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Sunday, June 30, 2024

Twins' Trevor Larnach working hard to establish foothold in majors - Star Tribune

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SEATTLE – Trevor Larnach, a former first-round pick, felt he was at a make-or-break point in his career during the offseason. He was left off the Twins' 2023 postseason roster and he fell below other corner outfielders on the organizational depth chart.

Whether his future was with the Twins or another team, he knew he needed to play better. He had only shown small glimpses of success in the big leagues.

"There is nothing more frustrating," Larnach said, "than reaching your dream and seeing it slip away and not knowing why."

Larnach decided he needed to make some changes as he entered the offseason. He changed agents, joining the Bledsoe Agency, which has a training facility for its clients outside of Nashville. Larnach, from the Bay Area in California, committed to changing the foundation of his batting stance, working on swinging without taking a stride forward.

He remembers walking into the Nashville facility for the first time and thinking to himself, "Oh, man, I hope I made the right decision."

"It was definitely a leap of faith, dude," Larnach said. "The thing I love about them is they don't work with people outside of the agency. You have to commit to the agency to be able to work there. ... That was my type of environment. It reminded me a lot of college. Guys on the same page trying to work hard and achieve what their goals are."

Larnach, 27, has turned into an everyday starter against righthanded pitching, splitting time between left field and designated hitter while playing through turf toe in his right foot. He entered Saturday night's game at Seattle with roughly league-average offensive production (.720 OPS). He had a .297 on-base percentage with seven homers, seven doubles and 25 RBI in 48 games.

There are metrics that paint Larnach as one of the unluckiest players in the league with how hard he is hitting the ball. His average exit velocity is 92.4 mph — StatCast classifies 95 mph as a hard-hit ball — which puts him in the 92nd percentile in the majors. He has cut his strikeout rate almost in half compared to last year, but he has a .268 batting average on balls in play, which is almost 40 points below his career norm.

"It doesn't make it easy," Larnach said. "At the end of the day, up here is about production."

Twins manager Rocco Baldelli added: "It can be frustrating when you're doing everything you can and you're whacking the ball all around the park and you're not getting any hits. I think he's in a good place, and he's doing exactly what we're hoping for him to be doing. Keep hitting the ball like that and some really positive things are always going to come your way."

Larnach planned to carry his no-stride swing into the season, but he naturally added a small step during spring training. He feels more in control of his body, enabling him to wait another split-second on pitches, which in turn has cut down on his swings and misses.

Part of Larnach's routine in batting practice is beginning with medium-strength line drives to the opposite field, sometimes his first 15-20 swings. It's something Larnach incorporated after spending some time working with Torii Hunter and Matt Kemp in Texas over the offseason at Royce Lewis' invitation.

"I did the whole pull-side homers thing the past three years," Larnach said. "I found that it pushes my point of contact up more. I'm already, I think, pretty good with the fastball. If I'm doing that in a controlled environment, it's pushing my contact point out and it leaves me less of a chance to hit something slower the other way."

The scouting report against Larnach over the past three seasons was to pound him with slower pitches. Every year, fewer than half the pitches he saw were fastballs.

"It was frustrating because I wasn't fooled," said Larnach, the No. 20 overall pick in the 2018 draft out of Oregon State. "I was pretty well aware they were going to do that. When I knew that stuff was coming and I still couldn't hit it. ... Trust me, I did a lot of things that I possibly could in the past to try to negate that. It takes time and understanding."

The Twins initially viewed Larnach as a depth option entering the season, behind fellow lefthanded hitters and former first-round picks Matt Wallner and Alex Kirilloff. There wasn't even much of a competition in spring training.

That wasn't the only reason he felt he needed to implement changes in the offseason.

"Guys come in and do well, they deserve that," he said. "I wasn't just thinking my time here. I was just thinking my entire career."

The Twins expect Larnach's luck to change. He is making too much hard contact not to have better numbers eventually.

For Larnach, now that he's back in the big leagues and receiving another opportunity, he's showing his offseason changes are paying off for him.

"It's not that I wanted to switch agencies — it's a tough thing to do," Larnach said. "You grow a bond. You work with these people. I was at a point where I'm 26, 27. I need to make an adjustment.

"It's a tough thing to do, but you have to take risks. I'm grateful."

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June 30, 2024 at 06:14AM
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Twins' Trevor Larnach working hard to establish foothold in majors - Star Tribune

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Iran will hold a runoff election between a reformist and a hard-liner - NPR

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An Iranian man casts his vote at a polling station in Tehran during Iran's presidential election on Friday.

An Iranian man casts his vote at a polling station in Tehran during the country's presidential election on Friday. Hossein Beris/AFP

Hossein Beris/AFP

Iranians will head back to the polls next week to decide between a reformist and a hard-line conservative for president.

The runoff election comes after the first vote, which took place on Friday, ended with none of the candidates receiving a majority. Under Iranian election law, a candidate must get 50% and one vote in order to secure an outright victory.

But two top contenders did emerge: reformist Masoud Pezeshkian and hardliner Saeed Jalili.

Pezeshkian has called for greater outreach to the outside world as a means of improving Iran’s economy, while Jalili is a former nuclear negotiator with strong anti-Western views.

The two will face off in a second round of voting scheduled for July 5. The snap election is to replace former President Ebrahim Raisi who died in a helicopter crash last month.

In Iran, the supreme leader yields the most power. But the president can still have influence on domestic and some foreign policies.

This upcoming election will be the second presidential runoff in the country's history. The first took place in 2005, when hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won against former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. Iran's critics are quick to note that the country's elections are not free or fair.

How the first vote went

On Friday, Pezeshkian received 10.4 million votes while Jalili trailed with 9.4 million, according to Iran's Islamic Republic News Agency.

As some expected, the hard-line vote was divided, while Pezeshkian is believed to have captured many votes from moderate or reform-minded Iranians.

The election also confirmed widespread disenchantment among voters with the current political process in Iran. Turnout looks to have been a record low in the history of the Islamic Republic, continuing a trend seen in other recent elections.

What's at stake

Prior to President Raisi's death, the hard-liner was viewed as a protégé and possible successor of the 85-year-old supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Now, the prospect of who may replace Khamenei, who holds the power to make the most major decisions in Iran, is even more unclear.

What is apparent is that Khamenei does not support many of the reformist ideas put forth by Pezeshkian, including seeking greater engagement with other countries.

But at large, observers don't predict significant change to come out of this vote. No candidate has proposed policies that would be considered controversial, such as as addressing the strict Islamic dress code for women.

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June 29, 2024 at 10:26PM
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Iran will hold a runoff election between a reformist and a hard-liner - NPR

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Saturday, June 29, 2024

Giants can't make the same 'Hard Knocks' mistake that Jets did - New York Post

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Giants can't make the same 'Hard Knocks' mistake that Jets did

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June 30, 2024 at 01:53AM
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Giants can't make the same 'Hard Knocks' mistake that Jets did - New York Post

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Friday, June 28, 2024

Why it's so hard for Democrats to replace Joe Biden — even after disastrous debate - National Post

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There is no evidence Biden is willing to end his campaign. And it would be nearly impossible for Democrats to replace him unless he chooses to step aside

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President Joe Biden’s halting debate performance has led some in his own party to begin questioning whether he should be replaced on the ballot before November.

There is no evidence Biden is willing to end his campaign. And it would be nearly impossible for Democrats to replace him unless he chooses to step aside.

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Here’s why:

Delegates Biden won in the primaries are bound to support him

Every state has already held its presidential primary. Democratic rules mandate that the delegates Biden won remain bound to support him at the party’s upcoming national convention unless he tells them he’s leaving the race.

Biden indicated that he had no plans to do that, telling supporters in Atlanta shortly after he left the debate stage, “Let’s keep going.” Biden campaign spokesperson Lauren Hitt was even clearer, saying Friday: “Of course he’s not dropping out.”

The conventions and their rules are controlled by the political parties. The Democratic National Committee could convene before the convention opens on Aug. 19 and change how things will work, but that isn’t likely as long as Biden wants to continue seeking reelection.

The current rules read: “Delegates elected to the national convention pledged to a presidential candidate shall in all good conscience reflect the sentiments of those who elected them.”

U.S. President Joe Biden
U.S. President Joe Biden walks off stage during the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Justin Sullivan /Getty Images

VP Kamala Harris couldn’t automatically replace Biden

The vice president is Biden’s running mate, but that doesn’t mean she can swap in for him at the top of the ticket by default. Biden also can’t decree that she replace him should he suddenly decide to leave the race.

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The Democratic National Convention is being held in Chicago, but the party has announced that it will hold a virtual roll call to formally nominate Biden before in-person proceedings begin. The exact date for the roll call has not yet been set.

If Biden opts to abandon his reelection campaign, Harris would likely join other top Democratic candidates looking to replace him. But that would probably create a scenario where she and others end up lobbying individual state delegations at the convention for their support.

That hasn’t happened for Democrats since 1960, when John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson jockeyed for votes during that year’s Democratic convention in Los Angeles.

Donald Trump
Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump participates in the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Justin Sullivan /Getty Images

Other potential Democratic candidates would also face challenges

In addition to the vice president, others that had endorsed Biden in 2024 while harboring their own presidential aspirations for future cycles include California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Illinois Gov. J. B. Pritzker and California Rep. Ro Khanna.

Still others who Biden bested during the party’s 2020 presidential primary could also try again, including Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, as well as Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

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If Biden were to abruptly leave the race, conservative groups have suggested they will file lawsuits around the country, potentially questioning the legality of the Democratic candidate’s name on the ballot.

But Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington, who wrote a book about the presidential nominating process and is also a member of the Democratic National Committee’s rulemaking arm, said that courts have consistently stayed out of political primaries as long as parties running them weren’t doing anything that would contradict other constitutional rights, such as voter suppression based on race.

“This is very clear constitutionally that this is in the party’s purview,” Kamarck said in an interview before the debate. “The business of nominating someone to represent a political party is the business of the political party.”

U.S. presidential debate
Guests at the Old Town Pour House watch a debate between President Joe Biden and presumptive Republican nominee former President Donald Trump on June 27, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. Photo by Scott Olson /Getty Images

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.

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June 28, 2024 at 11:49PM
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Why it's so hard for Democrats to replace Joe Biden — even after disastrous debate - National Post

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House G.O.P. Begins Push on Hard-Right Spending Bills, Teeing Up Future Battles - The New York Times

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The Republican-led House voted on Friday to strip President Biden’s homeland security secretary and secretary of state of their salaries. It approved measures banning military installations from having drag queen story hours for children. And it passed legislation prohibiting paid leave for Pentagon employees who get an abortion.

The provisions were included in three spending bills to fund the Departments of Defense, State and Homeland Security that House Republicans muscled through largely along party lines — even though none of them have any hope of becoming law.

With a government funding deadline looming at the end of September and a high-stakes election in November, lawmakers have entered a period of legislative theatrics, where each chamber is advancing spending bills that the other will never approve.

In the House, for a second year in a row, that has meant that Republican leaders have opened the floodgates to a barrage of conservative priorities. They include defunding initiatives to combat climate change and promote diversity and slashing the budgets of Biden administration officials — sometimes with little resistance from Democrats, who know those proposals will never be enacted.

“None of these bills — none of them — will be signed into law the way they are written right now,” said Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts. “We all know that this is not about serious legislating. This is about show business right now, performing for the most extreme right wing of the Republican base, and it is a waste of time.”

The scenes played out this week in the House, as lawmakers voted on dozens of amendments that presaged the bitter spending fight Congress will take up this fall. The House-passed bills provide a starting marker for bipartisan negotiations, meaning lawmakers will have to yet again bridge a vast chasm between the legislation passed by the Republican-led House and the Democratic-controlled Senate.

In the Senate, Democrats and Republicans are sparring over how to divvy up federal dollars between military and domestic spending. Republicans are seeking a significant increase in money for the military, while Democrats insist that cannot happen without an equivalent increase in domestic spending.

Privately, most appropriators acknowledge that a stopgap, short-term spending bill will most likely be needed to avert a government shutdown at the end of September, punting the debate over federal spending until after the November elections.

Many of the conservative policy riders House Republicans are trying to advance fell out of the spending bills passed this year, after Democrats refused to accept them. The measure targeting drag queen story hours at military bases and another proposal barring the F.B.I. from building a new headquarters in Maryland, for example, were included in the spending bills the House passed last cycle but were ultimately jettisoned by Democrats.

Republicans have insisted they are using their power of the purse to rein in federal agencies that have strayed from their core missions.

“There are some who say cuts of this magnitude jeopardize United States leadership in the world and make us less safe,” Representative Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida said of the State Department bill. “I completely disagree. In fact, it is just the opposite. It eliminates controversial or ineffective programs that American taxpayers do not support and that, quite frankly, our allies and partners don’t support, either.”

House Republicans on Wednesday and Thursday killed a number of divisive amendments offered by their far-right colleagues. Among them were a series of measures that called for ending aid and arms sales to Ukraine, and another proposal — identical to one the House passed last year that was jettisoned in negotiations with the Senate — that would have reduced the salary of Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III to $1.

The legislation approved on Friday would slightly increase funding for the Pentagon, providing a 4.5 percent pay raise for all military personnel while cutting roughly $670 million for anti-climate change and diversity initiatives. It would reduce funding for the State Department and related agencies by 12 percent, and provide a slight boost to funding for the Department of Homeland Security.

“This bill funds the core responsibilities of the department that protects the homeland,” said Representative Mark Amodei, Republican of Nevada. “What it doesn’t do is fund liberal priorities that further contribute to the chaos at our southern border.”

The Pentagon funding bill passed 217 to 198. The legislation to fund the State Department passed 212 to 200. And the bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security passed 212 to 203.

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June 29, 2024 at 12:10AM
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House G.O.P. Begins Push on Hard-Right Spending Bills, Teeing Up Future Battles - The New York Times

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A Minneapolis restaurant was working hard to beautify the neighborhood with flowers. A flower thief was working harder. - Star Tribune

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For weeks, frustrated staff at El Sazon Cocina & Tragos had watched surveillance footage of what appears to be a well-dressed woman tiptoeing around the restaurant's patio at Lyndale Avenue S. to pilfer posies in the dead of night.

Again and again, cameras captured her heading to the same corner, to the same planter, to carry off one of the six attractive flower arrangements that ring the outdoor seating area. Later, the cameras caught her carrying off the replacement flowers. And the replacement flower replacements.

"I don't mean to laugh, because it's kind of upsetting, but it's also ridiculous," said Karen de Leon, who co-owns the restaurant with her husband, Cristian. "A flower is not going to break us, but it's annoying."

Eventually, the restaurant posted an appeal for help on social media before El Sazon's plant replacement budget starts cutting into its delicious taco budget.

"Any ideas on how to stop her???" they asked.

El Sazon's many fans had many ideas. Stakeouts. Booby traps. Burying AirTags in the pots to track them down later. Instead of garden gnomes, someone suggested the restaurant could place photos of the woman from the surveillance tapes in the flower beds.

In the end, the best suggestion came from their friendly neighborhood florists. Bachman's on Lyndale dropped off a gift card to help cover the cost of a replacement for the replacement for the replacement flowers — along with a suggestion: Next time, "maybe try a cactus planter."

"They do such a beautiful job of beautifying the neighborhood," said Karen Bachman Thull, the company's director of marketing and communication. "From one family business to another family business, we just thought it would be nice to support them and continue to support them to beautify the neighborhood."

With any luck, El Sazon's flowers will bloom where they were planted from now on. The mystery figure, in her heels and distinctive denim jacket, has not reappeared on the security cameras since news of the thefts broke. El Sazon's patio is in full bloom.

"Now," de Leon said, "we're just hoping for good weather."

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June 28, 2024 at 06:21AM
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A Minneapolis restaurant was working hard to beautify the neighborhood with flowers. A flower thief was working harder. - Star Tribune

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'It's hard to debate a liar,' Biden tells reporters - MSNBC

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June 28, 202404:56

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04:56

Post-debate President Biden tells reporters 'it's hard to debate a liar' after growing questions about his performance.

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June 28, 2024 at 08:08PM
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'It's hard to debate a liar,' Biden tells reporters - MSNBC

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The real reason Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is working so hard to resist Trump - Fox News

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