Tag Archives: Dominic

Noah Cyrus Reportedly Dated Tish Cyrus’ New Husband Dominic Purcell Before They Got Married – BuzzFeed

  1. Noah Cyrus Reportedly Dated Tish Cyrus’ New Husband Dominic Purcell Before They Got Married BuzzFeed
  2. Miley Cyrus Had ‘No Idea’ About Dating ‘Drama’ Surrounding Mom Tish and Sister Noah (Exclusive Source) PEOPLE
  3. Miley Cyrus’ mom Tish began dating husband Dominic Purcell after he had casual relationship with daughter Noah Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Noah Cyrus looks unfazed while attending Paris Fashion Week after past relationship with mom Tish’s husband exposed Page Six
  5. Noah Cyrus and Dominic Purcell Dated, Mom Tish Didn’t Tell Noah When She ‘Decided to Pursue’ Him: Source Entertainment Tonight

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“Ridiculous!” Prince Harry ‘Cut Off’ Actor Friend Dominic West ‘For Oversharing’ – TalkTV

  1. “Ridiculous!” Prince Harry ‘Cut Off’ Actor Friend Dominic West ‘For Oversharing’ TalkTV
  2. ‘The Crown’ actor says Prince Harry no longer speaks to him: ‘I said too much’ Fox News
  3. Prince Harry ‘threw a s – – t fit’ after Dominic West revealed royal drank champagne out of a prosthetic leg New York Post
  4. Dominic West Says He and Prince Harry Lost Touch Because He “Said Too Much in a Press Conference” Yahoo Life
  5. Prince Harry ‘threw a fit’ and cut Dominic West out of his life: Friend reveals details of Crown star’s fall-o Daily Mail

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Dominic West Bought Prince Harry’s Memoir Immediately and It Changed His ‘The Crown’ Season 6 Performance – Variety

  1. Dominic West Bought Prince Harry’s Memoir Immediately and It Changed His ‘The Crown’ Season 6 Performance Variety
  2. ‘The Crown’: Dominic West on Season 6’s Diana Aftermath and Why His Real Son Playing William “Would Have Been Too Close for Comfort” Hollywood Reporter
  3. When is The Crown season 6 part 2 released? The Independent
  4. Dominic West on The Crown: ‘I’m fighting Charles’s corner’ The Times
  5. The Crown: Prince William BLAMES King Charles for mother Diana’s death in tense scenes in season 6 of the Netf Daily Mail

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Miley Cyrus the Maid of Honor! Singer looks on as mom Tish marries Prison Break star Dominic Purcell in Malibu – Daily Mail

  1. Miley Cyrus the Maid of Honor! Singer looks on as mom Tish marries Prison Break star Dominic Purcell in Malibu Daily Mail
  2. Miley Cyrus turns maid of honor for mom Tish Cyrus as she gets married to Dominic Purecell in Malibu PINKVILLA
  3. Tish Cyrus mother of Miley Cyrus marries Dominic Purcell in Malibu ceremony Geo News
  4. Miley Cyrus gets emotional as her mother Tish Cyrus weds Dominic Purcell: Photos The News International
  5. Miley Cyrus’ new ‘stepdad’ Aussie actor Dominic Purcell posts proud picture with the popstar during outing wit Daily Mail
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rishi Sunak under pressure over what he knew about claims against Dominic Raab – BBC

  1. Rishi Sunak under pressure over what he knew about claims against Dominic Raab BBC
  2. No 10 refuses to deny Sunak was given informal warning about Raab’s behaviour before he made him deputy PM – as it happened The Guardian
  3. PMQs: Starmer cites Independent story while grilling Sunak over Zahawi appointment The Independent
  4. Prime Minister’s Questions should have come with a trigger warning The Independent
  5. Labour accuses Rishi Sunak of being ‘too weak’ to sack Dominic Raab over bullying claims Financial Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Cubs Have Had Discussions With Dominic Smith

After signing Cody Bellinger to a one-year, $17.5MM deal today, the Cubs could wind up landing another left-handed power bat, with Anthony DiComo of MLB.com reporting the team has had discussions with Dominic Smith at the Winter Meetings. Smith is a free agent after the Mets non-tendered him.

Smith has struggled in the past two seasons, playing through a partially torn labrum last year and never got going in 2022, as he battled for playing time with J.D. Davis and ultimately found himself optioned to the minor leagues. He finished 2022 with a .194/.276/.284 batting line without a single home run, good for a well below average 67 wRC+.

With that being said, Smith has showed plenty of promise over his career, and has been the victim of circumstance in some regards. The 27-year-old was drafted 11th overall in 2013 and regularly featured on top-100 prospect lists as he came through the minors. He received some time in the majors in 2017 and 2018, but showed his offensive promise in 2019, when he slashed .282/.355/.525 with 11 home runs in 197 plate appearances. That also happened to be the same year Pete Alonso burst onto the stage, and forced Smith to spend time in left field, where he graded out poorly defensively.

Boosted by the presence of the DH in the National League in 2020, Smith continued hitting in that pandemic-shortened season, slashing .316/.377/.616 with ten home runs. Yet things tailed off in 2021 as injury sapped his power, and Smith has never really been able to get another look in and the Mets opted to non-tender instead of paying him a projected $4MM arbitration salary.

While his 2022 numbers won’t drive much interest, he’d make sense for teams willing to take a flier on him rediscovering his plentiful upside. Of course, one of the problems Smith faced in New York was a lack of regular playing time, so while times may see him as a high-upside bench bat, he may be more inclined to seek out opportunities where he can start, at least initially.

The Cubs currently have Matt Mervis and Alfonso Rivas penciled into the first base and designated hitter slots, so there’s certainly room there for them to add a player like Smith. The Cubs have also held long-standing interest in him, as DiComo adds that the Cubs discussed a trade with the Mets this past summer involving Smith. The Rays and Royals have both shown interest in Smith earlier this off-season as well.



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MLB rumors: Dallas Keuchel DFA’d again; multiple suitors for Mets’ Dominic Smith

With the All-Star break now in the rearview, the next benchmark during the 2022 Major League Baseball season is the trade deadline. The traditional July 31 deadline has been pushed back two days to Aug. 2 this year. Keeping in mind there are now three wild cards per league, theoretically there could be a larger number of buyers than usual, though an awful lot of teams don’t resemble contenders, so maybe we’ll still get a similar number of sellers. 

Let’s dive in. 

Keuchel DFA, again

Southpaw starter Dallas Keuchel has been designated for assignment for the second time this season, according to Jeff Passan. 

Keuchel, 34, started the season on the third year of his three-year, $55 million deal with the White Sox. He was good in 2020, pitching to a 1.99 ERA and 1.09 WHIP in 11 starts, but then regressed to a 5.28 ERA last season and 7.88 with 20 walks and 20 strikeouts in 32 innings for the White Sox before they let him go. The Diamondbacks then grabbed him and in four starts he posted a 9.64 ERA and 1.82 WHIP. Walks weren’t quite as big an issue and his strikeout rate rose in Arizona, but it’s a tiny sample and overall, hitters have destroyed Keuchel all year, to the tune of a .338/.407/.564 triple slash. Basically, every opposing hitter has performed like an MVP candidate against him. 

The two-time All-Star and 2015 AL Cy Young winner should continue to find work, but it’s possible he’s made his last MLB start this season. 

Multiple suitors for Smith

The Mets are in first place in the NL East and on pace to win 100-plus games, so they obviously aren’t “sellers” by the traditional definition. They are in position to cut bait on Dominic Smith, though, so they could deal him. 

The Cubs and Red Sox “and others” have shown interest in Smith, according to Robert Murray. A possibly complicating factor: Smith was placed on the injured list Thursday, retroactive to July 17, with a sprained ankle. He should be back before the deadline and anyone looking for Smith as a change-of-scenery guy might not care about this minor injury at this moment. 

Smith, the former top-100 prospect, is now in his sixth MLB season. He was very good in 2019 and in the shortened 2020 season he hit .316/.377/.616 (168 OPS+) with 21 doubles and 10 homers in 50 games. Last year, though, he hit .244/.304/.363 with 112 strikeouts in 446 at-bats. This season, he’s gotten even worse, hitting .194 with a paltry .284 slugging percentage. He hasn’t even hit a single home run. His 61 OPS+ and -0.4 WAR are simply unplayable for a team with postseason aspirations. 

Any acquiring team would be looking for a post-hype breakout from Smith and, hey, those happen sometimes. 

Romo elects free agency

Reliever Sergio Romo, who was previously designated for assignment, has cleared waivers and has decided to become a free agent, reports Ben Nicholson-Smith. 

Romo is 39 years old and in his 15th MLB season. In 23 appearances this season, he has a 7.50 ERA and 1.39 WHIP in 18 innings. He was somewhat serviceable for the A’s last season but it’s probably fair to say he hasn’t been good for extended stretches since 2019. He’ll catch on somewhere else, but his MLB career is likely winding down. 

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Mets option Dominic Smith for bullpen help

NEW YORK — On Tuesday afternoon, manager Buck Showalter made it clear why the Mets optioned first baseman Dominic Smith to Triple-A and recalled right-hander Adonis Medina from Syracuse: The big league club needed an extra pitcher for the bullpen. It hasn’t helped that the starters haven’t given the Mets length lately.

“Primarily, we need a pitcher,” Showalter said. “We are not going to put our bullpen in harm’s way. We have had some short [outings from our starters]. … We are going to try to keep everybody healthy [in the bullpen]. Dom was the option we ended up with. … We have bullpen pieces that we really need to be careful with.”

Medina was recalled for the sixth time this season. He has a 5.87 ERA in 7 2/3 innings of relief in the Majors, but a 2.00 ERA in nine innings at Triple-A.

Smith got off to a slow start this year, batting 16-for-86 (.186) with 14 RBIs in 39 games with New York. In 19 games since Smith’s four-hit night against the Phillies on May 1 — which secured his spot ahead of the May 2 roster deadline — he batted just .130/.226/.217 with seven RBIs and five walks.

The Mets are hoping he can get back to being the Dominic Smith of 2020, when he was one of baseball’s best hitters with a .316 average and ranked third on the Mets with 2.0 WAR.

“In the situation that we are in, we have a really good first baseman in Pete Alonso,” Showalter said. “[Smith] is probably feeling like every at-bat, he has to hit four home runs in one at-bat.

“[We want him to] settle in a comfort zone, just remind himself how good [he is]. He is a confident guy. I see the work he keeps doing, trying to be perfect in every at-bat. It’s hard to do in this game. The pitchers are really good. Just try to settle into some consistent at-bats and know that he is going to be out there every day. Just get into a groove where he can be who he is capable of being.”

How did Smith take the news? Maybe general manager Billy Eppler said it best.

“I think like any of us would take it if we got news from our employer. It was hard, but I made sure to articulate how good of a baseball player I thought he was and still do,” Eppler said. “It’s a point of adversity. But he’s got our support, and any resource that he can help with, anything he needs from us, he’s got it.”

With Smith in the Minor Leagues, Mark Canha most likely serves as the backup first baseman. He has played 118 big league games at the position during his career. The Mets also have other players on the roster who can see time at first. Eduardo Escobar has played 18 games there, while Patrick Mazeika has played 98 games at first base in the Minors.

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Dominic Taddeo: New York mob hitman, set to be released next year, escapes federal custody

Taddeo, 64, was transferred in February from a medium-security prison in Sumter County, Florida, to a halfway house near Orlando, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) spokesperson Scott Taylor. He was scheduled to be there until his release in February 2023, according to court documents.

On Monday, March 28, Taddeo failed to return from an “authorized appointment” and was placed on escape status, Taylor said.

The United States Marshals Service told CNN it was aware of the escape and “has made the fugitive investigation a top priority,” according to a spokesperson.

Taddeo was nearing the end of several prison sentences for a string of convictions, including illegal weapons possession and racketeering and conspiracy in connection to the killings and attempted homicides, according to 1992 archives of the Rochester newspaper Democrat and Chronicle.

Taddeo pleaded guilty in January 1992 to the shooting deaths of three people in 1982 and 1983, and also for twice attempting to fatally shoot a mob leader and plotting to kill another mob figure, according to the Democrat and Chronicle archives.

Taddeo admitted in court that a crime organization known as “La Cosa Nostra” that existed in Rochester had paid him to kill certain people, according to news reports. La Cosa Nostra — or the Mafia — has been operating in New York since roughly the 1920s, according to the FBI.

In April 1992, the late US District Judge Michael A. Telesca sentenced Taddeo to 24 years in prison, which he was to serve consecutively to the 30 years he was already serving for drug conspiracy, bail jumping and illegal weapons possession, according to the newspaper archive.

Taddeo filed a motion for compassionate release in December 2020, citing the dangers that the Covid-19 pandemic posed to his health. A judge denied the request and refused to cut Taddeo’s sentence short, citing the “seriousness of his offenses and his extremely lengthy criminal record.”

“Defendant began a life of crime at 16 years old,” U.S. District Judge Frank Geraci Jr. wrote in his decision last year. “His prior convictions are for crimes including assault, conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and, most notably, Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization conspiracy arising from his employment and association with Rochester’s La Cosa Nostra organized crime family.”

“The RICO charges involve the murder of three individuals, attempted murder of two more individuals, and conspiracy to murder a fifth person,” the judge wrote, adding that cutting Taddeo’s sentence short “would undermine” the seriousness of the offenses.

Taddeo has been on the run before, according to the Democrat & Chronicle newspaper. In 1987, facing federal weapons charges, he disappeared while out on bail and was found two years later after a national manhunt, the newspaper reported.

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Dominic Taddeo, notorious New York mobster who killed 3 people, escapes federal custody in Florida

A notorious New York mobster who killed three people and attempted to kill two others has escaped from federal custody after recently being moved to a halfway house, according to the Bureau of Prisons. Dominic Taddeo, a hit man from a Rochester-area crime family, escaped on March 28, according to the Bureau of Prisons website.

Taddeo, 64, had been imprisoned at a medium-security lockup in Florida before being transferred to a residential halfway house, also in Florida, in February.

He failed to return from an authorized medical appointment and “was placed on escape status” on Monday, a Bureau of Prisons spokesperson said.

Taddeo pleaded guilty in 1992 to racketeering charges that included the killings of three men during mob wars in the 1980s. In 1982 and 1983, Taddeo shot Nicholas Mastrodonato, Gerald Pelusio and Dino Tortatice to death.

A federal judge in western New York denied Taddeo’s request for compassionate release last year, rejecting his claim that health problems including hypertension and obesity put him at risk for serious complications from COVID-19. Prosecutors said medical records did not show that Taddeo was particularly unhealthy.

The Democrat & Chronicle reported that Taddeo had previously eluded authorities during a two-year manhunt after being released on bail in 1987. He was finally caught in 1989 while trying to meet his brother in Cleveland, the newspaper reported.

When brought back to Rochester, the Democrat & Chronicle wrote, “Small, balding, and looking hardly like the mob hit man who investigators say gunned down three underworld figures, Dominic Taddeo returned to federal court in shackles.”



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