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OLYMPICS FACES WAR US swimmer King backs up bold words for doping violators Cast members Pharoah, Killam exiting ‘SNL’ Pentagon: Number of Islamic State fighters dwindling in Libyan city Back page Page 17 Page 4 Marines prepare for bigger wars even as they cut resources » Page 2 stripes.com Volume 75, No. 83 ©SS 2016 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2016 50¢/Free to Deployed Areas 2 years of airstrikes against Islamic State group have redrawn Iraqi map but left destruction, displacement BY SUSANNAH GEORGE Associated Press MAKHMOUR, Iraq — Two years ago, the U.S.led coalition launched the first airstrikes on the Islamic State group, ushering in a deeper phase of intervention that dramatically changed the fight against the militant group in Iraq. Since then, more than 9,400 coalition airstrikes have allowed Iraqi forces to slowly claw back cities, towns, supply lines and infrastructure. But the fight — which continues to be largely waged from the air — has also leveled entire neighborhoods, displaced millions and redrawn the Iraqi map. The U.S.-led coalition estimates that since the airstrikes began on Aug. 8, 2014, the Islamic State group has lost more than 40 percent of the territory it once held in Iraq. But while coalition airstrikes paved the way for Kurdish and Iraqi ground forces to retake territory, in many cases the result is a ruined prize. SEE LANDSCAPE ON PAGE 4 A family house lies in ruins in Ramadi, Iraq, on March 20, weeks after the city was retaken from the Islamic State group. Inset: A militant is seen during airstrikes on an Islamic State group convoy in an aerial image made from undated video released by Iraq’s Ministry of Defense on July 2. AP photos US: More military transparency needed in South China Sea AND BY GERRY SHIH CHRISTOPHER BODEEN Associated Press QINGDAO, China — The response from Beijing and others to an arbitration panel’s ruling invalidating China’s vast South China Sea maritime claims has brought no surprises, but much more military transparency is needed to reduce tensions in the Swift region, the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet said Tuesday. Adm. Scott Swift also criticized China-Russia joint naval exercises planned next month in the South China Sea, saying the choice of location was not conducive to “increasing the stability within the region.” He also said any decision by China to declare an air defense identification zone over the strategic water body would be “very destabilizing from a military perspective.” Swift was visiting the northern Chinese port of Qingdao as part of efforts to build trust and understanding between the navies, now locked in a protracted competition for primacy in East Asia, where the U.S. has traditionally been the dominant power. Attention has been fixed on the South China Sea since the July 12 ruling by The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration in a case brought by the Philippines. China refused to participate in the case or recognize the ruling, and strongly criticized the U.S. for encouraging its ally to pursue the matter. Since then, Beijing has launched air patrols over the South China Sea, SEE TRANSPARENCY ON PAGE 5 F3HIJKLM PAGE 2 QUOTE OF THE DAY “It’s a whale of a fraternity with one hell of an initiation.” — Lt. Col. Brian Birdwell, who was reunited last week with Col. Rob Maness, his rescuer after the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon See story on Page 10 TOP CLICKS ON STRIPES.COM The most popular stories on our website: 1. South Korean woman arrested after newborn found dead 2. Islamic State says it has equipment captured from Special Ops troops 3. Fast-attack sub’s chief of boat loses job 4. Military moms join mass breastfeeding event on Okinawa 5. West Point’s Class of 2020 makes it through ‘Beast Barracks’ COMING SOON Movies “Gleason” tells of former NFL player’s video for son •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 MILITARY Neller: Corps needs to be ‘reshaped’ BY COREY DICKSTEIN Stars and Stripes WASHINGTON — The U.S. Marine Corps will adjust its force structure in the near future as it identifies gaps in capability and technology that it could face in a battle with a modern enemy, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller said Tuesday. The Corps in recent years has made adjustments to the way it trains and equips Marines to prepare them to fight a nearpeer adversary, Neller said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a bipartisan Washington think tank. Additional adjustments, including to the way front-line units are structured, will be necessary for the Marine Corps to be prepared to face a rival with similar capabilities, such as Russia or China. “We are going to reshape this Marine Corps,” he said. “We aren’t going to stay exactly the same because I don’t think we can. The threats and the capabilities out there are changing too fast, and ‘ We aren’t going to stay exactly the same because I don’t think we can. ’ Gen. Robert Neller Marine Corps commandant we have to be able to survive on the modern battlefield.” The Marine Corps must expand its capabilities in cyber and electronic warfare, he said, but it also must increase its abilities to counter threats it has not faced on the battlefield since World War II, such as defending against aerial bombardment or advanced artillery systems. The Corps has incorporated enemy unmanned aerial systems into training at Twentynine Palms, Calif., where it has equipped the opposing force with small drones to gather intelligence on the unit undergoing training. Other changes Marines could soon see, he said, have not been decided. Neller used the Marine Corps’ 24 infantry battalions as an example of an organization that will undergo some changes. There are no plans to cut any of those units, he said, but the Corps is studying how they are organized to determine which capabilities need to be expanded or added and which others should be cut or eliminated. “What’s inside those individual infantry battalions is going to be a little bit different,” Neller said. “Not fundamentally different, but I’m not ready yet to say what exactly that is going to look like.” For example, he said, the Marines might add an assistant squad leader to infantry squads who would be in charge of flying and managing the unit’s small reconnaissance drones. They are also considering how to incorporate cyber warriors into a maneuver battalion and whether they can afford to scale back an aspect like counterimprovised explosive device capabilities to make room for the changes. “How do you make this all fit? We’re in the process of determining all that,” he said. The adjustments are being made under the assumption that the Corps will not grow. The service will reach its post-9/11 drawdown bottom line of 182,000 Marines in the coming months, he said. At the heights of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Corps had 202,000 Marines. “It would be great if we had the resources to have 190,000 Marines, but we’re not assuming that,” Neller said. “So, we’re going to operate on the assumption we’re going to have 182,000 Marines, because that’s what we’ve been resourced for.” dickstein.corey@stripes.com Twitter: @CDicksteinDC Lebanon gets $50M in new US assistance Associated Press TODAY IN STRIPES American Roundup ............ 16 Business .......................... 20 Classified ................... 19, 21 Comics ............................. 22 Crossword ........................ 22 Faces ............................... 17 Opinion ....................... 14-15 Sports ......................... 23-32 Weather ........................... 20 Wired World...................... 18 BEIRUT — The United States on Tuesday delivered $50 million worth of military assistance to Lebanon’s army to help it battle Muslim extremists near the border with Syria. U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Elizabeth H. Richard told reporters at Beirut’s port that the latest assistance is in “an entire ship full of military equipment.” A U.S. Embassy statement said the shipment includes 50 armored Humvees, 40 Howitzers and over 1,000 tons of ammunition. The U.S. has been speeding up delivery of ammunition to help Lebanon’s military combat jihadi groups near the border with Syria. BILAL HUSSEIN /AP A Lebanese army soldier stands guard above artillery pieces that were unloaded from a ship at the Beirut port on Tuesday. “This year alone, we provided over $221 million in equipment and training to the Lebanese security forces,” Richard said. “I’d also like to point out that Leba- non is the fifth-largest recipient of United States foreign military financing in the world.” In March, Washington delivered three Huey II helicopters, raising to 10 the number of such U.S.-made aircraft in Lebanon’s fleet. Washington has provided more than $1 billion in military assistance to Lebanon since 2006. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 3 MILITARY Turkey pushes hard for US to extradite cleric Associated Press PHOTOS BY JESSICA BIDWELL /Stars and Stripes Organizers of a World Breastfeeding Week event on Okinawa hope to foster peer support for a practice they say is important for babies’ health. Event puts spotlight on nursing mothers BY JESSICA BIDWELL Stars and Stripes CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — Women on Okinawa, including U.S. military moms, brought their babies beachside for a mass public breast-feeding event aimed at raising awareness for the practice. The Global Big Latch On, part of World Breastfeeding Week, takes place worldwide the first week of August to promote breast-feeding and women and children’s health. The event’s organizers hope getting women to breast-feed together will foster a sense of community and peer support. “The breast-feeding community has helped me through all my doubts about the lactation process,” said Hollie Mcelmurray, a military mom who attended Saturday’s gathering at Sunabe Baba Beach near Kadena Air Base. It’s important for women to be successful at breast-feeding, said Melanie Scherer, another participant. Pressure from people who don’t like public breast-feeding can make some mothers feel like quitting, she said. “That’s not how it should be,” Scherer said. “You’re feeding your baby; you’re doing what nature intended, and I think it’s important Oklahoma’s chief of the boat is relieved of duty The USS Oklahoma City’s chief of the boat was relieved of duty late last month — the second time this year the vessel has lost a superior. Master Chief Machinist’s Mate Joseph H. Decker III was re- Women on Okinawa attend the Global Big Latch On, a public breastfeeding event. to spread the awareness and show people that it’s OK to feed your baby when and where, however you have to do it.” Breast-feeding is the ideal source of sustenance for infants, providing the complete nutritional and hydration requirements that a child needs, the World Health Organization says. The agency recommends breast-feeding exclusively for the first six months of a baby’s life and continuing to breast-feed for two years, or as long as the mother and child prefer. Last year, the Army became the last service to formally adopt a breast-feeding policy, setting up rules and private areas where mothers can express milk and giving them time off work to do it. Since July of last year, Tricare has covered all costs associated with breast-feeding. That includes a breast pump, supplies and lacta- tion counseling — things mothers need if they want to breast-feed their babies and work outside the home. But it wasn’t always this way. Scherer said breast-feeding her first baby without such coverage was challenging, expensive and stressful. “When I had my first child, Tricare did not cover any type of breast-feeding supplies, and I failed at breast-feeding my baby,” she said. “I feel guilty about that; I only made it five weeks because I didn’t have the supplies or support that I needed … I am now at seven months exclusively breastfeeding my second child because of Tricare’s help.” The U.S. Naval Hospital Okinawa lactation consultant said Saturday’s event was not affiliated with the hospital or the U.S. military. moved from his position on the Guam-based Los Angeles-class submarine on July 27 because of a “pattern of ineffective leadership,” a Navy statement said. Decker, who had served on the fast-attack submarine since April of last year, has been temporarily reassigned to Submarine Squadron 15 at Polaris Point, Naval Base Guam. He will be replaced by Senior Chief Fire Control Technician Brandon Kyle Edmiston. In January, Oklahoma City Cmdr. Mike Conner was relieved for unspecified reasons. He was replaced by Cmdr. Patrick Friedman. bidwell.jessica@stripes.com From staff reports ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey’s justice minister said Tuesday the United States would be sacrificing its alliance with Turkey to “a terrorist” if it were to refuse to extradite a U.S.-based Muslim cleric who the government says is behind the July 15 failed coup. Bekir Bozdag also told the staterun Anadolu Agency that antiAmerican sentiment in Turkey is reaching “its peak” over the issue of cleric Fethullah Gulen’s return, and risks turning into hatred. Turkey has branded Gulen’s movement a terrorist organization and wants him returned to Turkey to face trial. Washington has said it would need evidence of the cleric’s involvement, and says the regular extradition process must be allowed to take its course. Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania, has denied involvement in the violent coup attempt that left more than 270 people dead. “If (the United States) does not return him, it will have sacrificed Turkey to a terrorist,” Bozdag said. “The United States is a great state and I believe will do what is expected from a great state.” Bozdag said Turkish authorities are still investigating who, after Gulen, was the number 2 suspect in the coup plot. In his weekly address to legis- lators of his ruling party, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim on Tuesday vowed to bring Gulen to justice. “That terrorist head will come to Turkey and be brought to account. That man who ordered the bombing of Turkey and the parliament, who pointed Turkey’s armaments toward the Turkish people will get the punishment he deserves,” Yildirim said. The government has launched a sweeping crackdown targeting Gulen’s followers in the aftermath of the coup. Bozdag said Turkey has formally arrested 16,000 suspects pending trial, with 6,000 others still being questioned. At least 7,668 other people are under investigation but not detained, he said. In addition, tens of thousands of people with suspected links to Gulen have been suspended or dismissed from their jobs in the judiciary, media, education, health care, military and local government. The purges continued Tuesday, with Turkey’s government-run Directorate of Religious Affairs announcing it had dismissed some 2,560 more employees suspected of ties to the Gulen movement, raising the number of people ousted from the agency since the failed coup to 3,672. S. Korean woman arrested after dead newborn found BY YOO KYONG CHANG AND K IM GAMEL Stars and Stripes SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean woman was arrested this weekend for allegedly leaving her dead newborn in a motel bathroom after she had sex with a U.S. servicemember, police said. The 32-year-old woman, who was seven months pregnant, and her friend met two U.S. servicemembers at a nightclub in Seoul on Saturday, then spent the night with them at a motel, police said Tuesday. According to the police account, the woman’s water broke while she was having sex with one of the servicemembers, but she told him it was her period and sent him to a convenience store to buy sanitary pads. She then gave birth and left the baby wrapped in a towel in the bathroom. Police were called to the motel Sunday afternoon after a maid found the baby, which was dead, while the woman and the U.S. servicemember were having lunch with the other couple in another room. Police questioned the two servicemembers but released them after determining they had nothing to do with the baby’s death. A senior police official said the Americans were no longer part of the investigation. The woman initially claimed the baby died while she was rinsing it off after the birth, but the National Forensic Service determined the baby suffocated, the senior police official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the probe is ongoing. The woman, a kindergarten teacher, told police that the father of her baby was a U.S. soldier who had returned to the United States, but that could not be confirmed. U.S. Forces in Korea said it would not comment on an ongoing investigation. gamel.kim@stripes.com Twitter: @kimgamel PAGE 4 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 WAR ON TERRORISM DOD: Militants down to 350 fighters in Sirte BY TARA COPP Stars and Stripes M AYA A LLERUZZO/AP Iraqi policemen ride a motorbike in central Ramadi, Iraq, in March, a few weeks after fierce battles between Islamic State militants and Iraqi security forces for control of the city. Landscape: Scars of airwar remain vivid FROM FRONT PAGE The first coalition strikes were spurred by an Islamic State push from Mosul a few weeks after the group’s initial rampage across Iraq. Makhmour base was just one of a number of front-line positions overrun in early August 2014, bringing Islamic State fighters within just 19 miles of Irbil, the capital of Iraq’s Kurdish region. “Daesh was moving into this town and we were withdrawing up into the mountains,” said Ayoub Khaylani, a Peshmerga soldier who was at Makhmour base with his unit just before the Islamic State group’s initial attack on Mahkmour. Daesh is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group. After three days of airstrikes, the Islamic State advance on Irbil was slowed and Kurdish forces retook the base. Two years later, the fight against the Islamic State group has moved west across the Tigris River into Nineveh province and Makhmour has transitioned from an active front line to a sleepy support position. “If it weren’t for the strikes and the heavy artillery (given to the Iraqi army by the coalition), we would still be up in the mountains,” Khaylani said, sitting in a small air conditioned room hunched over his mobile phone on an overstuffed sofa. “I will not allow the United States to be dragged into fighting another war in Iraq,” President Barack Obama said when he announced the authorization for airstrikes in Iraq in 2014. “American combat troops will not be returning to fight in Iraq.” On Friday, the Pentagon announced about 400 U.S. soldiers will deploy south of Mosul to Qayarah airbase to aid in the op- eration to retake Iraq’s secondlargest city. They are among the 560 additional troops that Obama approved for the Iraq mission last month. The Pentagon says there are about 3,800 U.S. forces currently in Iraq, not including hundreds who are on temporary duty and not included in the official count. As the push to retake Mosul ramps up, the scars from two years of costly victories remain vivid. Sinjar, the small mostly Yazidi town north of Mosul, was retaken by Kurdish forces nine months ago, but it still lies in ruins. While Sinjar is technically “liberated” the majority of its residents still live in tented camps for the displaced scattered throughout Iraq’s north. The Pentagon claims 55 civilians have been killed in Iraq and Syria since the air war against the Islamic State group was launched. However, human rights and humanitarian aid groups insist that number is vastly underestimated. Airwars, a project tracking airstrikes targeting the Islamic State group, estimates that at least 1,568 civilians have likely died in coalition actions. For Iraq’s Kurdish peshmerga forces, pushing back the militants also has meant strengthening their hold on disputed territory. Closely supported with coalition training, intelligence sharing and airstrikes, Kurdish forces have taken hundreds of towns and villages from the Islamic State group that were previously claimed by both the Kurdish regional government and Iraq’s central government in Baghdad. Amnesty International accused peshmerga forces of deliberately destroying thousands of homes in Arab villages taken back from the Islamic State in an effort to prevent Arab residents from returning to the territory, according to a report this year. Mosul residents who fled to Irbil in summer 2014 celebrated the first coalition airstrikes on extremist militants, hoping the stepped-up intervention would quickly repel the militants and allow civilians to return home. Now, makeshift tents in church gardens and half-finished buildings have been replaced with neat rows of caravans on the outskirts of town that resemble fledgling neighborhoods more than temporary shelters. Across Iraq, more than 3.2 million Iraqis remain displaced from their homes, according to information gathered by the International Organization for Migration. Kindi Hameed Majid, 30, fled Mosul with his wife in the summer of 2014. The young couple thought they would only be gone a few days. Now more than two years later, he is still in Irbil and says he doubts he will ever return. Even if Mosul is retaken by Iraqi forces, he said he worries the city will never be secure enough to be inhabitable again. “We see the future as dark and unknown.” WASHINGTON — Only about 350 Islamic State fighters remain in the all-but-abandoned Libyan coastal city of Sirte as the United States finished its eighth day of airstrikes there, U.S. defense officials said Tuesday. The United States, as part of Operation Odyssey Dawn, began targeting Islamic State vehicles and fighting positions Aug. 1. Since then, unmanned aircraft launching from undisclosed locations and Marine AV-8B Harrier jets taking off from the nearby USS Wasp, an amphibious assault warship, have conducted 28 strikes against the terrorist group, according to U.S. Africa Command and defense officials who spoke on the condition of not being named. More than half of the strikes have been conducted from unmanned aircraft, one of the defense officials said. Sirte, once a city of 80,000 people, has about 1,000 residents remaining, the defense official said. Islamic State militants there totaled up to 1,000 fighters at one time. But their numbers have dwindled as well and many of them have moved outside Sirte to the south or blended back into the civilian population, the official said. Since the airstrikes began last week, U.S. and Libyan forces have worked together to identify targets and allow pro-government forces to retake parts of southeast Sirte. “A small number of U.S. forces have gone in and out of Libya to exchange information with local forces, and they will continue to do so as we strengthen the fight against [the Islamic State group] and other terrorist organizations. These personnel will not be engaged in fighting [the Islamic State group,]” said Henrietta Levin, a defense spokesperson. With the support of the airstrikes, Libyan forces have been able to retake most of the al-Dollar district in Sirte, near the same conference center where the final surrender of forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi took place in fall 2011. Civil war has raged in Libya since that time. In 2015, Islamic State fighters took control of Sirte. copp.tara@stripes.com 3 US troops wounded BY PHILLIP WALTER WELLMAN Stars and Stripes Three U.S. soldiers were wounded in Afghanistan Monday evening when a suicide bomber detonated a vehicle packed with explosives in eastern Nangarhar province. The soldiers suffered minor injuries, NATO’s Resolute Support mission said. They were conducting a force-protection patrol at the time of the incident. NATO didn’t disclose the names of the soldiers or where they were taken for treatment. Attaullah Khogyani, spokes- man for Nangarhar’s governor, said the suicide bomber struck a military convoy in Surkh Rod district near Jalalabad. He said a U.S. military vehicle was damaged. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the blast in a statement posted on the group’s website. Last month, five American servicemembers were wounded in Nangarhar, where U.S. forces are helping the Afghan military fight the Taliban and the Islamic State group. Their injuries were not life-threatening. wellman.phillip@stripes.com •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 5 PACIFIC Transparency: China’s actions lead to uncertainty FROM FRONT PAGE R ALPH SCOTT/Missile Defense Agency A Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, interceptor is launched during a test in 2013. China backlash over missile shield puts North Asia on edge BY TING SHI Bloomberg News HONG KONG — South Korean President Park Geun Hye has discovered first hand the feeling of getting the cold shoulder from China. Under the fluent Mandarin speaker’s watch, South Korea had seen improved ties with China, drawn together in part by concern about Japan’s wartime past and the military ambitions of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Park was the only leader of a U.S. ally to attend a military parade in China last year for the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. Now, relations that were hailed by both countries as the best in history have soured, and Park may get a frosty reception in China next month for the Group of 20 summit. The reason: Her agreement to deploy a U.S. missile shield on Korean soil. While South Korea says the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system would be aimed at prickly neighbor North Korea, which has been busy of late test-firing missiles, China has reacted angrily, saying the shield could be applied to it. Russia has also opposed it being stationed in Asia. The tensions, which could crimp Chinese tourism to South Korea and even the appetite for that country’s K-pop music, could also go some way to resetting the geopolitical landscape in North Asia. South Korea may move back toward the U.S., and that in turn could bring South Korea and Japan closer. China, meantime, finds itself potentially in North Korea’s corner. “The THAAD deployment is a symbol of the new Cold War,” said Shi Yongming, an associate research fellow who specializes in Korean studies at the Foreign Ministry-run China Institute of International Studies in Beijing. “It marks a watershed moment in the relations between China and South Korea. The strategic trust is now broken. The power dynamic in Northeast Asia has fundamentally shifted, towards a profound deterioration.” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has described the THAAD plan as an “out-and-out strategic” move, underscoring Beijing’s perception the deployment is a U.S. plan to contain China in the region. South Korea’s willingness to share information with Japan that’s collected from THAAD has compounded that view. The system is “purely defensive,” U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby said at a briefing last month. “There should be no reason for China or any other nation to be concerned about this in terms of any offensive capabilities.” Kirby said the U.S. had offered to share details of the system with Chinese officials, who never took up the offer. One consequence of the tensions over THAAD could be an arms race in North Asia, with both China and Russia moving to develop more sophisticated weaponry. The deployment may also play into the hands of North Korea, allowing leader Kim Jong Un to shore up ties with China, its only major ally. South Korea is already facing an economic backlash even though THAAD may not be operational on its soil until the end of next year. The Korea International Trade Association has identified 26 measures in place by China that hurt its members. Sales to China declined about 9 percent in July. It accounts for about a quarter of South Korea’s exports and is its biggest trading partner. For both Xi and Park, the cooling of ties could cost them political capital. Xi picked Seoul over Pyongyang for his first high-profile state visit to the peninsula. Park, meanwhile, had leaned on China to help her rein in North Korea’s nuclear ambitions. “It’s China’s inability to restrain North Korea and unwillingness to give South Korea meaningful security guarantees that has shown the limits of what South Korea can expect from China,” said Phillip Saunders, director of the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs at the U.S. National Defense University. Xi and Kim — who have yet to meet — exchanged congratulatory messages in May and July on key party occasions. North Korean exports to China of natural resources not subject to United Nations sanctions rose more than 50 percent in the first half of the year, according to South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency. Kim Dongyup, an analyst at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University in South Korea, said the bickering over THAAD “is happiness to North Korea.” China’s foreign ministry, which has said THAAD’s powerful radars threaten its national security, has warned about taking “necessary measures to safeguard” its interests. “The THAAD system far exceeds the defense needs of the Korean Peninsula, it will directly harm China’s strategic security interests and disrupt the regional strategic balance,” according to Zhu Haiquan, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington. The Defense Ministry confirmed on July 28 it was pressing ahead with anti-missile system tests. China’s military has multiple options to respond, according to Yue Gang, a retired colonel. To prevent THAAD “foreshadowing a Northeast Asian version of NATO,” China could jam THAAD’s radar or boost the density of its missile deployment to overwhelm it, he said. Still, China will need to take care to avoid pulling away too far from South Korea. said it would consider declaring an air defense zone and vowed to continue work on man-made islands created from piling sand atop coral reefs in the highly contested Spratly group. New satellite photos show work proceeding on what seem to be two-dozen hardened concrete airplane hangars on the islands suitable for housing Chinese air force planes, including strategic bombers and inflight refuelers. The photos were collected and studied by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank, and reported in The New York Times. They show construction work on man-made islands at Fiery Cross, Subi and Mischief reefs. China has said the new islands are primarily to assist fishermen and other causes, as well as to reinforce its sovereignty claims. China also says that the islands should be able to defend themselves, and that it is entitled to build whatever structures it wishes on them. Meanwhile, Japan protested Tuesday over a marked increase in the number of Chinese coast guard and fishing vessels in waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea. Swift said the responses of all parties to the arbitration ruling had been consistent with their long-held positions and it was unclear what, if any, recent Chinese actions had been taken specifically in response. “I think it’s a mistake to take them individually and not look at them as a collective. And you have to look at it as an extension of an arc,” Swift said. Such judgments were made more difficult by a lack of transparency about intentions, he said, repeating a frequent U.S. criticism of China’s secretive military. “The uncertainty in the region is because of the lack of transparency and exactly where it is that arc is going. And that arc is de- fined by multiple data points,” he said. Swift cited two examples: The still unexplained cancellation by China of a visit by the aircraft carrier USS Stennis earlier this year, and the reason for the construction of the new aircraft hangars. “That increases the angst and uncertainty, that lack of transparency, and that is generally destabilizing as opposed to a stabilizing action,” Swift said. The admiral said he was confident the U.S. Navy would continue to sail close to China’s artificial islands in what are called freedom of navigation missions to reinforce the stipulations of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, although he said such decisions are made in Washington. China deeply resents such cruises, greeting them with threats and harassment. Swift also criticized the planned China-Russia drills, saying, “There are other places those exercises could have been conducted.” “So I think that is a matter of concern and something that should be considered from the perspective of actions that are not increasing the stability within the region,” he said. Also Tuesday, Former Philippine President Fidel Ramos said in Hong Kong that he wants to focus on points of common interest with China such as tourism and commercial fishing as part of efforts to smooth relations with Beijing roiled by the South China Sea dispute. Current Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has asked the 88-year-old Ramos to act as his special envoy to pave the way for talks with Beijing. While the Chinese government has yet to formally comment on Ramos’ mission, the official Xinhua News Agency said in an editorial Tuesday that it “brings a whiff of hope that the two countries will return to bilateral negotiations over the issue.” F3HIJKLM PAGE 6 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 NATION Trump promises to ‘jump-start’ US economics BY JILL COLVIN JOSH LEDERMAN AND Associated Press DETROIT — Promising to “jump-start America” to a new era of prosperity, Donald Trump announced a revamped economic plan Monday aimed at revitalizing a stagnant U.S. economy by cutting taxes for workers and businesses. He assailed Hillary Clinton as a candidate who would merely extend a Democratic period of old ideas and weakness. Trying to move past recent stumbles, Trump proposed a sim- plified three-bracket income tax system that hewed closely to what House Republicans have recommended, the latest indication the GOP presidential nominee is working to put infighting with his party’s leaders behind him. In a shift from the plan he proposed during the primary season, he increased the tax rate that the highest-earning Americans would pay. With few exceptions, Trump provided more of a philosophical basis for an economic plan than a series of specifics. He did spell out proposed tax brackets and called for greater child care deductions for families. As he called for urgent change away from Democratic policies, he envisioned a nation refocused on manufacturing at home and wary of trade deals abroad — a country bearing little resemblance to the globally focused economy of recent years. “Americanism, not globalism, will be our new credo,” he said in his address at the Detroit Economic Club. “Our country will reach amazing new heights — maybe heights never attained before.” Delivering his speech from a teleprompter, Trump was interrupted repeatedly by protesters who stood on chairs and shouted at him before being pulled out of the room by security guards. He did not react harshly as he often has in the past, either quietly thanking the guards or simply powering ahead in his speech. Only days ago, Trump triggered panic within the GOP when he declined to endorse House Speaker Paul Ryan’s re-election or that of other leading Republicans. He sought to put the dust-up to bed Friday by finally backing those candidates while also trying to move past other controversies, like his verbal attacks on a Muslim-American family whose son died fighting in Iraq. Republicans inside and outside of Trump’s campaign have implored him to shift the conversation back to Clinton’s perceived shortcomings. On Monday, he obliged, accusing her of jilting American workers and coming up short on promises to constituents. “The one common feature of every Hillary Clinton idea is that it punishes you for working and doing business in the United States,” Trump said. He said he wants to “jump-start America” and added, “It won’t even be that hard.” Candidate seeks to quell GOP pushback Clinton pans rival’s plan as beneficial only to rich Associated Press KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Hillary Clinton offered a simple reply to Donald Trump’s economic address Monday: “Don’t let a friend vote Trump.” At a rally in St. Petersburg, Fla., Clinton said the plans Trump outlined earlier in Detroit would push the country back into recession, warning that they benefit the rich and do little to create jobs or boost the economy. “His tax plans would give super big tax breaks to large corporations and the really wealthy,” Clinton said, characterizing the proposals, which include substantial tax cuts, as “trickle-down economics.” “You know that old saying: Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me,” she said. Clinton countered with her own economic proposals, saying she wants to invest in public works projects and more educational opportunities and will tax top earners to pay for her plans. She is expected to speak to the Detroit Economic Club on Thursday. “I have said throughout this campaign I am not going to raise the taxes on the middle class, but with your help, we are going to raise it on the wealthy,” Clinton said. At a rally later in the day in Kissimmee, Fla., Clinton continued her criticism, saying Trump “hasn’t offered any plans on infrastructure besides building a wall and having Mexico pay for it.” She also stressed her commitment to small businesses, asking, “Would you rather have a president who says you’re fired or you’re hired?” Earlier Monday, Clinton toured a brewery as a way of highlighting her commitment to small businesses. She planned to campaign in Miami Tuesday, as part of a two-day tour through battleground Florida, home of 29 electoral votes. WILMINGTON, N.C. — Donald Trump is seeking to quell concerns he lacks the discipline or policy know-how to make a competent president, even as the list of fellow Republicans deeming him unfit for the Oval Office grows. Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate long wary of Trump, became the latest Republican to announce her intent not to vote for her party’s nominee. Days after rebuking Trump for insinuating Somali refugees in Maine were dangerous, Collins said late Monday she’d thought “long and hard” about whether she was obligated to support the GOP nominee and decided she could not. “With the passage of time, I have become increasingly dismayed by his constant stream of cruel comments and his inability to admit error or apologize,” Collins wrote in a Washington Post op-ed. Collins wrote that she supports neither party’s nominee, although previously she’s said she’s open to voting for Hillary Clinton. The defection of a respected senator added to a chorus of GOP voices insisting they can’t back Trump. Some 50 Republican former national security officials signed an open letter calling Trump the most reckless candidate in history, prompting a counterattack from Trump, who said the signers share blame with Clinton for making the world “a mess” and fueling the Islamic State group’s formation. The renewed focus on GOP discord was not the theme Trump hoped to emphasize, especially as fresh polls appear to show Clinton widening her lead. But Trump suggested Tuesday there would be no dramatic change of strategy to regain control of the race. “I think it’s just, you know, steadiness,” Trump told Fox Business. “And it’s just doing what I’m doing.” BY CATHERINE LUCEY Associated Press PAUL SANCYA /AP Tongue-lashing at Trump event Zack W., left, listens to Maurice Hardwick at a protest while Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump delivered an economic policy speech to the Detroit Economic Club in Detroit on Monday. Pulse shooter’s father sits behind Clinton at rally The Washington Post Seddique Mateen, the father of the suspect in the June mass shooting at an Orlando nightclub, secured a prime seat at a rally for Hillary Clinton on Monday outside the Florida city. For 25 minutes, Mateen sat right behind the Democratic nominee for president as she remembered the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting and laid out her policies. Mateen’s presence was first noted by WPTV reporter Tory Dunnan, who was initially rebuffed for an interview but then was surprised to find Mateen holding a pro-Clinton sign and asking to talk to the press. “Clinton is good for the United States, versus Donald Trump,” Mateen said in broken English. “I was invited by the Democratic Party; I’m a member.” Asked about his son, Omar Mateen, who killed 49 people in one of the biggest massacres in American history, Mateen said he wished “that my son joined the army and fought ISIS,” or the Islamic State group, instead. Clinton’s campaign was apparently unaware of Mateen’s presence at the rally, much less the 25 minutes he spent sharing a frame with the nominee. “The rally was a 3,000-person, open-door event for the public,” a Clinton campaign official said. “This individual wasn’t invited as a guest, and the campaign was unaware of his attendance until after the event.” Mateen has spent years, and some of his own money, attempting to become better known. He paid to air a news and commentary show in Afghanistan, where he declared a fringe campaign for president and offered support for the Taliban. After WPTV broke the news of Mateen’s rally attendance, several conservative pundits urged Republican nominee Donald Trump to make it an issue in the campaign. “Donald Trump might be the luckiest son-of-a-gun to ever run for president,” wrote the National Review’s Jim Geraghty. “If he can’t make some noise over this and make up five points quick, he should just close up shop and let Pence-Cruz handle it from here.” •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 7 NATION Families of 2 killed in Benghazi sue Clinton BY STEPHANIE A KIN CQ-Roll Call PHOTOS BY BRIAN HILL , (A RLINGTON HEIGHTS, ILL .) DAILY HERALD/AP Re-enactors move through the forest last month during the 2/327th Vietnam Re-enactment Group’s first “Return to the A Shau: A Vietnam Living History Event” at Camp Big Timber, in Elgin, Ill. Re-enactors seek to honor Vietnam vets BY ROBERT SANCHEZ (Arlington Heights, Ill.) Daily Herald ELGIN, Ill. — The Vietnam War battle re-enactment began without warning. About 20 men dressed as Vietnam-era U.S. soldiers were walking through the dense woods when the sound of gunshots erupted from somewhere in front of them. As the scenario unfolds, it’s hard to tell who is shooting at what. There’s yelling, chaos and the repeated noise of blanks being fired. By the end of the mock battle, the Americans are victorious, but find the enemy was just a small number of North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong soldiers. “That’s how it would be. The Viet Cong would use hit-and-run tactics,” said Rick Pennington, spokesman for the July 23rd weekend’s “Return to the A Shau: A Vietnam Living History Event” at Camp Big Timber near Elgin. For Vietnam veteran Patrick Mitchell, it’s a far cry from the re-enactments he’s accustomed to seeing. “I’ve been to Civil War re-enactments. I’ve been to World War II re-enactments,” said Mitchell, 67, of Elgin. “But this is more up my alley.” The event, organized by 2/327th Vietnam Re-Enactment Group included an encampment showing what life was like for the Americans who fought in Vietnam. Larry May, who served in the Army during Vietnam, said he was impressed by the displays showcasing uniforms, weapons, and gear used during the war. “This heat reminds me of being there,” said May, 71. “It’s been 51 years. But it’s nice that they’re honoring the Vietnam veterans. That hasn’t happened in a long time.” Veterans line up to view re-enactors move through the forest. Pennington said the goal of the event is to educate the public about the sacrifices made during the war. “These guys were the first war generation to not come home to a hero’s welcome,” Pennington said. “I think it’s a shame.” Steve Zahareas of Schaumburg, one of the re-enactors, said the time has come for Vietnam veterans to get the recognition they deserve. “All the Vietnam soldiers did was what their fathers and their uncles did before them in World War II and Korea,” Zahareas said. Vietnam veteran Richard Wistar said he enjoyed the event because it gave him the opportunity to meet others who fought in the war. “This is the first time in 46 years that I was able to talk about it to somebody,” said Wistar, 70, of Gilberts. “It makes you feel like you came home.” WASHINGTON — The families of two Americans killed in the 2012 attacks on the diplomatic mission in Benghazi have filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit against Hillary Clinton, claiming that she was responsible because of her use of a private email server while she was head of the State Department, according to media reports. The lawsuit filed by Patricia Smith and Charles Woods, the parents of Sean Smith and Tyrone Woods, also claims that Clinton defamed the families in her public statements. “The Benghazi attack was directly and proximately caused, at a minimum by defendant Clinton’s ‘extreme carelessness’ in handling confidential and classified information,” the lawsuit alleges, according to NBC News. Smith was an information management officer and Woods was a security officer in Libya. Both families have been publicly critical of Clinton. Smith was a featured speaker at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, where she said she blamed Clinton for her son’s death. Woods has appeared on cable news shows, saying on CNN last week that Clinton had proved “incapable” of protecting Americans in Benghazi. They are represented by Larry Klayman of Judicial Watch, a conservative organization that has been critical of Clinton and sought her emails from her private server during her tenure as secretary of state, according to media reports. Clinton campaign spokesman Nick Merrill told NBC News that the claims in the lawsuit have already been subjected to intense scrutiny. PAGE 8 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 NATION Miami neighborhood home to artists, tourists and Zika BY DAVID FISCHER Associated Press MIAMI — On any given day, a visitor to Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood might see a hipster pecking at a vintage typewriter outside a coffee shop, or a young professional enjoying roasted duck carnitas at a fusion restaurant next door. Two blocks away, a family from the Midwest, Latin America or Europe might be exploring the graffiti murals of the Wynwood Walls or wandering into an art gallery. At night, couples line up around the block to get into a trendy tavern. The recent announcement that 16 people have been infected with the Zika virus by mosquitoes in the Wynwood area has scared away some visitors. Federal health officials last week warned pregnant women to avoid the neighborhood and a 1-square-mile area around it. But many remain undaunted. “Everything here has a very modern vibe, a modern feel,” said Danny Perez, 25, who sometimes comes to Wynwood from South Miami to work. Pointing out a nearby organic juice and food place next to a letterpress store, he said, “These are niche markets that you don’t find everywhere in Miami.” Just north of downtown Miami, Wynwood once was a garment and warehouse district but went into decline in the 1970s. Artists began setting up shop around the turn of the century, and galleries soon began opening in the decaying buildings and empty lots. Business owners started hosting an Art Walk one night a month, giving locals and curious tourists a chance to see and be seen. The art created inside the buildings began spreading to the neighborhood’s exterior walls, and the annual Art Basel show that later came to Miami gave those works an international stage. “I feel like I’m in Disneyland for the art world,” said Jonathan Yubi, 31, who came down to Miami from Orlando, Fla., last week to pick up copies of his fledgling art publication, Artborne Magazine, from a printer. He used the trip as an excuse to check out Wyn- wood for the first time. Courtney Clark, 28, has been working at one of the area’s retail stores for about a year. She didn’t seem worried about Zika as she ate outside Thursday afternoon. “I have a little bracelet with mosquito repellent on it,” Clark said. “But other than that, I’m not pregnant or looking to get pregnant anytime soon.” While unafraid herself, she has noticed a drop in visitors. “There are definitely fewer people around,” Clark said. “It will probably stay like that for the next couple weeks or so until we get out of the news.” Paul Villard, 23, said he thought about not showing up at the Wynwood restaurant where he works, but he ultimately decided to go. “You can’t really let that stuff interfere with life,” Villard said, but acknowledged that pregnant women should probably stay away for a while. Until now, the only known Zika cases in the United States were in people who had recently traveled to Latin America and the Caribbean. A LAN DIAZ /AP Tourists on Friday visit the Wynwood Walls in the Wynwood area of Miami, where warnings about Zika carried by mosquitoes has scared away some visitors. Zika, a mild disease for most, can lead to severe brain-related birth defects if women are infected during pregnancy. Health officials announced Aug. 1 that Zika had turned up in Wynwood. They clarified last week that the actual infections were limited to a 500-square-foot residential area north of the art district, and that area has since been bombarded with insecticides. They have urged women of child-bearing years to avoid the area and for pregnant women there to be tested. Florida’s Health Department has said there’s no evidence of mosquitoes transmitting Zika elsewhere in Miami. Health and dollars are both on the line as the Zika scare collides with Wynwood’s art and tourism boom. Joel “Smiley” Atkinson, 47, said he’s seen many neighboring businesses move out over the five years he’s worked at LBK Shoes Corp. Property values have skyrocketed in the area, and many longtime residents and businesses can’t afford to stay. “It’s a bad thing for some people, and it’s a good thing for other people,” Atkinson said. “For the art people, maybe it’s good. For the people doing business, that’s bad.” •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 9 NATION Study: Unsafe levels of chemicals in water affects 6M Americans Wildfire surges in Southern California Associated Press CRESTLINE, Calif. — A Southern California wildfire has surged in size and put thousands of homes in potential peril. Smoke plumes roiling from flaming ridges of the San Bernardino Mountains blew all the way across the Mojave Desert to Las Vegas as the blaze forced the evacuation of hundreds of homes Monday. Firefighters aided by 16 aircraft battled flames that spread across nearly 10 square miles on the northern side of the rugged mountain range east of Los Angeles. People in some 375 homes were ordered to evacuate, authorities said. Residents of about 5,000 more were advised that they may want to evacuate, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office said. Helicopters sucked loads of water from nearby Silverwood Lake to douse flames leaping across slopes. Air tankers swooped low to paint the dry vegetation with pink fire retardant. The fire, which erupted for an unknown reason Sunday, was just 6 percent contained. The Washington Post JAMES Q UIGG, THE (VICTORVILLE, CALIF.) DAILY PRESS/AP A jet tanker drops retardant on a wildfire Monday along Highway 173 in Hesperia, Calif. Across the Mojave, officials in southern Nevada issued an air quality advisory because of smoke from the fire more than 200 miles away. The Clark County Department of Air Quality said the air was unhealthy for sensitive groups, including young children, senior citizens and people with respiratory problems and cardiac disease. Like some of the state’s other fires this summer, the blaze burned near a popular recreation area. But Silverwood Lake’s waters had been closed to swimming, fishing and boating since Aug. 4 because of an algae bloom. On the central coast, meanwhile, California’s biggest fire expanded to more than 95 square miles north of scenic Big Sur. An army of more than 5,000 firefighters and an air force of tankers and helicopters made progress, however, surrounding 50 percent of the 18-day-old blaze. Drinking water supplies serving more than 6 million Americans contain unsafe levels of a widely used class of industrial chemicals linked to potentially serious health problems, according to a new study from Harvard University researchers. The chemicals — known as polyfluoroalkyl and perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFASs — have been used for decades in a range of industrial and commercial products, including nonstick coatings on pans, food wrappers, water-repellent clothing and firefighting foam. Long-term exposure has been linked to increased risks of kidney cancer, thyroid problems, high cholesterol and hormone disruption, among other issues. “Virtually all Americans are exposed to these compounds,” said Xindi Hu, the study’s lead author. “They never break down. Once they are released into the environment, they are there.” As part of the study, which was published Tuesday in Environmental Science & Technology Letters, the researchers examined concentrations of six types of PFAS chemicals in drinking water supplies around the country. The data came from more than 36,000 samples collected by the Environmental Protection Agency between 2013 and 2015. They also looked at sites where the chemicals are commonly found — industrial plants, military bases and civilian airports and wastewater treatment plants. What they found: 194 of 4,864 water supplies across nearly three dozen states had detectable levels of the chemicals. Sixty-six of those water supplies, serving about 6 million people, had at least one sample that exceeded the EPA’s recommended safety limit of 70 parts per trillion for two types of chemicals — perfluorooctanesulfonic acid and perfluorooctanoic acid. The federal government does not currently regulate PFAS chemicals. But they are on the EPA’s list of “unregulated contaminants” that the agency monitors. PAGE 10 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 NATION ‘Pokemon Go’ player is killed in Calif. Survivor, rescuer from 9/11 reunited Associated Press BY COLBY ITKOWITZ The Washington Post It’s been nearly 15 years since their lives were thrust together for a few chaotic moments outside the Pentagon on 9/11. Lt. Col. Brian Birdwell never got to thank the man who held his leaky IV line and tried to keep him conscious as he lay on a gurney, parts of his body and half his face burned beyond recognition. Col. Rob Maness never knew if the severely wounded man he’d helped had survived. That is, until their paths crossed again at a political convention. In 2001, Birdwell worked at the Pentagon and, on the morning of Sept. 11, was in an office with two colleagues watching the live footage of the Twin Towers burning. At 9:35 he stepped out to go to the bathroom. Less than 10 minutes later, as Birdwell left the bathroom, American Airlines Flight 77 barreled into the side of the building, the nose of the aircraft less than 20 yards from where Birdwell stood. He was engulfed in flames, parts of his polyester Army pants melted to his skin, his arms were skinned, and he collapsed with blood and black soot caked to his charred body. Minutes later, he was being carried out of the building and a medic on site quickly hooked him up to an IV. That’s when Maness, who worked for the Air Force, showed up and was instructed to hold Birdwell’s IV line, which was leaking, and to try to keep the fading man awake. Maness asked his first name. They prayed together. Maness told him he’d be OK, though it was a promise that he didn’t know for years that he’d actually kept. The Washington Post Lt. Col. Brian Birdwell shows his cast to Marion Jordan and physical therapist Kristen Dammen at Washington Hospital Center burn unit. Birdwell was badly burned while working at the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. Courtesy of Rob Maness Rob Maness, left, who rendered aid to Birdwell, center, on Sept. 11, were reunited by former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, right, at the Republican National Convention. Birdwell was eventually taken to the hospital where he’d spend 26 days in intensive care. More than 60 percent of his body was severely burned, and he’d have 39 operations during his excruciating recovery, which took about four years, he said. Maness spent the rest of Sept. 11 surrounded by the blood and carnage, helping the wounded get to the triage area or to a spot where they could be transported to a hospital. Both men are in politics now, Birdwell a state senator in Texas and Maness a candidate for the open U.S. Senate seat in Louisiana. They were both in Cleveland for the Republican National Convention. Maness requested a meeting with former Texas Gov. Rick Perry to ask advice for running in a statewide election. Perry wanted to introduce him to another veteran who had also been in the Pentagon on 9/11. He had his aides track down Birdwell. Within minutes of trading stories from that terrible day, the men realized who the other was. They were describing the same location, the same injuries, the same broken IV line. “We had a really big hug that had the gravity and emotion of two comrades in arms,” Birdwell said. Birdwell started a nonprofit, Face the Fire Ministries, that supports burn victims and wounded servicemen and servicewomen. Maness helped found an advocacy organization to prevent veteran suicides. Both say their shared politics, passions and past will ensure they now stay in each other’s lives. “Rob played a part in me being able to do those things and that’s pretty special,” Birdwell said. “It’s a whale of a fraternity with one hell of an initiation.” Wanted: Drug-free expert to oversee medical pot rules Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio is looking for an expert in growing marijuana who must adhere to its drug-free workplace policy as the state implements a new medical marijuana law. Cleveland.com reported the new hire by the Ohio Department of Commerce would help write rules for medical marijuana cultivators. The chosen contractor would be held to Ohio’s drug-free workplace policy, which currently doesn’t allow for medical marijuana use. A Commerce Department spokesman couldn’t say Friday whether the contractor’s employees would have to clear a pre- employment drug test. The contractor would research best practices and recommend how they would work with Ohio’s patient needs in the new Ohio Medical Marijuana Control Program. The job was posted last week. The state is accepting applications through Wednesday. The department has budgeted $50,000 for the work. SAN FRANCISCO — A 20year-old man was shot to death while playing “Pokemon Go” at a tourist attraction along San Francisco’s waterfront, authorities and a family friend said. An unknown assailant shot Calvin Riley on Saturday night at Aquatic Park near Ghiradelli Square, the U.S. Park Police said Sunday. A family friend called it a random attack. Riley was playing the hit mobile game with a friend when someone shot him from behind and took off, John Kirby told KGO-TV. “From what we know, there was no confrontation,” Kirby said. “There was nothing said back and forth. It was just senseless, just came up and shot in the back and ran away for nothing.” Kirby said Riley and his friend had noticed someone watching them from the top of a hill that overlooks the park, but it was dark and they were mostly looking at their cellphones. National Park Service spokesman Lynn Cullivan said investigators believe there are witnesses to the attack because it happened in the bustling Fisherman’s Wharf area. They are seeking tips. Sgt. Robert Jansing, a detective with the U.S. Park Police, said the gunman did not take any of Riley’s belongings or try to rob him. Riley graduated from high school in San Mateo and pitched for the baseball team at San Joaquin Delta College. “It’s a huge loss to everyone,” the school’s head coach, Reed Peters, told KGO-TV. “He was a great kid, a great competitor.” It’s unclear whether the attack had anything to do with “Pokemon Go,” which has become a national sensation this summer as legions of fans visit real-world landmarks in a hunt for digital creatures. But the game’s popularity has created unintended consequences in everyday life. Property owners complain of players trespassing or damaging their grounds, and scores of players have been injured or robbed as they stare at their phones and try to track cartoon monsters. Law enforcement officials have warned about the game’s possible dangers, saying players can become engrossed in it and tune out their surroundings. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 11 NATION Kan. boy suffered fatal neck injury on tall water slide BY JIM SUHR Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Kansas water slide billed as the world’s tallest remained off-limits as authorities pressed to figure out how a state lawmaker’s young son died of a neck injury while riding it. Details remained murky about what happened Sunday to Caleb Thomas Schwab, 10, on the 168foot-tall “Verruckt” — German for “insane” — that since its debut two years ago has been the top draw at Schlitterbahn Waterpark in Kansas City, Kan. Kansas City police issued a statement late Monday afternoon saying Caleb suffered a fatal neck injury at about 2:30 p.m. Sunday while he was riding the slide with two women, neither of whom was related to him. They suffered minor facial injuries and were treated at an area hospital, police said. Emergency responders arrived to find the boy dead in a pool at the end of the ride, according to the statement, which offered no further details. In a statement Monday afternoon, Schlitterbahn said it was “deeply and intensely saddened for the Schwab family and all who were impacted by the tragic accident.” The park was tentatively scheduled to reopen Wednesday, but “Verruckt is closed,” according to the statement. Officer Cameron Morgan, a police spokesman, said no police report about the incident was available. He said investigators were treating Caleb’s death as a “civil matter” rather than a criminal one and referred additional questions to the park. Schlitterbahn spokeswoman Winter Prosapio declined interview requests Monday but told reporters on Sunday that Caleb had been at the park with family members, adding that “we honestly don’t know what’s happened.” It wasn’t immediately clear whether results of an autopsy Monday on Caleb would be publicly released or, if so, how soon, said Margaret Studyvin, of the Wyandotte County coroner’s office. On the water slide, which is certified by Guinness World Records as the world’s tallest, riders sit in multiperson rafts during “the ultimate in water slide thrills,” subjecting “adventure seekers” to a “jaw dropping” 17-story drop, the park’s website says. Passengers then are “blasted back up a second massive hill and then sent down yet another gut wrenching 50 foot drop,” the website adds. Each rider must be at least 54 inches tall, and the group’s weight is limited to a total of 400 to 550 pounds. Poll: Young favor LGBT rights Associated Press WASHINGTON — Young people in America overwhelmingly support LGBT rights when it comes to policies on employment, health care and adoption, according to a new survey. The GenForward survey of Americans ages 18-30 found that support for those policies has increased over the past two years, especially among young whites. But relatively few of these young adults consider rights for people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender to be among the top issues facing the country. According to the findings, 92 percent of young adults support HIV and AIDs prevention; 90 percent support equal employment; and 80 percent support LGBT adoption. Broad majorities support training police on transgender issues, government support for organizations for LGBT youth and insurance coverage for transgender health issues. GenForward is a survey by the Black Youth Project at the University of Chicago with The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. In the past two years, support has increased from 69 percent to 84 percent among young whites for policies such as allowing gays and lesbians to legally adopt children. Support for employment equality for LGBT individuals rose from 84 percent to 92 percent. The poll also suggests support for allowing adoption by gays and lesbians has increased among Hispanics. The poll of 1,940 adults age 1830 was conducted July 9-20 using a sample drawn from the probability-based GenForward panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. young adult population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. O.J. E ARLY, THE G REENEVILLE (TENN.) SUN /AP Members of the Greeneville Fire Department help people off the Ferris wheel at the Greene County Fair in Greeneville, Tenn., on Monday. 1 suffers head injury in Ferris wheel fall Associated Press GREENEVILLE, Tenn. — Police said one of three people who fell from a Ferris wheel during a county fair in Tennessee suffered a head injury and remains hospitalized in serious condition. Greeneville police Capt. Tim Davis said during a news conference that the other two were responsive and answering questions after falling 30 to 45 feet Monday night. He had said earlier all three were alert and responsive, but said Tuesday morning he had received new information. A second person also remained hospitalized. Davis said the three fell when the car flipped over. The oldest was a 16-year-old girl. Asked about reports that the car was rocking before it flipped, Davis said police have not been able to confirm that but they are still interviewing people. Officials said fair rides were closed Tuesday and won’t reopen until a third-party inspection is complete. ‘Text neck’ on rise among high school athletes BY L AURA NIGHTENGALE (Peoria, Ill.) Journal Star PEORIA, Ill. — For athletes turning out for fall sports this week, that pain in the neck or shoulder could be related to an offthe-field activity. “I have never seen so many kids with neck pain before (than) in the last two years. Before that, I could probably see one, and it was probably because he got his bell rung in football,” physical therapist Zach Kirkpatrick said. “But now, I just start seeing these chronic neck pain, teenage kids. Clearly something is going on here that we need to address.” Kirkpatrick is referring to the phenomenon of “text neck,” characterized by a forward-slumped neck, rounded shoulders and tight chest muscles. The downward-facing posture that most of us assume when using our phones can cause undue strain on vertebrae, ligaments of the cervical spine and muscles and “sets your neck up for failure.” For some patients, that could manifest as chronic neck pain or headaches. For others, symptoms might not be obvious until something like hitting a three-point stance on the football field or taking an overhead swing at a volleyball aggravates an underlying problem. Kirkpatrick, facility manager at Athletico Physical Therapy in East Peoria, Ill., said he most often treats overhead athletes, in particular, for problems caused by poor posture that affects their athletic performance. “They’re texting their girlfriend or whatever all the time or playing some sort of game on their phone when they’re not playing baseball, and they really don’t think about how their head and neck position really will affect their ability to throw and how that leads to more strain through the shoulders,” Kirkpatrick said. Also, the problems associated with “text neck” could lead to more serious injuries. Take your deep neck flexors, for example. The small muscles help stabilize the head. If they’re tired and overworked from looking down at a cellphone, they aren’t working as well as they should be to protect your head and neck during a tackle. Not just teens are susceptible to “text neck.” While the symptoms are traditionally much more prevalent in an older population, Kirkpatrick said it’s become increasingly common in adults who spend a lot of time at the computer. Holding your phone a little higher could help prevent the onset of “text neck.” Same goes for your computer screen. Kirkpatrick suggests taking a break every 30 minutes to do a few stretches of the neck, chest and shoulders. “This is something a high school kid can do throughout class several times a day. They’re fortunate enough to get up and walk around a little bit between classes, and that’s a good time to think about hitting those exercises.” PAGE 12 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 13 WORLD Official: 14 civilians in Yemen killed in airstrike Victims of attack in Quetta mourned Associated Press BY A BDUL SATTAR Associated Press QUETTA, Pakistan — Pakistani lawyers on Tuesday mourned colleagues slain in a shocking suicide bombing the previous day at a hospital in the southwestern city of Quetta that killed 70 people, mostly lawyers. The attack, which stunned the judicial community, also underscored concerns that militants in Pakistan are still capable of striking in the heart of the country’s cities and towns — despite government claims of dismantling various terrorism networks. The Pakistani bar association called for lawyers to boycott courts in an unusual strike against the attack. Schools and markets were closed in Quetta, also in protest over the attack, which was claimed by a breakaway faction of the Pakistani Taliban, the Jamaatul-Ahrar militant group. In Islamabad, lawyers lined up outside the Supreme Court under tight security to offer funeral prayers for those killed in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province. “Those who even did not spare the hospital and carried out the suicide attack cannot be called humans,” senior attorney Mohammad Ashraf said as he stood with colleagues outside a Quetta court building. “We request that the government tracks down and punishes all those who killed innocent lawyers and other people.” Another lawyer, Rehmatullah Khan, said he was missing his friends and colleagues. “We used to sit with them here. … Now, they are gone.” At a Quetta market, Mohammad Saleem, a resident of the city, said everyone was still in a state of shock. “People are scared and they ask for how long the violence will continue,” he said. Monday’s attack came as lawyers converged at a Quetta hospital after the body of a prominent colleague — Bilal Kasi, the president of the Baluchistan Bar Association — was taken there after he was shot and killed by gunmen just hours earlier. A suicide bomber detonated his explosives’ vest amid the gathering, and survivors later described scenes of panic as the blast ripped through the emergency room. In a statement, Ahsanullah Ahsan, spokesman for the Jamaatul-Ahrar militant group, said its fighters killed Kasi and also dozens of lawyers gathered at the government-run Civil Hospital to mourn for their colleague. JONATHAN SHENFIELD/AP Stephen Hallam, managing director of pork pie makers Dickinson and Morris, works in their kitchens in Melton Mowbray, England. Pork pie problem: UK food traditions losing EU support SANAA, Yemen — A Yemeni factory official and two medics said a Saudi-led airstrike killed 14 civilians working an overnight shift in the capital, Sanaa. They said the airstrikes, which continued into Tuesday, targeted Yemen’s Shiite rebels, but one of them hit a food factory, the alAqil compound. The official and the medics spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. The heavy bombardment came on the heels of failed U.N. peace talks in Kuwait between Yemen’s internationally recognized government and the country’s Shiite rebels, known as Houthis. Rebel spokesman Mohammed Abdel-Salam said the Saudi-led coalition has closed the airspace over Sanaa, preventing the rebel delegation’s plane from reaching the capital. Since the start of the two-year war, the Saudi-led coalition has been in control of the airspace over neighboring Yemen. BY JOSH BOAK Associated Press BUILTH WELLS, Wales — Welsh farmers like Rees Roberts, who has 1,000 acres with sheep, cattle and crops, can expect to earn a premium on their meats thanks to a certificate of regional authenticity. But that marker of distinction — the same kind that ensures champagne can only come from the French region of the same name — is granted by the European Union and is now at risk after Britain voted to leave the 28-country bloc. The certificates, of which there are 73 across Britain for goods like Stilton cheese and Melton Mowbray pork pies, not only help farmers earn more but also shape rural communities’ identities. Add to that the loss of $3.97 billion in EU subsidies for U.K. farmers, potential new tariffs and fears that agriculture will not be prioritized in trade talks with the EU, and the decision to leave the 28-nation bloc promises to be painful. “The voters weren’t thinking it through,” said Roberts, 65, as he discussed the uncertainty with fellow farmers at a fair in the village of Builth Wells. For Welsh farmers, EU membership cushioned against tough times. Sheep flocks have fallen in size by 20 percent since a 1999 peak, while farmers’ real annual average incomes have tumbled nearly a third since 2003, to the equivalent of $29,250, according to government figures. The potential loss of preferential trade with Europe has left Wales rushing to export its lamb and beef to the United States, with the government submitting a 1,000-page proposal to the U.S. Agriculture Department last month ahead of upcoming trade talks in April. The move was driven in part by concerns that negotiations over the next two years on Britain departing the EU will prioritize London banking jobs while downplaying the needs of those in the hinterlands without the posh salaries. “There are many concerns of how influential agriculture will be in these negotiations, both in terms of trade and direct financial support, when compared to the powerful sectors such as financial services,” said Dai Davies, chairman of Welsh meat promoter Hybu Cig Cymru. Davies was at the Royal Welsh Show in Builth Wells — among the largest agricultural fairs in Europe — to listen to farmers’ concerns and an- Indian activist ends 16-year hunger strike Associated Press K IRSTY WIGGLESWORTH /AP A butcher hangs meat at Rhonda Meats Ltd. at Smithfield Market in London. swer their questions. A sense of seriousness and urgency dominated the mood, despite the sheepshearing contests, food stalls and a folk rendition of Beyonce’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It).” Even though Wales is a net beneficiary of EU support, it voted to leave the EU by 53 percent to 47 percent, a fact that reflects the complexities of global trade. Many people in rural Britain, including Wales, are against the EU because the open borders required by membership challenges their sense of national identity. In some voters’ minds, globalization is synonymous with regulations, immigrants and the loss of jobs to low-cost countries in Eastern Europe or China. Those emotions come even though the union also had carved out markets for goods linked to Britain’s heritage. IMPHAL, India — One of India’s most prominent political activists ended a 16-year hunger strike Tuesday, licking honey from her hand and declaring, “I will never forget this moment.” Irom Sharmila had been forcefed through a tube in her nose and held by police since November 2000, when she began her fast to protest a draconian security law that gives immense power to security forces in the northeastern state of Manipur. Earlier Tuesday, a judge had granted her bail after she assured him that she planned to end her fast. Hours later, she appeared at a news conference, the nose tube already removed, and tasted the honey. She said she plans to run in the next Manipur state elections, in early 2017, to fight to have the security act struck down. “I need power to remove this act,” said Sharmila, 44. “I am the real embodiment of revolution.” Asked how she felt to finally eat, she said “I will never forget this moment.” She began her fast days after 10 civilians were killed by paramilitary soldiers in Manipur, which has long been plagued by uprisings by ethnic separatist militants and violent government crackdowns. She was charged with attempting suicide, a crime in India, allowing officials to force-feed her. F3HIJKLM PAGE 14 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 OPINION Max D. Lederer Jr., Publisher Lt. Col. Michael C. Bailey, Europe commander Lt. Col. Brian Choate, Pacific commander Harry Eley, Europe Business Operations Terry M. Wegner, Pacific Business Operations Visa query not part of ‘silly season’ BY CHRISTINE FLOWERS Philadelphia Daily News EDITORIAL Terry Leonard, Editor leonard.terry@stripes.com Robert H. Reid, Senior Managing Editor reid.robert@stripes.com Tina Croley, Managing Editor for Content croley.tina@stripes.com Sean Moores, Managing Editor for Presentation moores.sean@stripes.com Joe Gromelski, Managing Editor for Digital gromelski.joe@stripes.com BUREAU STAFF Europe/Mideast Teddie Weyr, Europe & Mideast Bureau Chief weyr.teddie@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9310; cell +49(0)173.315.1881; DSN (314)583.9310 Pacific Paul Alexander, Pacific Bureau Chief alexander.paul@stripes.com +81.42.552.2511 ext. 88380; cell (080)2184.4941 DSN (315)227.7380 Washington Joseph Cacchioli, Washington Bureau Chief cacchioli.joseph@stripes.com (+1)(202)761.0908; DSN (312)763.0908 Brian Bowers, Assistant Managing Editor, News bowers.brian@stripes.com Amanda Trypanis, Design Desk Supervisor trypanis.amanda@stripes.com CIRCULATION Mideast Robert Reismann, reismann.robert@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9150; DSN (314)583.9150 Europe Van Rowell, rowell.van@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9111; DSN (314)583.9111 Pacific Mari Matsumoto, customerhelp@stripes.com +81-3 6385.3171; DSN (315)229.3171 CONTACT US Washington tel: (+1)202.761.0900; DSN (312)763.0900; 529 14th Street NW, Suite 350, Washington, DC 20045-1301 Reader letters letters@stripes.com N ormally I’m no fan of the sillyseason stuff, and you know exactly what I’m talking about. I’d rather know what a political candidate thinks about the federal debt than whether his wife is a looker. I’d rather have some understanding of what another candidate will do to lower the unemployment rate than whether her husband is still playing around on the side. These are the somewhat boring, yet nonetheless crucial issues that face us in an election year. Still, the silly stuff is amusing, and if you’re having a particularly long and stressful day, it’s enjoyable to plunge into the sticky, sordid little pool of sound bites and non-news. For example, that thing about Donald Trump yelling at a baby was good for a chuckle. We all know he was joking, but some of us will pretend he eats children for breakfast because it advances our partisan narrative. And that whole dust-up when Hillary Clinton said, “What difference does it make?” in front of the Bengazi panel last year? We all knew she wasn’t a callous witch who brushed off the deaths of four Americans as if they were bits of dandruff on her pantsuit lapel. But it makes for great talking points on the cable news shows, so we run with it. Those silly-season things, along with the fabricated scandal of a reporter who was manhandled by a Trump operative and the attacks on Megyn Kelly (who can defend herself quite well), are an insult to the voter’s intelligence. Unfortunately, the voters have shown that they deserve to be insulted, particularly this year, with their “Entertainment Tonight” tastes. It’s a bit ironic to have so many people complaining about the way the media focus on the irrelevancies when these are exactly the things that drive the ratings. Chicken/egg? Perhaps, but I think it’s more egg (public)/ chicken (media, which want the public to pay attention). BY JUSTIN FOX stripes.com/contactus Tobias Naegele The Stars and Stripes ombudsman protects the free flow of news and information, reporting any attempts by the military or other authorities to undermine the newspaper’s independence. The ombudsman also responds to concerns and questions from readers, and monitors coverage for fairness, accuracy, timeliness and balance. The ombudsman welcomes comments from readers, and can be contacted by email at naegele.tobias@stripes. com, or by phone at 202.761.0900. Stars and Stripes (USPS 0417900) is published weekdays (except Dec. 25 and Jan. 1) for 50 cents Monday through Thursday and for $1 on Friday by Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. Periodicals postage paid at San Francisco, CA, Postmaster: Send address changes to Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. This newspaper is authorized by the Department of Defense for members of the military services overseas. However, the contents of Stars and Stripes are unofficial, and are not to be considered as the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S. government. As a DOD newspaper, Stars and Stripes may be distributed through official channels and use appropriated funds for distribution to remote locations where overseas DOD personnel are located. The appearance of advertising in this publication does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Defense or Stars and Stripes of the products or services advertised. Products or services advertised shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. © Stars and Stripes 2016 stripes.com visa procedures for a professional model. Usually, models are given permission to work under what is known as an H-1B visa, which is good for up to three years at a time. This would have obviated the need to travel back and forth to Slovenia every few months to “stay legal,” as Melania has been quoted as saying. The most plausible explanation for what Melania did appears to be coming into and out of the country — legally, mind you — on a tourist visa. There are tourist visas for pleasure, and tourist visas for business, but neither of those visas allows you to work. Yes, there are tiny exceptions, but you don’t want to hear about them because (1) your eyes will glaze over and (2) none of them applies to sexy Slovenian models. Melania was never, it appears, illegally present in the country. She did not slip across any border that will be sealed if her husband gets to build his wall. She walked in, head held high. But if she came in with the intention of working, and had only that tourist visa, she could be charged with visa fraud. And that is a big no-no if your husband is accusing lots of other people of being murderers, rapists and terrorists. Her ex-agent swears that he obtained an H1-B for Melania before she ever modeled for money, and that she was just “confused” when she made those statements about going in and out of the country to “stay legal.” But until we see the paperwork, which is as readily available as Trump’s tax returns, there will be a cloud over Melania Trump. So that is why this story is not part of the “silly season.” Donald Trump’s unfortunate commentaries about illegal aliens made this story a relevant one, and it unfortunately dragged his wife into a situation that will make her homage to Michelle Obama at the Republican National Convention seem tame in comparison. Moral of the story: Not everything that seems silly really is. Now, can we talk about Hillary’s horrendous taste in pantsuits? Christine Flowers is a lawyer and a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News. Degree just might get you a side job Additional contacts OMBUDSMAN Of course, one man’s “silly” is another’s “important,” and depending upon whom you are supporting in the presidential election, that could all be relative. And speaking of relative, or relatives, I normally don’t like to talk about them when it comes M. Trump to politics. That’s because they, generally, do not choose to be thrust into the public spotlight when their husband, wife, mother, daughter, sibling or former step-cousin, once removed, decides to throw his or her hat in the ring. With Clinton, that’s, of course, a different story, because her most visible relative was himself a politician who did the sort of thing men often do whenever they have the opportunity, but who rarely get that opportunity in the Oval Office. Now, up until a short while ago, I strongly believed that Trump’s better half fell into that general category of “off-limits,” because Melania never thrust herself into the public spotlight. OK, she did, but that spotlight had less to do with elections and more to do with something that rhymes with elections. Something Hillary’s husband could appreciate. I was someone who basically said the racy photos Melania had posed for over two decades ago were a personal matter, between her and several million subscribers to the racy gentleman’s magazine in which they appeared. But seriously, it had nothing to do with Trump’s candidacy. Now, however, there is a suggestion that Melania shot those photos when she was working as a model in the United States but before she actually had permission to work in the United States. It’s still only speculation at this point, because her original visa documents haven’t been made available to the public, but Melania’s description of having to return to her native Slovenia “every few months” to get her “papers stamped” is not consistent with what I know to be the Bloomberg View A lot of Americans are doing work on the side these days. This isn’t apparent in the monthly employment data, which showed only 4.6 percent of workers holding multiple jobs in June, down from more than 6 percent in the mid-1990s. But evidence has been emerging in dribs and drabs from other sources. Here’s a new drib, courtesy of the Federal Reserve Board’s “Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2015,” which came out in May but hasn’t gotten a whole lot of attention: “Twenty-two percent of employed adults indicate that they are either working multiple jobs, doing informal work for pay in addition to their main job, or both.” Of those, half (11 percent of employed adults), reported doing informal work, which the Fed survey described to respondents as work for pay that isn’t a formal job and “may include activities like selling items you make at flea markets or online; freelance work through companies like Uber, Care.com, or Airbnb; or providing services for others like paid child care or yard work.” Of those who didn’t have a formal job (and weren’t either students or retirees), 27 percent reported doing informal work. The monthly jobs survey administered by the Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics doesn’t specifically ask about this kind of “gig” work. Neither, for that matter, does the survey of “Contingent and Alternative Employment Arrangements” that the BLS is planning to resurrect next year after a 12-year hiatus (and that economists Lawrence Katz and Alan Krueger commissioned a smaller version of last year). That survey focuses on independent contractors, on-call workers, temps and the like, but isn’t really set up to capture things like selling stuff at a flea market or renting out your apartment on Airbnb. The new Fed survey doesn’t show whether informal work is on the rise — although others have looked at the number of 1099MISC nonemployee-compensation forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service through the years and concluded that it is. What the Fed does offer is a fascinating breakdown of the incomes and educational backgrounds of those who do informal work. Having a low income means you’re more likely to do informal work, which isn’t surprising. But being more educated also means you’re more likely to do informal work. Steve King, of Emergent Research, who tipped me off to the Fed survey, wrote in an email that this was consistent with the results of a survey of on-demand-economy (ODE in the following passage) workers that he designed for Intuit last year: “Part of this is age. Younger people are more educated on average than older and the ODE workforce skews young. Those aged 19-34 make up 38% of the ODE workforce and about 30% of the U.S. population. But this only explains part of it. “We think the other issue is many of the jobs available in the ODE require skills. Marketplaces like Fiverr, Upwork, Hourly Nerd, etc. are all skills based. Not surprisingly, the folks working via these sites have higher education levels than average. “But even things like Uber, Lyft, Task Rabbit and especially sites like Etsy and Airbnb require good online skills. We think this leads to higher education levels.” Another way of looking at the Fed’s income-education breakdown, though, is that the on-demand or gig or sharing economy is being powered in large part by highly educated people who can’t get steady jobs that pay well. Last year, freelance journalist Monica Potts wrote a long lament for the Washington Monthly subtitled “How the ‘sharing economy’ allows Millennials to cope with downward mobility, and also makes them poorer.” I found it affecting, but wasn’t convinced that it applied to more than a few liberal-artscollege graduates in a few coastal cities. Now I’m starting to think it might be bigger than that. Justin Fox is a Bloomberg View columnist . Wednesday, August 10, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 15 OPINION Olympic distraction arrives just in time BY DICK M EYER Scripps Washington Bureau T hank God for the Summer Olympics. They have never come at a better time. What could possibly be a better prescription for our tired, election-fried nation than spending a couple weeks obsessed with beach volleyball, badminton, pole vaulting and the modern pentathlon? Absolutely nothing. If I could spend all two weeks doing nothing but watching Olympic sports, I would. The Olympics this year are a heavensent opportunity to indulge in distraction and moral uplift, both of which we desperately need. So go ahead and indulge. In this modern age, we are a mediasoaked people, with big screens on our wall and tiny screens in our paws. Personally, I think this will drive our species to robotic despondence in a few short decades, but that’s another story. Right now, we are drowning from a multimedia hose spraying constant updates of this dreadful, demoralizing and infinite election. We deserve a break today and the easiest way to get it is to massively change the channel. What would happen if we, the voters, took our eyes off this two-year marketing marathon for two weeks? Nothing. If a tree falls in a forest and no one hears it, it still falls. Or something like that. Whatever. Maybe Donald Trump will do something way crazier or offensive than he’s ever done before. That’s very possible, but so what? It’s hard to imagine what’s left for him to do that would convince his opponents that he’s sane, decent and fit for office or convince his ardent backers that he’s insane, indecent and unfit for office. And if he does pull off something so mega-yuuuge, we’ll have plenty time to ponder it after the last A LESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP Dancers perform Sunday before the start of the women’s team archery competition at the Sambadrome venue during the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. gold medal is awarded. Maybe Trump will drop out — take his toys and go back to his tower. Then the 168 members of the Republican National Committee will meet somewhere and pick a new nominee. Maybe it will be Paul Ryan or Mitt Romney or even Vladimir Putin, Trump’s choice. Whatever. You can read about it during breaks in women’s gymnastics and still have more than two months to ponder your vote. Maybe Trump’s opposition research team or Russian hackers will unearth some angle to a Hillary Clinton scandal that 25 years of digging has missed. Maybe her untrustworthy rating will actually exceed 100 percent. Maybe she’ll crash in the polls and retreat to a spa for a month. Whatever. We the voters will still have weeks and weeks and tweets and tweets to sort it all out, after the Olympic closing ceremony. But most likely, nothing truly consequential will happen, the whole political-warming climate will cool down and the air will freshen a tad and this whole calamity will feel less calamitous — for a blessed while at least. I know there are some people who are truly excited and inspired by Hillary Clinton and her quest, people who are loving this campaign. And I know there are people who truly think Donald Trump is a gutsy maverick and not another political BS artist and they are loving this campaign. But I haven’t met very many. Even fans of the two candidates are grossed out by the big picture. This campaign has been the opposite of uplifting. What better tonic could there be than rooting for someone or some team with crazy, silly abandon for a couple days? Especially if you choose an athlete to support randomly, with no prior attachment and therefore little risk of heartbreak when they don’t medal. The randomness is part of the fun. My planned random interest this year is going to be men’s crew. I am going to pull for the Americans in the men’s double scull, but I intend to become a maven on the pairs from New Zealand and Slovenia. I intend to judge and award points on every gymnastic and diving event, men’s and women’s, and become irate when inexperienced, nationalistic judges disagree with my objective, expert judgments. I vow to renounce my lifelong commitment to mocking and besmirching every single corny, “up close and personal profile.” I will be uplifted by every Bulgarian weightlifter and totally in sync with every synchronized swimmer. If I knew how to change my ringtone — I think that’s what it’s called — to the Olympic theme song, I would. I hope the television ratings for the Olympics set new records, too. I hope the cable news ratings and news websites’ traffic plummets to glorious lows. I hope Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump disappear from human consciousness for a couple of weeks, replaced by fencing, table tennis and women’s kayaking. I will be uplifted, damn it. Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC . Gap year can offer life-changing opportunities BY R EBECCA S. FAHRLANDER The Philadelphia Inquirer T aking a break between high school and university — a gap year — has been trending in recent years. Prince William famously took a gap year to travel and volunteer for worthy causes. More recently, Malia Obama decided to postpone entering university for a year. The gap year offers an opportunity to make a transition between two stages of a young life — taking a break from formal education and substituting the informal learning from travel and work in the socalled real world. A few decades back, when it was not quite as common as it is today, I took my gap year. Actually, I took two. An honors student, I certainly was academically prepared to go straight to college. However, I felt I needed a break. Also, unlike many teenagers, I had no work experience. I was not sure what I wanted to do with this seemingly endless road of life, and thus took time off to work in a large corporation and do a bit of travel. In many ways, it was a rational transition from classes to this environment. This corporate world required some of the same qualities as school, including persistence, punctuality and math, reading and social skills. I also spent most of the first half-year taking training and classes, ap- It was also easy to see that college afforded better opportunities in general for more interesting and autonomous work. titude tests and learning from others. As I look back now, I realize that I learned many valuable lessons from that experience. First, I learned enough about myself to begin to sort out what I wanted to do. I realized I was not suited to a business career. I was good at the work I did, but I could not envision spending a lifetime of days in that environment. I wanted to use my mind and creativity more, and to make a difference in the world. I wanted to have control over what, where and how I did my life’s work, not be so stifled by bureaucratic rules. Second, it was during my gap years that I began to travel and to learn I could go anywhere. Of course, I had traveled with my family before this, but during my gap years I planned trips and traveled by myself or with a friend. I planned a couple of trips to California, taking in the counter culture of San Francisco and the celebrity glow of LA. This was the start of my lifelong love of the Golden State. A trip with coworkers to Las Vegas left me with an impression of how lives can take the wrong path. Being underage (and thus barred from casinos) and totally uninterested in the main activities the city is known for, I spent much of my time there observing people as well as attending concerts and shows. I found the city to be as sad as it was glamorous — a place where people found themselves stranded due to bad choices they had made. From these trips, I realized that I wanted to travel more throughout the world. I also learned that travel itself was not enough; that being happy with what one was doing 52 weeks a year was central to a happy life. I learned about hierarchies and, perhaps ironically, the importance of education. The people with higher-level positions, which usually required more education, were clearly treated with more deference. It was also easy to see that college afforded better opportunities in general for more interesting and autonomous work. It was also in my gap years that I learned the reality of women’s inequality in work and society. Even as a child, I had questioned the limitations placed on women. But as a worker myself, I learned about the daily reality of being treated differently as a woman. For example, although I had scored far higher on a computer aptitude/IT training program test than the young man who sat next to me in my department, he was called into the training class well before I was. Indeed, my gap years were over and I left for college before being called up for that program. Perhaps most important, I learned that human potential must not be wasted; that each of us must strive to do the most with his time and talents; that it was up to each of us to take the initiative rather than wait for someone else to recognize one’s strengths and talents. I could not wait around for someone to invite me into a certain life. I had to make that life myself. Thus, by the end of my gap years, I had an appreciation of the university experience and what a difference it could make in my life. As my second summer of work drew to a close, I gave notice and entered college, eager to embrace the experience, do my best and make up for lost time. I pushed through my undergraduate degree in two years and nine months, my gap years behind me but informing my path ahead. Rebecca S. Fahrlander is an adjunct professor of psychology and sociology at the University of Nebraska Omaha. She wrote this for The Philadelphia Inquirer. PAGE 16 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 AMERICAN ROUNDUP Man killed in fire was smoking, on oxygen ST. PAUL — AuthoriMN ties have identified a St. Paul man who died in a weekend house fire. Neighbors called in the fire early Saturday morning as they saw smoke coming out of the man’s home. Firefighters extinguished a fire in the basement and found a man dead in a living room chair. They found no other victims. The man was identified Monday as Michael Cyril Buckley, 64. St. Paul Fire Marshal Steve Zaccard said the fire was caused by smoking while using an oxygen tank. Neighbors said Buckley lived alone and appeared to have health issues that might have impaired his ability to move. THE CENSUS The approximate number of miles traveled by a 25-pound pet tortoise during a day on the loose in Oklahoma. Becca Funa, of Yukon, just west of Oklahoma City, said her tortoise, Desta, is remarkably fast, and “you can’t exactly put a collar on him.” This was the tortoise’s second escape from home. Funa said Desta spends most days in her backyard. She told Oklahoma City television station KWTV that she noticed Desta was missing on Friday. On Saturday, a woman found the tortoise at Yukon City Park, and Funa was reunited with her pet later that night. Funa said she suspects Desta got out through an open gate in the yard. 1 Banning coffee while driving? Not so fast TRENTON — Drivers NJ who drink coffee behind the wheel don’t need to worry about getting a ticket in New Jersey anytime soon. The sponsor of a bill targeting distracted driving said his measure doesn’t specifically cite coffee, despite recent news reports focusing on the beverage. Democratic Assemblyman John Wisniewski said the legislation is aimed at discouraging distracted driving and that he cannot imagine that a police officer would pull anyone over for drinking coffee. Current law already prohibits texting or talking without a handsfree device. The new legislation is broader and would bar distracted driving generally. Wisniewski says he sponsored the bill to avoid the need for new legislation every time technology changes. Giraffe born at zoo, meets older brother ROYAL OAK — A 5foot-tall baby is a new resident of the Detroit Zoo. The zoo, in Royal Oak, said the female giraffe was born outdoors Saturday at the giraffe habitat to Kivuli, age 7, following a 14month gestation. Animal care staff said she took her first steps within a half-hour of her birth and nursed throughout the night. The father of the yet-to-benamed calf is Jabari, 8. This is the pair’s second offspring in two years; Mpenzi was born at the zoo in 2014. Scott Carter, the Detroit Zoological Society chief life sciences officer, said in a statement that the calf “has been spending time with mom and is curious about big brother Mpenzi.” The calf weighs 166 pounds. Fully grown, she can be 18 feet tall and up to 2,600 pounds. MI Robbery? No, thanks. Clerk, customers refuse ANDERSON — It SC seems the clerk and customers at a South Carolina tobacco store simply refused to be robbed. JIM C OLE /AP Doing it old school Teams of oxen help pull the Orleans County Grammar School in Brownington, Vt., on Monday. More than 1,000 people showed up to watch the teams move the building, which was built in 1823, with the help of a modern-day motor. Anderson County sheriff’s Capt. Garland Major told local news outlets that a man entered the Tobacco Jungle shop Sunday evening wielding a gun and demanding money. No one listened to the would-be robber, and he left with nothing. Major said the clerk wrestled with the man, who then turned his attention to store customers. They also refused to give him money. Major said video footage showed the man wielding a “musket-style” handgun — something that appeared to be a cross between a pirate gun and a sawedoff shotgun. Police said the man is thought to have driven off in a car parked near the store. ticed the object looked like bone, he called in the experts. Utah State University sent someone to inspect the find and determined it was a 3½-foot tusk of a Columbian mammoth. Members of that species were 12 to 15 feet tall, and the university said they likely roamed the grasslands of Lake Bonneville. Both Utah State University and Brigham Young University took a piece of the tusk for carbon dating. It could be anywhere from 12,000 to 15,000 years old. Man digs on property, finds mammoth tusk arrest last week. Police said he attempted to trade drugs for sex in a sting operation. City officials said in a news release Monday that Silverthorne’s resignation will be effective as of noon Thursday. The City Council has scheduled a special meeting Tuesday night. Silverthorne was arrested Thursday on drug distribution charges. Police said they received PRESTON — An Idaho ID man stumbled upon a rare find while digging in a gravel pit on his property. Kasey Keller, of Preston, told KIFI-TV that at first he thought he’d found a plastic pipe, then petrified wood. But when he no- Mayor to resign after drugs, sex sting arrest FAIRFAX — Fairfax VA Mayor R. Scott Silverthorne is resigning after his a tip that Silverthorne was using a dating website to set up sexual encounters with other men in exchange for drugs. Police said Silverthorne gave an undercover detective two grams of methamphetamine outside a Tysons Corner hotel before his arrest. Candy that sickened 19 at party contained THC FRANCISCO — CA SAN San Francisco health officials suspect the gummy candies that sickened 19 people at a birthday party contained edible marijuana. Final lab results weren’t available Monday, but officials say some of the hospitalized patients tested positive for THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. Thirteen of the patients were 18 or younger. The youngest was 6. They were hospitalized Saturday, and all had been discharged by Monday morning. The patients’ symptoms were consistent with the effects of edible cannabis, including rapid heart rate, high blood pressure, dilated pupils, dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea, lethargy and confusion. San Francisco’s health officer, Dr. Tomas Aragon said officials don’t know where the candies came from. Missing toddler pops out of soybean field DUNCOMBE — Authorities said a missing 3-year-old was found alongside a farm field near his Webster County home. Volunteers joined county emergency response teams for a search after the boy was reported missing about 3 p.m. Sunday. The Messenger reported that two drones and people on horses combed the property near Duncombe, along with searchers on foot. To the relief of searchers, at about 6 p.m. the boy popped out of a soybean field that hadn’t yet been covered. It’s unclear whether he suffered any injury. IA From wire reports •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 17 FACES Pharoah, Killam not returning to ‘SNL’ Other Fox news Associated Press “Saturday Night Live” cast member Taran Killam said he “was never given a reason why” he was being let go after six seasons on the NBC program. Killam and fellow cast member Jay Pharoah won’t be back when “SNL” returns this fall for its 42nd season, the network said Monday. Killam told Uproxx in an interview published Monday that he was planning on making the upcoming season of “SNL” his final one before being told that his contract wasn’t being picked up. “I was never given a reason why, really. I can assume until the cows come home,” he said. Killam speculated that the production schedule of a film he’s directing and starring in, “Why We’re Killing Gunther,” may have played a part because two months of post-production work on the movie would have coincided with “SNL’s” production schedule. Whatever the reason for his departure, Killam said he has “no gripes” about his time as part of the comedy institution. Killam performed several celebrity impressions on the show, including Brad Pitt and Donald Trump — although the Trump role went to “SNL” announcer and former star Darrell Hammond during the past season. Pharoah also was on the program for six seasons and had the coveted role of impersonating President Barack Obama. He was also known for his send-ups of Kanye West, Jay Z, Shaquille O’Neal and others. Other news Spotify said “The Girl from Ipanema” was streamed more than 40,000 times a day, a 1,200 percent rise for the track, after the Olympics kicked off Friday night in Rio de Janeiro. Supermodel Gisele Bundchen walked onstage during the opening ceremony while the Grammy-winning song from 1964 played. Led Zeppelin won the copyright war over its creation of “Stairway to Heaven,” but it lost its battle Monday to recoup nearly $800,000 in defense fees. A Los Angeles federal jury in June found that guitarist Jimmy Page and singer Robert Plant did not lift the introduction of “Stairway” from an obscure instrumental written by the late Randy Wolfe, founder of the band Spirit. NSYNC got back together, at least for a night. The boy band’s former frontman, Justin Timberlake, posted a picture on Instagram of himself alongside fellow NSYNC members Joey Fatone, Lance Bass, Chris Kirkpatrick and J.C. Chasez. Timberlake noted in the caption that they were celebrating Chasez’s 40th birthday. NSYNC went on hiatus in 2002. FOX /AP Significant talks are underway with “The X-Files” stars Gillian Anderson, right, and Duchovny, left, and creator Chris Carter for more of the drama series, Fox’s entertainment president said Monday. ‘X-Files’ might return Associated Press Significant talks are underway with “The X-Files” stars Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny and creator Chris Carter for more of the drama series, Fox’s entertainment president said. “Schedules are hard, but we are working hard to get this done and we would love to get another season out soon,” programming chief David Madden told a TV critics meeting in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Monday. Fox touted the 16 million viewers who watched each of the six episodes that brought the 19932002 sci-fi series back to this year. But what about the mixed reviews it got, reporters asked Madden and Dana Walden, chairman and CEO of Fox Television Group. Because the series had been off the air for so long, it faced the challenge of filling in its larger “mythology” and fast-forwarding the characters’ lives, Walden said. “Going forward, there won’t be the same obligation to reset the series,” she said. Walden disputed the characterization of how the show was received, saying it earned glowing reviews as well as negative ones. The chatter on Fox’s social media platforms was overwhelmingly positive, she added. “I think that there was some very strong work throughout the season, and we look forward to more,” Madden said, defending Carter and his production team. Creator says ‘Pitch’ isn’t just baseball show Associated Press An upcoming Fox drama about the first woman to play Major League Baseball is not merely about baseball, said its co-creator and co-executive producer, Dan Fogelman. “It’s a show that takes place in the world of baseball,” he said. “It’s about this young woman coming of age with the lens of the world watching her.” Fogelman doesn’t believe the series is based in folklore either, but more a precursor to when women do play pro sports with men. “I think this is going to happen in modern lifetime. The human anatomy makes it a challenge,” he said. “It’s addressed in the pilot. I think the right young woman is going to come along.” Fox also draws upon the network’s partnership with the real MLB when it is time to play ball to keep the games looking as realistic as possible. Series lead Kylie Bunbury spent 2½ months learning to pitch prior to filming, and her efforts have paid off. “The girl can pitch now,” said another co-executive producer, Paris Barclay. “Now she’s pitching and she’s got a little heat and she’s got great form.” RICHARD SHOTWELL , INVISION /AP Kylie Bunbury spent 2½ months learning how to pitch for her role in the upcoming Fox drama, “Pitch,” about the first woman to play Major League Baseball. “The Simpsons” is doubling down with an hourlong episode in January, the first time the half-hour animated series has expanded to a full hour. Al Jean, executive producer of the series that revels in daring humor, included a political shot in announcing the episode. “I just pray it won’t be the last thing people see before a Trump inauguration,” Jean said in a statement. The airdate for the episode, titled “The Great Phatsby,” a play on the classic “The Great Gatsby,” was not announced. “The Simpsons” begins its 28th season on Sept. 25, and will reach its 600-episode milestone Oct. 16. An upcoming Sunday night in September will be Amy Schumer night. The comedian will voice characters on “The Simpsons,” “Bob’s Burgers” and “Family Guy” on the episodes airing Sept. 25. In each show, she plays someone different. Fox said Schumer has already recorded her appearances and completed them in one session. Network chairman Dana Walden said the idea was to have the same actor bring a “connective tissue throughout the night.” Worlds are colliding on the network as Andy Samberg’s “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” character Jake is about to meet Jess from “New Girl,” played by Zooey Deschanel. Characters from “New Girl” and “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” will cross over in back-to-back episodes airing Oct. 11. The only plot detail revealed is that the “New Girl” gang will head to New York, where they meet the crew from the “Nine-Nine” precinct. This isn’t the first combo event for the network. Last season, “Bones” and “Sleepy Hollow” also crossed over to ratings success. “New Girl” premieres its sixth season and “Brooklyn NineNine” debuts season four Sept. 20. After two seasons of teasing viewers, Mariah Carey has set a date to guest star on “Empire.” Carey will appear on the Oct. 5 episode. She will play a superstar singer named Kitty, who collaborates with Jussie Smollett’s character, Jamal Lyon, on a new song. Lyon has a creative block until Kitty helps him deal with some personal issues to make the song work. “Mariah loves the show” and has long made a point of sharing her passion for it when they have met at events, said Dana Walden, chairman and CEO of the Fox Television Group. Other guest stars confirmed for season three, which debuts Sept. 21, include actor Taye Diggs and rapper French Montana. Viewers might pay a lot of attention to what Taraji P. Henson wears as Cookie on “Empire,” but guess who doesn’t? Taraji P. Henson. “It’s not my job,” Henson said Monday. That’s not to say that some outfits have caused her to have colorful commentary. “I remember one outfit I looked like I had aluminum foil on,” another time “a sushi roll,” and then there was a time she wore what resembled “fur noodles.” But, in the end, she’s fine with what’s picked for her. “I’m not the costumer. I tell them bring it to me, I’ll put it on and make it work.” PAGE 18 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 WIRED WORLD Gold medal gadgetry Olympics offer showcase for tech such as VR, payments ring BY M AE A NDERSON AND RYAN NAKASHIMA Associated Press B esides dazzling feats of athleticism, dazzling new technologies will be on display at the Olympics. About 217 million viewers in the U.S. alone tuned in to the London Olympics four years ago, making it the most watched TV event in history. The television audience is expected to increase for the Rio Olympics, which formally opened Friday. Others will tune in online or watch the games in person in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. That makes the Olympics an excellent showcase for new and emerging technologies. Such brands as Visa and Samsung are taking the opportunity to show off their wares. Visa’s payment ring Visa, a 30-year Olympics sponsor, is running the payment systems at the Olympics. Visa is equipping about 4,000 payment terminals at souvenir shops, concession stands and other Olympic venues with a wireless technology called near-field-com- munication, or NFC. Visa planned to give payment rings to 59 athletes to wear. With a tap on an NFC payment terminal, they can charge their Visa accounts. Giving the ring to Olympic athletes like swimmer Missy Franklin and decathlete Ashton Eaton lets Visa test the technology while garnering buzz as athletes tweet about them and wear them around the Olympic village. Samsung’s special edition Galaxy S7 Samsung, another Olympic sponsor, delivered a special Olympic Games edition of its Galaxy S7 Edge phone to 12,500 Olympians. The phone is branded with the Olympic rings and has Olympics-themed wallpapers loaded on the device. The company also made 2,016 of the Olympic phones for the public to buy in selected countries, including Brazil, the U.S. and South Korea. One feature Samsung expected to make a splash: The phones come with a flag app, which athletes were encouraged to hold up as they walked together by country during the opening ceremonies. NBC gets into VR, Getty goes 360 Some viewers will get to see virtualreality content, along with 360-degree video and images. NBC, which has television and online rights in the U.S., plans 85 hours of VR coverage through the NBC Sports app on Samsung’s Gear VR headset. VR events will include opening and closing ceremonies, men’s basketball, gymnastics and track and field. They will typically be shown on a one-day delay. Getty, the Olympics’ official photography agency, launched a virtual-reality division in June to focus on 360-degree images. Getty shot some 360-degree images at the London Olympics in 2012, but this time every Getty photographer will have a 360-degree camera. “We are only on the cusp of what will be a tectonic plate shift in VR,” Getty CEO Dawn Airey said. High-tech coverage NBC owner Comcast Corp. is showcasing its X1 set-top box, giving its customers a way to search for live coverage and replays by country, athlete and sport. It’s also integrating voice search into the system, allowing viewers to get the latest medal count by speaking, “How is the USA doing?” Comcast is also offering a way to zip to gold medal event highlights and restart events that have already begun. The X1 is one way Comcast is trying to help viewers sort through some 6,000 hours of Olympics coverage. If it boosts audiences for the Olympics, it’ll also help Comcast recoup some of the $4.4 billion that NBC paid for U.S. broadcast rights over six years. AP photos •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 Attorneys 178 Real Estate 850 R S A N D Financial Services 904 Transportation 944 ST R I P E S • F3HIJKLM Dental 902 Dental Transportation PAGE 19 944 902 PAGE 20 •STA F3HIJKLM R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 BUSINESS/WEATHER Delta’s ongoing woes: More flights canceled Associated Press DALLAS — Delta’s travails, and those of its customers, move into day two with the airline canceling nearly 250 flights. The cancellations Tuesday follow about 1,000 canceled flights Monday and almost 3,000 delayed flights after an outage at its Atlanta headquarters initiated a global meltdown of its booking and communications systems. The airline was back online after a number of hours Monday, but the outages were so widespread that it is still dealing with the ripple effects a day later. The airline posted a video apology by CEO Ed Bastian. And it offered refunds and $200 in travel vouchers to people whose flights were canceled or delayed at least three hours. Delta’s challenge on Tuesday was to find enough seats on planes during the busy summer vacation season to accommodate the tens of thousands of passengers whose flights were scrubbed. Last month, the average Delta flight was 87 percent full. For passengers, hardship from the early Monday morning meltdown was compounded by the fact that Delta’s flight-status updates weren’t working either. Instead of being able to stay home, many passengers only learned about the flight problems when they arrived at the airport. “By the time I showed up at the gate the employees were already disgruntled, and it was really difficult to get anybody to speak to me or get any information,” said Ashley Roache, whose flight from Lexington, Ky., to New York’s LaGuardia Airport was delayed. “The company could have done a better job of explaining ... what was happening.” Delta spokesman Trebor Banstetter said that after a power outage at the company’s Atlanta headquarters, some key systems and network equipment did not switch over to backup systems. He said the airline’s investigation into the cause of the outage was continuing but said there were no indications of hacking. A spokesman for Georgia Power said that the company believes a failure of Delta equipment caused the airline’s power outage. He said no other customers lost power. Delta declined to comment on the power company’s report. Flights that were already in the air when the outage occurred continued to their destinations, but flights on the ground remained there. Delta Air Lines Inc. ranks as the third-largest in the world by number of passengers carried, with 138.8 million travelers last year, according to industry group IATA. It was narrowly beaten only by American Airlines and Southwest Airlines, with all of them flying mostly within the United States. Airlines depend on huge, overlapping and complicated systems to operate flights, schedule crews and run ticketing, boarding, airport kiosks, websites and mobile phone apps. Even brief outages can snarl traffic and cause long delays. That has afflicted airlines in the U.S. and abroad. Last month, Southwest Airlines canceled more than 2,000 flights over four days after an outage that it blamed on a faulty network router. United Airlines suffered a series of massive IT meltdowns after combining its technology systems with those of merger partner Continental Airlines. Lines for British Airways at some airports have grown longer as the carrier updates its systems. MARKET WATCH EXCHANGE RATES Military rates Euro costs (Aug. 10) .........................$1.1368 Dollar buys (Aug. 10) ........................€0.8797 British pound (Aug. 10)........................ $1.33 Japanese yen (Aug. 10) .....................100.00 South Korean won (Aug. 10) ........ 1,080.00 Commercial rates Bahrain (Dinar) ....................................0.3770 British pound .....................................$1.2963 Canada (Dollar) ................................... 1.3124 China (Yuan) ........................................6.6619 Denmark (Krone) ................................6.6986 Egypt (Pound) ......................................8.8802 Euro ........................................ $1.1103/0.9007 Hong Kong (Dollar) ............................. 7.7573 Hungary (Forint) ................................. 279.72 Israel (Shekel) ..................................... 3.8174 Japan (Yen)........................................... 101.97 Kuwait (Dinar) .....................................0.3020 Norway (Krone) ................................... 8.4197 Philippines (Peso).................................46.84 Poland (Zloty) .......................................... 3.84 Saudi Arabia (Riyal) ...........................3.7504 Singapore (Dollar) ..............................1.3461 South Korea (Won) ..........................1,102.04 Switzerland (Franc)............................0.9828 Thailand (Baht) ..................................... 34.92 Turkey (Lira) .........................................2.9728 (Military exchange rates are those available to customers at military banking facilities in the country of issuance for Japan, South Korea, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. For nonlocal currency exchange rates (i.e., purchasing British pounds in Germany), check with your local military banking facility. Commercial rates are interbank rates provided for reference when buying currency. All figures are foreign currencies to one dollar, except for the British pound, which is represented in dollars-to-pound, and the euro, which is dollars-to-euro.) INTEREST RATES Prime rate ................................................ 3.50 Discount rate .......................................... 1.00 Federal funds market rate ................... 0.36 3-month bill ...........................................0.305 30-year bond ........................................... 2.31 WEATHER OUTLOOK WEDNESDAY IN THE MIDDLE EAST THURSDAY IN THE PACIFIC WEDNESDAY IN EUROPE Misawa 80/67 Kabul 94/66 Baghdad 116/85 Kuwait City 118/91 Riyadh 111/84 Seoul 95/76 Kandahar 104/75 Bahrain 112/91 Brussels 62/47 Lajes, Azores 76/68 Doha 113/90 Ramstein 65/42 Stuttgart 63/47 Iwakuni 96/77 Sasebo 97/79 Guam 85/78 Pápa 63/49 Aviano/ Vicenza 72/57 Naples 84/71 Morón 98/71 Sigonella 95/70 Rota 88/72 Djibouti 102/83 Tokyo 85/74 Osan 94/74 Busan 93/77 Mildenhall/ Lakenheath 67/56 Okinawa 88/80 The weather is provided by the American Forces Network Weather Center, 2nd Weather Squadron at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. Souda Bay 89/74 WEDNESDAY’s US temperatures City Hi Abilene, Texas 100 Akron, Ohio 87 Albany, N.Y. 80 Albuquerque 85 Allentown, Pa. 85 Amarillo 92 Anchorage 64 Asheville 80 Atlanta 84 Atlantic City 88 Austin 101 Baltimore 90 Baton Rouge 88 Billings 83 Birmingham 88 Bismarck 85 Boise 82 Boston 82 Bridgeport 83 Brownsville 98 Buffalo 86 Burlington, Vt. 87 Caribou, Maine 83 Casper 90 Charleston, S.C. 89 Charleston, W.Va. 89 Charlotte, N.C. 87 Lo 78 72 67 68 71 69 52 69 73 74 77 74 76 59 75 64 54 70 73 81 73 69 52 55 77 72 73 Wthr PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy Rain Cldy Clr Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Rain Chattanooga 91 Cheyenne 87 Chicago 89 Cincinnati 87 Cleveland 89 Colorado Springs 88 Columbia, S.C. 90 Columbus, Ga. 86 Columbus, Ohio 88 Concord, N.H. 84 Corpus Christi 97 Dallas-Ft Worth 101 Dayton 87 Daytona Beach 90 Denver 89 Des Moines 92 Detroit 91 Duluth 71 El Paso 91 Elkins 85 Erie 84 Eugene 84 Evansville 89 Fairbanks 67 Fargo 84 Flagstaff 72 Flint 93 Fort Smith 98 74 59 70 73 73 59 75 74 73 62 80 80 71 75 63 69 71 62 72 68 73 53 72 53 64 52 67 77 Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Rain Rain Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy Rain Rain Clr Cldy Fort Wayne Fresno Goodland Grand Junction Grand Rapids Great Falls Green Bay Greensboro, N.C. Harrisburg Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Knoxville Lake Charles Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles 91 95 96 84 92 74 88 85 89 83 77 89 96 88 90 91 90 59 92 90 93 93 92 98 88 94 94 80 69 65 68 66 66 49 66 72 72 66 51 75 78 71 73 76 75 52 73 84 73 78 67 80 72 73 77 65 Cldy Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Rain Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy Louisville Lubbock Macon Madison Medford Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Missoula Mobile Montgomery Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Paducah Pendleton Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh 89 96 86 88 88 94 90 99 86 90 73 86 88 91 85 85 87 88 94 98 93 92 91 83 90 88 96 86 74 73 73 67 58 78 80 77 70 71 49 76 76 74 77 73 73 75 67 75 73 74 72 54 71 73 84 72 Cldy PCldy Rain PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Rain Rain Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Clr Rain Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Rain Rain Pocatello 83 Portland, Maine 82 Portland, Ore. 81 Providence 81 Pueblo 96 Raleigh-Durham 88 Rapid City 95 Reno 89 Richmond 90 Roanoke 84 Rochester 88 Rockford 90 Sacramento 94 St Louis 94 St Petersburg 90 St Thomas 89 Salem, Ore. 85 Salt Lake City 91 San Angelo 102 San Antonio 100 San Diego 74 San Francisco 71 San Jose 82 San Juan, P.R. 90 Santa Fe 83 St Ste Marie 80 Savannah 89 Seattle 74 50 62 59 68 63 73 67 53 73 70 74 66 61 75 78 79 57 67 77 78 66 56 58 79 59 65 75 57 Clr PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy Rain PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Clr Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain PCldy Shreveport 96 Sioux City 95 Sioux Falls 93 South Bend 91 Spokane 78 Springfield, Ill. 90 Springfield, Mo. 91 Syracuse 85 Tallahassee 85 Tampa 89 Toledo 91 Topeka 95 Tucson 89 Tulsa 98 Tupelo 93 Waco 101 Washington, D.C. 91 W. Palm Beach 90 Wichita 95 Wichita Falls 101 Wilkes-Barre 83 Wilmington, Del. 88 Yakima 84 Youngstown 87 77 72 72 66 54 70 73 70 76 76 70 74 79 78 75 79 77 79 73 77 69 73 55 70 Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Rain Rain PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Clr Cldy National temperature extremes Hi: Mon., 117, Death Valley, Calif. Lo: Mon., 29, Denio, Nev. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 Announcements 040 Announcements 040 Let's Celebrate Announce the birth of a child, marriage, or perhaps an anniversary in Stars and Stripes! Call us: +49 (0)631 351 3612 no voice mail Autos for Sale - Germany 142 BMW, 320i, 1990 $8500.00 New leather seats, new top, mp3 cd player, 4 new rims & tires along with winter tires, heated seats, engine 13 years old 017664780420 bhenderson1966@icloud.com Chevrolet, Corvette, 2008 $29995.00 Jetstream blue convertible. 3LT. Black power top. Black interior. 436 HP w port exhaust. Heads up and Nav with DVD for southern states. 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Retail 260, Thule WingBar 969 Thule Rapid System 754 Kit 1323 New with VAT form 200 euros. 015233692616 jteeselink@hotmail.com Travel 1000 ** Summer in Garmisch** Hotel Forsthaus Oberau 8 km N of Garmisch Hot tub/sauna 39eur PP, DBL occp, free brkfst, dogs welcome. 08824-9120 www.forsthaus-oberau.de PAGE 22 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • F3HIJKLM PAGE 23 SCOREBOARD Sports on AFN Go to the American Forces Network website for the most up-to-date TV schedules. myafn.net Deals Monday’s transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended San Francisco OF Chuckie Jones (San Jose-CAL) 100 games, without pay, following a third positive test for a drug of abuse in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned OF Byron Buxton to Rochester (IL). Reinstated 3B Trevor Plouffe from the 15-day DL. SEATTLE MARINERS — Sent SS Ketel Marte to Tacoma (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Optioned RHPs Taijuan Walker and Cody Martin and 2B Luis Sardinas to Tacoma (PCL). Recalled 1B Mike Freeman from Tacoma. Added RHP Arquimedes Caminero to the 25-man roster. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Placed OF Kevin Pillar on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Darrell Ceciliani from Buffalo (IL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP Evan Marshall to Reno (PCL). ATLANTA BRAVES — Claimed RHP Chaz Roe off waivers from Baltimore. Transferred RHP Williams Perez to the 60-day DL. Selected the contract of RHP Madison Younginer from Gwinnett (IL). Designated 1B Brandon Snyder for assignment. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Optioned RHP David Goforth to Colorado Springs (PCL). Placed RHP Junior Guerra on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Rob Scahill and RHP Wily Peralta from Colorado Springs. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Sent LHP Josh Osich to Richmond (EL) for a rehab assignment. Agreed to terms with RHP Cesar Gonzalez on a minor league contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed G Tony Wroten, F Troy Williams and G/Fs Wayne Selden Jr. and D.J. Stephens. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS — Announced the retirement of WR Lance Moore. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Waived DL Kyle Rose. Signed DL Chigbo Anunoby. DETROIT LIONS — Waived WR Damian Copeland. Signed WR Alex Chisum. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Waived-injured CB Ifo Ekpre-Olomu. Signed CB Al LouisJean. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Released WR Hakeem Nicks. Removed OT Terron Armstead from the PUP list. Signed LS Chris Highland. NEW YORK JETS — Waived-injured DL Julien Obioha. Placed WR Chris King on the reserve/did-not-report list. Removed RB Khiry Robinson from the PUP list. Signed WR Anthony Kelly and DL Christo Bilukidi. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Signed OL Kelvin Palmer. COLLEGE BARTON — Named Kyle Walthall men’s and women’s assistant swimming coach. CLAYTON STATE — Named Ciaran Lane graduate assistant coach for cross country and track and field. EDGEWOOD — Named Chaia Huff women’s basketball coach. HOFSTRA — Named Kevin Barry senior director for athletic development, Andrea Murphy director for athletic development and Shaun Rutherford assistant director of athletic development/special events. NOTRE DAME — Named Maggie Smith women’s assistant lacrosse coach. SAN DIEGO STATE — Announced the resignation of athletic director Jim Sterk. ST. SCHOLASTICA — Named Maria Stuber men’s and women’s nordic ski coach. SHAW — Named Chris Outlaw assistant trainer. WAGNER — Named Katherine Sweeney women’s assistant lacrosse coach. Tennis World TeamTennis W L Pct. GB San Diego 6 2 .714 — Orange County 5 2 .750 ½ Philadelphia 4 4 .500 2 Washington 3 4 .429 2½ Springfield 2 5 .286 3½ New York 2 5 .286 3½ Sunday’s matches San Diego 22, Springfield 19, EP Orange County 23, Philadelphia 17 Monday’s matches New York 21, Washington 19 San Diego 23, Philadelphia 15, EP Tuesday’s matches Washington at New York Springfield at Orange County Pro basketball Pro soccer WNBA MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB New York 18 8 .692 — Atlanta 13 12 .520 4½ Indiana 12 12 .500 5 Chicago 11 13 .458 6 Washington 9 15 .375 8 Connecticut 8 16 .333 9 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB x-Los Angeles 21 3 .875 — x-Minnesota 21 4 .840 ½ Phoenix 10 14 .417 11 Seattle 9 15 .375 12 Dallas 9 16 .360 12½ San Antonio 5 18 .217 15½ x-clinched a playoff spot Note: Olympic break; season resumes August 26. EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA New York City FC 10 7 7 37 40 40 Toronto FC 10 7 6 36 33 24 New York 9 9 6 33 40 32 Montreal 8 5 9 33 37 31 Philadelphia 8 8 7 31 38 37 New England 6 9 8 26 29 40 Orlando City 5 6 11 26 36 39 D.C. United 5 8 9 24 22 28 Columbus 3 8 10 19 26 35 Chicago 4 11 6 18 20 30 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 13 6 5 44 37 31 Colorado 11 3 8 41 26 19 Real Salt Lake 10 7 7 37 35 34 Los Angeles 9 3 10 37 37 22 Sporting KC10 11 4 34 28 28 Portland 8 8 8 32 36 34 Vancouver 8 10 6 30 33 39 San Jose 6 6 10 28 23 24 Seattle 7 12 3 24 24 29 Houston 4 10 8 20 24 28 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday, Aug. 3 Toronto FC 1, Real Salt Lake 0 Friday, Aug. 5 New York City FC 0, San Jose 0, tie Saturday, Aug. 6 Philadelphia 2, D.C. United 2, tie Montreal 1, Houston 0 Toronto FC 4, New England 1 Colorado 2, Vancouver 0 Real Salt Lake 3, Chicago 1 Sunday, Aug. 7 Portland 3, Sporting Kansas City 0 Seattle 3, Orlando City 1 New York 2, Los Angeles 2, tie Friday’s game San Jose at Vancouver Saturday’s games Montreal at New York Portland at D.C. United New York City FC at Columbus Philadelphia at New England Sporting Kansas City at FC Dallas Toronto FC at Houston Colorado at Los Angeles Sunday’s games Orlando City at Chicago Real Salt Lake at Seattle Pro football NFL preseason AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Buffalo Miami New England N.Y. Jets W 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 Pct .000 .000 .000 .000 PF PA 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Tennessee 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 00 00 00 00 Baltimore Cincinnati Cleveland Pittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 00 000 00 00 00 00 00 000 Denver Kansas City Oakland San Diego 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 00 00 00 00 Dallas N.Y. Giants Philadelphia Washington W 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 Pct PF PA .000 00 00 .000 00 00 .000 000 00 .000 00 00 Atlanta Carolina New Orleans Tampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 Chicago Detroit Green Bay Minnesota 0 0 0 0 South North West NATIONAL CONFERENCE East South North 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 West 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 000 00 00 .000 00 .000 00 .000 000 .000 000 Arizona 0 0 0 .000 Los Angeles 0 0 0 .000 San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 Seattle 0 0 0 .000 Sunday, Aug. 7 Green Bay vs. Indianapolis at Ohio, ccd., field conditions Thursday’s games Washington at Atlanta Tampa Bay at Philadelphia Carolina at Baltimore New Orleans at New England Jacksonville at New York Jets Denver at Chicago Friday’s games Miami at New York Giants Detroit at Pittsburgh Minnesota at Cincinnati Cleveland at Green Bay Oakland at Arizona Saturday’s games Seattle at Kansas City Indianapolis at Buffalo Dallas at Los Angeles San Diego at Tennessee Sunday, Aug. 14 Houston at San Francisco 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 Canton, AP sportlight Aug. 10 1900 — The first Davis Cup is held with the United States beating Britain, 3-0. 1938 — McLin Hanover, driven by Henry Thomas, wins the Hambletonian Stakes in straight heats. 1949 — Ezzard Charles knocks out Gus Lesnovich in the eighth round at Yankee Stadium in his first world heavyweight title defense. 1949 — Miss Tilly, driven by Fred Egan, wins the Hambletonian Stakes in straight heats. 1975 — Jack Nicklaus wins the PGA Championship for the fourth time with a two-stroke victory over Bruce Crampton and Tom Weiskopf. 1980 — Jack Nicklaus wins his fifth PGA Championship with a record score of 274, seven strokes ahead of Andy Bean. 1995 — Gwen Torrence, the 100-meter champion at the World Championships, wins the 200 meters, then is disqualified for running out of her lane. 1995 — Michael Bradley, a third-year pro without a tour victory, shoots a record-tying 63 in his first PGA round to lead the PGA Championship. 2007 — Tiger Woods matches the major championship record with a 63 in the PGA Championship. Woods misses a 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole that would have given him the record. 2008 — In Beijing, Michael Phelps begins his long march toward eight gold medals by winning the 400-meter individual medley in 4:03.84 — smashing his own world record. NWSL W L T Pts GF GA Portland 8 2 5 29 20 12 Washington 9 3 2 29 22 12 Western New York 8 5 2 26 29 18 Chicago 7 4 4 25 14 13 Sky Blue FC 6 5 4 22 18 20 Seattle 5 5 5 20 18 14 Orlando 6 9 0 18 14 19 FC Kansas City 4 7 4 16 11 14 Houston 3 7 3 12 13 15 Boston 2 11 1 7 7 29 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday, Aug. 6 FC Kansas City 1, Western New York 0 Houston 1, Chicago 1, tie Seattle 5, Portland 2 Sunday, Aug. 7 Washington 3, Sky Blue FC 1 Boston 1, Orlando 0 Thursday, Aug. 18 Washington at Houston Boxing Fight schedule Aug. 12 At Turning Stone Resort Casino, Verona, N.Y., Miguel Flores vs. Ryan Kielczweski, 10, featherweights; Bryant Perrella vs. Yordenis Ugas, 10, welterweights. Aug. 13 At Rosarito Convention Center, Rosarito, Mexico, Antonio Margarito vs. Ramon Alvarez, 10, junior middleweights. Aug. 19 Rhinos Stadium, Rochester, N.Y., Jarrell Miller vs. Fred Kassi, 10, heavyweights; Nikolay Potapov vs. Antonio Nieves, 10, bantamweights; Bakhtiyar Eyubov vs. Karim Mayfield, 10, welterweights. Aug. 21 At Ford Amphitheater, Brooklyn, N.Y., Errol Spence Jr. vs. Leonard Bundu, 12, welterweights. Aug. 23 At Sands Bethlehem (Pa.) Event Center, Caleb Plant vs. Juan De Angel, 10, middleweights. Aug. 27 At Honda Center, Anaheim, Calif., Robert Guerrero vs. David Peralta, 12, welterweights; Alfredo Angulo vs. Freddy Hernandez, 10, super middleweights; Terrell Gausha vs. Steve Martinez, 10, junior middleweights. Aug. 31 At Tokyo, Kohei Kono vs. Luis Concepcion, 12, for Kono’s WBA World super flyweight title; Ryoichi Taguchi vs. Ryo Miyazaki, 12, for Taguchi’s WBA World light flyweight title. Sept. 3 At Cavite, Philippines, McJoe Arroyo vs. Jerwin Ancajas, 12, for Arroyo’s IBF super flyweight title. Sept. 9 At Santander Arena, Reading, Pa., Roberet Easter Jr. vs. Richard Commey, 12, for vacant IBF lightweight title; Daniel Jacobs vs. Sergio Mora, 12, for Jacobs’ WBA World middleweight title. Sept. 10 At O2 Arena, London, Gennady Golovkin vs. Kell Brook, 12, for Golovkin’s WBC-IBO-IBF middleweight titles; Johnriel Casimero vs. Charlie Edwards, 12, for Casimero’s IBF flyweight title; Lee Haskins vs. Stuart Hall, 12, for Haskins’ IBF bantamweight title. Golf World rankings Through Aug. 7 1. Jason Day 2. Dustin Johnson 3. Jordan Spieth 4. Rory McIlroy 5. Henrik Stenson 6. Bubba Watson 7. Adam Scott 8. Rickie Fowler 9. Danny Willett 10. Branden Grace 11. Sergio Garcia 12. Justin Rose 13. Phil Mickelson 14. Patrick Reed 15. Brooks Koepka 16. Louis Oosthuizen 17. Jimmy Walker 18. Russell Knox 19. Hideki Matsuyama 20. Matt Kuchar 21. J.B. Holmes 22. Zach Johnson 23. Jim Furyk 24. Brandt Snedeker 25. Charl Schwartzel 26. Chris Wood 27. Scott Piercy 28. Paul Casey 29. Rafa Cabrera Bello 30. Kevin Kisner 31. Justin Thomas 32. Shane Lowry 33. Bill Haas 34. Kevin Na 35. Byeong-Hun An 36. Kevin Chappell 37. Daniel Berger 38. Andy Sullivan 39. Emiliano Grillo 40. Alex Noren 41. William McGirt 42. Lee Westwood 43. Thongchai Jaidee 44. Soren Kjeldsen 45. Danny Lee 46. Marc Leishman 47. Charley Hoffman 48. Matthew Fitzpatrick 49. K.T. Kim 50. Martin Kaymer 51. Tyrrell Hatton 52. David Lingmerth 53. Daniel Summerhays 54. Jason Dufner 55. Francesco Molinari 56. Gary Woodland 57. Harris English 58. Bernd Wiesberger 59. Ryan Moore 60. Kiradech Aphibarnrat 61. Webb Simpson 62. James Hahn 63. Robert Streb 64. Thomas Pieters 65. Hideto Tanihara 66. Joost Luiten 67. Chris Kirk 68. Thorbjorn Olesen 69. Anirban Lahiri 70. Smylie Kaufman 71. Jaco Van Zyl 72. Ryan Palmer 73. Billy Horschel 74. Brendan Steele 75. Jeunghun Wang AUS 14.23 USA 11.20 USA 10.48 NIR 9.05 SWE 9.01 USA 6.77 AUS 6.42 USA 6.40 ENG 5.98 SAF 5.55 ESP 5.47 ENG 5.27 USA 5.17 USA 4.85 USA 4.53 SAF 4.49 USA 4.48 SCO 4.40 JPN 4.38 USA 4.31 USA 4.27 USA 3.98 USA 3.94 USA 3.73 SAF 3.73 ENG 3.50 USA 3.41 ENG 3.38 ESP 3.34 USA 3.30 USA 3.23 IRL 3.18 USA 3.17 USA 3.14 KOR 3.13 USA 3.12 USA 3.09 ENG 3.07 ARG 3.06 SWE 3.03 USA 2.96 ENG 2.94 THA 2.92 DEN 2.83 NZL 2.83 AUS 2.82 USA 2.79 ENG 2.77 KOR 2.71 GER 2.68 ENG 2.66 SWE 2.61 USA 2.51 USA 2.43 ITA 2.37 USA 2.35 USA 2.34 AUT 2.28 USA 2.26 THA 2.23 USA 2.20 USA 2.19 USA 2.06 BEL 2.03 JPN 2.02 NED 2.02 USA 2.01 DEN 1.97 IND 1.97 USA 1.97 SAF 1.94 USA 1.94 USA 1.91 USA 1.89 KOR 1.86 PGA Tour statistics Through Aug. 7 Scoring Average 1, Phil Mickelson, 69.192. 2, Dustin Johnson, 69.238. 3, Jason Day, 69.294. 4, Jordan Spieth, 69.407. 5, Adam Scott, 69.526. 6, Brooks Koepka, 69.575. 7, Henrik Stenson, 69.670. 8, Matt Kuchar, 69.682. 9, Rory McIlroy, 69.695. 10, Charl Schwartzel, 69.725. Driving Distance 1, Dustin Johnson, 313.9. 2, J.B. Holmes, 313.2. 3, Tony Finau, 312.6. 4, Bubba Watson, 309.9. 5, Gary Woodland, 307.9. 6, Andrew Loupe, 307.8. 7, Jason Kokrak, 307.4. 8, Luke List, 306.9. 9, Hudson Swafford, 306.8. 10, 2 tied with 304.9. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1, Colt Knost, 73.97%. 2 (tie), Jerry Kelly and Thomas Aiken, 71.38%. 4, Darron Stiles, 70.62%. 5, Justin Hicks, 70.50%. 6, Brian Stuard, 70.39%. 7, Henrik Stenson, 69.82%. 8, Zac Blair, 69.38%. 9, Soren Kjeldsen, 68.57%. 10, Jason Bohn, 68.53%. Greens in Regulation Percentage 1, Henrik Stenson, 72.63%. 2, Lucas Glover, 71.72%. 3, Russell Knox, 70.47%. 4, Jhonattan Vegas, 70.13%. 5, Sergio Garcia, 69.90%. 6, Paul Casey, 69.73%. 7, Patrick Rodgers, 69.56%. 8, Thomas Aiken, 69.54%. 9, Jason Dufner, 69.51%. 10, Keegan Bradley, 69.37%. Total Driving 1, Keegan Bradley, 74. 2, Emiliano Grillo, 80. 3, Rory McIlroy, 81. 4, Hudson Swafford, 82. 5, Lucas Glover, 88. 6, Henrik Stenson, 98. 7, Russell Henley, 101. 8 (tie), Thomas Aiken and Paul Casey, 103. 10, Brendan Steele, 107. Shots Gained-Putting 1, Jason Day, 1.072. 2, Steve Stricker, .828. 3, Jamie Donaldson, .784. 4, Phil Mickelson, .756. 5, Jordan Spieth, .739. 6, Harris English, .690. 7, Aaron Baddeley, .666. 8, Daniel Summerhays, .637. 9, Martin Piller, .610. 10, 2 tied with .586. Birdie Average 1, Rory McIlroy, 4.41. 2, Dustin Johnson, 4.38. 3, Jordan Spieth, 4.35. 4, Henrik Stenson, 4.22. 5, Hideki Matsuyama, 4.16. 6, Jason Day, 4.14. 7, Brooks Koepka, 4.12. 8, Phil Mickelson, 4.10. 9, J.B. Holmes, 4.09. 10, Robert Garrigus, 4.00. Eagles (Holes per) 1, Ben Martin, 92.6. 2, Jason Day, 93.3. 3 (tie), Dustin Johnson and Kevin Chappell, 99.0. 5, Morgan Hoffmann, 99.8. 6, Chez Reavie, 100.3. 7, D.H. Lee, 102.0. 8, Adam Scott, 108.0. 9, Patrick Rodgers, 112.5. 10, Jerry Kelly, 115.2. Sand Save Percentage 1, Sean O’Hair, 64.71%. 2, Jon Curran, 61.76%. 3, Jonas Blixt, 61.19%. 4, Jason Day, 61.11%. 5 (tie), Phil Mickelson and Brendon Todd, 60.71%. 7, John Huh, 60.50%. 8, David Toms, 60.49%. 9, Aaron Baddeley, 60.15%. 10, Dicky Pride, 60.00%. All-Around Ranking 1, Henrik Stenson, 237. 2, Rory McIlroy, 274. 3, Brooks Koepka, 277. 4, Jason Day, 279. 5, Dustin Johnson, 343. 6, Phil Mickelson, 355. 7, Sergio Garcia, 359. 8, Adam Scott, 386. 9, Rickie Fowler, 408. 10, Justin Rose, 416. PGA Tour FedEx Cup leaders Through Aug. 7 Rank Player Points YTD Money 1. Jason Day 2,735 $7,562,028 2. Dustin Johnson 2,701 $7,210,435 3. Adam Scott 2,063 $5,126,406 4. Russell Knox 2,001 $4,455,211 5. Jordan Spieth 1,965 $4,809,170 6. Brandt Snedeker 1,555 $3,265,011 7. Phil Mickelson 1,532 $3,645,759 8. Patrick Reed 1,531 $3,486,384 9. Justin Thomas 1,512 $3,561,845 10. Kevin Kisner 1,423 $3,066,248 11. Kevin Chappell 1,422 $3,472,720 12. Kevin Na 1,389 $2,945,366 13. Henrik Stenson 1,387 $3,365,923 14. William McGirt 1,360 $3,319,597 15. Jimmy Walker 1,352 $3,271,771 16. Matt Kuchar 1,349 $3,271,732 17. Brooks Koepka 1,348 $3,240,841 18. Sergio Garcia 1,306 $3,155,365 19. Hideki Matsuyama 1,305 $3,331,635 20. Daniel Berger 1,254 $2,846,469 21. Bubba Watson 1,235 $3,020,497 22. Jason Dufner 1,229 $2,436,265 23. Branden Grace 1,187 $2,801,396 24. Smylie Kaufman 1,181 $2,424,647 25. Charl Schwartzel 1,127 $2,357,153 26. Jhonattan Vegas 1,119 $2,149,558 27. Emiliano Grillo 1,109 $2,316,033 28. Charley Hoffman 1,087 $2,175,607 29. Rickie Fowler 1,087 $2,361,380 30. Bill Haas 1,085 $2,281,173 31. Scott Piercy 1,071 $2,735,421 32. Graeme McDowell 1,049 $2,376,580 33. Harris English 1,010 $1,926,938 34. Rory McIlroy 973 $2,655,615 35. Daniel Summerhays 963 $2,028,628 36. J.B. Holmes 956 $2,431,877 37. Charles Howell III 931 $1,888,171 38. Fabian Gomez 924 $1,875,871 39. Jim Herman 923 $1,909,752 40. Gary Woodland 907 $1,624,572 41. Si Woo Kim 882 $1,628,974 42. James Hahn 878 $1,991,502 43. Aaron Baddeley 874 $1,609,215 44. Jamie Lovemark 870 $1,781,077 45. Tony Finau 864 $1,537,378 46. David Lingmerth 859 $1,827,318 47. Jon Curran 840 $1,845,412 48. Justin Rose 829 $1,955,591 49. Kyle Reifers 821 $1,470,940 50. Colt Knost 803 $1,594,587 51. Zach Johnson 799 $1,624,304 52. Brendan Steele 791 $1,481,948 53. Louis Oosthuizen 769 $1,967,329 54. Marc Leishman 765 $1,524,160 55. Roberto Castro 759 $1,641,658 56. Alex Cejka 754 $1,566,308 57. Patton Kizzire 744 $1,455,660 58. Ryan Palmer 731 $1,251,274 59. Chris Kirk 727 $1,491,828 60. Vaughn Taylor 726 $1,546,684 61. Jason Kokrak 721 $1,329,334 62. Ryan Moore 719 $1,576,469 63. Paul Casey 710 $1,596,340 64. K.J. Choi 705 $1,328,448 65. Danny Lee 699 $1,405,722 66. Patrick Rodgers 698 $1,234,965 67. Kevin Streelman 692 $1,473,120 68. Danny Willett 691 $1,938,132 69. Freddie Jacobson 680 $1,326,444 70. Billy Hurley III 676 $1,486,145 71. Webb Simpson 665 $1,417,811 72. Brian Stuard 658 $1,506,878 73. Jason Bohn 654 $1,343,191 74. Bryce Molder 652 $1,333,707 75. Jerry Kelly 648 $1,237,771 76. Spencer Levin 644 $1,161,097 77. Harold Varner III 643 $1,265,844 78. Chez Reavie 630 $1,041,744 79. Chad Campbell 621 $1,060,497 80. Russell Henley 620 $1,191,747 81. Ricky Barnes 618 $944,518 82. Brian Harman 607 $1,003,388 83. Billy Horschel 601 $1,187,531 84. Martin Laird 599 $1,098,170 85. David Hearn 599 $933,589 86. Shane Lowry 588 $1,565,276 87. Vijay Singh 586 $1,190,700 88. Hudson Swafford 581 $833,913 89. John Senden 577 $944,621 90. Steve Stricker 565 $1,323,671 91. Scott Brown 556 $1,003,069 92. Robert Streb 556 $958,867 93. Tyrone Van Aswegen 550 $995,882 94. Francesco Molinari 550 $1,083,155 95. Luke Donald 549 $955,996 96. Lucas Glover 543 $886,517 97. Zac Blair 541 $876,605 98. Cameron Tringale 539 $1,064,066 99. Jonas Blixt 538 $1,071,421 100. Adam Hadwin 532 $874,762 101. Peter Malnati 528 $1,230,590 102. Jim Furyk 523 $1,355,269 103. John Huh 514 $922,394 104. Boo Weekley 509 $967,881 105. Mark Hubbard 503 $642,942 106. Ben Crane 500 $607,892 107. Anirban Lahiri 494 $835,171 108. Sean O’Hair 492 $702,838 109. Derek Fathauer 491 $853,210 110. Graham DeLaet 487 $893,002 111. Andrew Loupe 483 $1,005,676 112. Michael Kim 477 $641,208 113. Keegan Bradley 476 $819,525 114. Troy Merritt 468 $901,251 115. Luke List 468 $740,297 116. Robert Garrigus 467 $933,154 117. Brett Stegmaier 466 $896,874 118. David Toms 455 $774,522 119. Seung-Yul Noh 454 $661,711 120. Nick Taylor 441 $628,756 121. Ben Martin 441 $624,515 F3HIJKLM PAGE 24 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 MLB 7 hits for Crawford Associated Press MIAMI — Brandon Crawford was a big hit Monday night. Seven of them, to be exact. Crawford became the first major leaguer in 41 years to get seven hits in a game, finally putting the San Francisco Giants ahead to stay with an RBI single in the 14th inning of an 8-7 victory over the Miami Marlins. “A great performance,” said Giants bench coach Ron Wotus, who filled in as manager after Bruce Bochy was hospitalized with an illness. “Bochy picked a heck of a day to take off.” The previous player to get seven hits in a game was Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Rennie Stennett on Sept. 16, 1975, at the Chicago Cubs. He did it in nine innings, the only big leaguer to accomplish that feat since after 1900. “It doesn’t happen very often that you get eight at-bats in a game so I figured it didn’t happen a whole lot, but you don’t think about stuff like that when you’re playing,” Crawford said. The San Francisco shortstop, who entered in a 6-for-36 slide, raised his batting average 13 points to .278. He tripled, doubled and had five singles in eight atbats, tying the NL record for hits in a game. “I got a couple to drop in and squeak past and then I hit a few balls hard, too, that found holes,” Crawford said. “I felt good.” The seven hits set a franchise mark. “It’s crazy to me,” Crawford said. “The history of the Giants with all of the great players that have come through, you would think that somebody pushed across seven hits in one day, but it’s pretty crazy to be in pretty small company.” Crawford’s hits came off six different pitchers. “What do you have to do to get that guy out? I don’t know,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. “We didn’t figure it out today. He’s a tough out right now and obviously, when you’re getting seven hits, you’re feeling pretty good about yourself. So I’m sure this whole series, it’s not going to be fun trying to get him out.” The only major league player besides Stennett to get seven hits in a nine-inning game was Wilbert Robinson for the old Baltimore Orioles of the National League in 1892. Johnny Burnett holds the major league mark for an extra-inning game with nine hits for Cleveland in a 1932 contest that lasted 18 innings. George Kontos (3-2) pitched two scoreless innings to earn the victory. The game took 5 hours, 34 minutes — the longest of the season for both teams. “Exhausting,” Crawford said. “I’m tired right now.” Scoreboard American League East Division W L 63 48 64 49 60 50 56 55 45 66 Central Division Cleveland 62 47 Detroit 61 51 Kansas City 53 58 Chicago 53 58 Minnesota 46 66 West Division Texas 66 47 Seattle 58 53 Houston 57 55 Los Angeles 49 62 Oakland 49 63 Baltimore Toronto Boston New York Tampa Bay Mariners 3, Tigers 0 Pct .568 .566 .545 .505 .405 GB — — 2A 7 18 .569 .545 .477 .477 .411 — 2A 10 10 17A .584 .523 .509 .441 .438 — 7 8A 16 16A National League East Division W L Pct GB Washington 66 45 .595 — Miami 59 53 .527 7A New York 57 54 .514 9 Philadelphia 52 62 .456 15A Atlanta 42 70 .375 24A Central Division Chicago 69 41 .627 — St. Louis 59 53 .527 11 Pittsburgh 55 54 .505 13A Milwaukee 49 61 .445 20 Cincinnati 45 66 .405 24A West Division San Francisco 64 48 .571 — Los Angeles 63 49 .563 1 Colorado 55 57 .491 9 San Diego 48 63 .432 15A Arizona 45 66 .405 18A Mondays games Toronto 7, Tampa Bay 5 Minnesota 3, Houston 1 Texas 4, Colorado 3 Oakland 3, Baltimore 2 Seattle 3, Detroit 0 San Francisco 8, Miami 7, 14 innings Atlanta 4, Milwaukee 3, 12 innings St. Louis 5, Cincinnati 4 L.A. Dodgers 9, Philadelphia 4 Tuesday’s games Texas at Colorado Cleveland at Washington Tampa Bay at Toronto N.Y. Yankees at Boston L.A. Angels at Chicago Cubs Houston at Minnesota Chicago White Sox at Kansas City Baltimore at Oakland Detroit at Seattle San Diego at Pittsburgh Arizona at N.Y. Mets San Francisco at Miami Atlanta at Milwaukee Cincinnati at St. Louis Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers Wednesday’s games Cleveland (Clevinger 0-1) at Washington (Gonzalez 7-9) Tampa Bay (Snell 3-4) at Toronto (Happ 15-3) N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 9-8) at Boston (Pomeranz 8-9) Colorado (De La Rosa 7-7) at Texas (Perez 7-8) L.A. Angels (Nolasco 4-8) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 11-5) Houston (Keuchel 7-11) at Minnesota (Santana 5-9) Chicago White Sox (Quintana 9-8) at Kansas City (Kennedy 6-9) Baltimore (Gallardo 4-3) at Oakland Detroit (Verlander 12-6) at Seattle (Hernandez 6-4) San Francisco (Samardzija 9-8) at Miami (Phelps 5-5) Philadelphia (Hellickson 9-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 9-5) San Diego (Jackson 2-2) at Pittsburgh (Vogelsong 1-1) Arizona (Ray 5-11) at N.Y. Mets (Colon 10-6) Cincinnati (DeSclafani 6-0) at St. Louis (Garcia 8-8) Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-4) at Milwaukee (Anderson 6-10) Monday Dodgers 9, Phillies 4 Philadelphia Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi C.Hrnnd 2b 5 0 1 0 Utley 2b 4 1 1 1 Altherr rf 4 1 0 0 C.Sager ss 4 2 2 2 Franco 3b 4 1 1 0 Ju.Trnr 3b 4 1 1 0 T.Jseph 1b 4 1 1 1 Reddick rf 3 1 1 0 Rupp c 3 0 2 1 Ad.Gnzl 1b 4 1 2 1 O.Hrrra cf 4 0 0 0 Grandal c 3 3 2 1 T.Gddel lf 3 0 1 0 Pderson cf 4 0 2 3 Paredes ph-lf1 0 0 0 Segedin lf 2 0 0 1 Galvis ss 4 0 0 0 Fields p 0 0 0 0 Eflin p 2 1 2 0 P.Baez p 0 0 0 0 S.Gnzlz p 0 0 0 0 Kndrick ph 1 0 0 0 Asche ph 1 0 0 0 Ravin p 0 0 0 0 Mariot p 0 0 0 0 Urias p 2 0 0 0 Lu.Grca p 0 0 0 0 Howell p 0 0 0 0 Fthrstn ph 1 0 0 0 E.Hrnnd ph-lf2 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 8 2 Totals 33 9 11 9 Philadelphia 003 000 010—4 Los Angeles 511 000 11x—9 E—Urias (1). DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB— Philadelphia 7, Los Angeles 3. IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Eflin L,3-6 3 7 7 7 2 0 Gonzalez 3 1 0 0 0 1 Mariot 1 1 1 1 0 2 Garcia 1 2 1 1 0 1 Los Angeles Urias W,3-2 5 5 3 1 2 2 Howell 1 0 0 0 0 1 Fields 1 0 0 0 0 1 Baez 1 2 1 1 0 1 Ravin 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—2:50. A—48,370 (56,000). Detroit Seattle ab r h bi Aoki lf 4 1 1 0 S.Smith rf 3 0 0 0 Heredia rf 1 0 1 1 Cano 2b 4 0 0 0 N.Cruz dh 3 1 2 0 K.Sager 3b 3 1 1 1 Lind 1b 3 0 0 0 L.Mrtin cf 2 0 1 0 Zunino c 3 0 1 1 M.Frman ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 29 3 7 3 Detroit 000 000 000—0 Seattle 020 000 01x—3 DP—Detroit 2, Seattle 1. LOB—Detroit 5, Seattle 3. IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Fulmer L,9-4 7 5 2 2 1 6 Lowe C 2 1 1 0 2 Ryan B 0 0 0 0 0 Seattle Iwakuma W,14-7 7 5 0 0 1 8 Caminero H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Diaz S,6-60 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:30. A—20,002 (47,476). ab Kinsler 2b 3 Collins cf 4 Mi.Cbrr 1b 4 V.Mrtnz dh 4 J..Mrtn rf 4 J.Upton lf 3 McGehee 3b 3 Sltlmcc c 3 J.Iglss ss 3 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 h 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cardinals 5, Reds 4 Cincinnati St. Louis ab r h bi Crpnter 2b 5 0 2 2 Hzlbker pr 0 1 0 0 Pscotty rf 5 1 2 1 Hlliday lf 4 0 0 0 Leake pr 0 0 0 0 Moss 1b 4 0 0 1 Molina c 3 1 1 1 J.Prlta ss 4 0 2 0 Gyorko 3b 4 0 1 0 Pham cf 2 1 1 0 Wacha p 0 0 0 0 G.Grcia ph 1 0 0 0 Bowman p 0 0 0 0 M.Adams ph 1 0 0 0 Duke p 0 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Wong ph 0 1 0 0 Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 33 5 9 5 Cincinnati 031 000 000—4 St. Louis 000 000 005—5 E—Duvall (4). DP—Cincinnati 2, St. Louis 1. LOB—Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 10. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Reed 6 4 0 0 1 4 Diaz B 1 0 0 1 0 Wood H,9 1C 1 0 0 0 2 Cingrani L,2-5 C 3 5 5 2 0 Ohlendorf BS,4 0 0 0 0 1 0 St. Louis Wacha 5 6 4 4 4 3 Bowman 2 1 0 0 1 2 Duke 1 1 0 0 0 2 Maness W,3-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Cingrani (Wong), by Ohlendorf (Molina). WP—Diaz. T—3:10. A— 40,616 (43,975). Hmilton cf Cozart ss Votto 1b Duvall lf Phllips 2b Schbler rf E.Sarez 3b Brnhart c C.Reed p J.Diaz p B.Wood p Cngrani p Ohlndrf p ab 4 5 5 2 3 4 4 3 3 0 1 0 0 r 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 h 1 2 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 bi 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Twins 3, Astros 1 Houston Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi T.Kemp dh 3 1 0 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 0 0 Bregman 3b 4 0 1 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 1 0 Sprnger rf 4 0 1 1 Kepler rf 3 0 0 0 Correa ss 4 0 1 0 Sano dh 4 0 1 0 Gattis c 4 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4 0 1 0 Ma.Gnzl 2b 3 0 1 0 E.Rsrio cf 4 1 3 0 A..Reed 1b 2 0 0 0 J.Plnco ss 4 1 2 0 C.Gomez cf 3 0 0 0 Centeno c 3 1 1 1 Mrsnick lf 3 0 0 0 Da.Sntn lf 3 0 2 1 Totals 30 1 4 1 Totals 33 3 11 2 Houston 000 001 000—1 Minnesota 000 030 00x—3 E—C.Gomez (1). DP—Minnesota 1. LOB—Houston 4, Minnesota 7. IP H R ER BB SO Houston McHugh L,7-10 7 10 3 3 1 6 Hoyt 1 1 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Duffey W,8-8 6 4 1 1 1 8 Rogers H,7 1 0 0 0 1 0 Pressly H,10 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kintzler S,11-111 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP—Duffey. T—2:18. A—20,978 (39,021). Athletics 3, Orioles 2 Baltimore ab A.Jones cf 4 Kim lf 4 M.Mchdo 3b 3 C.Davis 1b 4 Trumbo rf 4 P.Alvrz dh 4 Wieters c 4 Schoop 2b 3 J.Hardy ss 3 Oakland r 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 h 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 bi 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi Crisp cf 3 0 1 0 Muncy 2b 4 0 0 0 Ldndorf 2b 0 0 0 0 Vogt c 3 2 2 2 K.Davis lf 4 0 1 0 Vlencia rf 4 0 0 0 Eibner rf 0 0 0 0 Alonso 1b 4 0 1 0 B.Btler dh 4 0 2 1 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 Healy 3b 2 1 0 0 Totals 33 2 7 2 Totals 31 3 7 3 Baltimore 001 000 010—2 Oakland 000 101 10x—3 LOB—Baltimore 5, Oakland 7. IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore Gausman L,3-10 6 6 2 2 2 6 Ondrusek 1 1 1 1 1 0 O’Day 1 0 0 0 0 1 Oakland Graveman W,9-7 7 6 1 1 0 4 Dull H,10 1 1 1 1 0 1 Madson S,24-29 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP—Gausman. T—2:29. A—10,407 (37,090). WILFREDO LEE /AP The Giants’ Brandon Crawford watches the ball as he hits a triple during the 13th inning Monday in Miami. Crawford became the first major league player in 41 years to get seven hits in a game. Giants 8, Marlins 7 (14) San Francisco Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 7 3 3 0 D.Grdon 2b 7 2 3 0 Pagan lf 7 1 2 0 Prado 3b 4 3 2 2 Belt 1b 6 2 1 2 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Posey c 6 1 2 2 McGowan p 1 0 0 0 Crwford ss 8 1 7 2 Mathis c 0 0 0 0 Pence rf 7 0 1 1 Yelich lf 6 2 3 4 Panik 2b 2 0 0 0 Stanton rf 6 0 1 1 E.Nunez 3b 6 0 1 0 Ozuna cf 5 0 0 0 Cueto p 2 0 1 0 Ralmuto c 6 0 1 0 G.Blnco ph 1 0 0 0 Cashner p 0 0 0 0 Peavy p 0 0 0 0 Detrich 1b 3 0 1 0 Gllspie ph 1 0 0 0 Rojas 1b-3b 3 0 0 0 W.Smith p 0 0 0 0 Hchvrra ss 6 0 0 0 Law p 0 0 0 0 Frnndez p 2 0 1 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 I.Szuki ph 1 0 0 0 Adranza ph 1 0 0 0 Crvenka p 0 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Wttgren p 0 0 0 0 Brown ph 1 0 0 0 Ellngtn p 0 0 0 0 Casilla p 0 0 0 0 Brrclgh p 0 0 0 0 Bmgrner ph 1 0 0 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 CJhsn ph-1b 2 0 1 0 Totals 56 8 18 7 Totals 52 7 13 7 San Francisco 000 010 510 000 01—8 Miami 000 230 200 000 00—7 E—Fernandez (1). DP—San Francisco 2, Miami 1. LOB—San Francisco 18, Miami 6. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO Cueto 5 6 5 5 1 5 Peavy 1 1 0 0 0 1 Smith BS,6 0 3 2 2 0 0 Law 1 0 0 0 0 1 Romo 1 1 0 0 0 0 Strickland 2 1 0 0 0 1 Casilla 2 1 0 0 0 2 Kontos W,4-2 2 0 0 0 1 2 Miami Fernandez 6 6 1 1 2 6 Cervenka 0 3 3 3 0 0 Wittgren BS,2 B 3 2 2 0 0 Ellington C 0 0 0 0 0 Barraclough BS,3 1 1 1 1 2 3 Rodney 1 0 0 0 1 0 Dunn 1 1 0 0 1 1 McGowan L,1-4 3C 3 1 1 5 2 Cashner B 1 0 0 0 0 Cervenka pitched to 3 batters in the 7th W.Smith pitched to 3 batters in the 7th Dunn pitched to 2 batters in the 11th HBP—by Cueto (Ozuna). WP—Ellington. T—5:34. A—22,806 (36,742). Blue Jays 7, Rays 5 Tampa Bay Toronto ab r h bi Travis 2b 5 2 4 1 Butista rf 4 0 2 3 Dnldson 3b 5 0 1 0 Encrncn 1b 5 1 3 3 Sunders dh 2 0 1 0 Tlwtzki ss 3 1 0 0 Ccliani lf 3 0 0 0 Ru.Mrtn ph-c1 1 0 0 M.Upton cf 4 0 1 0 Thole c 2 1 0 0 Smoak ph 1 0 0 0 Barney pr-lf 0 1 0 0 Totals 34 5 9 5 Totals 35 7 12 7 Tampa Bay 000 220 001—5 Toronto 200 200 30x—7 DP—Tampa Bay 1, Toronto 2. LOB— Tampa Bay 7, Toronto 12. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Odorizzi 5B 8 4 4 3 4 Boxberger C 0 0 0 0 1 Cedeno L,3-5 0 0 2 2 2 0 Floro 1 2 1 1 1 2 Farquhar 1 2 0 0 0 0 Toronto Dickey 4B 6 4 4 3 3 Biagini 1C 1 0 0 0 0 Benoit W,3-1 1 1 0 0 1 1 Grilli H,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 Osuna S,26-262 1 1 1 1 0 2 Frsythe 2b Krmaier cf Lngoria 3b B.Mller 1b Mahtook rf Frnklin lf Sza Jr. dh T.Bckhm ss B.Wlson c C.Dckrs ph ab 4 5 3 4 3 4 3 4 3 1 r 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 h 3 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 bi 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 Cedeno pitched to 2 batters in the 7th HBP—by Odorizzi (Thole), by Dickey (Longoria). WP—Dickey, Odorizzi. PB—Thole 2, Wilson. T—3:13. A—43,812 (49,282). Braves 4, Brewers 3 (12) Atlanta Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi Incarte cf 5 0 1 0 Villar 3b 5 0 1 0 Aybar ss 5 0 1 0 Or.Arca ss 5 0 1 0 F.Frman 1b 5 1 1 0 Braun lf 4 0 2 0 M.Kemp lf 4 1 2 1 Gennett 2b 5 0 0 0 Mrkakis rf 5 1 2 1 H.Prez rf-1b 5 1 1 0 Ad.Grca 3b 4 0 0 0 Carter 1b 3 1 0 0 G.Bckhm 2b 4 0 0 1 C.Trres p 0 0 0 0 Przynsk c 5 1 2 1 Boyer p 0 0 0 0 Whalen p 2 0 1 0 Wilkins ph 1 0 0 0 Pterson ph 1 0 0 0 K.Brxtn cf 5 0 2 1 Jose.Rm p 0 0 0 0 Mldnado c 5 1 1 2 Ma.Cbrr p 0 0 0 0 Davies p 2 0 0 0 Frnceur ph 1 0 0 0 Knebel p 0 0 0 0 Cunniff p 0 0 0 0 Nwnhuis ph 1 0 0 0 C.d’Arn ph 1 0 0 0 Thrnbrg p 0 0 0 0 J.Jhnsn p 0 0 0 0 R.Flres rf 2 0 0 0 Totals 42 4 10 4 Totals 43 3 8 3 Atlanta 010 110 000 001—4 Milwaukee 010 020 000 000—3 E—K.Broxton (4). DP—Atlanta 1, Milwaukee 4. LOB—Atlanta 5, Milwaukee 6. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta Whalen 6 5 3 3 1 7 Ramirez 2 1 0 0 1 3 Cabrera 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cunniff W,2-0 2 1 0 0 0 2 Johnson S,10-12 1 1 0 0 0 2 Milwaukee Davies 7 8 3 3 0 3 Knebel 1 1 0 0 0 1 Thornburg 1 0 0 0 0 2 Torres L,2-3 2 1 1 1 2 1 Boyer 1 0 0 0 0 0 C.Torres pitched to 4 batters in the 12th T—3:31. A—20,976 (41,900). Rangers 4, Rockies 3 Texas Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Choo rf 3 0 1 0 Blckmon cf 3 1 2 1 Desmond cf 4 0 0 0 LMahieu 2b 3 0 0 0 Lucroy c 4 0 0 0 Arenado 3b 4 1 2 2 Beltre 3b 3 1 2 1 Ca.Gnzl rf 0 0 0 0 Odor 2b 4 1 1 0 Parra ph-rf 4 0 1 0 Profar 1b-lf 3 1 0 0 Mar.Ryn 1b 3 0 0 0 Andrus ss 3 1 1 2 Raburn lf 3 0 1 0 Hamels p 2 0 0 0 Dahl lf 1 0 1 0 Claudio p 0 0 0 0 Hundley c 4 0 0 0 Rua ph 0 0 0 0 Adames ss 4 1 1 0 Mrelnd ph-1b 2 0 1 1 Ty.Andr p 3 0 0 0 DShelds lf 2 0 0 0 Ottvino p 0 0 0 0 Beltran ph 0 0 0 0 Estevez p 0 0 0 0 Kela p 0 0 0 0 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Mazara ph 1 0 0 0 Diekman p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 32 3 8 3 Texas 000 000 103—4 Colorado 001 100 010—3 DP—Texas 1, Colorado 1. LOB—Texas 5, Colorado 5. IP H R ER BB SO Texas Hamels 6 6 2 2 1 6 Claudio 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kela W,4-1 1 1 1 1 1 0 Diekman S,4-40 1 1 0 0 0 1 Colorado Anderson 7 2 1 1 3 5 Ottavino H,5 1 1 0 0 1 1 Estevez L,2-8 BS,6 B 2 3 3 1 0 Logan C 1 0 0 0 1 WP—Anderson. T—3:04. A—31,768 (50,398). Wednesday, August 10, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • F3HIJKLM PAGE 25 MLB ROUNDUP Molina starts, finishes rally to stun Reds Associated Press ST. LOUIS — Never has a 94 mile-perhour fastball to the ribs felt so good for Yadier Molina as it did Monday night. Molina started and ended a five-run rally in the ninth inning as the St. Louis Cardinals stunned the Cincinnati Reds 5-4. He was hit by a pitch from Ross Ohlendorf with the bases loaded to drive home the winning run. Instead of wincing, Molina pumped his fist and slid into first base. “He walked by me and said we have lots of ice,” manager Mike Matheny said. “So he wasn’t concerned about being hit there.” Molina singled to start the inning against Reds closer Tony Cingrani. Matt Carpenter drove in two runs with a single, Stephen Piscotty singled home another and Matt Holliday walked to load the bases before Cingrani (2-4) was lifted for Ohlendorf, who walked Brandon Moss to tie it before hitting Molina. “You can have the good approach, you can do all the things you want to, you can hit the ball hard, but it takes a little luck sometimes and you’ve got to get the pitches to do it with,” Moss said. “And in the ninth inning we got a lot of pitches to do it with.” The comeback erased what had been a night of offensive futility for St. Louis through the first eight innings, as the Cardinals entered the last inning 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position. “You trust in each other and that was one of those next men up,” Matheny said. “There was nobody with that huge home run. It was just one right after the other whether it’s a hit batsman, whether it’s walks or whether it’s a big hit. Play the game, good things can happen.” Seth Maness (2-2) pitched a perfect ninth to earn the win. Cardinals starter Michael Wacha struggled to settle in as seven of the first 12 batters he faced reached base. Zack Cozart’s double eluded the outstretched glove of Holliday in left field and went off the wall to give the Reds a 2-0 lead in the second. Cozart, who had two hits, scored when Joey Votto followed with a triple. “Just command early on, especially in the first and second inning I was kind of just all over the place,” Wacha said. “I felt like I was able to settle in and throw some good pitches down in the zone.” The rally spoiled what had the makings of Cody Reed’s first major league win. Reed’s six scoreless innings dropped the Reds starters’ ERA to 2.84 over the last 11 games. “It’s miserable,” Reds manager Bryan Price said. “It’s a miserable feeling but we’ve just got to come back tomorrow and win the game and get this feeling out of our BILLY HURST/AP The Cardinals’ Yadier Molina, left, celebrates a 5-4 walk-off victory over the Reds after being hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. system.” Mariners 3, Tigers 0: Hisashi Iwakuma threw seven shutout innings for his seventh win in his last eight starts, Mike Zunino and Kyle Seager both had RBI singles off Michael Fulmer in the second inning and host Seattle beat Detroit. Seattle won its fourth straight and moved within 2 ½ games of Detroit and Boston for the second wild card in the American League thanks to another gem from Iwakuma (13-7). The right-hander allowed five hits and struck out eight, running his streak of scoreless innings at Safeco Field to 21 1/3. Blue Jays 7, Rays 5: Devon Travis had a career-high four hits, including the goahead single in the seventh inning, and host Toronto beat Tampa Bay. Edwin Encarnacion hit his 299th career home run as the Blue Jays snapped a threegame losing streak against the Rays. Encarnacion and Jose Bautista both had three RBIs as Toronto scored more than four runs for the first time since a 9-1 win over Baltimore on July 30. Dodgers 9, Phillies 4: Corey Seager homered twice and Chase Utley and Yas- mani Grandal also went deep for host Los Angeles. Seager has 21 homers, breaking Hanley Ramirez’s record for homers by a Dodgers shortstop. He’s also the eighth L.A. rookie with 20 or more homers in a season. Athletics 3, Orioles 2: Kendall Graveman pitched seven strong innings, Billy Butler hit a tiebreaking single in the sixth and host Oakland beat Baltimore despite another home run from slugger Manny Machado. Machado, who hit home runs in his first three at-bats Sunday, belted his 26th home run of the season with two outs in the eighth. It wasn’t enough to prevent the Orioles from losing and falling into a first-place tie with Toronto in the AL East. Twins 3, Astros 1: Tyler Duffey pitched six effective innings and host Minnesota took advantage of two misplays by Houston center fielder Carlos Gomez in a three-run fifth. Gomez, the former Twins outfielder, let Jorge Polanco’s single skip by him for a two-base error that allowed one run to score. Then he lost a fly ball off Juan Cen- teno’s bat, turning it into an RBI triple. Danny Santana followed with a runscoring single, and Minnesota won for the seventh time in nine games. Rangers 4, Rockies 3: Elvis Andrus hit a two-run single, Mitch Moreland delivered a tiebreaking double and Texas scored three times in the ninth inning to beat host Colorado. The AL West leader had a double steal before Andrus’ single tied it 3-all. Moreland sent Andrus home with a double before he was thrown out stretching at third. Carlos Estevez (2-7) got his fifth blown save in the ninth. Braves 4, Brewers 3 (12): Matt Kemp scored from third base after Keon Broxton dropped Gordon Beckham’s sacrifice fly in the 12th inning, and Atlanta beat host Milwaukee. With the bases loaded and nobody out, Broxton dropped a drive to deep center field for an error. Kemp drew a walk from Carlos Torres (2-2) to start the 12th and went to third on a ground-rule double by Nick Markakis. F3HIJKLM PAGE 26 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 NFL/SPORTS BRIEFS/HIGH SCHOOL Chargers, Bosa still at odds Former Ohio State DL only unsigned player from this year’s draft Associated Press SAN DIEGO — The San Diego Chargers had their seventh training camp practice on Monday and once again it didn’t include Joey Bosa. Bosa, the third overall pick, remains in a contract dispute with the Chargers. “I’m worried about the guys that are here,” coach Mike McCoy said. It’s believed the sticking points between the parties is when Bosa’s $17 million bonus is distributed and offset language in case he signed another contract if released by the Chargers. The former Ohio State star is the only unsigned player from this year’s draft. Chargers general manager Tom Telesco wasn’t available for comment, according to a team spokesman. Todd France, one of Bosa’s representatives at CAA Sports, didn’t return a message. McCoy said, in general terms, players skipping camp can fall behind. “Any time you don’t practice and you’re not in meetings ... it comes down to playing with one another and becoming a team,” he said. “If you are new in a system it is more important to be here. “You got to get in football shape. The offseason in shorts and T-shirts? That’s not football. You got to get your pads on. You got to work the bumps and bruises out.” The Chargers open the preseason against the Tennessee Titans on Saturday. Bosa, a passrushing defensive end, is unlikely to play. The rhetoric accelerated on Sunday when Cheryl Bosa, Joey’s mother, posted a remark toward the Chargers on Facebook. In a reply to someone frustrated by the impasse, she wrote: “It bums me out for him so much. Wish we pulled an Eli Manning on draft day.” Eli’s father, Archie, met with then-Chargers coach Marty Schottenheimer and general manager A.J. Smith, requesting they not select his son with the 2004 draft’s No. 1 pick. Smith snubbed the elder Manning and took Eli Manning. Smith then traded him to the New York Giants for a package which included Philip Rivers. Manning has won two Super Bowls with the Giants. The Chargers haven’t won a Super Bowl and have missed the playoffs in five of the past six years. Bosa was selected to help turn around the Chargers. “We all know how Joey loves the game and he will come back in great shape,” McCoy said. “Football shape, no. It will take some time. We’ll see about that when he gets here.” In other NFL news: The Minnesota Vikings have agreed to terms on a fouryear contract extension with long snapper Kevin McDermott. The deal, first reported by the NFL Network, runs through the 2020 season with a maximum value of $4 million. Coach Mike Zimmer confirmed the agreement Monday. McDermott is entering his second season with the Vikings, after unseating last year veteran Cullen Loeffler, who then was the longest-tenured player on the team. The Indianapolis Colts will be without starting defensive end Kendall Langford for three to four weeks after having arthroscopic surgery on his injured knee. Coach Chuck Pagano made the announcement when the team returned to Anderson University on Tuesday. Pagano said Langford hurt his knee in practice last week, was sent back to Indianapolis for an MRI and doctors found a congenital defect. Pagano did not say which knee was injured, but Pa- Briefly US Hockey Hall announces inductees COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Longtime high school coach Bill Belisle, forward Craig Jan- “The Jacksonville Jaguars organization is deeply saddened by the passing of former offensive line coach George Yarno and our condolences are with his wife, Cindy, his daughter, Adrianne and his sons, Josh and George,” the team said in a statement. “Yarno had courageously battled stage IV cancer for nearly three years.” Stars and Stripes A-Rod’s ticket value soars for last game NEW YORK — Alex Rodriguez’ value has suddenly soared — at least when it comes to ticket prices. Despite his .204 batting average this year, baseball fans are suddenly willing to pay four times the normal price to see A-Rod play the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday. It’s the 41-year-old designated hitter’s last game with the Yankees. According to TiqIQ, a resale ticket data collector, the average list price of a ticket is $305 — compared to $75 before A-Rod tearfully announced Sunday that he was retiring from the team. StubHub was offering top seats for $9,500. But a “nosebleed” bleacher seat could still be had for $48 gano remains hopeful that Langford will be ready for the Sept. 11 season opener against Detroit. Former NFL player and coach George Yarno has died after a lengthy battle with stomach cancer. He was 58. The Jacksonville Jaguars, the last team Yarno worked for, made the announcement Monday night. McKinney will head DODEA Pacific sports Pogba to Man U in record transfer MANCHESTER, England — Emerging from the shadows, Paul Pogba — a red devil emblazoned on the side of his head — removed his hood, looked straight into the camera and uttered the words Manchester United fans had been waiting to hear: “I’m back.” With that 26-second video teaser released by United early Tuesday, the France midfielder became the world’s most expensive footballer at around $116 million and England’s biggest club made another statement of intent during its latest offseason of heavy spending that moved close to $200 million. This was the new Man United at work: Breaking the world transfer record; announcing the signing after midnight local time to suit foreign audiences; a series of glitzy videos included one with a grime artist where Pogba produces some impressive dance moves. Pogba was a promising 19year-old when he left United to join Juventus after his contract expired, having only made seven appearances as a substitute. KYLE ROBERTSON, C OLUMBUS DISPATCH /TNS Ohio State defensive lineman Joey Bosa leaves the field after being ejected for a hit on Notre Dame quarterback DeShone Kizer during the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 1. Bosa, the third overall pick, remains in a contract dispute with the San Diego Chargers. DAVID VINCENT/AP Paul Pogba was signed by Manchester United for around $116 million. ney and the 1996 World Cup of Hockey team are this year’s inductees into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame, USA Hockey Executive Director Dave Ogrean announced Monday. The 86-year-old Belisle has won 32 state championships in 41 seasons at Mount St. Charles Academy in Woonsocket, R.I., Janney is the leader in assists per game among U.S.-born players and was one of the top playmakers of his era. He had 563 assists and 751 points in 760 games. The 1996 World Cup of Hockey team was chosen on the 20th anniversary of its title in the inaugural event. CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — Tom McKinney, a coach with 14 years of experience at the middle- and high-school levels and whose teams won six Far East cross country titles was selected as DODEA Pacific athletics coordinator, DODEA announced Monday in a news release. McKinney, 45, of Chamberlain, S.D., has taught and coached at Seoul American and Kadena since entering the DODEA system in 2001. In addition to coaching championship teams in two sports, McKinney has also directed Far East soccer tournaments since 2007. He will now oversee the overall DODEA Pacific athletics program, featuring competition in Japan, Korea, Okinawa and Guam districts, with 13 high schools in 14 sports and end-of-season Far East tournaments. McKinney is a career educator with more than 15 years of teaching physical education, health and science. He holds a bachelor’s degree in health, physical education and recreation from South Dakota State and a master’s in adaptive physical education from Nebraska. Courtesy of DODEA-Pacific public affairs DODEA-Pacific athletics coordinator Tom McKinney. After two years of teaching and coaching at Seoul American, McKinney transferred to Kadena and built a Far East cross country power. His Panthers won six overall Far East Division I banners and crowned seven individual race champions. He also coached the Panthers to the 2006 D-I soccer tournament title, and served from time to time as Kadena athletics director. McKinney takes over for Don Hobbs, a former Kubasaki boys basketball coach who held the DODEA Pacific athletics coordinator position from September 2003 until his retirement July 1. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 27 OLYMPICS Men’s basketball Sloppy US cruises after rough start BY TOM WITHERS Associated Press BERNAT A RMANGUE /AP Brazil’s Robert Scheidt sails during the second race of the men’s Laser competition Monday in Rio. Smooth sailing for regatta opener BY BERNIE WILSON Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — Sailing, not the dirty water, was finally the focus on troubled Guanabara Bay during a spectacular start to the Olympic regatta on Monday. Windsurfers sped across the waves toward Flamengo Beach in a fresh breeze, against the imposing backdrop of Sugarloaf Mountain. Christ the Redeemer, Rio’s highest and most magnificent landmark, was obscured by fog. Across the bay, 43-year-old Robert Scheidt won the second race in the Laser class after finishing a disappointing 23rd in the opener. He’s trying to become the first Olympic sailor and first Brazilian to win six Olympic medals. He owns two golds, two silvers and a bronze. He’s seventh overall. “This is like perfect conditions. You can’t get better than this. And the views are amazing,” said American windsurfer Pedro Pascual of Miami. Guanabara Bay seemed to pass the sniff test, at least on the surface. The courses appeared clear of trash. Organizers have sent a helicopter over the bay every morning searching for rubbish. If any is spotted, boats are sent to scoop it up. Barriers have been put across rivers to try to stem the flow of garbage into the bay. Under the waves, things are different. An independent study by The Associated Press has shown high levels of viruses and sometimes bacteria from human sewage in the water. “We’re not really concerned about that,” Pascual said. “We’ve been here for a while training and we haven’t had an issue. I’m just focused on racing. There’s been days when it rains you can see stuff floating around, but it’s like everywhere else, I guess. It’s a bay.” American Paige Railey, who finished second in the second Laser Radial race and is seventh overall, said the water was “great, totally fine. Warm, clean. We were happy. I really want to give hats off to Brazil. I came here in 2007 for the Pan Ams and they’ve done a magnificent job of cleaning up the water and there are really no problems. I’d jump off the boat and go swimming if I could.” Charlie Buckingham of Newport Beach, Calif., making his Olympic debut in the Laser class, said the water “was great. No trash. It was warm. Splashes felt good.” Conditions could change if it rains. “There always have been problems here, Spanish windsurfer Ivan Pastor said. “It’s a very large bay. There is a lot of current, rivers flowing into it and we’ve seen quite frequently a lot of trash floating; plastic, which is the worst.” RIO DE JANEIRO — Red, white and blasé for one quarter, the U.S. Olympic team woke up and won with ease. Shaking off a sluggish, sloppy start and maybe some Brazilian boredom, the Americans regrouped in the second quarter and romped over Venezuela 11369 on Monday, taking another step toward a possible third straight gold medal. Kevin Durant scored 16 points and Carmelo Anthony 14 for the U.S. squad, which may have grown a touch overconfident following a 57-point blowout of China in its tournament opener. The Americans were tied at 18 after one quarter, but stopped turning the ball over and fouling, unleashed their defense and outscored Venezuela 30-8 in the second period. They cruised from there, improving to 82-1 under coach Mike Krzyzewski and reminding everyone it’s going to take a special performance for 40 minutes to deny them another Olympic title. “Everything’s not going to be easy,” Durant said. “We know that, even with this great team.” It was similar to the meeting between the teams in Chicago on July 29, when the U.S. shot poorly and still won by 35 on its pre-Rio exhibition tour. Maybe this was a reminder that no team can be taken lightly — and there is little margin for error — once the Olympic flame is ignited. “Once we settled down, made our adjustments to the way they were calling the game, the way that Venezuela wanted to play the game, that second quarter we picked it up defensively and turned it around,” Anthony said. The Americans continue pool play on Wednesday against unbeaten Australia. The Aussies, featuring five NBA players, four of them league champions, improved to 2-0 on Monday with an impressive 95-80 win over Serbia. Australia has never won an Olympic medal in men’s basketball, but Krzyzewski knows the team from Down Under will be up for the Americans. “I don’t think they’ve gone back to their boat or apartment or wherever they’re staying thinking they can’t beat us,” the coach said. “They feel like they can beat us and we understand that.” Anthony, the four-team Olympian and two-time gold medalist playing in his record 25th game for the United States, provided a much-needed spark in the second quarter. With the Americans leading just 28-22 and looking anything but golden, Anthony came across the lane and stripped the ball away from Venezuelan center Gregory Echenique and passed it to Kyrie Irving. Anthony followed Irving up the floor, accepted a feed on the wing and knocked down a three-pointer that lifted some of the pressure — and fog — off Team USA. “That changed the game,” said Paul George, who led the U.S. with 20 points. “Melo made that three and it gave us all confidence.” Anthony moved past Michael Jordan on the career scoring list and now only trails LeBron James and David Robinson for the most points by an American Olympian. Medals roundup US men take silver in 10-meter synchro diving Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — China easily won its second gold medal in diving at the Rio Olympics, dominating the men’s 10-meter synchronized event while showing the rest of the world how to barely make a splash. Chen Aisen and Lin Yue totaled 496.98 points on Monday, cruising to victory by 39.87 points. American teammates David Boudia and Steele Johnson took silver at 457.11. Tom Daley and Daniel Goodfellow of Britain rallied to claim bronze in 445.45. China is aiming to sweep the eight diving events in Rio de Janeiro for the first time in the Olympics. A day earlier, the Chinese won the women’s 3-meter synchro title. Chen and Lin were especially impressive on their final two dives, totaling the most points of any team in both rounds. Boudia and Johnson controlled second place throughout, leaving only the bronze medal up for grabs. Four years ago in London, Boudia earned bronze in platform synchro with a different partner and gold in the individual 10-meter competition. “One of every color,” Boudia said. “I’ve never felt so content and so calm. You’re at the Olympic Games with millions of people watching you, so it’s a pretty good feeling.” Johnson, a 20-year-old diver at Indiana University, was clearly thrilled with winning a medal in his Olympic debut. In 2009, Johnson struck his head on the platform and was saved from bleeding out by his coach, who jumped in the pool and held his head together. He received 33 stitches and a tube in his head to drain the chlorine. Fencing: Russia’s Yana Egorian scored the final two points to stun teammate Sofya Velikaya 15-14 and win the gold medal in women’s sabre fencing, the first such meeting between two Russians in 20 years. Egorian’s winning last touch left Velika- ya, a two-time world champion, with backto-back silver medals in the Olympics. Ukraine’s Olga Kharlan took bronze. Judo: From the favela to the top of the podium, Rafaela Silva earned Brazil’s first gold medal. Silva, the country’s first female world champion in judo, won the 57kilogram division. The 24-year-old Silva beat Sumiya Dorjsuren of Mongolia. The women’s bronze medals went to Kaori Matsumoto of Japan — the defending Olympic champion — and Telma Monteiro of Portugal. Shooting: Croatia’s Josip Glasnovic captured gold in men’s trap after defeating Italy’s Giovanni Pellielo in final match that went to a shoot-off. Glasnovic and Pellielo each hit 13 of 15 targets in the gold-medal match and were on the mark with their first three in the shoot-off. Great Britain’s Edward Ling hit 13 of 15 targets to beat David Kostelecky of the Czech Republic in the bronze medal match for his first medal in three Olympics. Italy’s Niccolo Campriani earned gold in men’s 10-meter air rifle after taking silver in London four years ago. Campriani had 206.1 points to finish 1.5 ahead of silver medalist Serhiy Kulish of Ukraine. Russia’s Vladimir Maslennikov won the bronze. Weightlifting: World record holder Chen Lijun pulled out of the men’s 62-kilogram class because of leg cramps, which opened the class for Oscar Albeiro Figueroa Mosquera of Colombia to win gold. Mosquera lifted 142 kilograms in snatch, 176 in clean and jerk.Eko Yuli Irawan of Indonesia won silver and Farkhad Kharki of Kazakhstan won bronze in his Olympic debut. Sukanya Srisurat and Pimsiri Sirikaew gave Thailand its first gold and silver medals in an Olympic event by going 1-2 in the women’s 58-kilogram class. Kuo HsingChun of Taiwan won bronze. PAGE 28 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 OLYMPICS US women’s eight shines BY K ARL R ITTER Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — After a day off due to gusty winds, Olympic rowers got back in their boats Monday with the outstanding U.S. women’s eight making a strong debut in Rio. On calm water with barely a breeze on Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon, the Americans qualified for Saturday’s final in 6 minutes, 6.34 seconds, a whopping eight seconds ahead of the Netherlands. “It was good to get a race under our belts,” said Meghan Musnicki, one of two rowers remaining from the U.S. eight that won gold in London 2012. “This is the first time we’ve raced in this lineup.” Britain won the second heat in 6:09.52 and is lining up as the strongest candidate to smash the dynasty of the Americans, who’ve won 10 consecutive world and Olympic titles in the event. “It’s definitely achievable and we all believe that we can do it, and that’s what you really need in a race like this,” said Karen Bennett, who rows in seat No. 7 in the British boat. “What better place to beat them than the Olympics to really make a statement.” The Brits held off New Zealand and Canada, coxed by 56-year-old Lesley Thompson-Willie, who is participating in her eighth Olympics. Britain also secured a spot in the final of the men’s eight, winning its heat in 5:34.23 while defending Olympic champion Germany won the other heat, four seconds slower. Helen Glover and Heather Stanning nearly saw their four-year winning streak end in the women’s pair as Hedvig Rasmussen and Anne Andersen of Denmark led the race until the final stretch. The British pair won by just two-tenths of a second and advanced to the semifinals, along with the Danes. A NDRE PENNER /AP The United States’ women’s eight competes in a heat on Monday. A Serbian pair that capsized in choppy waters Saturday stayed in their boats this time as they qualified for the semis in a repechage. Vladislav Yakovlev of Kazakhstan was less fortunate as he flipped in the single sculls after just 200 meters. Yakovlev climbed back into his boat and finished the race almost five minutes behind the Algerian winner. The first medal races in the Olympic regatta are set for Wednesday. Scoreboard Medals table Through Monday, Aug. 8 40 of 306 total medal events Nation G S B Tot United States 5 7 7 19 China 5 3 5 13 Japan 3 0 7 10 Russia 2 5 3 10 Italy 3 4 2 9 Australia 4 0 3 7 South Korea 2 2 1 5 Thailand 2 1 1 4 Britain 1 1 2 4 Canada 0 1 3 4 Hungary 3 0 0 3 Taiwan 1 0 2 3 Kazakhstan 0 1 2 3 Brazil 1 1 0 2 Sweden 1 1 0 2 Belgium 1 0 1 2 Indonesia 0 2 0 2 New Zealand 0 2 0 2 South Africa 0 2 0 2 Ukraine 0 1 1 2 Uzbekistan 0 0 2 2 Argentina 1 0 0 1 Colombia 1 0 0 1 Croatia 1 0 0 1 Kosovo 1 0 0 1 Netherlands 1 0 0 1 Vietnam 1 0 0 1 Azerbaijan 0 1 0 1 Denmark 0 1 0 1 France 0 1 0 1 Mongolia 0 1 0 1 North Korea 0 1 0 1 Philippines 0 1 0 1 Georgia 0 0 1 1 Greece 0 0 1 1 Poland 0 0 1 1 Portugal 0 0 1 1 Spain 0 0 1 1 Monday’s medalists DIVING Men’s Synchronized 10-meter Platform GOLD—China (Lin Yue; Chen Aisen) SILVER—United States (David Boudia; Steele Johnson) BRONZE—Britain (Thomas Daley; Daniel Goodfellow) FENCING Women’s Sabre GOLD—Yana Egorian, Russia SILVER—Sofya Velikaya, Russia BRONZE—Olga Kharlan, Ukraine GYMNASTICS (ARTISTIC) Men’s Team GOLD—Japan (Ryohei Kato; Yusuke Tanaka; Koji Yamamuro; Kenzo Shirai; Kohei Uchimura) SILVER—Russia (Denis Abliazin; Nikolai Kuksenkov; Ivan Stretovich; David Belyavskiy; Nikita Nagornyy) BRONZE—China (Liu Yang; Lin Chaopan; Zhang Chenglong; Deng Shudi; You Hao) JUDO Men’s -73kg GOLD—Shohei Ono, Japan SILVER—Rustam Orujov, Azerbaijan BRONZE—Lasha Shavdatuashvili, Georgia BRONZE—Dirk van Tichelt, Belgium Women’s -57kg GOLD—Rafaela Silva, Brazil SILVER—Sumiya Dorjsuren, Mongolia BRONZE—Telma Monteiro, Portugal BRONZE—Kaori Matsumoto, Japan RUGBY Women GOLD—Australia (Nicole Beck, Evania Pelite, Chloe Dalton, Amy Turner, Shannon Parry, Emilee Cherry, Emma Tonegato, Ellia Green, Charlotte Caslick, Alicia Quirk, Gemma Etheridge). SILVER—New Zealand (Shakira Baker, Terina Te Tamaki, Theresa Fitzpatrick, Portia Woodman, Tyla Nathan-Wong, Gayle Broughton, Niall Williams, Kayla McAlister, Kelly Brazier, Ruby Tui, Huriana Manuel). BRONZE—Canada (Brittany Benn, Kelly Russell, Jennifer Kish, Charity Williams, Karen Paquin, Bianca Farella, Natasha Watcham-Roy, Megan Lukan, Hannah Darling, Ashley Steacy, Ghislaine Landry). SHOOTING Men’s 10-Meter Air Rifle GOLD—Niccolo Campriani, Italy SILVER—Serhiy Kulish, Ukraine BRONZE—Vladimir Maslennikov, Russia Men’s Trap GOLD—Josip Glasnovic, Croatia SILVER—Giovanni Pellielo, Italy BRONZE—Edward Ling, Britain SWIMMING Men’s 200 Freestyle GOLD—Sun Yang, China SILVER—Chad Guy Bertrand le Clos, South Africa BRONZE—Conor Dwyer, United States Men’s 100 Backstroke GOLD—Ryan Murphy, United States SILVER—Xu Jiayu, China BRONZE—David Plummer, United States Women’s 100 Backstroke GOLD—Katinka Hosszu, Hungary SILVER—Kathleen Baker, United States BRONZE—Kylie Masse, Canada BRONZE—Yuanhui Fu, China Women’s 100 Breaststroke GOLD—Lillia King, United States SILVER—Yulia Efimova, Russia BRONZE—Catherine Meili, United States WEIGHTLIFTING Men’s 62kg GOLD—Oscar Albeiro Figueroa Mosquera, Colombia SILVER—Eko Yuli Irawan, Indonesia BRONZE—Farkhad Kharki, Kazakhstan Women’s 58kg GOLD—Sukanya Srisurat, Thailand SILVER—Pimsiri Sirikaew, Thailand BRONZE—Kuo Hsing-Chun, Taiwan Monday’s scores BASKETBALL Men Australia 95, Serbia 80 United States 113, Venezuela 69 France 88, China 60 Women United States 103, Spain 63 Canada 71, Serbia 67 Japan 82, Brazil 66 China 101, Senegal 64 FIELD HOCKEY Men Germany 2, India 1 Argentina 3, Canada 1 Women United States 2, Australia 1 Germany 2, New Zealand 1 Netherlands 4, South Korea 0 Britain 3, India 0 China 2, Spain 0 Argentina 4, Japan 0 RUGBY Women 11th Place Kenya 22, Colombia 10 Ninth Place Brazil 33, Japan 5 Placing 5-8 France 24, Spain 12 United States 12, Fiji 7 Semifinals Australia 17, Canada 5 New Zealand 25, Britain 7 Seventh Place Spain 21, Fiji 0 Fifth Place United States 19, France 5 Bronze Medal Canada 33, Britain 10 Gold Medal Australia 24, New Zealand 17 TEAM HANDBALL Women Sweden 31, South Korea 28 Russia 26, France 25 Norway 27, Spain 24 Brazil 26, Romania 13 Netherlands 26, Argentina 18 Angola 27, Montenegro 25 VOLLEYBALL Women China 3, Italy 0 (25-21, 25-21, 25-16) Japan 3, Cameroon 0 (25-20, 25-15, 2517) United States 3, Netherlands 2 (18-25, 25-18, 21-25, 25-20, 15-8) Serbia 3, Puerto Rico 0 (29-27, 25-18, 25-20) Russia 3, South Korea 1 (25-23, 23-25, 25-23, 25-14) Brazil 3, Argentina 0 (25-16, 25-19, 2511) WATER POLO Men Serbia 9, Greece 9 Italy 11, France 8 Spain 10, United States 9 Australia 9, Hungary 9 Brazil 16, Japan 8 Croatia 8, Montenegro 7 Monday’s results DIVING Men’s Synchronised 10m Platform Final 1. China (Lin Yue; Chen Aisen), 496.98. 2. United States (David Boudia; Steele Johnson), 457.11. 3. Britain (Thomas Daley; Daniel Goodfellow), 444.45. 4. Germany (Patrick Hausding; Sascha Klein), 438.42. 5. Mexico (Ivan Garcia; German Sanchez), 423.30. 6. Ukraine (Maksym Dolgov; Oleksandr Gorshkovozov), 421.98. 7. Russia (Viktor Minibaev; Nikita Shleikher), 417.57. 8. Brazil (Hugo Parisi; Jackson Rondinelli), 368.52. FENCING Women’s Sabre Individual Quarterfinals Sofya Velikaya, Russia, def. Cecilia Berder, France, 15-10. Manon Brunet, France, def. Azza Besbes, Tunisia, 15-14. Yana Egorian, Russia, def. Ekaterina Dyachenko, Russia, 15-10. Olga Kharlan, Ukraine, def. Loreta Gulotta, Italy, 15-4. Semifinal 1 Sofya Velikaya, Russia, def. Manon Brunet, France, 15-14. Semifinal 2 Yana Egorian, Russia, def. Olga Kharlan, Ukraine, 15-9. Bronze Medal Olga Kharlan, Ukraine, def. Manon Brunet, France, 15-10. Gold Medal Yana Egorian, Russia, def. Sofya Velikaya, Russia, 15-14. GYMNASTICS (ARTISTIC) Men’s Team Final 1. Japan (Ryohei Kato; Yusuke Tanaka; Koji Yamamuro; Kenzo Shirai; Kohei Uchimura), 274.094. 2. Russia (Denis Abliazin; Nikolai Kuksenkov; Ivan Stretovich; David Belyavskiy; Nikita Nagornyy), 271.453. 3. China (Yang Liu; Chaopan Lin; Chenglong Zhang; Shudi Deng; Hao You), 271.122. 4. Britain (Brinn Bevan; Kristian Thomas; Nile Wilson; Louis Smith; Max Whitlock), 269.752. 5. United States (Christopher Brooks; Danell Leyva; Alexander Naddour; Jacob Dalton; Samuel Mikulak), 268.560. 6. Brazil (Arthur Zanetti; Diego Hypolito; Sergio Sasaki; Arthur Mariano; Francisco Barretto Junior), 263.728. 7. Germany (Andreas Bretschneider; Fabian Hambuechen; Andreas Toba; Lukas Dauser; Marcel Nguyen), 261.275. 8. Ukraine (Vladyslav Hryko; Oleg Verniaiev; Igor Radivilov; Maksym Semiankiv; Andrii Sienichkin), 202.078. JUDO Men -73 kg Quarterfinals Dirk van Tichelt, Belgium, def. Denis Iartcev, Russia, Yuko, De-ashi-barai, 5:00. Shohei Ono, Japan, def. Lasha Shavdatuashvili, Georgia, Wazari, Koshi-guruma, 5:00. Rustam Orujov, Azerbaijan, def. Miklos Ungvari, Hungary, Wazari, Undetermined Nage-waza, 5:00. Sagi Muki, Israel, def. Nicholas Delpopolo, United States, Ippon, Osoto-gari, 3:51. Repechage Lasha Shavdatuashvili, Georgia, def. Denis Iartcev, Russia, Ippon, 4:44. Miklos Ungvari, Hungary, def. Nicholas Delpopolo, United States, Penalty, Non-Combativity, 5:00. Semifinals Shohei Ono, Japan, def. Dirk van Tichelt, Belgium, Ippon, Tomoe-nage, 3:57. Rustam Orujov, Azerbaijan, def. Sagi Muki, Israel, Yuko, Osoto-gari, 5:00. Bronze Medal A Lasha Shavdatuashvili, Georgia, def. Sagi Muki, Israel, Ippon, Kosoto-gake, 3:16. Bronze Medal B Dirk van Tichelt, Belgium, def. Miklos Ungvari, Hungary, Ippon, Ude-hishigijuji-gatame, 1:49. Gold Medal Shohei Ono, Japan, def. Rustam Orujov, Azerbaijan, Ippon, Ko-uchi-makikomi, 3:15. Women -57 kg Quarterfinals Sumiya Dorjsuren, Mongolia, def. Telma Monteiro, Portugal, Penalty, HoldTrouser-Leg, 1:56. Kaori Matsumoto, Japan, def. Automne Pavia, France, Wazari, Sode-tsurikomigoshi, 4:00. Rafaela Silva, Brazil, def. Hedvig Karakas, Hungary, Wazari, Tani-otoshi, 3:59. Corina Caprioriu, Romania, def. ChenLing Lien, Taiwan, Ippon, De-ashi-barai, 0:37. Repechage Telma Monteiro, Portugal, def. Automne Pavia, France, Ippon, Ude-hishigijuji-gatame, 1:01. Chen-Ling Lien, Taiwan, def. Hedvig Karakas, Hungary, Yuko, Uchi-mata, 4:00. Semifinals Sumiya Dorjsuren, Mongolia, def. Kaori Matsumoto, Japan, Ippon, Seoi-nage, 0:24. Rafaela Silva, Brazil, def. Corina Caprioriu, Romania, Wazari, Osoto-gari, 4:00. Bronze Medal A Telma Monteiro, Portugal, def. Corina Caprioriu, Romania, Yuko, Tomoe-nage, 4:00. Bronze Medal B Kaori Matsumoto, Japan, def. ChenLing Lien, Taiwan, Yuko, Ko-uchi-makikomi, 4:00. Gold Medal Rafaela Silva, Brazil, def. Sumiya Dorjsuren, Mongolia, Wazari, Sumi-otoshi, 4:00. SHOOTING Men’s 10m Air Rifle Finals 1. Niccolo Campriani, Italy, 206.1. 2. Serhiy Kulish, Ukraine, 204.6. 3. Vladimir Maslennikov, Russia, 184.2. 4. Abhinav Bindra, India, 163.8. 5. Peter Sidi, Hungary, 142.7. 6. Illia Charheika, Belarus, 121.6. 7. Petar Gorsa, Croatia, 101.0. 8. Oleh Tsarkov, Ukraine, 79.7. Men’s Trap Semifinals 1. Josip Glasnovic, Croatia, 15 (QG). 2. Giovanni Pellielo, Italy, 14 (QG). 3. David Kostelecky, Czech Republic, 13 (QB). 4. Edward Ling, Britain, 12 (QB). 5. Ahmed Kamar, Egypt, 12. 6. Massimo Fabbrizi, Italy, 11. Bronze Medal Match Edward Ling, Britain, def. David Kostelecky, Czech Republic, 13-9. Gold Medal Match Josip Glasnovic, Croatia, def. Giovanni Pellielo, Italy, 13-13 (4-3 remarks). SWIMMING Men 200m Freestyle Final 1. Yang Sun, China, 1:44.65. 2. Chad Guy Bertrand le Clos, South Africa, 1:45.20. 3. Conor Dwyer, United States, 1:45.23. 4. James Guy, Britain, 1:45.49. 5. Francis Haas, United States, 1:45.58. 6. Paul Biedermann, Germany, 1:45.84. 7. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:45.90. 8. Aleksandr Krasnykh, Russia, 1:45.91. 100m Backstroke Final 1. Ryan Murphy, United States, 51.97. 2. Jiayu Xu, China, 52.31. 3. David Plummer, United States, 52.40. 4. Mitchell Larkin, Australia, 52.43. 5. Camille Lacourt, France, 52.70. 6. Evgeny Rylov, Russia, 52.74. 7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 53.42. 8. Robert Glinta, Romania, 53.50. Women 100m Breaststroke Final 1. Lillia King, United States, 1:04.93. 2. Yulia Efimova, Russia, 1:05.50. 3. Catherine Meili, United States, 1:05.69. 4. Jinglin Shi, China, 1:06.37. 5. Rachel Nicol, Canada, 1:06.68. 6. Hrafnhildur Luthersdottir, Iceland, 1:07.18. 7. Ruta Meilutyte, Lithuania, 1:07.32. 8. Alia Atkinson, Jamaica, 1:08.10. 100m Backstroke Final 1. Katinka Hosszu, Hungary, 58.45. 2. Kathleen Baker, United States, 58.75. 3. Kylie Masse, Canada, 58.76. 3. Yuanhui Fu, China, 58.76. 5. Mie Nielsen, Denmark, 58.80. 6. Olivia Smoliga, United States, 58.95. 7. Emily Seebohm, Australia, 59.19. 8. Madison Wilson, Australia, 59.23. WEIGHTLIFTING Men’s 62kg Group A Final 1. Oscar Albeiro Figueroa Mosquera, Colombia (142-176), 318 kg.-701 pounds. 2. Eko Yuli Irawan, Indonesia (142-170), 312 kg.-687 pounds. 3. Farkhad Kharki, Kazakhstan (135170), 305 kg.-672 pounds. 4. Yoichi Itokazu, Japan (133-169), 302 kg.-665 pounds. 5. Ahmed Saad, Egypt (133-161), 294 kg.-648 pounds. 6. Morea Baru, Papua New Guinea (126-164), 290 kg.-639 pounds. 7. Muhamad Hasbi, Indonesia (130160), 290 kg.-639 pounds. 8. Myeongmok Han, South Korea (130150), 280 kg.-617 pounds. 9. Lijun Chen, China, DNF. Women’s 58kg Group A Final 1. Sukanya Srisurat, Thailand (110130), 240 kg.-529 pounds. 2. Pimsiri Sirikaew, Thailand (102-130), 232 kg.-511 pounds. 3. Hsing-Chun Kuo, Taiwan (102-129), 231 kg.-509 pounds. 4. Maria Alexandra Escobar Guerrero, Ecuador (100-123), 223 kg.-491 pounds. 5. Mikiko Andoh, Japan (94-124), 218 kg.-480 pounds. 6. Yuderqui Maridalia Contreras, Dominican Republic (100-117), 217 kg.-478 pounds. 7. Lina Marcela Rivas Ordonez, Colombia (96-120), 216 kg.-476 pounds. 8. Monica Patricia Dominguez Lara, Mexico (96-115), 211 kg.-465 pounds. 9. Yusleidy Mariana Figueroa Roldan, Venezuela (85-116), 201 kg.-443 pounds. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 29 OLYMPICS Women’s rugby Aussies win 1st gold BY JOHN P YE Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — The first Olympic rugby gold medal in 92 years has gone to a group of Australian women that includes a mechanic, an elite former sprinter and a 21-year-old newcomer who has traveled around Rio de Janeiro carrying an inflatable kangaroo. Australia absorbed an expected early battering from New Zealand and conceded an early try before responding with four consecutive tries to win the women’s rugby sevens final 24-17 on Monday. “It was a typical trans-Tasman battle,” Australia co-captain Shannon Parry said, referring to the intense sporting rivalry between her country and neighboring New Zealand. “Very excited, very elated with what we’ve achieved.” The sevens world series-winning Australian women extended their streak to five straight wins against 2013 World Cup winner New Zealand, quite a change in fortune in the broader rugby context. Australia’s men’s team, the Wallabies, have struggled against New Zealand’s famous All Blacks for more than a decade in the traditional 15-a-side game. The All Blacks have not only retained the Bledisloe Cup, they’ve also won two World Cups — beating Australia in the final last year. The women’s sevens team usurped New Zealand in the rankings, winning the world series for the first time last season. The Australian Rugby Union put them on contracts, set up an academy for sevens and allowed them to train as professional athletes. “When I started the game, women’s rugby in Australia wasn’t very big,” Parry said. “It was very much a minority sport. “To think, eight years down the track, I’m an Olympian, I play rugby as a full-time job. I just think how far the game has gone.” Rugby is back in the Olympics for the first time since 1924, but in the condensed sevens format and with women competing for the first time. Canada beat Britain 33-10 for bronze, avenging a 22-0 loss the previous day at the end of the pool stage. The United States beat France 19-5, after a come-from-behind 12-7 win over Fiji, to secure fifth place. It was all going New Zealand’s way when Kayla McAlister scored the first try, but the Australians rallied with tries from THEMBA H ADEBE /AP Australia’s Evania Pelite, right, scores a try as New Zealand’s Kelly Brazier, chases during the women’s rugby sevens gold medal match Monday. Australia won 24-17. Emma Tonegato and Evania Pelite before halftime. Tonegato’s early equalizer was contentious as she crashed over near the corner flag, but referee Alhambra Nievas awarded the try after checking with both assistant referees. A yellow card for New Zealand star Portia Woodman resulted in a significant momentum swing for the Australians. Pelite ran on to a long, floating pass from Alicia Quirk and scored out wide on the stroke of halftime, moments after For US cyclists, fourth place feels like curse Harrington happy to make golf field BY DOUG FERGUSON Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — Padraig Harrington was a strong voice in golf’s bid to become an Olympic sport for the first time in more than a century. And then golf’s image took a hit as players began dropping out, and the Irishman went quiet. He desperately wanted golf to succeed, and that meant unified support from the top players. But as they began pulling out — particularly Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland — it became personal. Without players withdrawing, he wouldn’t have a chance to play. “I was wearing two hats when it came to this,” Harrington said. “Obviously, I want golf to be a success in the Olympics, but I clearly wanted to go. So I wasn’t jumping up and down saying, ‘Guys, you should all go.’ I was staying out of it. Because it is a dream of mine.” It became a reality when Harrington arrived in Rio de Janeiro on Monday and the draw was announced for the 72-hole competition that starts Thursday and concludes with the first medals awarded since 1904 in St. Louis. Harrington will be part of the second group out, along with Italy’s Matteo Manassero and Danny Lee of New Zealand. Golf began its bid process in April 2008, about the time Harrington soared to his greatest heights. He repeated as British Open champion, and then won the PGA Championship to become the first European to win back-toback majors in the modern lineup of Grand Slam events. Harrington joined the biggest names in golf — Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Annika Sorenstam — in a strong pitch to the IOC to put golf back in the program. But when the Rio Games rolled around, Harrington was nowhere close to qualifying because of three Irish golfers well ahead of him in the world ranking. And then McIlroy pulled out, citing the Zika virus. Graeme McDowell withdrew because his wife is due with their second child and he didn’t want to be out of the country. Shane Lowry also withdrew. And now Harrington, the most famous of all Irish golfers, is at the Olympics. He hadn’t even met the other Irish qualifier, Seamus Powers, who plays on the Web.com Tour. But he is thrilled to have him as a teammate. Why are the Olympics so important? Why would a three-time major champion care more about gold than the silver claret jug or Wanamaker Trophy? That dates to his teenage years, when Harrington was starting to blossom in golf and was invited to three or four banquets each winter that honor the best sporting achievements in Ireland and feature the heroes of Irish sport over the years. “Every sports awards I went to from 15 years of age, the first man they called out was a guy named Ronnie Delany, who won the 1,500 gold medal in 1956,” he said. “Every sports award. That’s how big a deal it is. I sat there and looked up and this guy ... who is this guy? It’s a huge deal in Ireland.” Harrington can recite the Irish Woodman was sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on. When Ellia Green and Charlotte Caslick scored to lift Australia’s lead to 24-5, the final was as good as won. New Zealand cut the margin with a second try for McAlister and another for Woodman, her 10th of the tournament. “It’s an international fact that New Zealand and Aussie are just really good at competing against each other,” Woodman said. “They love it, and rugby’s in our genes, and we knew they were going to bring it.” BY DAVE SKRETTA Associated Press TONY G UTIERREZ /AP Padraig Harrington was a strong voice in golf’s bid to become an Olympic sport for the first time in more than a century, but it took a number of withdrawals for him to get into the Rio field. history in the Olympics, from Delany’s gold medal in Melbourne to Pat O’Callaghan’s two golds in boxing in 1928 and 1932, Bob Tisdall in the 1932 Olympics for the 400-meter hurdles, even Jack Butler Yeats winning a silver in mixed painting, when art competitions were part of the Games. He even chose to sacrifice his standing on the PGA Tour. Harrington played the Travelers Championship in Connecticut, failing in his bid to move into the top 125 in the FedEx Cup. There are two events remaining, but he’ll be in Rio — playing one week, watching the next. “I normally come back and would play, but I think so much of the Olympics, I’m going to take a week’s holiday and go to a number of events,” Harrington said. “It’s an opportunity of a lifetime to really have a great week’s holiday the second week. The first week will be all business but hopefully the second week we’ll have a good week.” RIO DE JANEIRO — One long-held truism of the Olympics is there are no medals for fourth place, only the crushing disappointment of coming oh-so-close to a life-changing step up the podium. If there were, the U.S. road cycling team would feel much better about the Summer Games. There have been six road cycling events the past two Olympics, including the men’s and women’s road races over the weekend. Three times the Americans have finished fourth, including the stirring and heartbreaking finish by Mara Abbott along Copacabana Beach on Sunday. After animating the race on the final climb of Vista Chinesa, and sweeping into the lead when Dutch rider Annemiek van Vleuten crashed hard on the descent, Abbott tried in vain to hold onto a slim advantage against three strong riders working together to catch her. They reached her within sight of the finish line. “I knew it was probably going to come down to the wire,” Abbott said later. “I just didn’t know which side.” The two-man squad of Taylor Phinney and Brent Bookwalter hardly had aspirations in their race Saturday. The course suited neither and Phinney pulled out midway through to save himself for the time trial, though Bookwalter still finished 16th in what he considered a positive result. Still, it left the Americans ruing their misfortunes. ‘ It feels awful. ’ Mara Abbott US cyclist who finished fourth in Rio women’s road race At the London Games four years ago, Phinney was beaten by Alexander Kristoff in a sprint to the finish at Buckingham Palace for bronze. Four days later, he posted the fourth-fastest mark in the time trial at Hampton Court Palace to again finish just off the podium. That in part is why Phinney, a cycling world champion, skipped the Tour de France and spent the past six weeks training specifically for Wednesday’s time trial. “It was a tough decision to pull out (Saturday) but I ultimately came to the conclusion that I’m here to win a medal in the time trial,” he said. “I’m not just here for the Olympic experience.” The U.S. road team hasn’t struck out entirely. Kristin Armstrong won the past two Olympic time trials, and came out of retirement to chase a third. The American women’s road team was favored to win gold, but mostly because of the world’s topranked rider, Megan Guarnier, and world hour-record holder Evelyn Stevens. Yet the hard course with its brutal ascents was tailored perfectly for Abbott, one of the sport’s strongest climbers. It proved to be another gutpunch for the U.S. team. “It feels awful,” Abbott said, “but at the same time, you’re supported by a team that’s worked so hard to help you win. We had a really amazing team here.” PAGE 30 F3HIJKLM •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Wednesday, August 10, 2016 OLYMPICS Boxing USA’s Hernandez stuns Russian star BY GREG BEACHAM Associated Press JULIO C ORTEZ /AP American Chris Brooks performs on the parallel bars during the artistic gymnastics men’s team final Monday in Rio de Janeiro. The team finished in fifth place, just as it did in London in 2012. Déjà vu for American men In a repeat of London, gymnastics team stumbles into 5th place BY K RISTIE R IEKEN Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — It was 2012 all over again for the Americans on Monday in the Rio Games. Just as in London, they followed a great performance in the preliminaries of the team competition with a terrible start to the finals and finished fifth. “In a lot of ways, these guys performed better than I feel we did in London,” coach Mark Wiliams said. “We fought through everything and there’s no giving up. Gymnastics is hard and there are a lot of good teams out there on the men’s side.” Four years ago things went wrong when they started on the pommel horse and two of them fell. On Monday it was the floor exercise that put the team in a big hole early with both Alex Naddour and Sam Mikulak stepping out of bounds during their routines. “It’s obviously tough whenever you start from behind, but that’s kind of the Team USA motto to never give up, never quit, fight until the end,” Chris Brooks said. “So we just tried to rally together and get the ball rolling.” They were able to do that, turning in solid performances on the rings, vault and parallel bars to put them within striking distance of a medal. Only the horizontal bar was left and Danell Leyva knew he had to be aggressive to give the team a chance. Instead of sticking his routine, he missed a connection, leaving the Americans in fifth place once more. “We started it off a little rough but we were picking it up toward the end,” Leyva said. “I was the one who messed it up at the end. RIO DE JANEIRO — Nico Hernandez realized the enormous odds he faced when he stepped in the ring with Russia’s Vasilii Egorov, the second-seeded light flyweight in the Olympic boxing tournament. Those odds were nothing that a fighter from Wichita couldn’t overcome with a little help from an Irish coach. Hernandez pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the Olympics’ first three days on Monday night with a unanimous decision over Egorov, the European champion and runner-up at last year’s world championships. “I knew he was one of the top seeds, and I knew I wasn’t expected to win,” said Hernandez, a 20-year-old former cross-country runner who trains back home in Kansas with his father, Lewis. “It feels great. This is definitely a booster for me, for my confidence. I knew I could do it. I just had to be on my top game tonight.” Hernandez flawlessly executed a game plan put together by veteran amateur coach Billy Walsh, who has been in charge of the U.S. program since late last year. Walsh predicted Egorov would throw a high volume of wild punches, and he instructed Hernandez to block the big shots before countering with his own combinations and body shots. For almost every moment of the three-round fight, Hernandez did what Walsh asked. He slowed in the third round against Egorov’s increasingly desperate onslaught, but still won 29-28 on all three cards. “You can have all the skills or all the plans in the world, but if ‘You can have all the skills or all the plans in the world, but if this guy doesn’t implement it, it looks like a disaster. Nico followed all of the plans, and he was brilliant. ’ Billy Walsh Hernandez’s coach this guy doesn’t implement it, it looks like a disaster,” Walsh said. “Today and in his first fight, Nico followed all of the plans, and he was brilliant. He got the rewards, and now we’re in the top eight.” Hernandez has won two fights in the first three days of the Olympic tournament, putting him one win away from a medal. He fights Ecuador’s Carlos Quipo on Wednesday, with the winner guaranteed at least a bronze. That’s remarkable progress for a fighter who wasn’t among most prognosticators’ medal picks — and for a team that was widely expected to struggle again in Rio after the U.S. men left London with no medals for the first time. Hernandez has been steadily improving in the year since he lost in the first round of the world championships in Qatar to Brendan Irvine, the Irish boxer who was then coached by Walsh. “We devised a plan to beat him then, but when we came in (to the U.S. team), very quickly he learned and adapted,” Walsh said. “We’ve built a relationship, and we’ve got confidence in each other.” D MITRI L OVETSKY/AP The USA’s Danell Leyva is checked by a team official after falling while performing on the horizontal bar. I just slipped on the bar. I really tried grabbing on and holding on as much as I could but my grip was off, like it was not on the bar, and that’s why it slipped off.” It was a day that illustrated the rapidly increasing gap between the U.S. men’s and women’s teams. While the women are overwhelming favorites to win their second straight team gold, the men have slipped to the middle of the pack after winning team medals in 2004 and 2008. Williams watched the American women dominate the field in qualifying on Sunday night and hoped it would give his group a boost. “Looking at the results obviously they’re doing the right things and they looked fantastic last night,” Williams said. “That was one of the best gymnastics meets I’ve ever watched. We’ve got to come out and be on fire as well.” The gymnasts weren’t really interested in comparing what happened in London to Monday’s performance. But Leyva summed up the feelings of most of the guys rather succinctly. “It feels equally bad,” he said. Despite the disappointing finish the men were happy with their effort and looked forward to better results in the individual events. “Even though we didn’t get the placement that we wanted it was fun. We had fun down there,” Brooks said. “We were supporting each other. We were competing with everything we had. It’s gymnastics — sometimes it doesn’t go your way, sometimes you need a little bit of luck. But I had a great time.” Naddour completely agreed with his teammate and had a smile on his face as he described the day. “Fifth in the world,” he said. “It’s still pretty good.” FRANK FRANKLIN II/AP The United States’ Nico Miguel Hernandez, left, fights Russia’s Vasilii Egorov during a men’s light flyweight 49-kg match Monday. Hernandez fights Ecudador’s Carlos Quipo on Wednesday. •STA Wednesday, August 10, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S F3HIJKLM • PAGE 31 OLYMPICS Americans add to haul with huge night at pool BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press MICHAEL SOHN /AP The United States’ Ryan Murphy shows off his gold medal after the men’s 100-meter backstroke Monday in Rio de Janeiro. RIO DE JANEIRO — This one will surely be seen as a victory for clean athletes over the dopers. No doubt, that was Lilly King’s take. The feisty American stared down Yulia Efimova, a swimmer at the center of Russia’s doping scandal, and then beat her in the pool Monday night. King could hardly contain her satisfaction at capturing gold in the 100-meter breaststroke — especially given who was in the next lane. “It just proves you can compete clean and still come out on top with all the hard work you put in behind the scenes, behind the meet, at practice and weight sessions,” the 19-year-old Indiana University student said giddily. “There is a way to become the best and do it the right way.” Efimova arrived in Rio as one of the symbols of the massive Russian doping operation, an athlete who had already served a 16-month suspension and tested positive again this year for the now-banned substance meldonium. Efimova was initially banned from the Olympics, but that decision was overturned on appeal. King took umbrage at Efimova’s No. 1 finger wag during the semifinals, and the bad blood carried over to the final. After glaring at Efimova in the ready room and giving her a look of disdain on deck, King led all the way to take the gold in 1 minute, 4.93 seconds. Efimova settled for the silver, more than a half-second behind. The bronze went to another American, Katie Meili. King’s victory highlighted another big night for the Americans, who also extended their domination in the men’s 100 backstroke with Ryan Murphy’s victory and wound up with six medals in all. Murphy was fourth at the turn, but rallied on the return lap to give the Americans their sixth straight gold medal in the 100 back. Their last loss came at the 1992 Barcelona Games. M ARTIN MEISSNER /AP Defending gold medalist Missy Franklin failed to qualify for the final of the women’s 200-meter freestyle, finishing last in her semifinal. For good measure, David Plummer — a 30-yearold Olympic rookie — claimed the bronze. Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu became the first twotime gold medalist at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium, adding the women’s 100 backstroke title to her world-record victory in the 400 individual medley. The silver went to American Kathleen Baker. In another result sure to stir the doping debate, China’s Sun Yang captured gold in the men’s 200 free. Two years ago, he served a three-month suspension for taking a banned stimulant. Conor Dwyer took the bronze, adding to the U.S. medal haul. Even on a red, white and blue night at the pool, Missy Franklin endured another stunning disappointment. The darling of the London Games failed to qualify for the final of the 200 freestyle, extending a mystifying loss of form since turning pro last summer. Franklin finished last in her semifinal heat with only the 13th-fastest time among 16 swimmers. Good: King backed up her criticism of Efimova by beating her FROM BACK PAGE that it was spontaneous, and seemed to come straight from the heart. And then she backed it up with a swim for the gold. An Olympic record swim for the gold, just to put an exclamation point on the night. “I do think it’s a victory for clean sport to show you can do it after competing clean all your life,” King said. That Efimova was even swimming in the lane next to King was puzzling to begin with. She was one of seven Russian swimmers originally banned after the International Olympic Committee ruled that past Russian dopers could not compete. Yet there she was in the pool, trying desperately to overcome King’s early lead. There she was on the medal stand, with the silver medal hanging around her neck. She was a double juicer, banned for 16 months after testing positive for an anabolic steroid in 2013 and for meldonium in March of this year. Yet somehow international swimming officials found a way to let her compete. King didn’t think that was right. Neither did another swimmer who has won more Olympic medals than anyone while competing clean. Michael Phelps has seen the same kind of thing. He has had the same kind of doubts. And he applauded King as much for LEE JIN - MAN /AP The United States’ Lilly King, left, and Russia’s Yulia Efimova compete in the final of the women’s 100-meter breaststroke Monday at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. what she did speaking out as what she did in the pool. “I think you’re going to probably see a lot of people speaking out more,” Phelps said. “I think she’s right. I think something needs to be done. It’s kind of sad today in sports in general, not just in swimming, there are people who are testing positive who are allowed back in the sport and multiple times. It kind of breaks what sport is meant to be and that’s what pisses me off.” King didn’t just call Efimova out, she stared her down before the two took to the blocks for their race. Things were just as icy afterward, as Efimova stood alone with her silver medal with no congratulations from King or her teammate, bronze medalist Katie Meili. “If she was wishing to be congratulated, I apologize. She had a fantastic swim,” King said at a press conference afterward where Efimova tried to defend herself against the doping charges. If the IOC hadn’t bowed down to the Russians to begin with last month, there would have been no such drama. While the Russian track and field team was banned from the games, most of the country’s other athletes were allowed to attend, including some who have had positive doping tests. That didn’t sit well with King, who doesn’t compromise on the issue. Asked if U.S. sprinter Justin Gatlin should be on the team after two drug suspensions, she didn’t back off. “Do I think people who have been caught for doping offenses should be on the team? No I don’t,” she said. “It should be set in stone. There should be no bouncing back and forth.” Simple words, spoken from the heart. King is not only a clean athlete, but now an Olympic champion. And that’s something to wag a finger about. STA R S A N D ST R I P E S Wednesday, August 10, 2016 F3HIJKLM SPORTS Lucky seven Giants’ Crawford first with seven hits in 41 years » MLB, Page 24 OLYMPICS Commentary IT’S GOOD TO BE KING Gold medal is a win for all clean athletes BY TIM DAHLBERG Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO wagging finger. A stunning swim. And with that, a win for clean athletes everywhere in an Olympics where no one is sure the playing field is really level. Yes, Lilly King is quite a swimmer. The gold medal hanging around her neck Monday night was evidence enough of that. But the brash 19-year-old from Indiana was much more than that on an electric night at the Olympic pool, where she held off Russian Yulia Efimova in a 100-meter breaststroke showdown that was loaded with overtones of a new doping Cold War. A day after calling Efimova out for doping, she backed up her words with a spectacular performance in the pool. In doing so she showed more courage in 100 meters than Olympic officials have shown in the last 100 days. “I basically said what everybody thinks,” King said. The day before she had wagged her finger from just off the pool deck to a televised shot of Efimova celebrating her win in a semifinal heat. On national TV she explained what she was thinking — and she did it in no uncertain words. On the eve of the biggest race of her life, King wasn’t afraid to take a stand. “You just got caught for drug cheating. I’m not a fan,” King said. It was a bold statement, the kind you never hear from athletes in the heat of competition. What made it even better was A SEE GOOD ON PAGE 31 Inside: PHOTOS BY M ATT SLOCUM /AP Above: The United States’ Lilly King celebrates winning the gold medal in the women’s 100-meter breaststroke Monday at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Inset: Russia’s Yulia Efimova was reduced to tears after settling for the silver medal. Bosa only drafted player still unsigned » NFL, Page 26 US men fifth in team gymnastics, Page 30 Australia women take gold in rugby, Page 29 US men’s basketball team cruises, Page 27