Tag Archives: Bat

Organigram Announces C$124.6 Million Investment from BAT and Creation of “Jupiter” Strategic Investment Pool – Business Wire

  1. Organigram Announces C$124.6 Million Investment from BAT and Creation of “Jupiter” Strategic Investment Pool Business Wire
  2. Organigram’s stock soars premarket as British American Tobacco invests C$124.6 million MarketWatch
  3. Organigram (NASDAQ:OGI) Surges on C$124.6M Investment – TipRanks.com TipRanks
  4. Organigram Announces C$124.6 Million Investment from BAT and Creation of “Jupiter” Strategic Investment Pool Yahoo Finance
  5. Organigram Announces C$124.6 Million Investment from BAT and Creation of “Jupiter” Strategic Investment Pool Financial Post
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BAT expresses disappointment at FDA Marketing Denial Order for Vuse Alto Menthol and Mixed Berry and will immediately seek a stay of enforcement – British American Tobacco

  1. BAT expresses disappointment at FDA Marketing Denial Order for Vuse Alto Menthol and Mixed Berry and will immediately seek a stay of enforcement British American Tobacco
  2. FDA Bans Sales of Vuse Menthol E-Cigarettes The Wall Street Journal
  3. FDA issues ban on RJ Reynolds menthol-flavoured vapes in US Financial Times
  4. FDA Denies Marketing of Six Flavored Vuse Alto E-Cigarette Products Following Determination They Do Not Meet Public Health Standard PR Newswire
  5. UPDATE 2-US FDA blocks some flavors of British American Tobacco’s key vape brand Vuse Yahoo Finance
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Arizona guests file lawsuit against Las Vegas Strip hotel after bat found in hotel room, exposes them to rabies – KLAS – 8 News Now

  1. Arizona guests file lawsuit against Las Vegas Strip hotel after bat found in hotel room, exposes them to rabies KLAS – 8 News Now
  2. Phoenix family sues Las Vegas hotel after reportedly finding live bat in room Arizona’s Family
  3. Arizona guests file lawsuit against Las Vegas Strip hotel after bat found in hotel room, exposes the 8 News Now — Las Vegas
  4. Family finds live bat in Strip hotel room, lawsuit alleges Las Vegas Review-Journal
  5. Family underwent ‘painful rabies treatments’ after finding a bat in Vegas hotel room, complaint says KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas
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Greta Gerwig on ‘Barbie’ vs. ‘Oppenheimer’ Battle and Margot Robbie’s Already-Iconic Foot: “I Did Always Think of the Arched Foot as a Bat Signal” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Greta Gerwig on ‘Barbie’ vs. ‘Oppenheimer’ Battle and Margot Robbie’s Already-Iconic Foot: “I Did Always Think of the Arched Foot as a Bat Signal” Hollywood Reporter
  2. Best Looks from the Barbie Pink Carpet The New York Times
  3. ‘Barbie’: Greta Gerwig Gives Shoutout To Writers As Co-Writer Noah Baumbach Skips Premiere Amid WGA Strike Deadline
  4. Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling | “Barbie” junket full interview Associated Press
  5. Greta Gerwig Knew CGI Barbie Feet Would Have Been ‘Terrifying’ /Film
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Thai woman faces up to 5 years in prison for eating bat soup in viral video

A Thai woman was arrested after she posted a video of herself eating bat soup to her Facebook page on Monday.

Phonchanok Srisunaklua, who identified herself as Khru (teacher) Jui in her video, is facing up to five years in prison and/or a fine of up to 500,000 baht (approximately $13,800) for possession of protected wildlife carcasses and for crimes violating the Computer Crimes Act (2007) in Sakhon Nakhon province, Thailand.

Srisunaklua, who is also a teacher, posted the clip on her Facebook page Kin Saeb Nua Nua (Eating it Delicious and Hot), which has 392,000 followers.

In the video, Srisunaklua can be seen spreading the lesser Asiatic yellow bats’ wings before tearing it apart to consume it. She reportedly bought the bats at a market near the Laos border in northern Thailand, where bats that are infected with the closest relative to SARS-CoV-2 can also be found.

More from NextShark: Woman suffers bloody face after getting smacked with a durian by a debt collector in Thailand

The woman described the bat, which was boiled in a bowl of spicy soup, as “delicious.” She reportedly said that it was her first time consuming a bat, adding that its nails smelled like a rat and its skin was sticky. She told viewers that she was not trying to spread any coronavirus, as residents in her area also ate bats.

However, many viewers found the video disturbing and criticized her for risking an outbreak of new diseases.

“If you’re going to die, die alone. No one will blame you. But you’ll be damned if you start a pandemic,” one viewer reportedly wrote.

More from NextShark: Chinese father breaks down after son he tutored daily for a year scores a 6/100 on math exam

On Monday, Srisunaklua wrote she was “still alive” under her post, and she added that the video was shot two days earlier.

After the clip went viral, the Department of Disease Control (DDC) warned the public not to eat bats due to health concerns. Dr. Chakkarat Pittayawong-anont, the director of the Epidemiology Division at the DDC, said humans can easily contract diseases from bats, adding that its feces alone can cause respiratory infections.

“I was shocked to see it in the clip now. Because the incident should not happen both in Thailand and around the world, it is very risky behavior, especially as bats have a lot of pathogens. There is no proof that the hot water temperature will actually kill the germs. Just touching the saliva, blood, and the skin is considered a risk,” veterinarian Pattaraphon Manee-on of the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation said:

More from NextShark: Conspiracy theory claiming COVID-19 came from US-linked labs in Ukraine trends on Weibo

“Besides the concern about the disease in bats, this woman could be guilty of breaking the Preservation and Protection and Wildlife Act, B.E. 2019, because bats are protected animals,” he added.

On Tuesday, Kaset Sutecha, a lecturer at Kasetsart Universikhruty’s Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, reportedly said that there are more than 60 types of viruses that have been detected in bats that can spread to humans. He also noted that the Sars-CoV-2 virus, which originated in Wuhan, China, spread to humans from bats.

Although Jui initially denied the charges made against her, she later posted a new video online to apologize to “society, doctors, journalists, colleagues, family and friends,” adding that she was “not thinking.”

More from NextShark: Watch: Korean streamer reacts to winning $1.5 million lottery while live on Twitch

Srisunaklua also promised to never consume bats again.

 

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Terrifying Khosta-2 Russian Bat Virus Could Spark the Next Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic isn’t over. In fact, it shows signs of lingering for, well, a long time.

But even as politicians and health authorities struggle with how, if at all, to keep addressing the current pandemic, scientists are already anticipating the next one. They’re scouring the planet for animal viruses that, like SARS-CoV-2, could leap to the human population and cause serious disease on a global scale.

They just found one. And it’s nasty.

In 2020, a team of Russian scientists collected a few horseshoe bats in Sochi National Park in southern Russia. The Russians identified, in those bats, a new virus they called Khosta-2. Behaviorally, the virus seemed to have a lot in common with SARS-CoV-2.

Two years later, a separate team—including scientists from Washington State University and Tulane University—tested Khosta-2 along with another newly-discovered Russian bat virus, hoping to determine whether they’re capable of infecting people. And, if so, whether our antibodies stand any chance of stopping them.

The initial results, which the team described in a new peer-reviewed study that appeared last week in the science journal PLOS Pathogens, are worrying. The second bat virus didn’t seem all that infectious. But Khosta-2, on the other hand, took a liking to human cells.

“We tested how well the spike proteins from these bat viruses infect human cells under different conditions,” the scientists wrote. “We found that the spike from the virus Khosta-2 could infect [the] cells, similar to human pathogens using the same entry mechanisms.”

Equally troubling, Khosta-2 proved “resistant to neutralization by serum from individuals who had been vaccinated for SARS-CoV-2.” In other words, our bodies’ defenses against COVID-19 might not protect us from a hypothetical disease caused by Khosta-2.

The implications are clear. We’d need better antibodies to beat Khosta-2. “Our findings highlight the urgent need to continue development of new, and broader-protecting … vaccines,” the scientists behind the new study wrote.

Like SARS-CoV-2 and the hundreds of other so-called sarbecoviruses, Khosta-2 uses that spike-shaped protein on its surface to grab onto and infect a host’s cells. But the vast majority of sarbecoviruses can only infect the species that are their usual hosts. Bats, typically.

What makes Khosta-2 special is that, like SARS-CoV-2, it can also infect people—in lab conditions, at least. What makes Khosta-2 particularly scary is that it appears to shrug off the antibodies that currently work against SARS-CoV-2. Again, in lab conditions.

The more that we disrupt ecosystems and allow new mixing of species and viruses, the more we spin nature’s roulette wheel.

James Lawler, University of Nebraska Medical Center

There’s a lot of uncertainty here. The Tulane-Washington State University team didn’t try to infect actual human beings with Khosta-2. To test infection, they exposed the Russian bat virus to human cell cultures. To test our potential for immunity, they exposed the virus to COVID antibodies. “We can only test what we can test,” Michael Letko, a Washington State University virologist and one of the study’s authors, told The Daily Beast.

But the immunity test in particular wasn’t necessarily representative of how our immune systems actually work—something the study’s authors readily admit. “The immune response in an individual will be multi-faceted, encompassing innate and adaptive responses and cell-mediated immunity,” Letko said. “We only looked at antibody neutralization in this study.”

So don’t panic quite yet. There are a lot of animal viruses, many of which are closely related to SARS-CoV-2 or at least use some of the same biological mechanisms to infect their hosts. Most have never infected a human being—and might not even be able to do so in real-world conditions outside of a lab.

With further study, Khosta-2 could end up as a scientific red herring. A virus that looks a lot scarier than it actually is. “We have a hard time predicting accurately which ones will actually crack the code to become efficient human pathogens,” James Lawler, an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, told The Daily Beast.

But there’s no denying that, as the human population expands and chops down more and more forests for farms and cities, it’s coming into close contact with more and more exotic animal species. Each encounter is an opportunity for an animal virus to infect people—a process scientists call zoonosis.

“Generally, we might be able to say zoonosis risk is increasing for many types of viruses,” Letko said. Consider the recent history of infectious diseases in the human population. SARS-CoV-2 is just the latest animal virus to leap to people, after the bird flu virus, SARS-CoV-1, MERS and others.

There’s every reason to fear the pandemic after COVID-19. Maybe Khosta-2 will be the virus that gets us next. Maybe it’ll be some other pathogen. “The more that we disrupt ecosystems and allow new mixing of species and viruses, the more we spin nature’s roulette wheel,” Lawler said. We need to keep our eyes open—and prepare.

The most useful thing we can do, besides stop chopping down the forests where bats and their viruses live, is develop vaccines that work against a wide range of similar pathogens. There are several universal coronavirus vaccines in development that scientists hope will work against current and future variants of SARS-CoV-2.

The same “pan-coronavirus” vaccines might also work against sarbecoronaviruses such as Khosta-2, Letko said. We can’t say for sure until we test them. But as COVID funding withers, intensive testing could slip farther and farther into the future.

And if these universal vaccines don’t work against Khosta-2, we might need entirely new vax formulations, ones that are even more widely effective. Barton Haynes, an immunologist with Duke University’s Human Vaccine Institute who is developing a new pan-coronavirus vaccine, told The Daily Beast the likeliest outcome would be a mix of separate jabs that, taken together, could offer broad protection against a whole host of sarbecoronaviruses.

In that case, we might have a race on our hands. Can we develop these brand-new vaccines faster than some new sarbecoronavirus—whether Khosta-2 or some as-yet-undiscovered cousin—goes zoonotic and makes the leap to the human species? And can we get enough people to actually get the vaccines in time?

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Khosta-2 pandemic next? Scientists warn of new COVID-like virus originating from Russian bat

PULLMAN, Wash. — Is the next pandemic on the horizon? Scientists are warning of a new, COVID-like virus called Khosta-2 originating from a Russian bat. It is believed to be capable of infecting humans, and would be resistant to current vaccines.

Khosta-2 was found two years ago in horsehoe bats. Its discovery adds to evidence that sarbecoviruses — part of the coronavirus family — are rife across Asia and eastern Europe.

“Our research further demonstrates that sarbecoviruses circulating in wildlife outside of Asia – even in places like western Russia where the Khosta-2 virus was found – also pose a threat to global health and ongoing vaccine campaigns against SARS-CoV-2,” says study lead author Dr Michael Letko, of Washington State University, in a statement.

Past studies suggest that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, emerged in an animal, most likely a bat, before spreading to humans. The precise origins of the virus are unknown and have been investigated by a team commissioned by the World Health Organization (WHO).

What will bring about the next pandemic?

Scientists believe another pandemic will happen during our lifetime. Coronaviruses can move between different mammals such as cats, dogs and minks. By moving between species, the virus can mutate and evolve into a new pathogen, which could explain how COVID-19 emerged.

In the latest research, Dr Letko and colleagues found spike proteins from Khosta-2 can infect human cells. It is resistant to both the monoclonal antibodies and serum from individuals vaccinated against COVID-19.

Both Khosta-2 and SARS- CoV-2 belong to the same sub-category of coronaviruses known as sarbecoviruses. The study highlights the need to develop universal vaccines to protect against sarbecoviruses in general, rather than just against known variants of SARS-CoV-2.

“Right now, there are groups trying to come up with a vaccine that doesn’t just protect against the next variant of SARS-2 but actually protects us against the sarbecoviruses in general. Unfortunately, many of our current vaccines are designed to specific viruses we know infect human cells or those that seem to pose the biggest risk to infect us,” says Dr. Letko. “But that is a list that’s everchanging. We need to broaden the design of these vaccines to protect against all sarbecoviruses.”

Hundreds of sarbecoviruses have been discovered in recent years, mainly in bats in Asia. Most are not capable of infecting human cells. The Khosta-1 and Khosta-2 viruses were discovered in Russian bats in late 2020, and it initially appeared they were not a threat to humans.

“Genetically, these weird Russian viruses looked like some of the others that had been discovered elsewhere around the world, but because they did not look like SARS-CoV-2, no one thought they were really anything to get too excited about,” explains Letko. “But when we looked at them more, we were really surprised to find they could infect human cells. That changes a little bit of our understanding of these viruses, where they come from and what regions are concerning.”

Khosta-2 vs. COVID-19

The study, published in the journal PLoS Pathogens, finds that Khosta-1 poses a low risk to humans. Khosta-2, however, demonstrates “troubling traits.” Like SARS-CoV-2, it uses its spike protein to infect cells by attaching to a receptor protein, called ACE2 (angiotensin converting enzyme 2) found throughout human cells.

Using serum derived from human populations vaccinated for COVID, scientists also saw Khosta-2 was not neutralized. Further tests found the antibodies were also ineffective against serum from people infected with the omicron variant.

The new virus lacks some genes involved in causing COVID in humans. But there is a risk of it recombining with a second virus like SARS-CoV-2.

“When you see SARS-2 has this ability to spill back from humans and into wildlife, and then there are other viruses like Khosta-2 waiting in those animals with these properties we really don’t want them to have, it sets up this scenario where you keep rolling the dice until they combine to make a potentially riskier virus,” says Letko.

South West News Service writer Mark Waghorn contributed to this report.



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All You Need To Know About Russian Bat Virus That Could Infect Humans

All you need to know about Khosta-2

US scientists have discovered a new virus in bats that could be bad news for humans. The new virus, called Khosta-2 cannot just infect human cells, it is also resistant to current vaccines. Research published in the journal PLOS Pathogens says that the virus is resistant to the antibodies of people vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2—which causes COVID-19, reported Newsweek.

The virus was first discovered in bats in Russia in 2020 but at that time scientists did not think that the virus posed a threat to humans. After much careful research done by scientists, they found that the virus can infect human cells and it can become a possible public health threat.

What is Khosta-2?

Sarbecovirus, to which Khosta-2 and SARS-CoV-2 belong, is a subgroup of coronaviruses.

According to a report in Time magazine, a related virus also found in the Russian bats, Khosta-1, could not enter human cells readily, but Khosta-2 could. Khosta-2 attaches to the same protein, ACE2 that SARS-CoV-2 uses to penetrate human cells. A researcher says that receptors on human cells are the way that viruses get into cells. If a virus can’t get in the door, then it can’t get into the cell, and it’s difficult to establish any type of infection. The new virus can impact human cells readily. Michael Letko, an author of the study says that people vaccinated against covid-19 cannot neutralize the virus, and neither can people who have recovered from Omicron infections.

However, the researchers say that like the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2, this virus does not have genes that can cause serious disease in people. But it can eventually change if it gets mixed with genes of SARS-CoV-2.

How does it spread?

Khosta-2 has been circulating in wildlife such as bats, pangolins, raccoon dogs and palm civets. Mr Letko told Newsweek, it is difficult to say at this stage whether Khosta-2 has the potential to spark an epidemic or even a pandemic.

The scientists warn that if Khosta-2 combines with SARS-CoV-2, it can have more infectious factors. “The chances of SARS-CoV-2 ever ‘meeting’ Khosta-2 in nature is surely very small, but there have been an increasing number of reports describing SARS-CoV-2 spilling back into wildlife—like white-tailed deer on the East Coast of the United States,” Letko said.

Vaccine research

“Right now, there are groups trying to come up with a vaccine that doesn’t just protect against the next variant of SARS-2 (SARS-CoV-2) but actually protects us against the sarbecoviruses in general,” Letko said.

He added, “Unfortunately, many of our current vaccines are designed [for] specific viruses we know infect human cells or those that seem to pose the biggest risk to infect us. But that’s a list that’s ever-changing. We need to broaden the design of these vaccines to protect against all sarbecoviruses,” added Letko.

Known cases across the world

The virus lacks some of the genes believed to be involved in pathogenesis — that is, developing into a disease — in humans.

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Khosta-2: New Russian bat virus discovered that could infect humans and resist COVID vaccines

When SARS-CoV-2 – the virus behind COVID-19 – surfaced in China and quickly brought the entire world to a standstill, then-President Donald Trump liked to refer to it as “the Chinese virus”.

Fast forward two and a half years, and US scientists are warning that a newly-discovered virus harboured by Russian horseshoe bats is also capable of infecting humans and evading COVID-19 antibodies and vaccines.

The bat virus, named Khosta-2, is known as a sarbecovirus – the same sub-category of coronaviruses as SARS-CoV-2 – and it displays “troubling traits,” according to a new study published in the journal PLoS Pathogens.

A team led by researchers at the Paul G. Allen School for Global Health at Washington State University (WSU) found that Khosta-2 can use its spike proteins to infect human cells very much like SARS-CoV-2 does.

“Our research further demonstrates that sarbecoviruses circulating in wildlife outside of Asia – even in places like western Russia where the Khosta-2 virus was found – also pose a threat to global health and ongoing vaccine campaigns against SARS-CoV-2,” Michael Letko, a virologist at WSU and corresponding author of the study, said in a statement.

He said this discovery highlights the need to develop new vaccines that don’t only target known variants of SARS-CoV-2, such as Omicron, but that protect against all sarbecoviruses.

‘Weird Russian viruses’

Among the hundreds of sarbecoviruses discovered in recent years, most have been found in Asian bats and are not capable of infecting human cells.

The Khosta-1 and Khosta-2 viruses were discovered in bats near Russia’s Sochi National Park in 2020, and it initially appeared they were not a threat to humans, according to the study’s authors.

“Genetically, these weird Russian viruses looked like some of the others that had been discovered elsewhere around the world, but because they did not look like SARS-CoV-2, no one thought they were really anything to get too excited about,” Letko said.

“But when we looked at them more, we were really surprised to find they could infect human cells. That changes a little bit of our understanding of these viruses, where they come from and what regions are concerning”.

‘Troubling traits’

Letko and his colleagues determined that Khosta-1 posed a low risk to humans, but Khosta-2 was more concerning.

In particular, like SARS-CoV-2, Khosta-2 can use its spike protein to infect cells by attaching to a receptor protein, called angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), which is found throughout human cells.

The scientists next wanted to find out whether the virus could evade the immunity offered either by previous coronavirus infections or COVID-19 vaccines.

Using serum derived from people vaccinated against COVID-19, the team discovered Khosta-2 was not neutralised by current vaccines.

They also tested serum from people who were infected with the Omicron variant, but there again, the antibodies were ineffective.

Fortunately, the authors write that the new virus lacks some of the genetic features thought to “antagonise” the immune system and contribute to disease in humans – but there is a risk that Khosta-2 could wreak havoc by recombining with a second virus such as SARS-CoV-2.

“When you see SARS-2 has this ability to spill back from humans and into wildlife, and then there are other viruses like Khosta-2 waiting in those animals with these properties we really don’t want them to have, it sets up this scenario where you keep rolling the dice until they combine to make a potentially riskier virus,” Letko said.

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Nationals are victims of bizarre appeal play, Bryan Reynolds’s hot bat

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The Washington Nationals won the first two games of their three-game series against the Pittsburgh Pirates with an unsustainable formula — leaving runners in scoring position early, only to get clutch hits late to narrowly escape.

So the hosts went for a more conventional route Wednesday at Nationals Park, pounding 16 hits. The problem was that Bryan Reynolds blasted three home runs, almost single-handedly preventing Washington from completing a series sweep in an 8-7 Pirates win.

The Nationals entered Wednesday 2 for 22 with runners in scoring position in the first two games yet won both. Washington finished 7 for 14 in the matinee and still lost.

Reynolds did his damage off three different pitchers — a two-run home run to left-center off Paolo Espino in the first inning, a solo shot to right off Carl Edwards Jr. in the sixth and a three-run blast in the seventh, an opposite field shot into the visitors’ bullpen that had Kyle Finnegan hanging his head the second his pitch made contact with Reynolds’s bat. The last homer proved the difference despite the Nationals (29-49) making the late innings interesting.

Nationals fan tracks pitchers’ poor starts, one stinker at a time

Yadiel Hernandez hit a solo home run in the seventh to bring the Nationals within one. They loaded the bases with two outs in the eighth, but Luis García flew out to left to end the threat.

“Even the last inning, I thought we were going to come back and at least tie the game, but it didn’t happen,” Manager Dave Martinez said. “I’m proud of the way the boys are playing.”

The one-run loss was even tougher to swallow given what transpired at the end of the fifth inning. With runners on second and third and one out, Josh Bell caught a sinking line drive from Ke’Bryan Hayes. Both runners took off on the swing, so Bell threw to third baseman Ehire Adrianza for the apparent third out.

Adrianza tagged Hoy Park first before tagging third base. The umpires said they never saw Adrianza tag the base, although Adrianza said after the game he did. Rule 5.09(c)(4) states a defensive team is required to formally make an appeal throw or tag of a runner who leaves his base too soon, even if it technically would qualify as the “fourth out” of an inning.

Jack Suwinski scored from third right before Park was tagged out, and because the Nationals didn’t formally appeal whether he left the base early, the run counted.

Still, Washington had plenty of opportunities in a back-and-forth contest.

Why the Nationals put Cade Cavalli, Cole Henry and Brady House on pause

Following Reynolds’s first home run, Washington recorded five hits off Pirates starter Mitch Keller. Bell doubled and Nelson Cruz singled on the next pitch to score Bell. Then Cruz came in to score on Keibert Ruiz’s single to knot the game at 2.

Juan Soto, who entered Wednesday hitting 7 for 56 (.125) with runners in scoring position, doubled with two outs in the second inning to score Adrianza. But the Pirates took the lead back after Daniel Vogelbach’s home run in the fourth off Espino and the bizarre sequence that accounted for a run in the fifth.

The Nationals pushed ahead in the bottom of the inning behind run-scoring hits from Ruiz and Yadiel Hernandez, and both had a chance to score on César Hernández’s bloop single with two outs.

Ruiz thought there was one out in the inning and waited until the ball dropped, so Hernandez was right behind him, and both dashed for home. Ruiz just beat the throw from left field, but Hernandez was tagged out at home.

Reynolds homered in each of the next two innings, and finally the Nationals ran out of answers.

“It was his day today,” Ruiz said.

“We had 16 hits, had seven runs,” Bell said. “Yes, we could have hit more. I mean, there’s always opportunities to drive in more runs. But I think that it seemed like we had a lot that we had to make up. And I’ll just leave it at that.”

What else does Rule 5.09(c) (4) say about appealing? Plenty. “Appeal plays may require an umpire to recognize an apparent ‘fourth out.’ If the third out is made during a play in which an appeal play is sustained on another runner, the appeal play decision takes precedence in determining the out. If there is more than one appeal during a play that ends a half-inning, the defense may elect to take the out that gives it the advantage. For the purpose of this rule, the defensive team has ‘left the field’ when the pitcher and all infielders have left fair territory on their way to the bench or clubhouse.”

How has Mason Thompson pitched in his rehab stints? Thompson (biceps tendinitis) made his third relief appearance in the past seven days for Class AAA Rochester on Tuesday night. He pitched two innings and allowed two hits, but recorded his third scoreless outing with the Red Wings. Martinez said his next step will be pitching on back-to-back days and throwing multiple innings.

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