Solo Swimmer, 54, Bitten by 3-Foot Shark in 'Rare Attack' During Marathon Swim Near Los AngelesNew Foto - Solo Swimmer, 54, Bitten by 3-Foot Shark in 'Rare Attack' During Marathon Swim Near Los Angeles

Getty A 54-year-old man was bitten by a 3-foot-long shark while swimming between Santa Catalina and San Pedro at around 1.30 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept 30 The marathon swimmer sustained wounds to his foot and leg and was attended to by his accompanying crew before four boats from the Los Angeles Fire Department arrived Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Adam VanGerpen told theLos Angeles Timesthat the man was "lucky" the creature just "nipped" at him, adding that the attack was "rare" A man was bitten by a 3-foot-long shark during a solo marathon swim in the ocean near Los Angeles, authorities have confirmed. On Tuesday, Sept. 30, at around midnight, the 54-year-old was swimming from Santa Catalina towards San Pedro — a distance of over 20 miles — when the "rare attack" occurred, authorities toldThe Los Angeles Times. The man had swum around 12 miles off Catalina Island and was halfway towards the mainland when authorities responded to the incident at approximately 1:30 a.m., according toKTLA. "It sounded like about a three to four-foot white shark just nipped at his leg and his foot and then took off," LAFD Fireboat Pilot Shaun Corby told the outlet, withNBC Los Angelesnoting that his cuts were "minor." PEOPLE has contacted the Los Angeles Fire Department for comment, but did not immediately receive a response. Reinhard Dirscherl/ullstein bild via Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The swimmer, who was accompanied by a crew, was pulled out of the water and attended to on their boat before authorities arrived, per KTLA. Four boats from the LAFD were dispatched to the man's vessel, with the first arriving around 40 minutes after the initial call for help. The vessel was located approximately eight miles from San Pedro at the time, according toThe Los Angeles Times,who also note that he was treated by two paramedics. "We just grabbed the victim and transported him back to our station, and transported him to the hospital," Corby told KTLA. Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Adam VanGerpen also toldThe Los Angeles Timesthat the man "was awake and talking and sitting up." "He suffered only mild distress," he added. Ted Soqui/Corbis via Getty The swimmer told officials that he and his team left Catalina at around 12:00 a.m. to avoid disruption from shipping lanes. "It's pretty rare and I guess we're all lucky that the shark just nipped at him, didn't like it and swam away," VanGerpen added to theThe Los Angeles Times. Read the original article onPeople

Solo Swimmer, 54, Bitten by 3-Foot Shark in 'Rare Attack' During Marathon Swim Near Los Angeles

Solo Swimmer, 54, Bitten by 3-Foot Shark in 'Rare Attack' During Marathon Swim Near Los Angeles Getty A 54-year-old man was bitten b...
Clemson, Florida lead college football's biggest disappointments after first monthNew Foto - Clemson, Florida lead college football's biggest disappointments after first month

Inevitably whenevercollege footballspeculation meets reality, the teams that overperform will be balanced by those that don't live up to their billing, fair or not. This piece focuses on the latter group with the first month of the campaign officially in the books. To clarify, this list of September's biggest disappointments will not include teams that lost one of the month's marquee contests. In other words, the likes of Texas, Penn State, Michigan and others that are currently below theirpreseason US LBM Coaches Pollranking will not be included here. We'll also givetwice-beaten Notre Damea pass for now, even if those close defeats have complicated their at-large playoff case. PATH TO PLAYOFF:Sign up for our college football newsletter No, these are the teams whose season's might already be lost, with a long two months still to come. Here are the five biggest busts of September. Preseason ranking:6. Current record: 1-3. There can be no other choice to top this list.A one-score loss to LSUwasn't cause for panic, but fans started to hear alarm bells when the Tigers needed a furious second-half rally to beat Sun Belt member Troy a week later.A walk-off loss at Georgia Techfollowed by a listless outing against Syracuse has now all but eliminated Clemson from the ACC race. A punchless offense that was supposed to be improved is the main culprit, but the defense that is averaging just 2½ sacks a game and has just five takeaways through four games isn't entirely blameless. Preseason ranking:13. Current record: 3-2. There were warning signs when the return game helped mask a spluttering offense in wins against Virginia Tech and Championship Subdivision member South Carolina State. Even so, the 38-7 pummeling on the Gamecocks' home field by Vanderbilt was sobering. Things didn't get much better a week later at unbeaten Missouri. South Carolina did get off the SEC schneid against likely cellar dweller Kentucky, but the Gamecocks' next five opponents are all ranked in the top 13, and the line's inability to keep quarterback LaNorris Sellers from getting pounded doesn't bode well. Preseason ranking:16. Current record: 2-2. The good news for SMU is it is not a member of the Big 12. The Mustangs haven't played an ACC contest yet, so things might still be salvageable given that league's declining reputation. But SMU's inability to get defensive stops against former Southwest Conference foes Baylor and TCU, the only two power-four teams faced to date, is a strong indicator that last year's playoff appearance was a mirage. Preseason ranking:17. Current record: 1-3. Like South Carolina, Florida's preseason projection was based on the perception that last season's promising finish was a sign that the offense, and quarterback D.J. Lagway in particular, would continue to make strides. A plethora of miscues and a three-game losing streak later, and the Gators are staring at another sub-.500 campaign. The defense, still statistically among the best in the SEC despite constantly being put in untenable positions, will at least make future opponents take notice. Preseason ranking:20. Current record: 2-3. Maybe the Dublin curse is real.A three-point loss to Iowa Statedidn't raise red flags on its own, but then a narrow escape against North Dakota portended setbacks against Army and Arizona. The Wildcats did right the ship a bit by beating Central Florida for their first Big 12 win, so things might not be 2024Florida Statelevel bleak. But September was a tough reality check for a team with conference title aspirations. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College football disappointments include Clemson, Florida

Clemson, Florida lead college football's biggest disappointments after first month

Clemson, Florida lead college football's biggest disappointments after first month Inevitably whenevercollege footballspeculation meets ...
The Seahawks could be a Super Bowl contender — if they learn to win at homeNew Foto - The Seahawks could be a Super Bowl contender — if they learn to win at home

A month into the NFL season, one clear-cut takeaway is that there seems to be no clear-cut favorite in the NFC. Philadelphia (4-0), the reigning Super Bowl champion, is the conference's only undefeated team. Behind the Eagles are five 3-1 teams and others (Green Bay, at 2-1-1, and Dallas, at 1-2-1) that don't appear far off. One team in that chase pack, the Seattle Seahawks (3-1), has a defense that has allowed the league's second-fewest points, thanks in part to its having intercepted the second-most passes. Advanced statistics suggest its quarterback, Sam Darnold, is among the season's best. And since Mike Macdonald took over as coach in 2024, perhaps no team is better at winning in difficult situations. Seattle went 7-1 on the road last season, and it has started this season 2-0 away from home, an overall 9-1 road record that ties with Detroit for the NFL's best in that span. Yet Seattle has an unusual flaw. "On the road we're kicking butt," linebacker Ernest Jones IV said after a home win against New Orleans on Sept. 21. "But we gotta win games at home." Under Macdonald, Seattle started 2-0 at Lumen Field in 2024. Ever since then, they are just 2-7, making them an outlier in a league in which, through Sunday of Week 4, home teams are 182-151-1 (a .546 winning percentage) since the start of the 2024 season. The Mets paid more than $340 million to contend for the World Series. They didn't even make the playoffs. University of Colorado fined $50,000 after offensive chants aimed at BYU Bad Bunny will headline Super Bowl 60 halftime show In January, Macdonald pledged improvement at home. "The first thing that comes to mind is we've got to play better at home," he said at the end of last season. "It's great to be 7-1 on the road, but we've got to make this place a nightmare for teams to come in and play us." It hasn't quite been a nightmare. Since last season, the Seahawks have been outscored by four points in 11 home games, and they are one of 10 teams with negative point differentials at home, according to Stathead. Compare that to Detroit, which has outscored its opponents by a league-high 176 points over the same span, and Buffalo, with its point differential of plus-156. "We've got to win at home, point-blank, period," defensive lineman Jarran Reed saidbefore the season openeragainst San Francisco at home — which the Seahawks lost. Two weeks later, they routed New Orleans to even their home record this season to 1-1. A key litmus test arrives Sunday when the Seahawks host Tampa Bay (3-1), another potential NFC contender whose only loss this season is to Philadelphia. The contrast between Seattle's fortunes at home and on the road are even more pronounced considering Lumen Field had long been among the toughest stadiums to visit. Under former coach Pete Carroll, the franchise won 68% of its home games from 2010 to 2023 — including 14 consecutive at one point — the fifth-best home winning percentage in that span, behind only Green Bay, New England, Baltimore and Pittsburgh, according to NBC Sports research. Games in Seattle became known for its cacophonous volume owing to fans known as the 12th Man, or "12s." That dominance began to slide late in Carroll's tenure, however. And the regression came against the backdrop of a larger shift within a league in which it's now harder to win at home. Home teams won 53% of their regular-season games from 2020 to 2024, the lowest winning percentage of any five-year period since 2000, according to an offseasonby Pro Football Focus. Since 2010 to 2014, when home teams won 57.2% of the time, road opponents have steadily gained an edge. In the playoffs, however, playing at home still has a much stronger correlation to winning, the study found — a challenge even for a team as good on the road as Seattle. It's why finishing with a high enough playoff seed to earn a home playoff game could be critical in a rugged conference.

The Seahawks could be a Super Bowl contender — if they learn to win at home

The Seahawks could be a Super Bowl contender — if they learn to win at home A month into the NFL season, one clear-cut takeaway is that ther...
Government shutdown begins as lawmakers fail to reach deal to extend fundingNew Foto - Government shutdown begins as lawmakers fail to reach deal to extend funding

Watch: Pete Hegseth addresses military leaders at Quantico Government shutdown begins after Congress fails to pass funding bill | Special Report Watch: Homes in North Carolina's Outer Banks collapse into ocean

Government shutdown begins as lawmakers fail to reach deal to extend funding

Government shutdown begins as lawmakers fail to reach deal to extend funding Watch: Pete Hegseth addresses military leaders at Quantico Gov...
Vast nuclear plant in Ukraine is being cooled by emergency diesel generators, Russia saysNew Foto - Vast nuclear plant in Ukraine is being cooled by emergency diesel generators, Russia says

By Guy Faulconbridge MOSCOW (Reuters) -The vast Soviet-built Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine is being cooled by emergency diesel generators for a ninth day after an external power line was severed, its Russian management said on Wednesday. Russia's state RIA news agency cited the plant's Russian-installed management as saying that backup electricity supply was sufficient for now, but that resumption of a regular electricity supply via an external source - the Dneprovskaya line - was impossible due to Ukrainian shelling. Ukraine in turn has said that Russian shelling is preventing the restoration of external power. Fighting an intense drone and artillery war around several vast Soviet-era nuclear power stations in Ukraine has repeatedly triggered grave warnings from the United Nation's nuclear agency, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), about the danger of a major nuclear accident. The last remaining external power line to the Zaporizhzhia plant, Europe's largest nuclear power station, was cut during fighting on Sept. 23. Power is needed to pump water around the plant to cool the reactors and spent fuel. Radiation levels are normal, the IAEA and Russia said. "Europe's largest nuclear power plant has been without external power for more than a week now, which is by far the longest lasting such event during more than three and a half years of war," IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said. The plant's Russian management was cited as saying that the emergency generators were sufficient for now and that only some of them were being used. All equipment was functioning as normal, it said. The Zaporizhzhia plant has six Soviet-designed VVER-1000 V-320 water-cooled and water-moderated reactors containing Uranium 235. All reactors are currently shut down so are cooler than usual. The risk is that without any power - external or supplied by the emergency generators - the nuclear fuel which sits just 500 km (300 miles) from the site of the world's worst nuclear accident, the 1986 Chornobyl disaster, would not be cooled and would risk a melt down. "The current status of the reactor units and spent fuel is stable as long as the emergency diesel generators are able to provide sufficient power to maintain essential safety-related functions and cooling," Grossi said. "It is extremely important that offsite power is restored." Russian forces seized the plant in 2022 shortly after President Vladimir Putin sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine. Russia has controlled the plant ever since. (Reporting by Reuters, Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; editing by Andrew Osborn)

Vast nuclear plant in Ukraine is being cooled by emergency diesel generators, Russia says

Vast nuclear plant in Ukraine is being cooled by emergency diesel generators, Russia says By Guy Faulconbridge MOSCOW (Reuters) -The vast So...

 

AB JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com