Bryce Love Reveals He Tore His ACL vs. Cal; Will Miss NFL Combine

BERKELEY, CA - DECEMBER 1:  Bryce Love #20 of the Stanford Cardinal warms up before the 121st Big Game between Stanford and the University of California Golden Bears played on December 1, 2018 at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley, California.  (Photo by David Madison/Getty Images)

David Madison/Getty Images

NFL draft prospect and Stanford running back Bryce Love revealed Friday that he tore his ACL during a Dec. 1 victory over California. 

“I’m very grateful to Dr. Andrews and his team for making the surgery a seamless process,” Love said in a statement to Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports. “Obviously, there’s no such thing as an ideal injury, but I’m on the path to recovery, and my goal remains the same—getting drafted by an NFL team and being the ultimate professional. I’ll be back better than I’ve ever been.”

Thamel noted Love underwent the surgery on Dec. 18 with Dr. James Andrews and will miss February’s NFL Scouting Combine.

There is no official return date yet, but Ian Rapoport of NFL.com added more context by saying, “The timeline would give Bryce Love a chance to be ready for the beginning of the 2019 season. But clearly, a difficult reality for one of the top backs.”

Love was a dominant playmaker during the 2017 season and was the Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year, a consensus All-American and the Doak Walker Award winner as nation’s best running back. He also finished second in Heisman Trophy voting behind Oklahoma quarterback Baker Mayfield.

He tallied 2,118 rushing yards and 19 touchdowns while helping lead Stanford to a Pac-12 North title and Alamo Bowl appearance.

While he was expected to once again be one of college football’s top players when he elected to return to school for the 2018 campaign, he finished with just 739 rushing yards and saw his yards per carry total dip from 8.1 in 2017 to 4.5. It should be noted at least some of the blame could go toward an offensive line that suffered multiple injuries.

Despite an up-and-down senior season, Love was still the No. 7 running back prospect on Bleacher Report’s Matt Miller’s most recent big board. Miller also listed him as having the best speed of all the prospects at his position.

It is fair to worry about Love’s speed and availability after this significant knee injury, although he does have the entire offseason to recover following a mid-December surgery as he prepares for the next step of his football career.

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Will there be justice for Jamal Khashoggi?

On Thursday, friends, politicians and human-rights activists remembered Jamal Khashoggi, 100 days after the killing of the Saudi journalist.

A vigil was organised at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, where Khashoggi was murdered on October 2, and a memorial service was held in the US Congress in Washington. DC.

Some members of the Congress are pressuring President Donald Trump to re-evaluate relations with Saudi Arabia and its Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is widely suspected of ordering the killing.

Will justice ever be served or will diplomatic and trade links overrule human rights principles?

Presenter: Folly Bah Thibault

Guests: 

Rami Khoury – professor of journalism, American University of Beirut and non-resident senior fellow, Harvard Kennedy School

Matthew Bryza – former US ambassador to Azerbaijan and former White House diplomat

David Haigh – human rights lawyer and co-founder, Stirling Haigh and Detained International 

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Air traffic controllers sue feds over shutdown


Air traffic controllers

Air traffic controllers, who are required to work without pay during the shutdown, were scheduled to receive a paycheck Thursday and instead got pay stubs reading zero or one or two dollars. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images

The union that represents air traffic controllers is suing the federal government over the partial shutdown, joining a growing list of unions that have filed complaints, including one on behalf of TSA agents.

The suit, which names President Donald Trump along with several FAA officials as defendants, accuses the administration of “depriving [air traffic controllers] of their hard-earned compensation without the requisite due process.”

Story Continued Below

Controllers, who are required to work without pay during the shutdown, were scheduled to receive a paycheck Thursday and instead got pay stubs reading zero or one or two dollars. Many have worked overtime during the shutdown for which they also haven’t been compensated.

“Defendants’ unlawful failure to pay plaintiffs and those similarly situated has and continues to have a devastating effect on those devoted federal employees’ lives,” the National Air Traffic Controllers Association wrote.

The union that represents TSA agents has also sued,alleging the shutdown violates labor laws.

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Does The Weeknd’s New Song With Gesaffelstein Take A Shot At Drake?



YouTube/Columbia

All this week, The Weeknd has been teasing a new collaboration with French electronic maestro Gesaffelstein in the form of spooky, oblique social media posts featuring the R&B star and a seemingly Solo-in-carbonite version of the DJ. The pair had previously teamed up for two tracks on My Dear Melancholy, the Weeknd’s 2018 EP, and on their new collab, “Lost in the Fire” (which dropped Friday), their joint sound is wiggly and liberated.

It came readymade with an atmospheric video, directed by Manu Cossu and complete with crisp flower imagery, blazing visions, and creepy nightmarish visions. It’s got shades of David Lynch or something you’d find in a contemporary art museum. But it looks great.

Along with its examination of a potentially sexually fluid relationship, “Lost in the Fire” features a line that some have already taken to be a shot at Drake, the Weeknd’s former collaborator and Toronto pal. “And I just want a baby with the right one / ‘Cause I would never be the one to hurt one,” the Weeknd sings in the song, according to Apple Music’s official lyrics (as Pitchfork points out).

But some have heard the line as “I would never be the one to hide one,” a potential reference to the revelation of Drake having a son, as aired out by Pusha T last year on his dis track “The Story of Adidon.”

Neither artist has weighed in on the line, and they likely won’t, but if they do, we’ll update this space with new information. In the meantime, you can watch the video, and listen to the song, above and decide for yourself.

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‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ speedrun shows what makes speedrunning great

At a hotel in Maryland, about 15 miles outside of Washington D.C., hundreds of gamers gather to play (and watch people play) over a hundred games as quickly as they can, back-to-back, at all hours of the day and night, for a week straight.

This is Awesome Games Done Quick, an annual speedrunning charity marathon that raises money for the Prevent Cancer Foundation, and on Tuesday night one of the best runs of the week happened: Sonic the Hedgehog run by Dr. Fatbody.

SEE ALSO: A look back at 5 of the best moments from Games Done Quick speedruns

This run is a distillation of what makes speedrunning great — and it just so happens to be a game that’s all about going fast.

This original Sonic run has a charismatic commentator, cool glitches and tricks, and exudes positivity and a strong sense of community. Not only is it impressive to watch Dr. Fatbody complete the iconic 1991 game in just over 20 minutes, the whole segment is imbued with this infectiously warm, welcoming quality.

The way Games Done Quick speedruns usually work is one person plays the game while a group of fellow runners hangs out and talks about the game on the couch behind them. 

For the Sonic the Hedgehog run, the couch is stacked with runners, including one who is video-calling in on a laptop, and Dr. Fatbody makes sure to shout all of them out and a handful of others who aren’t present.

Speedrunning is a hobby that’s built on passion

I’m not even a big fan of Sonic the Hedgehog but I found myself enamored by the run. The hyper-precise tricks that send Sonic flying through walls and across levels got the crowd and viewers hyped, and shows off the kind of skills and intense practice it takes to master the art of speedrunning.

And while normally runners at marathons try to avoid taking risks, Dr. Fatbody threw caution to the wind and went for a whole bunch of difficult moves to add some extra style to the run and get every hyped up.

The most important part of what makes this speedrun so great is the balance between fun and respect. Dr. Fatbody is clearly a fun guy and is there to have to a good time, but he also clearly cares a lot about this game and its community.

Speedrunning is a hobby that’s built on passion. You can’t really become a decent speedrunner without dedicating hundreds, even thousands of hours to repeating the same game over and over. Speedrunners know their games inside and out, and you can only really do that without losing your mind unless it’s something you truly love.

SEE ALSO: ‘Super Mario Bros.’ speedrunner hits nearly inhuman 4:55 world record

Games Done Quick events, on top of raising millions of dollars for charities like the Prevent Cancer Foundation, are displays of intense passion, and when channeled through excellent runners, it can be infectious.

It’s a passion that inspires people to stay awake until 3 a.m. (or set their morning alarms for 3 a.m.) when they have work or school in the morning to see their favorite games get crushed by talented runners, or tune into a six-hour run of a Zelda game in Italian (because the dialogue is shortest in Italian) instead of doing literally anything else on a Thursday night.

There’s tons of runs worth watching at this year’s Awesome Games Done Quick, and still more to come, whether it’s to see a favorite game get played by some of the most talented individuals alive or just get caught up in whatever exciting run catches your eye.

And you might even be inspired to try a speedrun yourself.

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Inside the Yemeni school where childhood doesn’t exist

Nine-year-old Ahmad spends most of his time on his own, kicking up some dirt and trying to get a deflated football to rebound off an old brick wall just metres away from a classroom where he sleeps.

For the last six months, this has been Ahmad’s daily routine. With it, the long days go faster, he says.

It also reminds him of some of the happier moments of his life. 

Six months ago, Ahmad would spend most his lunch breaks running around with his best friend Hesham, playing football in his school playground in the port city of Hodeidah.

But since fighting erupted in his neighbourhood last June, Ahmad found himself enduring a rather different school experience.

He fled to Sanaa with his parents and younger sister. The family now sleeps on thin mattresses on the cold floor of Muhammad Abdullah Saleh school in the capital. There is little food here and internally displaced people (IDPs) have to take a bath using buckets filled with grey water.

Hodeidah, a large city on Yemen’s Red Sea coast, has been the latest battleground between the Houthis and the Saudi-UAE coalition battling for control of the country.

WATCH: Yemen losing generation of youth to war (2:31)

More than 445,000 Yemenis have fled the city since the summer.

Without toys or friends, Ahmad’s parents say his life has been upended, with the youngster losing a massive chunk of his childhood each day to Yemen’s four-year-war.

“There’s no internet, no computers, no TV,” Ahmad told Al Jazeera. “Everyday it’s the same. It’s very boring.”

His father tried to get him to make new friends with some of the other IDPs. But his mother said the sound of the falling bombs and gnawing poverty have taken a heavy toll on his emotional well-being.

Each day he struggles to recreate the life he once had in Hodeidah, she said.

“His behaviour has changed a lot,” she added. “The way he now yells at his sister, no child of this age should be talking to their family [members] like that.”

More than 445,000 Yemenis have fled Hodeidah since the start of June, with thousands of IDPs heading to the relative safety of the capital Sanaa [Khaled Abdullah/Reuters]

Smell of mold and faeces

Just metres away from the classroom they now call ‘home’, plastic sheets are used by some to cut out the draughts.

“The situation [in Hodeidah] traumatised my children,” said Abdulla Hasn, who was among the first Yemenis to flee Hodeidah when pro-government forces, backed by the Saudi-UAE coalition, began advancing on the city.

Living in the small classroom with 16 of his relatives now, Hasn said: “They [my children] were crying, asking me to take them to another safe place. Then I moved with them to Sanaa”.

At the time, Hasn was not able to escape due to his finances. Not earning enough to cover the transportation costs, the group could only afford to leave when a “well-off” businessman loaned them 50,000 Yemeni riyals ($100) for the journey.

“I got the money and immediately left for Sanaa along with my wife, seven children, my sister and her seven children,” Hasn said.

After six gruelling hours, they finally reached the capital, a city reeling from more than four years of devastating coalition air strikes: Debris from bombed houses and shops lined the streets and poverty was widespread.

With camps already inundated with Yemeni IDPs, schools were the only option left to seek shelter in, he said.

Blankets and dirty plates lay on the floors, and more than a dozen people were crammed in each classroom.

The smell of mold and faeces permeated through the hallways, some of the IDPs said, with the bathrooms not equipped with showers.

“We survive on rice and bread,” said Hasn. “I don’t have a single riyal [to my name]”.

Thousands of IDPs have taken refuge at schools across the capital [Hani Mohammed/Associated Press]

‘Real tragedy’

With the humanitarian catastrophe in Yemen already referred to as one of the worst in the world, the intense battles raging in Hodeidah meant that Hasn had no option but to remain in Sanaa, which has been under the control of Houthi rebels since 2014.

The Yemeni government intensified its efforts to retake Hodeidah in order to clear a path to Sanaa, the capture of which it believes will end the war.

Once home to around 600,000 people, Hodeidah was Yemen’s most important city because of the port, through which 80 percent of the country’s commercial goods, aid and fuel flowed.

But since it was captured by the Houthis during their lightening offensive, the Red Sea city saw its fortunes shift from Yemen’s agro-industrial capital to a fierce battleground.

WATCH: In Yemen, children clamber over rubble to get to school (2:08)

Most of the school’s residents said had they know what lay in store for them, they would have probably remained in Hodeidah.

Ghamdan Abu Ali, a journalist and IDP from Hodeidah, said the dire situation of IDPs was another hidden “tragedy” of the war.

He said the only effective way to help those languishing in makeshift camps was to “stop the Hodeidah offensive so that people can return to their houses and live with dignity”.

“Residents from Hodeidah fled to many provinces including Sanaa, Dhamar and Hajjah. They abandoned everything in their city. They are now undergoing harsh living conditions,” said Ali.

He added that rent had soared since IDPs took shelter in Sanaa, with landlords capitalising on the chaos.

“An apartment which could have been rented out for $60 a month is now going in the region of $100,” he said.

Saba Al-Mualemi, a communications officer at the International Organization for Migration in Yemen (IMO), said recent arrivals “received aid including food commodities, mattresses, blankets and cleaning items”.

But for the hundreds of thousands scattered across the capital receiving meagre food rations and medicine, whatever aid was being delivered did little to mitigate their suffering.

Ahmad’s father said he hoped the next round of peace talks could offer a brief respite for his children.

But with fighting in Hodeidah showing no signs of abating, he feared the ongoing suffering could eat away at the last bit of resilience and optimism in his children.

 

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Lady Gaga apologizes for R. Kelly collaboration, vows to pull song

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Rick Nash Retires from NHL After 15 Seasons over Concern Related to Brain Injury

Boston Bruins left wing Rick Nash (61) waits for the face off during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Boston, Tuesday, March 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Charles Krupa/Associated Press

NHL winger Rick Nash announced his retirement Friday at the age of 34.

TSN’s Darren Dreger tweeted the following statement made by Nash’s agent, Joe Resnick, on behalf of the 15-year NHL veteran:

Darren Dreger @DarrenDreger

Statement from Joe Resnick of Top Shelf Sports Management Inc. @Topshelf_TSSM on behalf of his client Rick Nash https://t.co/rc7wu3wZNE

Nash decided against signing with a team during the offseason in an attempt to recover from a concussion he suffered last season.

The seasoned power forward spent the 2017-18 campaign split between the New York Rangers and Boston Bruins, finishing with 21 goals and 13 assists in 71 games.

In 1,060 career NHL regular-season contests, Nash racked up 437 goals and 368 assists for 805 points. He also recorded 46 points in 89 career playoff games.

Nash was originally selected No. 1 overall in the 2002 NHL draft by the Columbus Blue Jackets, and he went on to enjoy much of his greatest success with that franchise.

He scored at least 30 goals in seven of his nine campaigns in Columbus, and he topped 40 goals on two occasions.

Nash remains the Blue Jackets’ leader in most major offensive categories, including goals (289), assists (258) and points (547).

He was traded to the Rangers in 2012 and went on to spend parts of six seasons with the Blueshirts.

Nash’s best season in New York was 2014-15 when he scored a career-high 42 goals and added 27 assists.

The previous season, Nash played in the Stanley Cup Final for the first and only time in his career, but the Rangers fell to the Los Angeles Kings.

All told, Nash played in six NHL All-Star Games, was a one-time Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s leading goal scorer and won a pair of Olympic gold medals for Canada in 2010 and 2014.

With the possibility of Nash signing this season now off the table, teams in need of some scoring punch will be forced to explore trade options in the coming weeks.

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Freedom Caucus members tell Trump to back off wall emergency


Mark Meadows

In a tweet Friday morning, Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows wrote that if Democrats don’t compromise on the wall, Trump should exhaust all options before an emergency declaration, but then should feel free to do so. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

Government Shutdown

Conservative hard-liners fear the move would lead to an uncertain legal battle while setting a dangerous precedent for the presidency.

A core group of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus is urging President Donald Trump against the explosive step of declaring a national emergency to build his wall.

Multiple Republicans in the conservative group have privately raised their concerns with the Trump administration, fearing it would lead to a years-long legal standoff that Democrats could win while setting a dangerous precedent for the presidency, according to more than a dozen lawmakers and GOP aides. They want Trump to hold out for a deal with Democrats, regardless of how long the partial government shutdown drags on.

Story Continued Below

Trump’s possible pursuit of an emergency declaration on the border divided the caucus during an animated meeting Wednesday night, according to lawmakers who attended the meeting. Members wrestled with constitutional concerns. GOP Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan was reportedly particularly outspoken. Searching for an alternative, the group kicked around other, more legally sound ways for Trump to raise revenue for the wall.

“[Trump] has more options on the table than what I have read about,” said Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), who has sponsored a bill allowing private citizens to make contributions toward building and maintaining border walls. “We shared some of those ideas.”

But while conservatives are uneasy with the prospect of an emergency declaration, many acknowledge they would ultimately line up behind the president if he pulls the trigger — a scenario that is increasingly expected on Capitol Hill as the shutdown barrels into its fourth week.

“I do see the potential for national emergencies being used for every single thing that we face in the future where we can’t reach an agreement. That’s the slippery slope that I’m concerned about,” Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), a top Trump ally, told POLITICO on Thursday. “The administration is well aware of the ability to use national emergency [powers] and the reluctance to do so from House members.”

“And yet, I think the president would find broad support if it’s determined that ultimately he has to do it,” Meadows added.

In a tweet Friday morning, Meadows wrote that if Democrats don’t compromise on the wall, Trump should exhaust all options before an emergency declaration, but then should feel free to do so. “POTUS should use asset forfeiture money or other discretionary fees to start construction,” he wrote. “If not, he should declare a national emergency.”

The president’s approach is putting House conservatives — who spent years railing against President Barack Obama for alleged executive overreach, particularly on immigration — in a serious bind. It’s also one of conservatives’ first battles in their new minority, where the once-powerful House Freedom Caucus now hold far less leverage in the House.

Some of the group’s ringleaders, however, still have Trump’s ear and are working behind the scenes to persuade Trump to avoid an emergency declaration. They are competing against a small but growing contingency of Republicans who do support the power play, including some Freedom Caucus members.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a close Trump ally, urged the president Thursday to take executive action to secure wall funding after another failed attempt at dealmaking on immigration.

Speaking from the U.S.-Mexico border on Thursday, Trump signaled that he is leaning toward the step, which advisers say would enable the president to tap funds elsewhere in the budget, such as the Pentagon or Army Corps of Engineers, without congressional approval.

“If we don’t make a deal with Congress, most likely I will do that,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity Thursday. “We’re going to see what happens over the next few days.”

Freedom Caucus member Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) urged Trump to make the emergency declaration in an op-ed in the Daily Caller, while Rep. Mark Green, a freshman and newly minted Freedom Caucus member, is also girding for action on securing the border.

“I support whatever means it takes to get it done,” the Tennessee Republican told Fox Business Network’s Lou Dobbs. “We have a crisis at the southern border. It’s time to act.”

Other conservatives, however, are adamant that Trump’s strategy should be a last resort. Some are worried that it would be seen as backing down in the shutdown fight with Democrats, given the dubious fate of the border wall funds in the courts. Many GOP lawmakers are also anxious about setting a precedent for handing over too much power to the executive branch.

“To call it an outright emergency, I told them, I don’t agree with that, but it’s a crisis that needs to be dealt with. That was my opinion,” said Florida Republican Rep. Ted Yoho, who also pushed back against the proposal during the Freedom Caucus meeting this week. “Once you do that, it’s all or nothing.”

Rep. David Schweikert (R-Ariz.), another caucus member, said he does believe the president has the legal authority to declare an emergency for humanitarian reasons and the flow of deadly fentanyl over the border. But he warned against the approach.

“I believe the president does have the legal authority — if you read the statute — I also think it would be a poor use of that authority,” Schweikert said.

House Democratic leaders, just one week into the majority, are likely to respond quickly with legal action of their own if Trump goes ahead with his unilateral plan. That could tie up Trump’s wall funding maneuver for months or longer.

And if Trump agrees to reopen shuttered government agencies, Republicans fear they’ll lose their leverage if — or when — the move is blocked in court, which is why they prefer to see a deal go through Congress.

“I do think it’s an emergency, and if the president declares that, then we’ll go from there. But I think the best approach is legislatively,” Rep. Jim Jordan, another one of the group’s leaders, said in a Facebook live video with supporters Thursday.

“If he goes the ‘emergency’ route, I’m convinced it’s going to wind up in court. I think we all are. That just delays what we all know needs to get done,” the Ohio Republican said.

Meadows added that Trump could decide to keep the government shut down even if he declares a national emergency, suggesting that the president may wait to see the outcome in the courts first even if that took months.

“It doesn’t necessarily open the government,” Meadows said. “Declaring a national emergency and funding the government are two separate decisions.”

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