Tag Archives: Adrian

Adrian Griffin connecting with Giannis Antetokounmpo first step in reaching high standard – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

  1. Adrian Griffin connecting with Giannis Antetokounmpo first step in reaching high standard Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  2. Milwaukee Bucks To Hire Adrian Griffin As Next Head Coach I CBS Sports CBS Sports
  3. AP Sports SummaryBrief at 4:03 p.m. EDT | Auto Racing | lancasteronline.com LNP | LancasterOnline
  4. NBA Source Suggests Giannis Antetokounmpo Could Head To California Team In 2025: “Can You Imagine Him Playing With Stephen Curry In The Back End Of His Career ?” Fadeaway World
  5. Bucks hiring Raptors’ Adrian Griffin as coach, sources say – ESPN ESPN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bucks hiring Raptors assistant Adrian Griffin as head coach following meeting with Giannis Antetokounmpo: Sources – The Athletic

  1. Bucks hiring Raptors assistant Adrian Griffin as head coach following meeting with Giannis Antetokounmpo: Sources The Athletic
  2. Bucks hiring Raptors’ Adrian Griffin as coach, sources say – ESPN ESPN
  3. Bucks reportedly hire Raptors assistant Adrian Griffin as new head coach Yahoo Sports
  4. NBA Source Suggests Giannis Antetokounmpo Could Head To California Team In 2025: “Can You Imagine Him Playing With Stephen Curry In The Back End Of His Career ?” Fadeaway World
  5. AP Sports SummaryBrief at 4:03 p.m. EDT | Auto Racing | lancasteronline.com LNP | LancasterOnline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tulsa King is an undercooked fish-out-of-water mob story

Sylvester Stallone as Dwight “The General” Manfredi
Photo: Brian Douglas/Paramount+

When the trailer for Tulsa King premiered during the NFL’s week six broadcast of the Buffalo Bills vs. the Kansas City Chiefs, the league’s early season heavyweight title bout, it seemed more than apt: The show promised a punchy, swaggering, sporting choice of violence, featuring the television debut of Sylvester Stallone, and offering the most stout shoulder and jutted jaw this side of the gridiron. Sly’s goateed jaw protrudes as if chiseled out of mossy stone, his voice tumbling throatily almost through marbles, eyes half shut, part tough-guy disinterest and part brawny boxer brain damage, his biceps prominently featuring an unnatural highway system of veins. The series poster promises one star at the top, one name needed: “Stallone.”

As he ships a package the man behind the counter asks, “Any flammable liquids or firearms?” and the audience is supposed to feel a collective guffaw, a notion of, “Dude, this is Rambo!” We are all in on the joke, in on all of the pedestrian one liners from the trailer: “If I stopped eating every time somebody tried to hurt me I’d be a skeleton.” He is coy and he is rugged, he is out of place but unto himself, he is only a gray hair in a suit, but, in the words of Mickey, he is still very much a “greasy, fast, 200-pound Italian tank.”

For all the noise and bravado, though, the Red Bull and fist pumping vibes that seem to frame the energy of hungover Saturday afternoon frat house fare, what is easy to miss, aside from the promise of “From the Creator of Yellowstone,” is that the show was helmed by one of the most original and promising writers in Hollywood. Taylor Sheridan wrote Sicario in 2015, a twisty, criss-crossing, paranoid, and depraved look at the war on drugs, at machismo, at shady government dealings, at, well, shady personal dealings, in a picture as confounding and fractured and dark as could be expected of a major release. He was then nominated for Best Original Screenplay for 2016’s Hell Or High Water, an impeccably structured bit of neo-Western crime noir that would make the Coen brothers jealous. It’d be almost easy to overlook Wind River, a windswept and chilly and chilling thriller much more hopeless than Hell. In just a few years, as a writer, the man originally known as playing David on Sons Of Anarchy seemed to have channeled and repackaged a special modern blend of Cormac McCarthy and Larry McMurtry, with a sprinkling of Sam Peckinpah and the spirit of early Warren Zevon. His voice is lean and unsentimental, accompanied by a vision full of menace and the darkness just beyond the reaches of a prairie campfire.

Here Sheridan pulled a different type of trick, penning the original story of Tulsa in just three days, supposedly, before handing the project off entirely to Terence Winter, the writer and producer known for work on The Wolf Of Wall Street, Boardwalk Empire, and, yes, The Sopranos. Winter acts as surrogate showrunner and seems grateful for such an entirely new entree for a mafia story. “Mobster in cowboy country,” is how he describes it, specifying this particular variance of fish out of water, yet we are comfortable miles from Steven Van Zandt repurposing Silvio Dante for Lilyhammer.

Allen Coulter directs the first two episodes, in an act of full commitment to the David Chase antihero oeuvre. (Max Casella shows up too, in a seeming winking nod to Sopranos acolytes.) As we open, Stallone’s Dwight Manfredi is found leaving prison, scoffing at the new Manhattan of Apple stores and VR headsets, on a path to rectify the sins of his past, build a new life, accrue something of a new crew. “I married this life, I’m gonna see if it married me back.” At his welcome home party, he comes in hot, though. “Don’t stand behind my fucking back,” he barks, wasting no time getting down to the ludicrous business, his fists cathartically going thwack and pffff, mixing it up with the beefy men at the head of the family (led by Domenick Lombardozzi), those responsible for his 25-year residence in “college,” as they might call it. All of them are near caricature-level quick to the draw on the chest-puff snarls and the finger-pointing and spittle-inducing toughie platitudes, the pissing contests of former football players in business casual residing in tasteless McMansions. He eventually accepts his “banishment,” that there is “nothing left for me here,” and provides some mild exposition about an ex-wife and a daughter who “hates me.” “Why not?” he asks, and if you’re hungry for more explanation he might tell you he’s in “the none of your fucking business kind of business.”

Sylvester Stallone as Dwight Manfredi and Martin Starr as Bodhi
Photo: Brian Douglas/Paramount+

Either way, he lands in Tulsa with vague assignations dealing with “horse races,” immediately hires a driver (an endearing Jay Will as Tyson), strong arms his way into the medical-marijuana business (fronted by a stoned, deadpan Martin Starr), and bounds the realms between mountainous stoicism and semi-comic violence. Yes, Dwight might use a canteen, thrown like a shortstop turning two, no less, to combat a security guard, but he also might deadpan lament prison’s tiramisu. He uses the threat of a foot stomp, but it’s cooked with a base affability, as he explains “we’re partners,” and persuades with a “don’t make me be an asshole about this.” He is the buddy you like going places with, the one who can befriend any bartender (sad-boy supreme Garrett Hedlund), who throws 100s around like he’s paying off penance for a “lifetime of bad choices,” but can also wax on the finitude of “crossing the Rubicon,” or, say, Arthur Miller versus Henry Miller.

Like Sheridan’s best stuff, Tulsa is a story driven by a character with baggage. It is a familiar against-the-world trope of redemption and second chances and also a geriatric take on the blockhead underdog tale we’ve all known and loved Stallone for since those earliest rounds and those charmingly awkward dalliances with Adrian. Still, the vibe is of much lower stakes, like a medium-burn cruise along with an old friend who’s found new perspective. From the backseat, Dwight ponders the brave new world: “GM’s gone electric, Dylan’s gone public, a phone is a camera, coffee is five bucks, the Stones, god bless ‘em, are still on tour.” Such minor-key riffing and some stoner hijinks fill the long slow Oklahoma drives—wanna see Mickey Mantle’s childhood home?—that themselves buffer the contemplative scene-setting preparing for a glut of preordained violence.

Tulsa King | Official Trailer | Paramount+

But most of the early going is a long way from Winter or Sheridan’s most inspired work and more like something indeed cooked up in a short amount of time, say, in a stir-crazy pandemic weekend, something less apt to get married to than to pass along to a colleague while you go back to your Kevin Costner project (Yellowstone season five premieres the same day as Tulsa King), or your Jeremy Renner project (Mayor Of Kingstown season two premieres in less than two months). It helps if said colleague might overlook the cliche daddy issues that seem borrowed from Rocky V, or the it’s-a-small-world storyline lent directly by one of the most beloved episodes of Sopranos season one.

Still, Tulsa ranks as another sturdy chapter in the volume of prestigious, showy 21st century antiheroism. “Go West, Old Man” is the name of episode one, making thematic motives clear. Here we are, actor and character re-polishing, reawakening in a new background. There is not too far of a line to be drawn to Jeff Bridges’ recent work in The Old Man, another story of a, yes, old man, crafting a new career bookend before our eyes, another leading dog doing it now with gray in the beard, revisiting old tools and tricks while learning some new ones. Stallone, for his part, is actually quite funny, quite often. “If I can change, and you can change…” indeed. It’s a reminder of an American icon so known it’s easy to take him for granted, so one-hue it’s nice to see a flex of different muscles, so undeniably charismatic he’s welcome to take a country ride with.


Tulsa King premieres November 13 on Paramount+.

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Gold price will ‘collapse’ today if the Fed makes this crucial decision – Adrian Day’s FOMC preview

The Federal Reserve is likely to raise the Federal Funds Rate by no more than 75 basis points at this week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, despite the markets having priced in a higher chance of a 100 basis point increase following last week’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, according to Adrian Day, President of Adrian Day Asset Management and Portfolio Manager of the Euro Pacific Gold Fund.

A 100-basis point hike today would not only be unlikely, but also disastrous for the markets, Day told David Lin, Anchor for Kitco News at the Precious Metals Summit in Beaver Creek.

“I don’t think they need to do 100 basis points,” Day said. “I think the market is expecting 75 and the Fed normally is pretty good telegraphing.”

Day added that there is no chance of a less than 75 basis-point hike.

“One thing we know for sure, if it’s not 75, it’s going to be 100. It’s not going to be 50,” he said.

Importantly, a hike larger than consensus expectations would “collapse” gold prices and stocks.

“I think 75 is baked in, so if you get 75, gold is unlikely to go down and stocks are unlikely to go down more, and I mean go down more on that news. 100 would be different. If they have 100 [basis-point hike] I think gold collapses again,” he said.

Day’s comments come as the August headline CPI declined slightly an an annual percent change basis to 8.3%. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, climbed to 6.3%, up from July’s 5.9%.

Immediately following the release of the CPI print last week, the FedWatch Tool, which tracks the probabilities of rate hikes by size, saw an increase in the chances of a 100 basis-point hike to more than 30%. As of 10:30 am ET on Wednesday, the breakdown stands at 82% for 75 basis points and only 18% for 100 basis points.

The gold price is unchanged Wednesday morning ahead of the FOMC decision later in the afternoon.

Stocks are up slightly, with the S&P 500 up 0.5% as of 10:30 am ET.

Macroeconomic Outlook

U.S. unemployment ticked up by 0.2% last month to 3.7%. Although a small increase occurred over the summer, it is still at historical lows.

Day said that the unemployment rate has in the past been low right at the onset of a recession before increasing, and therefore a low unemployment rate is not itself an indicator for a healthy economy.

“If you just take a snapshot and look at the unemployment rate, yes, it’s very strong, as [Treasury Secretary] Janet Yellen and [Fed Chair] Jerome Powell would say. I would say a couple of things. Number one, the labor participation rate, until the last report, has been very, very low. The labor force participation rate has been declining and is low, and all other things equal, that makes your unemployment rate low as well,” he said. “If you look at every recession going back to the 1960s, the unemployment rate was at a low immediately before at the cusp of a recession. Having a low unemployment rate does not mean we’re not going to have a low recession.”

On consumer sentiment, Day cited a decline in optimism as the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index is continuing its summer-long decline. It is now at below 2008 lows, and is at the lowest level since data was reported in the 1970s.

While retail sales increased by 0.3% last month, Day said that this actually signals a decline in consumers’ purchasing volume.

“When retail sales are static and up only a little bit, when prices are up 10%, that means that the volume, people’s volume, is going down,” he said.

Day said that the Federal Reserve will continue to raise rates into this economic slowdown, but will stop and pivot right before they cause a “serious recession.”

For more information on Day’s long-term gold price outlook and his expectations for inflation, watch the video above.

Follow David Lin on Twitter: @davidlin_TV

Follow Kitco News on Twitter: @KitcoNewsNOW

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Kitco Metals Inc. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Kitco Metals Inc. nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Kitco Metals Inc. and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.



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Le’Veon Bell TKO’s Adrian Peterson in clash of former NFL running backs

In a boxing match featuring two former star NFL running backs, Le’Veon Bell got the better of Adrian Peterson, rocking him with a hard right hand to score a TKO victory in the fifth round Saturday night at Banc of California Stadium in Los Angeles.

Bell and Peterson were the two biggest names on the card, which was dubbed “Social Gloves: No More Talk.”

After four sluggish rounds in their five-round exhibition, Bell dropped Peterson in the fifth with a straight right that caught him flush on the chin. Peterson was wobbly as he got back to his feet, forcing the referee to stop the bout as Peterson swayed from side to side.

Peterson knocked Bell down earlier in the fight, but it a was mostly uneventful affair until Bell’s decisive blow in the fifth.

“I appreciate everybody’s love and support, for real,” Bell, the former Pittsburgh Steelers star, said after the fight. “That’s really what kept me going. Honestly, all the hate … that motivates me.”

Bell, 30, reiterated his plans to pursue a career in boxing, stating he has put football behind him.

Before Saturday’s event, Bell, who played in eight games total last season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Baltimore Ravens, said he wanted to become a star in the ring after a standout career on the football field.

Peterson, who is fifth on the NFL’s all-time list with 14,918 career rushing yards, played a total of four games in 2021 with the Tennessee Titans and Seattle Seahawks. Like Bell, Peterson, 37, has not officially retired. Peterson said he has always been a fan of boxing and that he accepted the opportunity to have fun and stay in shape for a potential return to the NFL.

The card was headlined by YouTube star Austin McBroom, a former college basketball player who has 6.4 million followers on Instagram. And Nick Young, the former NBA standout also known as Swaggy P, faced social media influencer Minikon.

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Adrian Oswaldo Sura Reyes admits to plowing into crowd, killing mom with hammer

A deranged Pennsylvania man has admitted to plowing his car into a crowd of people, killing one and wounding 17 others, before he drove home and murdered his mother with a hammer.

Adrian Oswaldo Sura Reyes, a 24-year-old from Nescopeck, reportedly got into an argument with his mother before hopping into a vehicle and driving to neighboring Berwick, where the mass casualty crash occurred, according to a criminal complaint obtained by WYOU.

Cops said he drove by the Intoxicology Department bar where a crowd had gathered for a fundraiser for the families of 10 people who were tragically killed in a fire earlier this month. He turned around after he decided to drive into the crowd.

Reyes told police he was just tired of fighting with his mother.

He barreled into the crowd around 6:15 p.m., killing 50-year-old Rebecca L. Reese and sending 17 others to the hospital.

Adrian Oswaldo Sura Reyes hit his mother with car before killing her with a hammer.
via REUTERS

“I didn’t ram ’em, I just ran them over,” Reyes said to police, according to the affidavit.

After the crash, Reyes drove back home. When he arrived, he saw his mother standing outside in the street. Cops said he floored the gas and crashed into her with the front of his car.

He told police he got a hammer from his car and bashed his mother in the head four or five times with it. When police arrived on scene they found the woman dead and arrested Reyes.

“This is a complete tragedy in a community where there’s already been tragedy,” State Trooper Anthony Petroski told reporters.

“We are going to do our job to the best of our abilities to conduct a thorough investigation not only for the families but the community members. They’re already hurting.”

Reyes was denied bail and is facing two open counts of criminal homicide.
Philadelphia 10 NBC News

As he was being led to court by Pennsylvania State Police around 3 a.m. Sunday morning, the accused killer said “sorry,” WYOU reported.

Investigators say Reyes is facing two open counts of criminal homicide. He was denied bail and is currently lodged in the Columbia County Correctional Facility.

Of the 17 wounded victims, WYOU confirmed the condition of 15 of them.

Five are in critical condition and two are in fair condition at Geisinger Medical Center Danville, where five other victims have been treated and released.

One patient was treated and released from Geisinger Bloomsburg Hospital, and two others have been released from Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center.

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Mariners Option Jarred Kelenic, Claim Adrian Sampson

The Mariners announced this afternoon they’ve claimed right-hander Adrian Sampson off waivers from the Cubs. They’ve also selected outfielder Steven Souza Jr. to the big leagues in place of Jarred Kelenic, who was optioned to Triple-A Tacoma. Seattle also reinstated Sergio Romo from the 10-day injured list, optioned Danny Young and designated Stuart Fairchild and Yohan Ramirez for assignment to clear 40-man roster space for Sampson and Souza.

Kelenic’s demotion is the most notable of Seattle’s spate of moves. A former sixth overall pick and top prospect, Kelenic has yet to produce against big league pitching. He struggled to a .181/.265/.350 line over his first 377 MLB plate appearances last season, striking out in 28.1% of his trips while hitting only .216 on balls in play. The M’s surely hoped to see more from the left-handed hitting outfielder in the early going this season, but that hasn’t yet been the case.

Through 30 games, Kelenic owns just a .140/.219/.291 mark. The youngster has gone down on strikes 36 times while making contact on only 67.8% of his swings. That’s the 12th-lowest contact rate among 192 batters with at least 90 plate appearances, and the M’s have decided it’s time for a reset against Triple-A arms. It’s the second time in as many years that Kelenic has been optioned after scuffling against MLB pitching, but he responded well during a month-long stint in the minors last summer.

The timing of Kelenic’s latest option comes rather ironically as the M’s are headed to Queens for a weekend series with the Mets. New York, of course, originally drafted him and included him in the controversial Robinson Canó/Edwin Díaz swap. That looked to be a coup for Seattle given Kelenic’s prospect pedigree, but he’ll obviously need to perform better whenever the M’s bring him back to the big leagues. There’s plenty of time to do so, as he won’t turn 23 years old until July. Because of the canceled minor league season in 2020, the Wisconsin native has still only played 51 games between Double-A and Triple-A.

Barring an exceptionally lengthy stint, the demotion doesn’t seem likely to affect his path to free agency after the 2027 season. Kelenic entered the year with 105 days of big league service; players are credited with a full service year for spending 172 days on an MLB roster or injured list. He’s accrued approximately 36 more days this year, meaning he needs to be in the majors for around a month more to surpass the one-year threshold in 2022. How long this stay in Tacoma lasts will no doubt be determined in large part by Kelenic’s performance there, but it’s hard to imagine the M’s keeping him down until September barring some major struggles against Triple-A pitching.

In the meantime, Seattle will turn to the veteran Souza with Julio RodríguezJesse Winker and Dylan Moore as outfield options. The 33-year-old has gotten sporadic MLB time with the Cubs and Dodgers over the past couple years, but he hasn’t played a full season in the majors since 2017. Signed to a minor league deal in Spring Training, Souza has gotten off to an excellent start with the Rainiers. He’s hitting .267/.417/.533 with five homers and a massive 19.8% walk rate in 22 games. The 14-18 M’s will see if he can carry over that production against big league arms to inject some life into an outfield that has underwhelmed.

Fairchild was part of that outfield mix very briefly. The 26-year-old was acquired from the Diamondbacks for cash in late April and appeared in three games, going hitless in a trio of plate appearances. A Seattle native, Fairchild was a second-round pick of the Reds in 2017 and has been traded twice in his young career. The M’s will have a week to deal him again or try to run him through outright waivers.

That’s also true of Ramirez, who has pitched in the bigs over the past three seasons. The right-hander owns a 3.97 ERA in 56 2/3 career innings, striking out a strong 28.6% of opponents. He’s also walked 15.2% of batters faced, however, and he’d been tagged for three homers in his first seven outings this year. The Mariners elected to move on, but he works in the mid-90s and has a pair of minor league option years remaining, so it’s possible another club takes a chance on him.

In his place, they’ll bring aboard a multi-inning option from the Cubs. Sampson started five of his ten appearances for Chicago last season, tossing 35 1/3 frames of 2.80 ERA ball. That came with an underwhelming 19.3% strikeout rate and an alarming 2.04 homers allowed per nine innings, but he pounded the strike zone and induced a fair amount of ground-balls. Chicago re-signed the righty to a minor league deal over the winter. He was selected to the big leagues on Sunday, pitched in one game, then was designated for assignment.

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Adrian Peterson agrees to complete 20 domestic violence and alcohol counseling sessions

Free agent running back Adrian Peterson has agreed to complete 20 sessions of domestic violence and alcohol counseling within the next six months following his February arrest on suspicion of domestic violence, a Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office spokesman told media outlets on Monday.

Peterson agreed to the sessions during a pre-filing hearing held Friday as an alternative to prosecution in the case, spokesman Rob Wilcox said.

According to a Los Angeles Airport Police statement, they received a call around 8:30 a.m. local time on Feb. 13 about possible domestic violence on board an aircraft bound for Houston and responded to “a verbal and physical altercation between a male suspect and a female victim.”

Peterson, 36, was booked at the Los Angeles Police Department Pacific Division and later released on $50,000 bond.

Peterson’s wife, Ashley, defended her husband two days after the arrest via an Instagram post, writing: “On Sunday, Adrian and I had a verbal argument. Unfortunately it was on an airplane. At no point did Adrian hit or strike me. This is a private matter between my husband and myself. We ask that everyone respect our privacy so we can focus on what matters most: our children.”

Peterson, a 15-year veteran, finished this past season on injured reserve with the Seattle Seahawks, who signed him to their practice squad in December after his three-game stint with the Tennessee Titans. Peterson, who ranks fifth in NFL history with 14,918 career rushing yards, has said he plans to continue playing next season.

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Adam Schefter, Adrian Wojnarowski sign deals to stay at ESPN

ESPN has retained its high-profile NFL and NBA insiders after a push from sports gambling companies to poach them away.

The network announced on Thursday that it has signed multi-year contract extensions with Adam Schefter and Adrian Wojnarowski.

“Adam and Woj are difference-makers that solidify our long-term position as the definitive source for everything NFL and NBA,” ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a statement.

“When you combine today’s news about Adam and Woj with Jeff Passan’s signing, we are making a deliberate statement about ESPN’s commitment to serving fans with the most in-depth reporting, storytelling and around-the-clock news.”

All three of those insiders are represented by CAA.

“Covering the most popular sport in the United States for the leading sports media company has been a dream combination,” Schefter said in the release. “Every day, at each show and event, I am surrounded by the best teammates – producers, directors, researchers, production staff, and so many more – who elevate everyone around them. I love my job, feel blessed to continue and thank ESPN and Jimmy Pitaro for their consistent faith in me.”

Adam Schefter has been at ESPN since 2009.
Getty Images
Adrian Wojnarowski has been with ESPN since 2017.
NBAE via Getty Images

Said Wojnarowski: “I’m eager to continue working with a remarkable group of colleagues and grateful for ESPN’s relentless commitment to newsgathering and reporting. My profound appreciation to Jimmy Pitaro, Cristina Daglas, Norby Williamson, Dave Roberts, Lauren Reynolds, Greg Dowling, David Kraft and the entire universal news desk for the support, vision and leadership that makes ESPN such a remarkable place to do my job. Also, a thank you to my representative Matt Kramer for helping to bring and keep me at ESPN.”

Schefter has been at ESPN since 2009 and Wojnarowski since 2017.

As the sports gambling industry continues its manifest destiny across America, ESPN had to battle sportsbooks — who would have benefitted greatly from the reporters’ enormous social media engagement — to keep its league insiders.

ESPN has been on a high-end talent spending spree of late, recently poaching Joe Buck and Troy Aikman from Fox Sports to be the new announce team for “Monday Night Football” — on contracts cumulatively worth $165 million.

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Los Angeles County District Attorney won’t charge Adrian Peterson after arrest in domestic violence case

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office has decided not to charge Adrian Peterson in connection to his arrest at Los Angeles International Airport on Sunday for what airport officials said was domestic violence, a representative told TMZ Sports.

Peterson’s case will now be referred to the Los Angeles City Attorney, who will examine the case and still could charge Peterson with misdemeanor domestic violence, TMZ reported.

According to a Los Angeles Airport Police statement, they received a call around 8:30 a.m. local time Sunday about possible domestic violence on board an aircraft bound for Houston and responded to “a verbal and physical altercation between a male suspect and a female victim.”

Peterson, 36, was booked at the Los Angeles Police Department Pacific Division. He was given a $50,000 bail and released Sunday afternoon on bond.

The free-agent running back had told Fox 26 in Houston in a telephone interview on Monday that he and his wife, Ashley, “got into an argument on the plane. That was pretty much the gist of it. I ended up grabbing her hand and taking her ring off her finger.”

Ashley Peterson, who continued on their flight to Houston after her husband was arrested, did not press charges. Adrian Peterson said he was arrested “because the ring left a scratch on her finger.”

“We just had a disagreement. I know the headlines, domestic violence. You’d think I beat her up or something,” Peterson said. “It was nothing like that.”

Ashley Peterson defended her husband Tuesday via an Instagram post, writing: “On Sunday, Adrian and I had a verbal argument. Unfortunately it was on an airplane. At no point did Adrian hit or strike me. This is a private matter between my husband and myself. We ask that everyone respect our privacy so we can focus on what matters most: our children.”

Adrian Peterson was charged with felony child abuse in 2014 for using a switch to spank his then-4-year-old son, which resulted in cuts and bruises all over the boy’s body. Peterson eventually pleaded no contest to a reduced charge of misdemeanor reckless assault. In addition to a two-year probation period, he was fined $4,000 and performed 80 hours of community service. The NFL suspended him for one year.

Peterson, a 15-year veteran, finished this past season on injured reserve with the Seattle Seahawks, who signed him to their practice squad in December after his three-game stint with the Tennessee Titans. Peterson, who ranks fifth in NFL history with 14,918 career rushing yards, has said he plans to continue playing next season.

ESPN’s John Keim contributed to this report.



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