Nationals’ Max Scherzer hits injured list with groin inflammation six weeks ahead of MLB trade deadline

The Washington Nationals placed right-handed starter Max Scherzer on the injured list on Tuesday because of groin inflammation, according to MASN’s Mark Zuckerman. Scherzer’s stint is backdated to June 12, meaning he’ll be eligible to return in a week’s time. In corresponding moves, the Nationals designated right-hander Rogelio Armenteros for assignment and purchased the contract of fellow righty Justin Miller from Triple-A Rochester.  Scherzer, 37 come late July, exited his outing on Friday after throwing just six pitches. Prior to then, he’d been off to a phenomenal start to this… Source link

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Rays’ ace Tyler Glasnow has partially torn UCL, flexor tendon strain; will attempt to rehab without surgery

USATSI Tampa Bay Rays ace Tyler Glasnow, who left his start on Monday night because of elbow inflammation, has a partially torn ulnar collateral ligament and a flexor tendon strain, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan. Glasnow will attempt to rehab the injury without undergoing Tommy John surgery, though it’s unclear what his chances are of avoiding that fate. Glasnow, 27, had pitched fantastically over his first 14 starts this season. He’d compiled a 2.66 ERA (145 ERA+) and a 4.56 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 88 innings. Although the Rays tend to steer away from lengthy… Source link

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Star Power Index: Cubs’ Eric Sogard goes the extra mile, Robbie Ray’s tight pants and an in-game burger break

Welcome to the MLB Star Power Index — a weekly undertaking that determines with awful authority which players are dominating the current zeitgeist of the sport, at least according to the narrow perceptions of this miserable scribe. While one’s presence on this list is often celebratory in nature, it can also be for purposes of lamentation or ridicule. The players listed are in no particular order, just like the phone book. The loudest of siren calls known to humankind? ‘Tis the siren call of the replenishing burger, and we have scant control over when it meets our ears. At a funeral? Might soon be burger time. Passing traffic on the shoulder of the road while steering with your knees so as to be able to light a… Source link

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Why The Packers Are A Playoff Team Without Aaron Rodgers

Let’s start by saying quarterback is important position in the game. And yes, Aaron Rodgers is the best quarterback in the league. But having the best quarterback doesn’t mean you have the best team and will win the Super Bowl (otherwise Aaron Rodgers would have a dozen Lombardis). Football is a team game. Last year teams quarterbacked by Mitch Trubisky, Jared Goff and Ryan Tannehill all went to the playoffs. Drew Brees, in such poor shape that he couldn’t lob the ball much 20 yards with any mustard, even led his team to a 2 seed. Tyler Heinicke led a team that almost pulled off an upset against the eventual champs! Quarterback is the most important position in the game, but it’s not the sole determining factor of team success. I know that some media chucklefaces like to spout… Source link

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Alaska Journal | Faye Flam

Labeling misinformation online is doing more harm than good. The possibility that COVID-19 came from a lab accident is just the latest example. Social media companies tried to suppress any discussion of it for months. But why? There’s no strong evidence against it, and evidence for other theories is still inconclusive. Pathogens have escaped from labs many times, and people have died as a result. Social media fact-checkers don’t have any special knowledge or ability to sort fact from misinformation. What they have is extraordinary power to shape what people believe. And stifling ideas can backfire if it leads people to believe there’s a “real story” that is being suppressed. Misinformation is dangerous. It can keep people from getting lifesaving medical treatments,… Source link

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Op-ed: Facebook, YouTube erred in censoring COVID-19 'misinformation' – Chicago Tribune

I discussed the new interest in the lab leak with another science journalist who was interested in why so many reporters are still treating the natural spillover hypothesis as the only possibility. We agreed this isn’t like the connection between carbon emissions and climate change, where there’s a scientific consensus based on years of research and multiple, independently-derived lines of evidence. Here, even if a few scientists favored the natural spillover early on, the question is still open. Source link

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Book Review: Bill Gates’ How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: News: The Independent Institute

Bill Gates has been in the news recently—but for all the wrong reasons. His book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need is far more significant to the body politic than his other recent appearances in the news. The book reads (of course) like a dystopian novel, replete with all the standard climate-change nonsense the thinking world encountered, then summarily dismissed, in Earth in the Balance by Al Gore, another figure known to the public as one thing (politician, in Al’s case) but coveting something else—the mantle of an environmental prophet. Prophet Bill, like the earlier Prophet Al, is (of course) upset by greenhouse gases—really upset. To rid the planet of them, particularly in the form of that non-pollutant gas called… Source link

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Facebook, YouTube Erred in Censoring Covid-19 ‘Misinformation’

Labelling misinformation online is doing more harm than good. The possibility that Covid-19 came from a lab accident is just the latest example. Social media companies tried to suppress any discussion of it for months. But why? There’s no strong evidence against it, and evidence for other theories is still inconclusive. Pathogens have escaped from labs many times, and people have died as a result. Social media fact-checkers don’t have any special knowledge or ability to sort fact from misinformation. What they have is extraordinary power to shape what people believe. And stifling ideas can backfire if it leads people to believe there’s a “real story” that is being suppressed. Misinformation is dangerous. It can keep people from getting lifesaving medical treatments, including… Source link

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Facebook, YouTube Erred in Censoring Covid-19 “Misinformation”

Labelling misinformation online is doing more harm than good. The possibility that Covid-19 came from a lab accident is just the latest example. Social media companies tried to suppress any discussion of it for months. But why? There’s no strong evidence against it, and evidence for other theories is still inconclusive. Pathogens have escaped from labs many times, and people have died as a result.  Social media fact-checkers don’t have any special knowledge or ability to sort fact from misinformation. What they have is extraordinary power to shape what people believe. And stifling ideas can backfire if it leads people to believe there’s a “real story” that is being suppressed. Misinformation is dangerous. It can keep people from getting… Source link

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The Remarkable Bookcycle Find New Home on Main Street — The Westport Local Press

Westport’s famous pink Remarkable Bookcycle is now stationed on the sidewalk in front of 173 Main Street, the future home of Cold Fusion Gelato. The mobile free library offers free novels and children’s books to anyone who stops by, curated by a team of volunteer Remarkable Librarians. The bicycle was painted and retrofitted by Ryan Peterson with the lead of novelist Jane Green. The name and color come from the famous Remarkable Bookshop, which sat just up from the bike’s current spot before its closure. … Source link

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