blood of tens of thousands of killed Yemenis,” said Khanna, an outspoken critic of the Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen.

While tech companies haven’t shown any inclination yet to unwind business ties with Riyadh, they are trying to keep the kingdom at arm’s length in public.

As the Saudi investment summit began on Tuesday, one of the country’s top tech partners, SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, was nowhere to be found and his name was no longer listed as a speaker on the event’s website, according to reports from the scene.

Saudi officials are putting $45 billion into SoftBank’s Vision Fund, a massive investment vehicle that has backed U.S. companies like Uber and Slack. Japan-based SoftBank is also majority owner of U.S. wireless carrier Sprint, which is seeking approval from regulators to merge with T-Mobile.

SoftBank did not return a request for comment on Son’s conference plans or the future of the Vision Fund’s relationship with Saudi Arabia.

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