This game…UNBELIEVABLE!!! Love the intensity, passion, and all our effort to win the game. Mad respect for Klay and this is what sports are all about. These guys out there bodies on the line night in night out and we love them for it.
The president has moved into damage control mode after an interview in which he scoffed at the notion of reporting revelations of damaging information from a foreign source to U.S. authorities. | Alex Wong/Getty Images
President Donald Trump on Friday tried again to rectify the mess he made by saying he would likely accept dirt on a political opponent from a foreign entity, going on “Fox & Friends” to clean up the comments.
Trump insisted during a meandering 50-minute interview on the network that “of course” he would alert the FBI in such a case, but only after reviewing it first, “because if you don’t look at it, you won’t know it’s bad.”
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The president has moved into damage control mode after an interview he gave with ABC News’s George Stephanopoulos this week in which he scoffed at the notion of reporting revelations of damaging information from a foreign source to U.S. authorities.
“It’s not an interference, they have information — I think I’d take it,” Trump said. “If I thought there was something wrong, I’d go maybe to the FBI — if I thought there was something wrong.”
“It’s called oppo research,” he added.
Remarkably, Trump also asserted on Friday that he didn’t foresee that issue arising. “I don’t think anybody would present me with anything because they know how much I love the country,” he said, despite well-documented attempts by Russian nationals to do just that during the 2016 election.
“Nobody’s gonna present me with anything bad, and No. 2, if I was — and of course, you have to look at it, because if you don’t look at it, you won’t know it’s bad, but, of course, you give it to the FBI or report it to attorney general or somebody like that,” he argued. “But of course you do that — you couldn’t have that happen with our country, and everybody understands that and I thought it was made clear.”
Even so, he contended, as a president who frequently meets with foreign leaders, he questioned whether he would need to report every negative thing uttered behind closed doors to U.S. authorities, citing his recent meetings with the leaders of the U.K., Ireland and France — all U.S. allies.
His clean-up attempts received mixed responses from the three “Fox & Friends” co-hosts, who often function as cheerleaders for the president. While Ainsley Earhardt appeared to accept the president’s explanation, Brain Kilmeade pushed back some on Trump’s argument.
“Mr. President, I think that’s a good point, but what if a leader leaned over and just said, listen, X candidate that you’re running against he did dicey things in XYZ country, and I’ve got some proof of it — what do you do in that scenario, do you back off, do you say I don’t need it, do you say show it to me?” he asked.
“Like I said Brian, the president of the United States no matter who it is whether it’s me or anybody else is in a much different position because I hear things that frankly, good, bad or indifferent that other people don’t hear, just a normal conversation,” Trump responded, before returning to his initial point. “But nobody is going to say bad things to me, they know that I’m a very straight player. They know one thing about me: I love the country more than anything.”
Trump’s claims that he would not be a prime recipient of foreign dirt not only contradicts his comments earlier in the week, but the actions of his 2016 campaign and himself more recently.
While running for president, his son, son-in-law and campaign chairman met with a Russian lawyer in Trump Tower because they were promised damaging information on Trump’s then-opponent Hillary Clinton. The meeting, which Trump later helped craft a misleading statement defending, was a key event investigated by former special counsel Robert Mueller in his probe of Russia’s election interference.
Also in 2016, Trump appeared to encourage Russia to hack Clinton’s personal email server during a news conference, a suggestion Mueller’s investigators found Moscow did attempt to act on.
More recently, Trump cheered on his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani over his plans to meet with leaders in the Ukraine to encourage investigations there involving former Vice President Joe Biden and his son — plans Giuliani canceled after allegations of meddling.
The president also insisted that he had “a lot of support” over the last few days, despite his comments being nearly universally condemned by his allies and opponents alike.
His comments to ABC also prompted backlash from the federal government. After Trump called his FBI director “wrong” for saying that candidates for office should report foreign offers of assistance, and one of Trump’s allies suggested there was a “mistake of law,” the head of the Federal Election Commission chimed in with her assessment.
“Let me make something 100% clear to the American public and anyone running for public office: It is illegal for any person to solicit, accept, or receive anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a U.S. election,“ Chairwoman Ellen Weintraub wrote. “This is not a novel concept.”
Demonstrators hold placards as they protest outside of Westminster Magistrates Court in London [Hannah Mckay/Reuters]
The full extradition hearing to decide whether WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should be sent to the United States will take place in February next year, Westminster Magistrates Court in London ruled on Friday.
Assange, 47, is accused by US authorities of conspiring to hack US government computers and violating an espionage law.
He is currently in a London prison after being jailed for 50 weeks for skipping bail after fleeing to the Ecuadorean embassy seven years ago to avoid extradition to Sweden for questioning in a sexual assault investigation.
He was too ill to attend a recent hearing and appeared at Friday’s hearing by video link from prison.
Ben Brandon, a British lawyer representing the US government, told the court hearing that the case “related to one of the largest compromises of confidential information in the history of the United States”.
Assange invokes First Amendment
Assange’s lawyer, Mark Summers, said the case represents an “outrageous and full-frontal assault” on journalistic rights.
US officials have made clear their intention to prosecute Assange under the Espionage Act, blaming him for directing WikiLeaks‘ publication of a huge trove of secret documents that disclosed the names of people who provided confidential information to American and coalition forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Assange asserts that he is a journalist with First Amendment protections.
Reporting from London, Al Jazeera’s Jonah Hull said the full extradition hearing next year could last five days.
“That decision itself could be appealed by either side leading to potentially another lengthy judicial process. It is at least many months before Julian Assange will have to answer any of the charges put to him by the US Department of Justice in a US court,” he said.
Real Madrid have beaten Barcelona to the signing of Japanese teenager Takefusa Kubo, who has joined the club from FC Tokyo for a reported fee in the region of €2 million (£1.8 million).
ESPN FC’s Dermot Corrigan referred to the interest shown by rivals Barca and Paris Saint-Germain and provided details of the transfer:
Dermot Corrigan @dermotmcorrigan
No details of fee or contract in Madrid’s Kubo statement, but Marca this morn said Madrid are to pay €2 million to FC Tokyo, and have offered a five year contract paying €1 million per annum, terms which neither Barca nor Paris Saint Germain were willing to match.
Attacking midfielder Kubo, 18, previously spent three years in Barca’s La Masia academy and has earned the nickname “Japanese Messi,” per ESPN, due to playing in a style similar to that of Blaugrana talisman Lionel.
Real Madrid said about their new signing: “The top level of the Madridista academy are set to get their hands on one of the most promising youngsters in world football. A technically gifted and hugely talented attacking midfielder, he possesses wonderful vision, quick feet and has an eye for goal.”
Goal recently posted footage of the starlet in scoring action for FC Tokyo, whom he joined in 2015 after leaving Catalonia:
Kubo made his senior debut for Japan as a substitute during their 2-0 win against El Salvador earlier in June.
Jose Felix Diaz and Miguel Angel Lara of Marca reported Barcelona wanted to sign the player in 2015, and it was their pursuit of Kubo and other underage players that led to the club’s transfer suspension.
Real will send the player to their Castilla squad, and Sport‘s Sam Marsden added other sporting reasons influenced his decision:
Samuel Marsden @samuelmarsden
Very interesting. Real Madrid have signed Takefusa Kubo, the Japanese teenager who left Barcelona due to FIFA punishment. Barça had hoped to bring him back from FC Tokyo but Madrid offered more money & made more sporting promises.
Kubo represents a young and valuable marketing tool to Japanese audiences, but his previous links to Barcelona and his early professional career with FC Tokyo hint at real promise.
It’s likely to be some time before the player has a first-team impact in Madrid—if any—though manager Zinedine Zidane has shown he’s willing to use young players like Vinicius Junior, 18, and Federico Valverde, 20.
Kubo scored five times and recorded four assists in 16 appearances for FC Tokyo this season, signing off with a streak of four goals in his last four J1 League games for the club.
Israeli warplanes have attacked several Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip following a Palestinian rocket attack in the south of Israel, the military has said.
The incident comes after Israel and Hamas exchanged rocket fire on Thursday, in the first serious cross-border escalation since a surge in fighting in May.
In a statement on Friday, the Israeli military said fighter jets struck “infrastructure in military compounds and a Hamas naval force military compound as part of a strike on a number of Hamas terror sites throughout the Gaza Strip”.
The statement said the attack came in response to a rocket launched from Gaza which hit a Jewish seminary in the town of Sderot.
The seminary was empty at the time of the attack as students had left to celebrate the Jewish Sabbath with their families.
“If the rocket had hit a few hours earlier there would have been a disaster,” former Defence Minister Amir Peretz, a Sderot resident, said in an interview with Israeli public radio on Friday.
No casualties were reported on any side.
‘We will respond’
Speaking from the Gaza Strip, Abdellatif al-Qanoo’, a spokesman for Hamas, told Al Jazeera the rocket fire was in response to Israeli aggression.
“The occupation [Israel] is bearing the fruit of its own escalation, continuous attacks [on Gaza] and its stalling in implementing agreements between us.
“Our people will continue to challenge the occupation. We will respond to this behaviour [Israeli attacks] by continuing to gather and march,” added al-Qanoo’ in reference to planned protests along the Israeli-Gaza border on Friday.
The latest escalation followed Israel’s closure of offshore waters to Gaza fisherman on Wednesday in what it said was a response to incendiary balloons launched across the frontier that caused fires in fields in southern Israel this week.
“Due to the continuous launching of incendiary balloons and kites from the Gaza Strip towards Israel, it has been decided tonight [Wednesday] not to allow access to Gaza’s maritime space until further notice,” Coordination of the Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the Israeli defence ministry department responsible for Palestinian civil affairs, said.
A spokesman for the Israeli fire service said incendiary balloons from Gaza caused seven fires on Tuesday alone. In the past year, Palestinians have set fire to a number of areas of farmland in southern Israel.
May violence
In two days of heavy fighting in early May, Israeli raids killed at least 25 Palestinians, more than half of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities. In the same period, projectiles from Gaza killed four civilians in Israel, local health officials said.
Some two million Palestinians live in Gaza, whose economy has suffered years of Israeli and Egyptian blockades as well as recent foreign aid cuts and sanctions by the Palestinian Authority, Hamas’s rival in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Israel says its blockade is necessary to stop arms reaching Hamas, with which it has fought three wars since the group seized control of Gaza in 2007, two years after Israel withdrew its settlers and troops from the small coastal enclave.
Four years ago, Donald Trump stepped onto an escalator in the atrium of Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York and began descending into a lobby packed with cameras. It’s safe to say the 10 or so seconds that followed are the most consequential escalator ride in American history.
The cranked-up soundtrack was Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World.” The cued-up crowd was made up of loyal staff, bemused reporters, people given 50 bucks to wave signs and make noise, and tourists and bystanders dressed up in early MAGA merchandise they’d just been handed. And they watched Trump, the director and leading man of his own lifelong show, standing and waving and giving a thumbs-up, trailing behind his smiling, stiletto-heeled wife, gliding through his habitat of marble and brass toward his discursive, xenophobic speech, his unprecedented candidacy and ultimately the White House.
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“The famous escalator scene,” Trump himself would say. “It looked like the Academy Awards.”
What really went into that moment, and what was it like to experience? This oral history was assembled from reporters and photographers who were there; from Trump’s aides and advisers and former Trump Organization executives; from a lead architect and the construction manager of Trump Tower; from the co-author of The Art of the Deal and former contestants on “The Apprentice” as well as supporters and others who had seen Trump prepare and rehearse for this for decades.
They thought they knew who he was, and what he was doing, and how this would go. They had no idea.
I. ‘I was thinking this will be something goofy and funny to cover.’
Tierney McAfee, reporter, People: I had never written about politics before, and so my editor just said, “Trump is supposed to make an announcement at Trump Tower today. Can you go?”
William Turton, reporter, The Daily Dot: It was my first day ever in New York City working as a reporter, and I was kind of, like, the lowest person on the totem pole in the newsroom. So that meant I kind of got, like, the shittiest assignments for the day.
Joe Perticone, reporter, Independent Journal Review: I was literally the first reporter in the door. … They were still painting the press riser blue. … There was a guy riding the escalator with a squeegee, and he was, like, squeegeeing as he was riding the escalator to, like, clean the escalator’s glass.
Gary Legum, reporter, Wonkette: I was thinking this will be something goofy and funny to cover. And in a year, nobody will remember Donald Trump ran for president.
William Turton: I stood outside interviewing folks with signs. … Basically, none of them spoke English. There was this one Italian family, I remember, who had these Trump signs, and I just asked them, “Why do you like Trump?” And they could barely string together a sentence in English.
Gary Legum: It occurred to me, actually, at that moment: “I wonder if any of these people are being paid to be here.”
Joel Rose, correspondent, NPR: You would ask people why they were there, and they would give you these weird, vague answers.
Juliet Papa, reporter, 1010WINS Radio: Somebody said they were, like, a part-time actor. So I just started assuming that they were sort of rented for the occasion.
Tierney McAfee: I remember there being, like, a lot of people who had shirts, and I think that they were handing them out. … They said: “Make America Great Again.”
Kena Betancur, photographer, Agence France-Presse: It wasn’t something spontaneous. … And that part was really clear—that it wasn’t people supporting him.
Hank Sheinkopf, Democratic strategist: I was outside of Trump Tower. The reason was because reporters were calling me and saying, “What do you think?”
Gary Legum: I walk into Trump Tower. … And there was a lone table set up, with one person manning it that was for press credentials. I said to her, “I’m with a political blog called Wonkette.” … And she was just like, “Oh, sure, here’s a press pass. Go on. Here’s a security guard to escort you down to the press pen.”
Juliet Papa: I was up on the balcony where the sound guy was. And the reason I was there was because the stage area, where all the cameras were, was so crowded. … But what I had was this great overview of the sea of cameras that were there, and the stage. I’ve covered a lot of big events, you know, like terror attacks and things where there were big news conferences, and I don’t know that I have ever seen that mass of cameras in my life.
Gary Legum: That atrium, it goes up like four or five stories. And so you could see people … they were just sort of lined around the railings surrounding the atrium.
Christopher Gregory, photographer, Getty Images: You were completely surrounded by sort of like a commercial enterprise, which is not really a feeling that you get when you go to a typical campaign [event].
Joe Perticone: There were, like, teddy bears, and copies of Art of the Deal, and chocolate bars that were made to look like gold bars that said “Trump” on them.
Sam Nunberg, Trump political adviser: We could have had women in bikinis, elephants and clowns there, for all I care. … It would have been the most gloriously disgusting event you’ve ever seen, as a way to, like, be a complete “fuck you” to the system.
Erin Durkin, reporter, New York Daily News: The one thing that is striking to me is that we really didn’t know what was going to happen. Everyone assumed: Yeah, OK, this has all the trappings of a presidential announcement. … But, like, he had done this multiple times before, where he pretended he was going to run for something and then it ended up being some kind of head fake and he didn’t run. … So we were kind of standing there … just kind of waiting to see where this would go.
Juliet Papa: We were waiting for the moment.
Brendan McDermid, photographer, Reuters: We all were speculating where he was coming from.
Christopher Gregory: We sort of assumed that he was going to come from kind of behind the stage.
Brendan McDermid: There were tourists in the lobby who started making noise.
Tierney McAfee: There was kind of, like, a rumbling that, like, he was coming.
Kena Betancur: People were cheering.
Brendan McDermid: As soon as I heard the crowd start getting excited, I set my exposure for the top of the escalator.
Tierney McAfee: And then there he was.
II. ‘A stage set for his life’
John Barie, Trump Tower architect and design director: When I met him, he had a vision.
Michael D’Antonio, Trump biographer: Trump Tower and especially the lobby were constructed as a stage set for his life.
Barbara Res, former Trump Organization executive vice president: He wanted class and brass in his atrium. Originally, the architect proposed granite, and he said, “No way, no way.” And they came up with this pink marble, and he liked that. … And then the bronze is a shiny bronze like it was at the Hyatt.
Carter Wiseman, formerarchitecture critic for New York: I was there when it was under construction, and he and Ivana took me on a tour. … He said, “Carter, you’ll understand this. This is quality marble from Italy.” … And I thought it looked as if it would work best in a whorehouse men’s room. It was so vulgar. … And I guess he knew something that we didn’t know. … We were all laughing, but he knew there were more people who loved that stuff.
Doug Brinkley, presidential historian: So that scene, Trump Tower, the building, the escalator, it’s like every city’s new mall on steroids. And people in America get excited when a big new building with a lot of glitz comes to town and makes cities feel like they’re sort of part of the modern way of life. I grew up in Toledo, Ohio, and it was just a big deal when the mall came with two floors and an escalator, you know? It was like … wow! I used to ride the escalator up and down, and it was, like, amazing that we had such a thing.
Tim O’Brien, Trump biographer: That location represents to Trump his arrival in Manhattan from Queens. … And anyone going through that door into the lobby is getting their first sense of Trump. So, for him, it’s a giant poster that’s meant to signify his arrival.
Louise Sunshine, former Trump Organization executive vice president: That lobby and that tower symbolizes Donald’s emergence into the world where he put his name on a building, and his first major accomplishment where he could put his name on something.
John Barie: Retailing is, by and large, a game of theater. You’ve got to present your goods in the most favorable light. So here we are in the atrium, in the middle of Manhattan in a canyon, and we say, “OK, what have we got to do?” … Well, one of the things that we’ve got to do is we’ve got to get natural light in there as early in the season as possible and as long as possible. Second is … that blank wall has to be activated. OK? And thirdly, as you come down, as you pass by the building on Fifth Avenue, you’ve got to look in there and you’ve got to see something that catches your attention. … So how do you do all that? Well, one of the things that you do is you present the escalators in a way that you can, as you walk into the building, you see the escalator. … and you say, “OK, I want to get on there.” Because something is up there, right? So now you’ve got the curiosity working. You see the magic that is the water of the waterfall. And so you’ve got movement, reflective light, you’ve got some noise in there, and that will draw your attention. So you’d get on the escalator, and you’re going to say, “OK, now what happens?”
III. ‘The emperor approaches’
Sam Nunberg, Trump political adviser: He came down [to his office on the 26th floor] in the black “Apprentice” suit. So he says, “What do you think?” And I say, “It’s great. … You’re the businessman, you’re the business candidate.” Right? Because he had told me about black or blue [in a conversation about which suit to wear]. And I said, “I think you should wear black, myself.” OK? I just said, “Go with black. You know, you’re the celebrity, you’re the icon.” It’d be like Reagan—Reagan always wore the same black suit on his announcements. So then he goes to me, “So you like the black suit?” And I go, “Yeah.” He goes, “No, you’re a fucking idiot. Get out.” And he closes the door. And he switches into blue.
Michael D’Antonio: The only thing he missed was a fog machine at the top of the escalator so that he could appear out of a mist.
Brendan McDermid: He stopped at the top of the escalator and waved.
Gwenda Blair, Trump biographer: With Melania … almost like the royal couple, looking out from Buckingham Palace, surveying their subjects.
Tony Schwartz, co-author of The Art of the Deal: As if he’s some kind of royalty.
Rick Wilson, Republican strategist: My first thought was, “Oh, look. Roger Stone’s quadrennial scam to keep Trump on the hook is here again.”
George Arzt, former press secretary to Mayor Ed Koch: My first thoughts harkened back to my childhood where Loretta Young came through a door while spinning around to display her dress for the evening. And second was a reminiscence of a show called “The Big Payoff” where Bess Myerson came down the steps in her mink coat.
Andrew Georgevits, deputy director, Trump campaign in New Hampshire: Trump plans out everything he does in life. People think he doesn’t, but trust me, the man thinks 16 steps ahead, and he has a vision, and he executes it.
Michael D’Antonio: This is his essential talent. … There used to be a circus that came to the town where I lived that had a ringmaster—who actually looked quite a bit like Donald Trump—and he didn’t have to try to be the ringmaster when he entered the middle ring and the spotlight caught him. Trump’s been playing this role for so long that he understands precisely where to stand.
Hank Sheinkopf: Donald Trump is the host of his own show. … He is the art director. He is the stage manager. … That escalator is part of the set. It gives him the entry point in. People have to look up at him.
Michael D’Antonio: He wants people to see a Greek god descending from the heavens. He is descending from Olympus to intercede in our desperate affairs. … It’s stagecraft that’s effective. … Eyes are raised as the emperor approaches.
Christopher Gregory: So everybody was shooting up towards him … which is kind of a very flattering and exalting angle.
Alan Marcus, former Trump publicist: Donald comes from on high. He has always been that way.
David Lloyd Marcus, cousin of Roy Cohn: That sort of attention-grabbing, you know, never-before-in-politics escalator ride, you know, surrounded by sort of golden grandiosity and pomp … that’s Roy. … That ride down was so emblematic of Roy because it was all about appearances and stagecraft. … All the media has to be assembled, waiting for him. That’s right out of Roy’s playbook.
IV. ‘He sees himself as a Broadway character.’
Tim O’Brien: When he did his sort of launch party for Trump Tower in the ’80s, that lobby was where the party was held. And he and Ivana were, you know, pointing out the waterfall and the marble and the bronze and everything and the gold plating to everyone. And it has been this totemic symbol for so much of his business career, the lobby and Trump Tower itself. I still think he sees it as his singularly best business achievement, even now. … And other things he owned, you know, he owns them briefly, they went into bankruptcy, he progressively whittled away at his casino holdings, he really moved away from being a real estate developer and into being a brand marketer. But Trump Tower was there, all along, the entire time.
Tony Schwartz: It’s his calling card. It’s his home. It’s his office. I mean, it’s everything. … This has been the primary vehicle through which he has presented the image of himself he wants others to have of him—fabulously, amazingly successful guy in the dead center of the universe, the best office and the best apartment in the world.
Marvin Roffman, former casino analyst: A very glitzy kind of a look.
Tony Schwartz: The party for The Art of the Deal, the book party, was this incredible event. …. The movie Wall Street, Oliver Stone, had just come out. And so you had the whole sense this was corrupt. Michael Douglas was one of the guests at the party. It was that kind of a party that started at 10 o’clock at night … klieg lights and a red carpet that you walked on into Trump Tower, and like literally hundreds and hundreds of people, including all sorts of mostly B-list celebrities. … It was certainly one of his—he would perceive it as—one of his best moments. … Trump Tower is the embodiment of the gilded age. It’s one of the few times where he said something that sounds exaggerated, that isn’t, which is: It’s probably the best real estate location in the world.
Sam Solovey, former contestant, “The Apprentice”: He sees himself as a Broadway character, and that lobby, the escalator, that’s the set. … That’s like his theater. … It’s the Trump theater. … There are specific instances I remember seeing him going on that escalator in my own life. … During the finale, when we had the after-party there, it was down in the lower lobby.
Bowie Hogg, former contestant, “The Apprentice”: … always making sure we were in our spots. We were ready. And then he made his grand entrance. … Ever the showman.
V. ‘I called my employees in the office to watch it.’
Juliet Papa: Walking with Melania, and he actually, like, he put his hand out, you know, ladies first, and it was very gentlemanly, and he led her onto the escalator.
Michael Caputo, adviser, Trump campaign: I was in my office in East Aurora, N.Y. It’s a tiny village outside of Buffalo. My office above a shoe repair shop. … I called my employees in the office to watch it.
Andrew Georgevits: I was at the office in Manchester. … To me, it was: “All right, we’re doing this.” … When he stepped onto that escalator, it was the first step in the journey [of] becoming president.
Chris Hupke, senior adviser, Trump campaign in Iowa: For those of us that were on board, we were certainly all true Trumpers. We were all about supporting him, but I think we were all still coming up to speed on, you know, just how he operated. I think the escalator kind of caught all of us like … wow, that’s kind of different and cool at the same time.
Michael Steel, senior adviser, Jeb Bush campaign: I was sitting with the policy team at Jeb’s headquarters, kind of an aging office building on the outskirts of Miami, and the policy shop had a TV, like a projection TV or something. Anyway, I remember the screen was really big but not very clear, and we all watched it as he was coming down the escalator. … It seemed like a joke at the time.
Tim Miller, communications director, Jeb Bush campaign: A complete joke. Not serious. Not actually running for president.
Michael Steel: It had none of the hallmarks of a professionally staged or advanced event.
Tim O’Brien: It was a classic moment of Trump self-promotion. He’s got his wife going down the escalator in front of him as a kind of trophy. He’s got his classic outfit on, which is a navy suit, a bold red tie and a white shirt.
Martin Hastings, retired union worker: … [I was standing] house left, on the upper level … a pretty good spot to be witnessing it. … I see him get on the escalator … maybe from 10, 15 feet away. … It probably could have been more dramatic, but it really—it was just almost natural.
Sam Nunberg: It’s Trump, coming down the escalator. It’s a brand. It’s the outsider.
Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the House, Trump adviser: “Here’s who I am.” And wouldn’t you love to have somebody who was successful? Because wouldn’t you like to be successful?
Tim O’Brien: He was playing “Rockin’ in the Free World.” And I just thought there’s no way Neil Young’s going to be comfortable with this.
George Arzt: I’m surprised he didn’t have a military band playing, “Hail to the Chief.”
Jack O’Donnell, former Trump casino executive: It was perfectly consistent with his whole branding concept. Of course it was going to be in Trump Tower, in the lobby, with all the marble.
Alan Cobb, director of coalitions, Trump campaign: It’s just kind of making a grand entrance into the building that he built to make a historical announcement. … There’s just, there’s something about it, as opposed to being where presidential announcements usually are, some outside park or something, where the candidate just arrives.
Doug Brinkley: It’s like going to a rock ’n’ roll show where somebody appears from the roof; you know, you’re landing into where the regular folks are. … Most people running for president have wanted to do something in their hometown or district that they feel is representative of their character. You know, so Jimmy Carter will do something at Warm Springs, Ga., where FDR fought polio. … But I think what Trump was doing was he was living up to his reality star image of being the guy who says, “I hire and fire.” I’m the boss man, but I’m gonna help the working people … the guy who’s made it but is willing to, you know, smash up the political order.
Tim O’Brien: They could have done it where he just came out on the stage in the lobby. He decided that it would look Bond-like and incredibly fab to just descend down the escalator.
Michael D’Antonio: If you saw it in a Batman movie where a villain was staging his announcement, it would look a lot like this. It would be staged in the same way. … A movie villain would live in a golden tower in the middle of a metropolis. He would have bodyguards. He would have paid courtiers. He would glide down the golden escalator.
Michael Caputo: He was slowly descending into the abyss of politics … leaving the higher ground of business and wealth and descending into the abyss of the political arena. Leaving the safety of one of the most beautiful apartments in the world. Leaving the convenience of one of the nicest private jets in the world. Leaving the side of one of the most beautiful women in the world. I mean, the president did not need this. In fact, descending on that escalator was a symbol of how much he was giving up in order to do this.
Tim O’Brien: … when, in fact, what he was doing was descending into a bank of cameras and a bunch of paid supporters to put himself on the public stage, which for him is nirvana.
Michael Nelson, presidential historian: I thought it was a publicity stunt, meant to show off Trump Tower.
Ruth Messinger, former Manhattan borough president: Particularly if you know his history, which I certainly did, there was no reason to think that that was anything more than just like, here’s Donald Trump in all his glory—pay attention to me for a little while.
Lou Nascone, Bayville, N.J., businessman: I was right down at the end of the escalator when he came down. Oh, my God, I had, like, a great spot. … I just saw him and Melania coming down. … Everybody was cheering.
Gary Legum: At that point I was assuming that, you know, Donald Trump was a novelty candidate. … My overwhelming thing was, eh, we’re just going to pretend that this is like, not completely ridiculous that he’s doing this.
DavidLloyd Marcus: I remember thinking of that escalator ride down as sort of like a metaphor for politics in this country, a metaphor for the downward plunge of the country. … Here’s this failed businessman and would-be TV star taking a ride down. Like, there he goes, there goes American politics with him, down, down, down …
Jack O’Donnell: What was going through my mind? … I knew that I was one of a few people who knew just how profoundly unfit he was for the job. And I didn’t think that a lot of people really knew that. I had a really detailed [understanding] of this guy’s personality flaws, so to speak, his impulsive nature and all that, the lack of focus, the preparation stuff. He doesn’t listen to people. All qualities that I thought are really critical to anybody … I just—I knew how profoundly unfit he was.
Michael Steel: It looked like a promotional appearance for the next season of “The Apprentice.”
VI. ‘It was fucking awesome.’
Joel Rose: It was weird.
Christopher Gregory: Really weird.
Gary Legum: Just so absurd.
Gwenda Blair: Exactly what we all expected. And it was also stupefying.
George Arzt: I thought it was hilariously theatrical. But very Trump-like.
Juliet Papa: I just thought it was sort of dramatic and brilliant and, um, effective.
Andrew Georgevits: It was fantastic. It was surreal.
Sam Nunberg: It was fucking awesome.
Michael D’Antonio: It was absolutely perfect. If you think about it as a program, you know, it was the premiere of the Donald Trump president show. And every day, ever since, has been a new episode, and it’s, um, wow—I mean, and we’re binge-watching this guy.
Newt Gingrich: Almost everybody in the media refuses to look at what Donald Trump was. This is a guy who had managed “The Apprentice” for 14 years. He understood his audience. He knew what his audience would respond to. He knew what worked. He knew what didn’t work. He’d also stage-managed Miss Universe. He’d stage-managed professional wrestling. He was a remarkably good entertainer.
John Barie: I was very proud in the sense that here’s this project that I spent countless hours on, in terms of design, detailing, talking, managing. I mean, this was the major credential in my architectural career … and there he is, riding down that escalator, and I had a big old smile on my face.
Michael Caputo: When I saw him going down the escalator, I knew that it was going to last forever.
Sam Nunberg: I didn’t know how well the campaign would do. … Like, let’s say he was in and he was out by the end of the summer. It still would’ve been one of the iconic scenes of his run.
Andrew Georgevits: A defining moment. Of him stepping to the plate.
Erin Durkin: You sort of saw that, and you thought, “We’re going to be in for something different.”
Juliet Papa: I said, “This is going to be some ride.”
Alan Cobb: It was so unique, and it really set the tone for a unique campaign and a unique, unusual candidate.
Chris Hupke: Who else came down an escalator in a quadrillion-dollar facility? … It really was how the campaign went. Everything was just so unique and different. … The fellow candidates could never grab any of the attention and catch up with any of the oxygen in the room.
Christopher Gregory: I was [thinking]: I’m sure the press will be obsessed with this for a week or something.
Erin Durkin: Just taking it all in … sort of just observing and noticing the unusual nature of everything that was going on, of which the escalator was one example—I mean, the words that were said in the speech probably ended up being the bigger example.
Kena Betancur: What surprised me, a lot, was the way he was talking about Mexicans … I mean, the very disrespectful way he was talking.
Michael Steel: I was particularly appalled by the reference to immigrants as rapists.
DavidLloyd Marcus: Very Cohn-esque. … You have to conjure up imaginary bad guys or scapegoats.
Sam Solovey: What was running through my mind, as he’s making these crazy statements about Mexicans being rapists and all this, it was like—he is the perfect, he is the antithesis of Barack Obama, and he does, you know, for all his shortcomings, of which there are many, he has a very good sense of timing.
Andrew Georgevits: He executes every moment meticulously, and we knew something big was going to happen. From that moment of him coming down that escalator, the man never stopped.
Tony Schwartz: Certainly not a remotely credible way to launch a presidential campaign. How wrong I was. And in case you didn’t hear me say that: How wrong I was.
Ruth Messinger: We all should have been smarter about who he was and who he was becoming.
Carter Wiseman: I wish I had been there for that event. It really is going down as a historic moment, isn’t it? That escalator ride. Who would have—who would have known?
In the aftermath of the Toronto Raptors‘ first NBA title, let’s make one thing clear: This championship warrants no asterisk.
Their banner year, clinched with a 114-110 victory over the Golden State Warriors in Thursday night’s Game 6, is not the byproduct of luck—at least no more than usual. It is not a fluke or a triumph borne from convenience. Their path to this title was unconventional, perhaps even a little random, but the championship itself is a reminder in the form of consummate validation.
The Raptors belong here. They’ve belonged all year. They deserve this moment. They earned it. And in doing so, they’ve echoed what became clear a long time ago: Kawhi Leonard is not going to find a better basketball home.
Some holdouts will invariably refuse to go that far. Again: There will be a push to place an asterisk upon this title run.
Golden State was banged up throughout the Finals—more so than ever in Game 6. Kevin Durant was lost for the series, and perhaps all of 2019-20, after he suffered an Achilles injury in his Game 5 return from a calf strain. Kevon Looney was playing with a fracture of the first costal cartilage on the right side of his rib cage. And Klay Thompson, already laboring through a hamstring issue, left for good in the third quarter Thursday with a left leg injury that, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, has since been diagnosed as a torn ACL.
Everybody is battling something if they’re lucky enough to be playing this late into the season. Kyle Lowry may need to have surgery on his thumb over the offseason. Kawhi Leonard, your 2019 Finals MVP, coped with knee problems for the entire playoffs after remaining on a maintenance program all year.
What Golden State endured was something worse. By the end, the Raptors were facing a facsimile of the Warriors dynasty. How could they not win?
Still, injuries did not determine the Finals. Toronto did.
It began with president of basketball operations Masai Ujiri’s controversial—but not actually risky—acquisition of Leonard, which involved parting with franchise mainstay DeMar DeRozan. So many things could have gone wrong. Plenty did.
CBS Sports HQ @CBSSportsHQ
Raptors President Masai Ujiri’s Boss Season
– Fires reigning COY Dwayne Casey to replace him with first-time head coach Nick Nurse
– Trades Demar Derozan for potential one-year rental Kawhi Leonard
– Rolls dice by acquiring Marc Gasol at deadline
– Raptors win 1st NBA title https://t.co/MFlVE0UVfF
Leonard didn’t play back-to-backs during the regular season. OG Anunoby, Kyle Lowry, Norman Powell and Fred VanVleet all missed at least 15 games. A left thumb injury put Jonas Valanciunas on the shelf for significant time before he was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies. Marc Gasol‘s arrival at February’s deadline marked the second substantive alteration to Toronto’s roster in six months.
Close calls, meanwhile, were peppered throughout the Raptors’ championship push. They lost Game 1 of their first-round matchup with the Orlando Magic. Leonard essentially needed to hit two game-winners to take down the Philadelphia 76ers in the semifinals, including a series-ending buzzer-beater in Game 7.
Toronto looked wobbly to start the Eastern Conference Finals. The Milwaukee Bucks opened the series with two straight wins, the second of which was a 125-103 drubbing. It then took the Raptors two overtimes to edge past them in Game 3. The beginning of their four-game winning streak could just as easily have been a 3-0 death sentence.
With Durant out for all but 12 minutes of the Finals, the Warriors arguably posed an easier test for the Raptors. Except, well, they didn’t. Dynasties don’t dissipate without a fight. Toronto’s 3-1 series lead, built in part thanks to Thompson’s absence in Game 3, never really felt safe.
The Raptors navigated this minefield anyway. It could have been worse. It also could have been better.
Toronto’s supporting cast spent much of the playoffs drowning in inconsistency. Fred VanVleet is a hero now, but he was a borderline no-show until he turned things around against Milwaukee in an about-face that just so happened to coincide with the birth of his son.
Danny Green went cold toward the tail end of the Sixers series and through the Bucks matchup. He perked up to start the Finals but went 3-of-15 from the field (1-of-11 from three) over the final three tilts and didn’t attempt a single shot in Game 6. That is hardly an afterthought if the Raptors are preparing for a Game 7.
Ditto for Marc Gasol’s up-and-down performance. His pendulum swung between passive and present all postseason. The former won out in Game 6. He missed all five of his shots, had more fouls (four) than points (three) and looked relatively unplayable.
All the setbacks, potential pitfalls and, above all, general newness makes the Raptors’ title that much more impressive. This was Year 1.
It only gets better if Leonard stays.
ESPN Stats & Info @ESPNStatsInfo
Kawhi Leonard won MVP, but his teammates stepped up throughout the series…
The Raptors are the 1st team since the 1986-87 Lakers to win the NBA Finals with 6 players averaging 10 PPG in the series (h/t @EliasSports).
Pascal Siakam is among the league’s brightest young stars. His shooting fluctuated for most of the playoffs, but he came up big when it mattered most. His 26-point, 10-rebound, three-assist detonation in Game 6, replete with tough defense against Draymond Green inside the arc, is a guideline for his trajectory.
Barely 25, Siakam is the favorite to win Most Improved Player honors. He earned almost as many second-team All-Defense votes (24) as Leonard (29). Leonard, Danilo Gallinari and Karl-Anthony Towns were theonly other playersthis season to clear 19 points, seven rebounds, three assists and one made three-pointer per 36 minutes with a true shooting percentage north of 60.
Anunoby missed the entirety of the playoffs after an emergency appendectomy, but he remains a legitimate three-and-D prospect and doesn’t turn 22 until July. VanVleet is 25. Powell is still, somehow, just 26.
This Raptors core has staying power. Indeed, other members are older. Ibaka turns 30 in September, Lowry is 33 and Gasol is 34. That would matter more if they were each on long-term deals. They’re not.
Ibaka and Lowry come off the books next summer. Gasol will join them if he picks up his $25.6 million player option. Green’s free agency is a concern, but going on 32, he shouldn’t break the bank.
Play their cards right, and the Raptors could have gobs of cap space in 2020. Only four guaranteed salaries will be on their books if they re-sign Leonard, use their first-round pick in 2020 and hold off on an extension for Siakam.
Depending on what else they do this summer, the Raptors can carry Siakam’s free-agency hold in 2020 and have more than enough to add another max player. Pinch their purse strings until then, and they’ll have a line to at least $50 million in spending power.
Leonard isn’t getting that kind of open-ended flexibility anywhere else. The Brooklyn Nets, Los Angeles Clippers and New York Knicks have paths to dual maxes this year and can keep their books clean into next summer, but they’re not reigning champs.
The Raptors are.
They allow Leonard to rejoin a championship core that potentially hasn’t reached its peak and has the maneuverability to continue retooling around him in the years to come. That means something.
Faizal Khamisa @SNFaizalKhamisa
Kawhi Leonard, after the trade, texted Kyle Lowry and said “Let’s do something special. I know your best friend left. I know you’re mad. But ltet’s make this thing work out.” It worked out.
Leonard can still leave. He’s earned the right to choose. He owes the Raptors nothing after helping them get everything.
But if he heads elsewhere after what they just did, knowing what they’re still built to do, then they never had a chance of keeping him in the first place.
Dan Favale covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter (@danfavale) and listen to hisHardwood Knockspodcast, co-hosted by B/R’s Andrew Bailey.
Canada’s Toronto Raptors have won their first NBA championship, beating defending champions the Golden State Warriors 114-110 in a Game 6 for the ages and sparking country-wide celebration.
The Raptors victory on Thursday night in Oakland, California, put the finishing touches on a remarkable 4-2 best-of-seven series upset that denied the Warriors a fourth title in five years and marked the first NBA title for a team outside the United States.
“I can’t really think right now, this is crazy. This is awesome man,” said Toronto guard Kyle Lowry. “Toronto! Canada! We brought it home baby! We brought it home!”
When the final buzzer sounded, jubilant Raptors fans flooded the streets of downtown Toronto for a night of celebration not seen in the city since Major League Baseball’s Toronto Blue Jays last won a World Series title in 1993.
Toronto forward Kawhi Leonard, branded the King of the North by Raptors fans after arriving at the franchise in a blockbuster trade with the San Antonio Spurs last July, was named the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) after averaging 28.5 points during the series.
‘I wanted to make history’
“Last summer I was going through a lot. I had a great support system, I just kept working hard, working hard and had my mindset on this goal right here,” said Leonard, who missed most of last season with a leg injury.
“I came to a team, a new coach, and that mindset was the same as mine. This is what I play basketball for, this is what I work out for all summer, during the season and I’m happy that my hard work paid off,” he added.
“I wanted to make history here. That’s what I did.”
Leonard is the third player to win Finals MVP with two franchises, joining only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and LeBron James.
“Without a doubt, the best thing about this thing is that somehow I wound up on the sideline getting to watch this guy play up close,” said Raptors coach Nick Nurse. This is his first season as a head coach in the league. “It’s really cool.”
Toronto Raptors forward Kawhi Leonard who missed most of last season with an injury was named Finals MVP [Ben Margot/AP]
Adding to NBA history, the last five games of the finals series were won by the away team, equalling the record set by Boston-Milwaukee in 1974 and tied by Chicago-Phoenix in 1993.
Prominent rapper and Raptors global ambassador Drake, meanwhile, said the results proved the Raptors’ team spirit.
“We did this off of love,” Drake said after the game. “We willed this into existence.”
Curry pledges Warriors comeback
For their part, the injury-hit Warriors now face an off season of uncertainty with looming free agency for key players, a move to San Francisco next season and a rising tide of teams that are catching up to their brand of positionless basketball all raising questions over the future of the franchise.
The biggest question surrounds the fate of forward Kevin Durant, who helped lead the team to two championships. Durant ruptured his Achilles in his return to the lineup in Game Five on Monday and coach Steve Kerr on Thursday said he will miss all of next season as he recovers.
Warriors guard Stephen Curry said Thursday did not mark the end of the road for the team, however, which came within a missed three-pointer from forcing a Game Seven in Toronto.
“It was a one-possession game to keep our season alive tonight,” he said of the 114-110 loss.
“We’ll be thinking about this one, it’s tough. But with our DNA, who we are and the character that we have on this team, I wouldn’t bet against us being back on this stage next year and going forward,” Curry said.
“So I’m really proud of the way that we fought until the end and this five-year run has been awesome,” he . “But I definitely don’t think it’s over.”
Toronto Raptors fans didn’t waste a second to celebrate their team’s first championship in franchise history as they stormed city streets and climbed light poles and buildings after the Raps’ 114-110 series-closing win over the Golden State Warriors on Thursday.
People are: jumping on cars, swinging from street lights, swinging from cranes, high-fiving strangers, spraying champagne, popping off fireworks. No one is sleeping tonight! #NBAFinals https://t.co/0I4VwpNjra
The title was just Toronto’s second in an American professional sports league since the Blue Jays won the 1993 World Series. Toronto FC took home the 2017 MLS Cup before the Raptors won two years later.
Raptors fans’ passion has been impossible to ignore throughout the entire playoffs.
Maple Leaf Square morphs into Jurassic Park for big Raptors games, where a throng of fans meet to watch their team.
When the Raps won the Eastern Conference Finals, fansclimbed busesand temporarily formed a blockade in front of Toronto guard Fred VanVleet as he tried to leave Scotiabank Arena.
Now the Raptors have even more reason to celebrate, and chances are they won’t stop any time soon.
The Toronto Raptors’ 114-110 victory over the Golden State Warriors on Thursday marked the end of the 2019 NBA Finals, but Draymond Green cautioned against those who thought it marked the end of his team’s dynasty, as well.
“Everybody thinks it’s kind of the end of us,” he said, per Reid Forgrave of CBS Sports. “That’s just not smart. We’re not done yet.”
Steph: “I wouldn’t bet against us, being back on this stage next year.”
It’s hard to bet against Golden State considering it won three of the last five NBA titles and a record 73 games during a regular season in that span. It is one of the best runs in league history and didn’t feature a single postseason loss before the Finals while rostering a combination of future Hall of Famers in Curry, Klay Thompson, Green and Kevin Durant.
However, there are plenty of question marks surrounding the team after this loss.
From a pure health standpoint, Durant ruptured his Achilles in Game 5 and will likely miss the entire 2019-20 season. Thompson suffered a knee injury Thursday and was seen on crutches. Kevon Looney and DeMarcus Cousins also battled through injuries in the postseason.
“What matters is Kevin Durant is going to miss next season with an Achilles tear,” head coach Steve Kerr told reporters. “What matters is Klay suffered a knee injury. We’ll know more later. But it’s just brutal, just brutal what these guys have had to deal with.”
It goes beyond the physical concerns, though, as Durant has a player option for next season and Thompson can become an unrestricted free agent. Cousins and Looney can also become unrestricted free agents.
What’s more, key role players Andre Iguodala and Shaun Livingston will be 36 and 34 years old next season, respectively. Both looked significantly slower during the Finals than they were at the start of this Warriors run and figure to take another step back by next playoffs.
Golden State showed the heart of a champion by battling through so many setbacks in these Finals and still pushing the Raptors to a nail-biter in Game 6. It will have to show that type of heart again to overcome so many question marks and keep the dynasty rolling.