Tag Archives: Fernando

Fernando Tatis Jr. wrist injury update

CHICAGO — Three months ago, on the first day of Spring Training, Padres president of baseball operations A.J. Preller met with reporters and offered a timetable for the return of his superstar shortstop. With three months of hindsight, we now know that timetable was overly optimistic.

On March 14, Preller predicted an absence of up to three months for Fernando Tatis Jr., who had sustained a fractured scaphoid bone in his left wrist during the offseason.

Precisely three months to the day — with Tatis yet to swing a bat since he sustained the injury — Preller addressed reporters again with a bit of sobering news.

“Another MRI scan continues to show healing, but it was not quite at the level for … a full green light,” Preller said. “Basically we’re in a spot where we’re going to progress week-to-week.”

The Padres, meanwhile, keep winning even without Tatis in the lineup. Their victory over the Cubs on Monday moved them into a virtual tie with the Dodgers atop the National League West. At 38-24, the Padres are off to their best 62-game start in franchise history.

But that hot start has been largely a testament to a deep rotation, a solid defense and the performance of Manny Machado. As a whole, the performance of the Padres’ offense has been middling. It’s a lineup that could clearly use a bit more thump – and particularly more production at shortstop.

“We’re expecting to have him back — it’s just a matter of when,” Preller said. “I don’t think it changes like, ‘Hey, we need to do something from a roster standpoint.’ The guys, they’ve played well, and we’re finding a lot of ways to win games.”

Tatis underwent those scans in Arizona on Monday with Dr. Donald Sheridan, who performed the surgery on March 16. Preller noted that Dr. Sheridan was pleased with some level of progress Tatis has made in strengthening his wrist.

But it hadn’t quite healed enough for Dr. Sheridan to clear Tatis to begin swinging, and the Padres aren’t about to rush him back to action.

“From the beginning, this was all about the long term and a long relationship with Fernando in his career,” Preller said. “We’re going to be very cautious. This falls in line with that.”

For now, Tatis will continue doing some level of baseball activity, without swinging. He’s been traveling with the team and was slated to re-join the Padres in Chicago on Tuesday night.

Thus far, Tatis has been full-go in his throwing progression, and he’s worked heavily on his conditioning. He’s been able to take lightly rolled ground balls and play light catch, but the Padres have been cautious.

“He wants to get back on the field and play,” Preller said. “He obviously loves playing. … I think he understands that this is about what’s best for him long-term. I know he feels good, and he feels like he can go out there and do this. But he was very mature in: ‘Hey, I’m going to trust what the doctors are saying.’

“This is about not just the next week. This is about the next few months and, really, the next 10-plus years, in terms of a career. If that means we’re going to have to take it week-to-week here right now, he was very understanding of that.”

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Fernando Tatis Jr. injury: Padres star out up to three months with fractured wrist, may need surgery

San Diego Padres superstar Fernando Tatis Jr. suffered a fractured wrist at some point during the offseason and could be out up to three months, GM A.J. Preller told reporters on Monday, including The Athletic’s Dennis Lin. Surgery may be required. The three-month timeline would put Tatis on track to return in the middle of June.

“Nothing crazy, I thought it was something we could work through,” Tatis told reporters, including MLB.com’s AJ Cassavell, about the injury. He said it first popped up about a month ago, though it may date back to his December motorcycle accident. Tatis clarified the decision whether to have surgery has not been made yet. 

Players and teams were not allowed to communicate during the lockout, so clubs were not alerted to any injuries suffered during the offseason until the work stoppage ended. This will be the third time in three 162-game seasons he has missed time with injuries. In 2019 and 2021, back and shoulder trouble sidelined him. 

Tatis, 23, has finished in the top four of NL MVP voting each of the last two seasons. He hit .282/.364/.611 with 42 home runs in 130 games last year and has cemented himself as one of the productive players in the game when he’s actually on the field. In his three MLB seasons, Tatis has played 273 of 384 possible regular season games, or 71 percent.

The injury is devastating news for a Padres team looking to rebound from a tremendously disappointing 2021. San Diego went into last season as a World Series contender and instead went 79-83. They lost 34 of their final 46 games. Manager Jayce Tingler was let go after the season and the Padres hired Bob Melvin away from the Athletics to replace him.

Here’s what Sportsline has to say about the impact of losing Tatis for potentially close to half the season:

with Tatis

88.8

66.2%

5.1%

1.1%

without Tatis

86.1

53.8%

2.9%

0.5%

Change

-2.7

-12.4%

-2.2%

-0.6%

“It’s terrible. I feel like everybody’s disappointed, especially me,” Tatis told Cassavell. “I feel like we have a pretty good chance this year as a team, and I just want to be out there for my teammates.”    

San Diego traded second baseman Adam Frazier to the Mariners prior to the lockout, thinning the club’s middle infield depth. Melvin’s regular lineup figures to look something like this while Tatis is on the mend:

  1. CF Trent Grisham
  2. 2B Jake Cronenworth
  3. 3B Manny Machado
  4. 1B Eric Hosmer
  5. RF Wil Myers
  6. C Austin Nola
  7. LF Jurickson Profar
  8. DH Nomar Mazara
  9. SS Ha-Seong Kim

The Padres pursued Nelson Cruz prior to his deal with the Nationals and they figure to remain in the market for a big bat. A short-term deal with an outfielder makes the most sense. Jorge Soler, Andrew McCutchen, and Joc Pederson are potential targets. They could look into a reunion with Tommy Pham as well, or pursue Japanese slugger Seiya Suzuki.

Journeyman and non-roster invitee Domingo Leyba now has the inside track on the team’s utility infielder job, so the Padres could look to upgrade their bench before Opening Day as well. San Diego was a middle-of-the road offensive team last season and they’re one more injury away from looking really thin in the lineup.

Tatis has been nothing short of brilliant when he’s on the field. He just isn’t on the field as often as the Padres would like. Tatis is entering the second year of the record 14-year, $340 million contract he signed last spring.

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Fernando Arroyos case: 4 arrested in fatal shooting of off-duty LAPD officer in South LA, Sheriff Villanueva says

SOUTH LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Four people have been arrested in connection with the killing of an off-duty Los Angeles Police Department officer who was shot while house-hunting in South L.A. with his girlfriend, authorities announced Wednesday.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva announced the arrests during a livestream of his weekly informational update. He did not disclose the suspects’ names or additional details about the investigation.

The Sheriff’s Department had previously said that three men and two women were detained in the Florence area of South L.A. on Tuesday afternoon in connection with the fatal shooting of 27-year-old Fernando Arroyos.

Arroyos, who was a 3-year veteran of LAPD assigned to Olympic Division, was shot near 87th and Beach streets Monday night. Investigators say a black pickup truck approached him and three suspects got out.

Some type of argument ensued before an exchange of gunfire, in which Arroyos was struck. Officials said he was house hunting with his girlfriend at the time of the shooting.

The sheriff’s department says no one has been charged with the murder of Arroyos and the names of the five people detained are not being released at this time.
Early Tuesday morning, a procession escorted Arroyos’ body from the hospital to the coroner’s office.
“We mourn the loss of one of our officers who was shot & killed in an armed robbery attempt. The officer was off-duty. We pray for the officer’s family, and their fellow officers, during this time of pain and sorrow,” the Los Angeles Police Protective League tweeted just after midnight Tuesday.

LAPD Lt. Rex Ingram remembered Arroyos as a “phenomenal young man, extremely bright, intelligent, humble, modest, and just a smile that would last for days.”

An only child, Arroyos’ coworkers say he had two dreams in life. His first was to be the first person in his family to go to college. He accomplished that by graduating from UC Berkeley with honors.

His second dream was to become an LAPD officer.

Eddie Martinez, a friend who grew up with Arroyos, said the slain policeman was “just a good kid, super straight-edge, always hard-working, really, in school.”
Arroyos “definitely wanted the best for his family,” Martinez said.

DEVELOPING: More details will be added to this report as they become available.

Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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Fernando Espinoza, a US teacher, disappeared in Libya. Now his mother is trying to bring him home

His voice was shaky, she said, almost unrecognizable from the confident commentary he would post to YouTube charting his foreign travels.

“Towards the end, I guess as they were telling him that the call had to end, he started crying,” she said.

His final words were, “I’m sorry, but I have to go. And Merry Christmas.”

He’d ventured south of the city for a weekend trip to a desert oasis, but on his return was picked up for questioning. And the frequent texts he sent to his mom ceased.

Sara had hoped to find her son and bring him home by Christmas Eve — the date of Libya’s first presidential election in a decade. But days out from the vote, the process has collapsed, pushing the country closer to conflict as warring parties seek to replace a government set to lose its mandate.

Now, Sara’s more worried than ever.

“I’m relieved that I heard from him,” she said of Tuesday’s call, negotiated by the US embassy in Tunisia and Libyan authorities.

“But then I also feel very sad because I know that he’s not well. My son never cries.”

The US embassy told CNN after the call that inquiries were being handled by the State Department. When asked by CNN for comment on Fernando’s status, the State Department said they were “aware of the detention of a U.S. citizen in Libya.”

“We are monitoring the situation and due to privacy considerations, we are not going to go into specifics at this time,” an official said.

Back home in Miami, Florida, Sara is left to relive the pain of her son’s disappearance as she pores over any details that could shed more light around what happened in the hopes of bringing Fernando home.

A weekend away

Sara had taken time off work to meet her son for a vacation in neighboring Tunisia this week, like they’d planned.

For many years, Sara raised Fernando as a single mother — they’re very close, he’s her only child. And he’s always had an adventurous streak, she said.

“He told me he’s been to about 47 countries in about seven years or so,” she said. “He’s traveled a lot.”

After being grounded during the pandemic, Sara said Fernando seized the chance to teach English in Tripoli at the International School of Martyrs or ISM International, a school for children from kindergarten to grade 12.

In early October, he flew to Libya and a month later, on November 4, he took a weekend trip to the Idehan Ubari desert to see the Gaberoun oasis, she said, a salty lake once home to a Bedouin tribe whose abandoned village is now a local tourist site.

From Tripoli, it’s a treacherous trip south by roads that wind through areas vulnerable to attack by militias. The region is contested by multiple groups, and experts have warned it’s unsafe to travel through.

Sara said she was told by ISM’s administrator that Fernando had been explicitly told by his new employers not to venture outside Tripoli because it was too dangerous. But he went anyway.

Though Sara says she can see why Fernando went: “It’s just part of his nature to be adventurous like that.”

Fernando hired a driver for ​the weekend trip, his mother said, nine hours south of Tripoli. From there, he would go to the desert oasis, about 58 miles (93 kilometers) ​west of the city ​of Sebha.

But Fernando didn’t ​reach Sebha on time, according to text messages he sent his mom.

On the outskirts of Sebha, he and his driver were seized and held overnight, according to text messages Fernando sent to his mother on November 5.

It’s not clear who held him, but he texted his mother to say he was fine.

After his release, Fernando continued his trip to the oasis and sent a photo of himself looking happy and relaxed before dropping out of contact again.

That’s when his mother really started to worry.

It was the last time they texted together.​

Fellow English teacher Vanessa Powell said mutual friends had told her that Fernando was questioned and detained on his return by plane to Tripoli on November 9. ​Until his Tuesday phone call to his mom, none of his friends had heard from him in six weeks. CNN has not been able to independently verify if he was questioned and detained at the airport.

Libyan authorities have not responded to CNN’s multiple requests for comment.

“He’s not online. He’s not on WhatsApp or messenger,” Powell told CNN on November 30. “No one knows exactly where he is. We just have some kind of story that he’s been arrested or is in jail or something.”

Powell met Fernando several years ago in Iraq, and she said he briefly stayed with her in Cairo before he flew to Tripoli to start his new job. Fernando didn’t express any concerns about his safety in Libya before he went, Powell told CNN, “because he’s been doing this kind of work in developing countries for a while.”

An unanswered phone

When Powell couldn’t reach him on the phone, she called Siraj Davis, a mutual friend who works as an English teacher in Iraq.

He told CNN he messaged the school on Facebook and received a reply on November 19: “He is not kidnapped. He is arrested by the intelligence police. He is safe and he is fine,” said the unsigned message, which Davis provided to CNN. “Still under investigation. I don’t have any other information. I am sorry I can’t help anymore,” the message added.

The school declined CNN’s multiple requests for comment and referred questions to the embassy. Sara said the school was initially helpful but now tells her to phone the embassy, too.

The US hasn’t had a diplomatic presence in Libya since July 2014, when it shut its embassy after violent clashes between Libyan militias, according to a US government website.

The US State Department warns US citizens not to travel to Libya due to the risk of “crime, terrorism, civil unrest, kidnapping and armed conflict.”

Sara said US consular officials in Tunisia told her they first spoke with Fernando on November 29, though she describes them as guarded in any information they shared. They told her Fernando “seems to be OK,” she said, and that he had asked for his medication — and to speak to his mother.

Silence followed, then on Monday US consular officials said they’d been granted a second consular phone call — which she could join. They cautioned that phone lines in Libya are unreliable, so she should prepare for disappointment in case the connection didn’t work.

It did.

In the early hours of Tuesday morning, Sara heard her son’s voice for the first time in over a month. She said the call was short, and she could tell other people, likely officials, were listening on both sides.

“He apologized and said, ‘I’m really sorry that I’m having to put you through this,'” Sara recalled. “I told him, ‘Don’t worry about it … we’re doing what we can to get you out.'”

Fernando told her he spends most of his time in a room except for occasional walks down a hallway. He doesn’t go outside but sees sunlight through a window and is taking his medication.

“He said, ‘Mostly what I do is sleep, cry and pray​,'” Sara told CNN.

No charges laid

There’s still no official confirmation as to why Fernando is being held.

Originally, the embassy suggested he was being questioned due to visa issues, Sara said, but six weeks on, she thinks there must be more to it.

An image of Fernando’s stamped passport obtained by CNN shows he entered Libya on a one-month visa on October 5, meaning his visa would have expired around November 5, when he was in the desert. The visa lists his occupation as “teacher” and names ISM as his sponsor.

Sara concedes her son’s background with the US Navy may have raised suspicion, but she’s adamant that he’s done nothing wrong.

“What I know for a fact about my son is that he loves to travel. And he loves, you know, to visit different countries and get to know different cultures.”

Davis, who has taught English in international schools in the Middle East for 12 years, says the lack of information is concerning, especially from the school who sponsored him to be there.

“This guy didn’t blow up a gas station. He didn’t sneak into a private security building of the Ministry of Interior,” he said. “He didn’t do anything that would be considered espionage. He just took a freaking trip. That’s it — a trip.”

A deadline looms

Fernando wasn’t always an English teacher.

After graduating from high school, he joined the US Navy, but a submariner’s life wasn’t for him, his mother said. It didn’t give him enough opportunity to explore, she said. So, after four years he turned to teaching English in countries where he could spend his time off visiting historical sites.

He’s spent much of his adult life traveling the world. His YouTube vlog contains videos of recent trips to Sudan, Panama and Brazil. And in the three months before landing in Libya, he went to Spain, Italy, Egypt, Azerbaijan and Georgia, according to his mother.

Because of his love for travel, Sara and Fernando often meet up in spots around the world.

“It’s nice because it’s like mother and son time and, you know, we get to travel together and we like to travel to different places,” she said.

But instead of joining her son for New Year’s, she’s at home, calling anyone who may offer advice on what to do. Sara said she spoke at length with representatives from The Richardson Center, a non-profit founded by former US Congressman and former US ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, who has a long track record of successful hostage negotiations and prisoner releases.

Mickey Bergman, the group’s vice president and executive director, told CNN it’s not in the Libyan government’s interests to hold a US citizen without charge.

“In all likelihood, this is a simple case of detainment for questioning followed by a bureaucratic holdup that can be resolved quickly and without issues,” he said.

Bergman, who was recently involved in the release of American journalist Danny Fenster in Myanmar and before that Otto Warmbier from North Korea, said Fernando’s safety during his detention was in “everyone’s interests.”

“No one would benefit if any harm happens to Fernando,” he said.

Sara hasn’t told her colleagues at the state attorney’s office in Miami, Florida, where she works, about her predicament. “Honestly, because it’s Christmas time and I don’t want to worry them, and too because I am also very private and I don’t want people to start asking me questions,” she said.

It’s enough that her son’s friends are texting her from different countries at all hours of the day and night.

“It’s nice to hear that there are so many people that care about him. But you know, it also wears on my psyche sometimes, because I wish I could give them better news than, ‘We’re still waiting. We’re still waiting, nothing new.'”

Sara worries that it’ll become even harder to get answers about her son’s whereabouts in Libya after this week.

On December 24, the country was due to hold its first Presidential election since the 2011 revolution when Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was captured and killed by rebel forces.

Emadeddin Badi, a senior fellow and Libya analyst at the Atlantic Council, told CNN from Tripoli Tuesday that tensions in the city had increased in recent days amid maneuvering by armed groups to fill a potential leadership void when the Government of National Unity’s mandate to lead effectively expires on Friday.

The Libyan High Election Commission wants to reschedule the vote for January 24, but it’s unclear who will govern the country in the meantime.

“There is no clear ruling on who should be in charge after the 24th of December,” Badi said. “What is definite is this ambiguous situation is already being exploited by factions that contributed to manufacturing the current crisis.”

Stephanie Williams, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Libya, is in the country meeting with presidential candidates to try to salvage the UN-backed electoral process.

But Badi says that process is “inherently flawed,” and the month-long delay could merely give political actors more time to capitalize on the uncertainty.

Sara knows time is running out to secure the release of her son under the current government — she just wants him home.

“He hasn’t done anything wrong … he needs to be released because he’s innocent,” she said.

“The sooner they can do that the better.”

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Fernando González, AP head of Caribbean news, dies in Cuba

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Fernando González, who spent decades covering and directing major stories for The Associated Press across Latin America, from papal visits to border skirmishes, hurricanes and hostage standoffs, has died in Havana.

González, 60, died at his home early Monday after suffering a heart attack, Cuba’s forensic medicine director said.

Gregarious and seemingly inexhaustible, González, known for his trademark long gray ponytail, was especially strong and compassionate in crisis situations, both covering the news and tirelessly organizing help when colleagues were ill or injured.

“Fernando represented the best of AP. He was a terrific journalist and loved the big stories,” said AP Executive Editor Julie Pace. “He was also a warm and caring colleague, someone whose impact was felt across all corners of the organization. He will be dearly missed.”

Born in Uruguay, González graduated from high school in Santiago, Chile, and then attended the University of Miami. He worked for a local radio station before eventually moving into news production, often freelancing for The Associated Press in Latin America.

González joined the AP full time in 2002 as senior producer for television news in Havana. He moved to Washington, D.C., in 2014 as regional video editor for Latin America and the Caribbean and then to Mexico City as the AP’s deputy news director for the region in 2016. González returned to Cuba in 2020 as news director for the Caribbean and Andes.

Among the major stories he covered were the 1996 hostage siege at the Japanese ambassador’s residence in Peru, Hurricane Mitch’s devastating impact on Central America in 1998, and the 2004 coup that overthrew Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

In 2007 González reported from Antarctica on the visit of U.N Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

González also covered three papal trips to Cuba by St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis, as well as President Barack Obama’s historic visit in 2016 and the death of former Cuban President Fidel Castro later that year.

Anita Snow, who reopened AP’s Havana bureau in 1999 after a nearly 30-year absence, praised González as “a great journalist,” calling him, “an even better human being: warm, generous and consistently kind.”

“And he probably knew Latin America better than anyone,” said Snow, who worked with González in Cuba and Mexico. She is currently an AP writer in Phoenix.

Chris Gillette, senior video producer for the AP in Brazil and a high school classmate of González, agreed.

“He was a really good people person, and very charming, so he was able to get into places others might find challenging — a true raconteur, amiable and smart,” Gillette said.

Nico Maounis, head of special news events for AP’s broadcast services, recalled Gonzalez as the consummate deal broker, gaining the AP access to everyone from presidents and other high officials to the simple man on the street.

“What was he like as a person? He was outgoing, he was cosmopolitan, he was funny, he was a diplomat, he was serious, a comic and a joker. He was everything,” Maounis said.

Longtime AP photographer Enric Marti summed up González’s compassion for those less fortunate, noting how he continued to patronize his favorite Mexico City restaurant, Lucille, even during the pandemic when others stayed away, tipping the waiters handsomely.

“He kept going and raised money for the waiters. … They basically had no tips and no money,” said Marti, AP’s deputy director of photography/global enterprise. “Whenever I was in town we would meet in Lucille. It was Fernando’s bar.”

González is survived by his wife Lisa, children Maria Linda and Nicolas, and three grandchildren, as well as his parents.

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San Fernando Valley burglary suspect captured in Shadow Hills after weeks-long manhunt

SHADOW HILLS, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — The suspect wanted for nearly a dozen recent burglaries in the San Fernando Valley was taken into custody in a hillside area of Shadow Hills Wednesday night, bringing an end to a weeks-long manhunt.

The man is accused of terrorizing the neighborhoods of Shadow Hills and Sunland-Tujunga for weeks starting in late October and has been captured on home surveillance video armed with a rifle in the middle of the night.

He is tied to nearly a dozen break-ins at homes or businesses, according to Los Angeles police.

AIR7 HD was over the Shadow Hills neighborhood around 7:40 p.m. and captured the suspect running along properties, careening down a long hill and then making his way down an embankment. He started to hide in thick brush.

He was taken into custody around 10:40 p.m. after police used a K-9 to track him down. The dog began dragging the suspect by the arm before officers arrived to take him into custody.

An ambulance later transported the suspect to a hospital in unknown condition.

LAPD had two helicopters circling the area for hours and dozens of officers responded to the scene.

Police searched extensively Tuesday at a property owned by LADWP near the 210 Freeway after the suspect was spotted, but he was able to escape.

The suspect had not injured anyone during the alleged burglaries but police were worried about the possibility that he could become violent due to the fact that he was often seen carrying guns and rifles.

RELATED: Armed man wanted after string of San Fernando Valley burglaries frequents the area, police say

City News Service contributed to this report.

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Fernando Tatis Jr. hits home run out of Dodger Stadium

LOS ANGELES — Later Thursday night, the Padres will board a plane for San Francisco. Maybe when they land, Fernando Tatis Jr.’s 42nd home run ball will be there to greet them.

At 22 years old, Tatis has already made a career out of hitting moonshots. But even by his standards, this was a special one. In the fifth inning of the Padres’ 8-3 loss to the Dodgers, Tatis got a hanging slider from right-hander Tony Gonsolin and sent it out of Dodger Stadium.

And, yes, we mean out of Dodger Stadium.

The ball caromed off the top of the left-field pavilion and into the stadium’s north concourse. It was Tatis’ 42nd home run, moving him into sole possession of second place on the Padres’ all-time single-season list. He trails only Greg Vaughn, who hit 50 in 1998.

According to Statcast, it was the second longest homer of Tatis’ career at 467 feet, trailing only his Coors Field blast on June 16 this season. It was the first home run to leave Dodger Stadium since Giancarlo Stanton hit a 475-foot blast for the Marlins on May 12, 2015.

The Padres may have faded from the playoff picture, but Tatis is still very much in contention to make some franchise history. As an National League MVP candidate, Tatis could join Ken Caminiti (1996) as the only Padres to win the award. He also seems likely to join Fred McGriff (1992) as the only Padres to win the NL home run crown. Atlanta’s Adam Duvall is currently second with 38.

Seven of Tatis’ home runs this season have come at Dodger Stadium, tying him with Todd Helton’s 2001 campaign for the most by a visitor in a single season.

It came in a losing effort, however, as the Padres dropped their ninth straight to the Dodgers, marking the first time they’d been swept in three straight series by L.A. since 1974. San Diego pitchers allowed five home runs for the second consecutive night, as the loss dropped the Padres to 78-81, ensuring a 10th season in 11 years in which they won’t finish above .500. Last year’s abbreviated 60-game season stands as the lone exception.

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Padres’ Manny Machado, Fernando Tatis Jr. get into heated incident in dugout

San Diego Padres stars Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. were seen getting into a spat in the dugout during the team’s loss to the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

Video posted on social media showed Machado screaming and cursing at Tatis, saying, “It’s not about you” and “You go play baseball,” after Tatis struck out looking in the fifth inning. Tatis was angry with home plate umpire Phil Cuzzi and manager Jayce Tingler argued the call and was ejected from the game.

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Tatis slammed his helmet in the dugout and Machado started to yell at Tatis. The two had to be separated in the dugout.

“It’s not viewed negatively,” Tingler told reporters after the game. “We’re a family. We’re not going to discuss the details, but we care. There’s passion. There’s frustration. Those are all emotions that are natural, and those things happen.”

MLB ERA LEADER SCHERZER DOMINATES AGAIN, DODGERS BEAT REDS

San Diego lost a 2-0 lead and lost the game 3-2 to the Cardinals, further hurting their chances of attaining a wild-card spot.

“I think any time stakes are high and everybody knows what’s at stake, anything can happen,” Tingler added. “We can have disagreements, but we still love each other, we play for each other, we care about one another, and so when you have those strong emotions on both sides things happen. I can’t predict what’s going to happen the next couple weeks.”

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San Diego started the season hot but as the temperatures heated up outside, the Padres got cold. The team finished under .500 in July and August and are poised to do it again with 12 days left in the month.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Four takeaways as Celtics dominate 76ers in Summer League: Carsen Edwards steps up, Bruno Fernando, Sam Hauser keep shining

The Celtics finished off their regular season Summer League schedule with an undefeated 4-0 record after a dominant 100-80 victory over the 76ers on Saturday. Barring an unexpected result on Sunday, Boston will play in the Summer League championship game on Tuesday night at 9 p.m. ET.

Here are four takeaways from today’s win over the 76ers.

Carsen Edwards steps up with shorthanded backcourt: Boston was down two of their top guards for Saturday’s matchup with Payton Pritchard (team-excused absence) and Yam Madar (groin injury) sidelined for the matchup. In their absence, Edwards (16 points) picked up the slack offensively, playing his best game of Summer League thus far. The third-year guard scored nine points in the first quarter to help Boston jump out to a seven-point lead and made solid contributions in all facets of the game. He posted a team-high five assists, two steals and a pair of blocks, making his presence felt on both ends of the floor. Edwards is on a guaranteed contract for next season but his roster spot for next year has been an open question mark, particularly after Boston created a logjam in their backcourt by adding Kris Dunn, Josh Richardson and Dennis Schroder this offseason. Edwards needed some positive showings this week to improve his stock and this outing was a step in that direction.

Sam Hauser continues his shooting hot streak: The undrafted rookie out of Virginia found his rhythm during Boston’s win over the Orlando Magic on Thursday night (game-high 21 points) and he picked up where he left off against the 76ers. The 6-foot-8 sharpshooter knocked down his first three shots of the game, including a pair of 3-point range to to score eight points in just 10 first half minutes. Coming off a 6-of-10 shooting night from 3-point range on Thursday, Hauser showed off yet again what made him Boston’s two-way contract target on draft night as he extended his sharpshooting to 8-of-12 from 3-point range over his past two games. He also added seven rebounds and a pair of assists in his 20 minutes.

Boston’s bigs stand out: Bruno Fernando was a late addition to the Celtics Summer League roster but he continues to be a force in the middle during Boston’s winning streak. His energy was on full display on both ends as he piled up nine points and 11 rebounds over just 16 minutes, attacking the glass hard (four offensive rebounds) and providing valuable screens for his teammates. Reserve center Zach Auguste also added a team-high 18 points and six rebounds while going 7-of-9 from the field off the bench. That scoring firepower off the bench helped the Celtics pull away with a 30-14 third quarter and seal the win.

Block party: Every single member of the Celtics shorthanded starting five had a block in the win, remaining a very stingy defensive effort by Boston. Bruno Fernando helped lead a stingy defensive effort by anchoring the middle with his energy while Romeo Langford, Aaron Nesmith and Juhann Begarin (two blocks) showed off some of their defensive versatility on the wing with a number of recovery blocks from the weak side and in transition. All in all, Boston finished with ten blocks in the win, keeping the previously undefeated Sixers to sub 35 percent shooting from the field.

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Fernando Tatis Jr. exits with injury vs. Rockies

SAN DIEGO — Padres star shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr. exited Friday’s game against the Rockies after he appeared to re-injure his left shoulder while sliding into third base.

In the bottom of the first inning of an ugly 9-4 loss to Colorado, Tatis attempted to advance when Rockies third baseman Ryan McMahon booted a ground ball. In an effort to avoid the tag, Tatis tried to slide away from the glove of Rockies shortstop Brendan Rodgers. Instead, he planted his left hand, then immediately grabbed for his left shoulder in obvious pain.

Manager Jayce Tingler said postgame Tatis sustained a left shoulder subluxation, a recurrence of the partial shoulder dislocation that he has sustained on three separate occasions already this year.

On a disheartening day all around, Tatis’ injury was the low point for San Diego. The Padres acquired outfielder Jake Marisnick in a trade with the Cubs earlier in the day, but they came up empty in their search for starting pitching at the Trade Deadline. In the meantime, their two primary division rivals, the Dodgers and Giants, pulled off a pair of blockbusters.

Instantly, the Padres’ thin rotation was put to the test, and Ryan Weathers endured his worst outing as a big leaguer, allowing eight runs over four innings.

As for Tatis, he missed a couple games in Spring Training with the injury, then landed on the IL for 10 days in April, before missing one further game in June.

The Padres, of course, can ill afford to lose Tatis, who is currently the clear frontrunner for National League MVP. He entered play Friday night hitting .290/.371/.650 with 31 homers and 23 steals.

As such, a hush fell over Petco Park when Tatis went to the ground in pain. He was on the ground for about a minute while he was evaluated by a team trainer. Eventually, he walked off the field under his own power and was replaced at shortstop by backup Ha-Seong Kim.

If there’s any room for optimism, it might be this: After a similar scene in April, when Tatis sustained a painful dislocation on a swing against the Giants, he landed on the IL as a precaution. But he was essentially fully healthy within a few days and returned after a minimum stint. The Padres can only cross their fingers and hope for a similar outcome this time around.

Still, a recurrence of the injury would be particularly troublesome. When Tatis sustained his injury in April, the Padres said they were confident he could do no further damage by playing through it while undergoing treatment. But if the injury were to recur, they said, the possibility of surgery would be revisited.

Shoulder surgery would end Tatis’ season — though he’s managed to avoid it thus far, and at the time of the April injury, general manager A.J. Preller noted, “There’s players that will get through the season and then, in the offseason, will get the surgery.” Perhaps that’s a viable path from here for Tatis.

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