Indiana Fever vs. Seattle Storm: TV channel, time, how to watchNew Foto - Indiana Fever vs. Seattle Storm: TV channel, time, how to watch

The Indiana Fever are riding a four-game win streak into Sunday's matchup against theSeattle Storm, which will likely mark the Fever's seventh consecutive game without All-Star guardCaitlin Clarkdue to a right groin injury. The Fever improved to 16-12 on the season and 8-7 without Clark in the lineup after an88-78 win over the Dallas Wingson Friday, which saw four of the Fever's four starters reach double-digits in scoring.Kelsey Mitchellled the way with 23 points and three assists, in addition to double-doubles fromAliyah Boston(12 points, 11 rebounds) andNatasha Howard(11 points, 16 rebounds). Meanwhile, the Storm are coming off a 108-106 double-overtime loss to theLos Angeles Sparkson Friday.Nneka Ogwumikerecorded a season-high 37 points and 12 rebounds in the loss. She became the sixth player in WNBA history to record 7,000 career points and the first to do so while shooting at least 50% from the field. MORE:Why the Seattle Storm's Nneka Ogwumike might be the most underrated WNBA All-Star The Fever and Storm have faced each other one other time this season, with the Fever coming away with a 94-86 win at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle on June 24. Boston scored a career-high 31 points in the win, while Mitchell added 26 points. Clark was held to six points, nine assists and three steals. Skylar Diggins, who turned 35 on Saturday, had 22 points and six assists in the losing effort. Here's everything you need to know about Sunday's contest between the Storm and Fever: The Seattle Storm will host the Indiana Fever at 3 p.m. ET (Noon PT) on Sunday, Aug. 3 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle. The game will be broadcast nationally on ABC. Time:3 p.m. ET (Noon PT) Location:Climate Pledge Arena (Seattle) TV channel:ABC Streaming:ESPN+ The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Fever vs Storm: TV channel, time, how to watch, Caitlin Clark status

Indiana Fever vs. Seattle Storm: TV channel, time, how to watch

Indiana Fever vs. Seattle Storm: TV channel, time, how to watch The Indiana Fever are riding a four-game win streak into Sunday's matchu...
MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of playNew Foto - MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play

The Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds were ready to start their engines Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee. Then Mother Nature waved the red flag not once but twice before play was ultimately suspended. TheMLB Speedway Classicbegan with a 2 1/2 hour rain delay, followed by less than a full inning of baseball, followed by another delay that resulted in a suspension of play until Sunday at 1 p.m. ET at the same venue. Cincinnati will take a 1-0 lead into the next day. The Reds scored off an Austin Hays single to left, their third hit of the frame. First pitch finally arrived at 9:40 p.m. ET. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Because of the lengthy delay, Braves starting pitcher Spencer Strider was scratched from the start. Strider, who grew up in Tennessee, went through warmups prior to the delay. Left-handed reliever Austin Cox, who had previously started only three games in his brief MLB career, got the nod for the Braves instead. They were planning to lean on their bullpen Saturday night. The Reds, on the other hand, didn't scratch their starter. They still rolled with Chase Burns, a 22-year-old who grew up in Tennessee as well and played college baseball for the Tennessee Volunteers. Burns produced a 1-2-3 inning to start the game. Leading up to the original 7:15 p.m. ET start time, pregame festivities included performances from Pitbull and Tim McGraw, U.S. Navy Musician First Class Kathryn Dobyns singing the national anthem, NASCAR pit crews helping introduce the starting lineups by servicing Braves- and Reds-themed stock cars and a flyover by four U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornets from Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach. But the rain started coming down. It was pouring when Braves icon Chipper Jones and Reds legend Johnny Bench participated in the ceremonial first pitches. Jones, an eight-time All-Star and one-time World Series champion with the Braves, threw to NASCAR driver Chase Elliott. Fellow NASCAR driver Kyle Busch — a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion — walked out to Bench, a 14-time All-Star and two-time World Series champion with the Reds, and traded spots, allowing the 77-year-old Bench to man his old position as catcher. As the rain continued to hit the converted diamond in the heart of the race track, the tarp came out. Racing fan and@Redspitcher@Bsinger51joins@Ken_Rosenthalto talk about tonight's experience so far at Bristol Motor Speedway.pic.twitter.com/PbGKDCZxFW — FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX)August 2, 2025 Nevertheless, a good number of fans originally expected to break MLB's all-time regular-season, single-game attendance record Saturday stayed put. Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci collected interviews for Fox Sports during the delay, showcasing how players and coaches for both teams still shared that enthusiasm. The grounds crew started removing the tarp around 8:50 p.m. ET. After the field was drained, the game finally started. But it wasn't long before the rain picked up again and the tarp returned. "We'll be back tomorrow, 1 o'clock resume,"saidMichael Hill, MLB senior vice president of on-field operations. "We are optimistic for a better weather forecast tomorrow."

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play The Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds were ...
Rams QB Matthew Stafford sees back specialist again as injury timetable remains murkyNew Foto - Rams QB Matthew Stafford sees back specialist again as injury timetable remains murky

Matthew Stafford is still waiting to get started at Los Angeles Rams training camp, and his timetable to do so remains as hazy as ever. The Rams starting quarterback visited back specialist Dr. Steven Watkins again on Saturday, head coach Sean McVay told reporters,via the Los Angeles Times. He confirmed the 37-year-old Stafford remains week-to-week and will not participate in a joint practice with the Dallas Cowboys on Tuesday. Stafford's availability for the next joint practice with the Los Angeles Chargers the following week reportedly remains undetermined. From the Times: "What I don't want to do is set a timeline," McVay said. "I know he's making good progress. He saw Dr. Watkins again. ... Everything is in good shape." Staffordhas been held out of training camp after encountering back soreness during the offseason. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] In Stafford's absence, Jimmy Garoppolo has taken first-team reps in his place while former fourth-round pick Stetson Bennett has worked with the second team. The Rams are scheduled to open their season Sept. 7 against the Houston Texans. There were talks about Stafford exiting Los Angeles over the offseason,but he ended up agreeing to a contract restructure to remain on the team. He's entering his fifth season with the Rams, who won a Super Bowl in his first season in L.A. but have failed to advance past the divisional round since.

Rams QB Matthew Stafford sees back specialist again as injury timetable remains murky

Rams QB Matthew Stafford sees back specialist again as injury timetable remains murky Matthew Stafford is still waiting to get started at Lo...
Texas panel advances redrawn congressional map that could take 5 Democratic seatsNew Foto - Texas panel advances redrawn congressional map that could take 5 Democratic seats

A Texas House panel on Saturday advanced anew congressional mapas state Republicanspower ahead with a strategybacked by President Donald Trump to help the GOP maintain the US House majority in the 2026 midterms. The map, unveiled earlier this week, attempts to make five Democratic congressional seats more favorable to Republicans. Texas Republicans argue the move is necessary over concerns that the current maps are unconstitutional and racially gerrymandered. Democrats havesaid it would suppressthe votes of people of color. The Texas House redistricting committee voted along party lines Saturday to approve the map, setting up a full House vote. Texas Democratic Party Chair Kendall Scudder said Saturday the party will file a lawsuit if the map passes, adding that state Republicans are "silencing voters on behalf of Donald Trump." "Democrats must fight this Trump power grab through any means necessary, and blue states across the country should use this as a signal flare to start carving up their own states and make these authoritarian wannabe Republican lawmakers regret ever opening up this redistricting discussion in the first place," Scudder said in a statement. Democratic governors in states like California have already warned they will attempt the same tactics to help their party win more seats, in what one US House Democrat described to CNN as a "redistricting arms race." US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and his political team areexploring similar plansin California, New York, New Jersey, Minnesota and Washington state in hopes of flipping at least a handful of Republican seats next November. Democrats need a net gain of just three seats to win the House in the midterms. The new Texas map features 30 districts that Trump would have won in 2024 if the map was in place, up from 27 under the current district lines. In total, there arefive more seats that Trump wonby more than 10 percentage points, according to data from the Texas Legislative Council. The proposed map eliminates the Austin-area seat of Rep. Greg Casar, who would likely be forced into a primary with another liberal Democrat, Rep. Lloyd Doggett, in the Austin area. Multiple people close to Doggett have told CNN they do not expect him to bow out quietly and instead foresee the two battling it out in a primary. One of those people close to the senior House Democrat pointed out that he has $6.2 million cash on hand. In a statement this week, Doggett did not address the question of his future and said his "sole focus" is defeating the new GOP map. Casar, for his part, vowed in a statement to "fight back with everything we've got," calling for voters to "mobilize against this illegal map." Republicans also propose merging the Houston-area seat of Rep. Al Green with a vacant seat held by thelate Rep. Sylvester Turner, who died in office earlier this year. Green's district was altered more than any other sitting member in the plan. Democrats expect Green to run in the new seat, though he may have to battle it out with some of the Democrats who were already running for the Turner seat. The map would also make two southern Texas seats — held by Democratic Reps. Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez — more Republican-leaning. But multiple Democrats view the seats as still in reach for the two centrist members who typically performed ahead of statewide or national Democrats. Trump has not yet weighed in on the proposed Texas map. CNN's Sarah Ferris and Ethan Cohen contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Texas panel advances redrawn congressional map that could take 5 Democratic seats

Texas panel advances redrawn congressional map that could take 5 Democratic seats A Texas House panel on Saturday advanced anew congressiona...
Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's StrategiesNew Foto - Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies

U.S. President Donald Trump shake hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, on July 16, 2018. Credit - Brendan Smialowski—Getty Images President DonaldTrump's firing of the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)on Friday afternoon just after she delivered a negative jobs report echoes the impulse of many leaders to shoot the messenger.Trump declared, "I've had issues with the numbers for a long time. We're doing so well. I believe the numbers were phony like they were before the election and there were other times. So I fired her, and I did the right thing." WhileTrump may or may not be friends with Vladimir Putin, he is clearly following the Russian President's HR staffing guidelines to eliminate lieutenants who bring bad news. Aswe've documented before, the Federal State Statistics Service (Rosstat) has a longhistory of manipulating official economic statisticsto please Putin, "bending over backward to correct bad numbers and burying unflattering statistics" under the pressure the Kremlin has exerted to corrupt statistical integrity, especially since Putin's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The reliability of official statistics from China has also beenbrought into question, leading analysts to rely on a wide range of unofficial or proxy indicators to gauge the true state of the Chinese economy. Even China's former Premier, the late Li Keqiang,reportedly confidedthat he didn't trust official GDP numbers. Read More:What to Know About the Jobs Report That Led Trump to Fire the Labor Statistics Chief Like other strongmen, Trump has repeatedly shown a pattern of manipulating data to suit his preferred narrative. Trump's surprise firing of BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer has quickly caught the attention of technical market analysts and economists on both sides of the political spectrum. One side cheers the push to disrupt a slow, bureaucratic federal agency. The other side shouts in dismay over concerns about yet another example of Trump politicizing an apolitical institution. Both responses are warranted. The accuracy of BLS data has long been questioned as major revisions only come in months later. To their credit, the BLS, in addition to other statistical agencies, has publiclyrecognizeda need to modernize its methodology. Unfortunately, though, the severity of job revisions has worsened since the COVID-19 era, with no successful program to address the issue. The downward revision on Friday of more than 250,000 jobs marked the most significant adjustment since the depths of the pandemic. However, Trump'saccusationsagainst the BLS of rigging the job numbers to make him and the Republican base look bad, and his subsequent firing of McEntarfer based on a belief that BLS revisions were politically motivated, are yet another step closer to authoritarianism. Introducing his latest conspiracy theory, the President went even further by suggesting McEntarfer, whose career spans two decades across Republican and Democratic Administrations, rigged the numbers "around the 2024 presidential election" in then-Vice PresidentKamala Harris' favor. Trump conveniently fails to mention that his definition of "around" was backin August 2024. Recall, the 2024 presidential election was a full three months later in November. Revisions are not unusual behavior by the BLS. They are a critical part of the natural process for developing an accurate picture of the largest, most dynamic economy in the world. Theaverage size of job revisionssince 2003 is not insignificant at 51,000 jobs. And, despite what Trump may want Americans to believe, his tariff policies have created an unprecedented level of uncertainty in the U.S. economy, comparable only to that of 2020, with many economists expecting a recession to follow as a result.Bloomberg reportinghas pointed to a possible connection between the severity of negative job revisions and recessionary economic environments. The BLS has also been subjected to DOGE-ledhiring constraints and other resource rescissions. In addition, the Trump Administration's disbanding of the Federal Statistics Advisory Committee in March both eliminated one of the main engines for enhancing agency performance and, perhaps, in what should have been a concerning harbinger, abolished the canary in the data integrity coal mine. Complaints about BLS methods are legitimate, like the reliance on enumerators over scanner data, and deserve attention, but this is not how to fix it. Read More:What Trump's Win Means for the Economy This is far from the first time Trump has subordinated statistical integrity to political theater. Fromcrowd sizesto weather forecasts,vote countstotariff formulas, Trump has discarded facts for fictions that play to his political favor. Trump doesn't just bend the truth—he twists the numbers until they resemble propaganda and then silences those who disagree. As CBS News titan Edward R. Murrow warned 65 years ago: "To be persuasive, we must be believable. To be believable, we must be credible. To be credible, we must be truthful." Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies

Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies U.S. President Donald Trump shake hands with Russian President Vladimir...

 

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