Tag Archives: Repaired

Ruby Princess cleared to depart San Francisco for Alaska after damage repaired, coast guard says – ABC7 News Bay Area

  1. Ruby Princess cleared to depart San Francisco for Alaska after damage repaired, coast guard says ABC7 News Bay Area
  2. Repaired Ruby Princess sails for Alaska after 3-day layover in San Francisco KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  3. Ruby Princess cruise ship leaves San Francisco for Alaska 4 days after crash at Pier 27, nearly 600 passengers fewer KGO-TV
  4. Repaired Ruby Princess leaves San Francisco with 579 fewer passengers KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  5. Update: Ruby Princess leaves San Francisco after repairing dock collision damage CBS San Francisco
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Dustin Poirier: Michael Chandler Might Not Be Able To Target Conor McGregor’s Repaired Leg – MMA News

  1. Dustin Poirier: Michael Chandler Might Not Be Able To Target Conor McGregor’s Repaired Leg MMA News
  2. Michael Chandler won’t ‘do as he’s told,’ exposes TUF 31 editors for protecting Conor McGregor — ‘That’s not … MMA Mania
  3. Beneil Dariush unsure Michael Chandler uses skills vs. Conor McGregor MMA Junkie
  4. Having Faced Conor McGregor and Michael Chandler, Dustin Poirier Reveals Game Changing Details on Proposed Fight – “We Got to See It in Action” EssentiallySports
  5. Joe Rogan praises Conor McGregor and Michael Chandler’s Ultimate Fighter dynamic: ‘It’s amazing” | BJPenn.com BJPENN.COM
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Gisele Bündchen ‘done’ with Tom Brady, marriage can’t be ‘repaired’

The Brady Bündchen is beyond repair.

Gisele Bündchen is “done” trying to make her marriage to Tom Brady work, a source close to the model revealed amid rumors that they are heading for Splitsville.

“She is done with their marriage,” the insider told People in an article published Friday. “She was upset about it for a long time and it’s still difficult, but she feels like she needs to move on. She doesn’t believe that her marriage can be repaired.”

But the source also claimed that the Victoria’s Secret model, 42, is “doing OK” amid the heartbreak.

“She is just trying to figure out her life,” the insider said, adding, “She doesn’t have much contact with Tom.”

Bündchen is more worried for the children than for herself. She and the NFL star share son Benjamin Rein, 12, and 9-year-old daughter Vivian Lake. Brady also has a 15-year-old son, John Edward, with his ex Bridget Moynahan.

Gisele Bündchen reportedly believes her marriage to Tom Brady is beyond repair.
Getty Images for UCLA Institute

The source shared that Bündchen “feels bad for the kids, but she doesn’t expect any custody issues.”

She would most likely stay in the $17 million property the pair recently purchased in the ultra-exclusive Indian Creek Island on Miami Beach, the source claimed.

The couple shares two kids. He also co-parents a son with his ex.
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“Gisele loves Miami. She has friends there. She can see herself living there permanently,” the source told the outlet.

“Again, she is still trying to figure things out. She is doing yoga, meditating and taking care of herself. She doesn’t put any pressure on herself to make drastic decisions.”

Bündchen is reportedly doing OK amid the breakup, the source revealed.
GC Images

This week, Page Six exclusively revealed both Bündchen and Brady, 45, have hired divorce lawyers. The news comes a month after sources told us that the estranged couple had an epic fight resulting in “the end of them.”

“I don’t think there will be any coming back now,” one insider recently told Page Six. “They both have lawyers and are looking at what a split will entail, who gets what and what the finances will be.”

The pair have been staying in separate houses since moving to Miami and out of Tampa Bay amid devastating Hurricane Ian.



A source told Page Six that the duo have been living separately.

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A source told Page Six that the duo have been living separately.

Getty Images

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Hilton and Rinna have been feuding ever since the former…

Bündchen has also been spotted on several occasions without her wedding ring, further fueling breakup rumors.

But the supermodel has hinted at marital issues for a while now.

Bündchen shared in an interview for the September Elle cover of Brady, “My children and I would like him to be more present,” and added she’s “definitely had those conversations with him over and over again.”

She recently shared that she and her kids wanted Brady to be “more present.”
Instagram/ Gisele

She has apparently had it with Brady continuing with his football career despite his initial decision to retire.

“There’s been trouble in the marriage over his decision to un-retire,” a source had told us. “Gisele has always been the one with the kids. They had agreed he would retire to focus on the family, then he changed his mind.”

Brady, for his part, has claimed that family and football are his priorities.  

The pair got married in February 2009.

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CM Punk doesn’t know what’s going on with his surgically repaired foot

On tonight’s (Aug. 26) episode of Rampage, Tony Khan promised “exclusive backstage footage” of CM Punk following his shocking world title loss to Jon Moxley earlier this week on Dynamite. Punk quickly lost that match after he appeared to re-injure his surgically repaired foot.

Here’s the backstage footage that Khan promised. The exclusive part of it lasts for about 19 seconds:

Punk is in the trainer’s room during the footage. He says he couldn’t put any weight on his foot. He didn’t feel a pop, it felt like his foot just gave out. Punk admits that’s not good, but he doesn’t really know what’s going on.

Reporting indicates that Punk is headed for a rematch with Moxley for the title on Sept. 4 at AEW’s All Out pay-per-view event near CM’s hometown of Chicago, Illinois. Do you think this exclusive footage helps explain how Punk might be able to bounce back so quickly to return to the ring next weekend?

Catch up on the all the results from Rampage right here.

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New York Jets’ Mekhi Becton having MRI on surgically repaired knee; coach Robert Saleh optimistic

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — New York Jets right tackle Mekhi Becton is having an MRI on his surgically repaired right knee after limping off the practice field Monday in apparent pain.

The injury doesn’t appear serious, according to the Jets, but any time lost is potentially significant because Becton has battled weight and conditioning issues.

“As of now, it doesn’t seem like a big deal, but — knock on wood — hopefully that stays the case,” said coach Robert Saleh, who described the MRI as precautionary.

The 2020 first-round pick injured his right knee in the 2021 season opener and never played again even though the team initially called it a four- to six-week return from surgery.

On Monday, he labored through early offensive-line drills, checking his knee and moving gingerly. A few minutes later, on the second play of an 11-on-11 period, Becton fell backward after being jolted by defensive end John Franklin-Myers. His right foot seemed to get caught in the grass, perhaps causing his knee to bend awkwardly.

Becton removed his shoulder pads and limped immediately to the locker room with members of the training staff. He started wearing a knee brace last Friday, an indication that he may have started to feel discomfort.

The injury occurred two days after the Jets hosted free-agent tackle Duane Brown, who attended the Jets’ annual Green & White scrimmage at MetLife Stadium. They remain interested in Brown, a five-time Pro Bowl selection who turns 37 on Aug. 30.

With Becton’s injury, and with backup swing tackle Conor McDermott sidelined one to two weeks with a sprained ankle, there is a greater sense of urgency to add an experienced tackle. Starting left tackle George Fant also is returned from knee surgery, although he is healthy and practicing.

Saleh downplayed the team’s interest in Brown, saying they have “so much great talent” at tackle and that Brown would be a luxury.

“It doesn’t create panic in my mind at all,” Saleh said. “A guy like Duane is a bonus.”

Still, there has to be concern because of Becton’s injury history. He has started only 14 out of 33 games in two seasons, including six games he didn’t finish because of various injuries. His weight became a major storyline last season, when he ballooned to about 400 pounds as he recovered from surgery.

He was overweight at the June minicamp, which frustrated the organization, but he trained at the facility before training camp and reported in acceptable shape. Saleh praised Becton for powering through the first nine practices as he worked his way back into football shape.

Now it could be a challenge if he has to miss time.

“We’ll see if he does take time off,” Saleh said. “Obviously, you’re concerned for everyone. … You just don’t want to get into a deficit of conditioning. He’s a big man. He’s been working his tail off and he’s done everything he’s been asked to do. Hopefully, he checks out good like we think he’s going to and he can continue on this track. I think he’s going to be fine.”

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Canada to return repaired Nord Stream 1 turbine, expand sanctions on Russia

Pipes at the landfall facilities of the ‘Nord Stream 1’ gas pipeline are pictured in Lubmin, Germany, March 8, 2022. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

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OTTAWA, July 9 (Reuters) – Canada will return a repaired turbine to Germany that is needed for the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline and could help to ensure continued flows of energy until Europe can end its dependency on Russian gas, Canada’s minister of natural resources said.

The Canadian government said in a statement on Saturday it was issuing a “time-limited and revocable permit” to exempt the return of turbines from its Russian sanctions and also announced new measures against Moscow in response to its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

Russia last month cited the delayed return of the turbine, which Germany’s Siemens Energy (ENR1n.DE), (SIEGn.DE) has been servicing in Canada, as the reason behind its reduction of flows to 40% of capacity through the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline to Europe. read more

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The Canadian government said shipping the turbine to Europe would support: “Europe’s ability to access reliable and affordable energy as they continue to transition away from Russian oil and gas”.

It was not clear how long it would take for the turbine to be returned and Siemens Energy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Kremlin on Friday said it would increase gas supplies to Europe if the turbine were returned, while Ukraine has said returning the equipment would breach sanctions.

In addition to the special permit for the turbine, Canada said it would expand sanctions against Russia’s energy sector to include industrial manufacturing.

Canada’s new sanctions “will apply to land and pipeline transport and the manufacturing of metals and of transport, computer, electronic and electrical equipment, as well as of machinery,” it said.

A German government spokesperson said Germany welcomed “the decision of our Canadian friends and allies”. read more

Ukraine, however, was dismayed.

Alexandra Chyczij, national president of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, said in a statement on Saturday that Canada had set “a dangerous precedent that will lead to the weakening of the sanctions regime imposed on Russia”.

“Our community is deeply disappointed by the Canadian government’s decision to bow to Russian blackmail,” it said.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said on Saturday in a statement that “Canada is unwavering in its support of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity … Canada will not relent in pressuring the Russian regime”.

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Reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa and David Shepardson in Washington; Additional reporting by Thomas Escritt in Berlin; Editing by Sandra Maler, Lisa Shumaker, Chris Reese and Barbara Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Tiger Woods says repaired right knee will ‘keep getting stronger’ as he prepares for upcoming PGA Championship

TULSA, Okla. — As Tiger Woods prepares to try to win his fifth PGA Championship this week, he said his surgically repaired right leg is stronger than it was at the Masters five weeks ago, when he struggled to climb the sloping hills of Augusta National Golf Club, one of the most demanding walks in golf.

Woods, 46, played his second nine-hole practice round at Southern Hills Country Club on Monday, after playing the front nine on Sunday. His last victory in the PGA Championship occurred at Southern Hills in 2007.

“It’s only going to keep getting stronger,” Woods told reporters Sunday. “The more I use it, the more strength it gains. Am I ever going to have full mobility? No. Never again. But I’ll be able to get stronger. It’s going to ache, but that’s the way it’s going to be.”

Woods, a 15-time major champion, flew to Tulsa in late April for a practice round. Southern Hills underwent an $11 million renovation by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner in 2018. Woods’ caddie, Joe LaCava, flew to Florida last week to work with him.

Woods struggled in his return to competitive golf at the Masters, the first time he had played in a regular tour event since he was seriously injured in a car wreck outside Los Angeles in February 2021. He made the cut at Augusta National, then finished 47th after shooting 6-over 78 in each of the last two rounds, his worst scores at the Masters. He admitted he was in pain after his rounds on the weekend.

With a victory at the PGA Championship, Woods would become the PGA Tour’s winningest golfer with 83 career victories.

“I’m excited about [the week],” Woods said. “I’m not going to play that much going forward, so anytime I do play, it’s going to be fun to play and to compete. There are only so many money games you can play at home.”

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Apple will no longer break Face ID on repaired iPhone 13s

Enlarge / The “Unable to activate Face ID” message that appears after swapping displays.

Apple says it will back off its plan to break Face ID on independently repaired iPhones. The company’s often contentious relationship with the repair community was tested again when “unauthorized” iPhone 13 screen replacements started resulting in broken Face ID systems. A new report from The Verge says that Apple “will release a software update that doesn’t require you to transfer the microcontroller to keep Face ID working after a screen swap.”

Screen replacements are the most common smartphone repairs. Apple included a new microcontroller in the iPhone 13’s display that pairs each screen with other components in the phone. As iFixit reported, if a third-party repair shop replaced the iPhone 13 display, Apple would disable the phone’s Face ID system.

The repair community has started calling this part-dependency trend “serialization.” Basically, each protected component reports a serial number to the OS, and the software keeps track of which serial numbers the device is supposed to have. If you swap out a part, one of the serial numbers will change, and the OS will know about it. In the case of third-party iPhone 13 screen replacements, the phone would say, “Unable to activate Face ID on this iPhone.”

Authorized repair shops have access to proprietary Apple software that pairs a new display microcontroller with the rest of the phone to re-enable Face ID. It’s possible for unauthorized shops to swap the display microcontrollers, but that’s a dramatic increase in work for the most common phone repair and requires a microscope and delicate desoldering work. Face ID on the iPhone 13 is an entirely different component from the display, so there’s no clear justification for locking Face ID after a display swap. The end result, though, according to iFixit, was an “unprecedented lockdown” that “gives Apple the ability to approve or deny each individual repair.”

After a wave of bad press, it’s “crisis averted” for the repair community. It would be nice if this was never an issue in the first place, though.

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How Kelvin Sampson repaired his career at Houston and resurrected the Cougars, who are back in the Final Four

INDIANAPOLIS —  Fifteen years to the day from when Kelvin Sampson left Oklahoma for Indiana under a cloud of controversy — for a job that would ultimately bring more controversy, by his own hand, and torpedo his career — the man made it back to the summit of the sport. 

Monday marked Sampson’s 1,000th game as a college head coach. 

Of all places: He did it in the state of Indiana. 

And of all years, and of all games, No. 1,000 coincided with Sampson steering Houston to its first Final Four since 1984. 

Cougars 67, Oregon State Beavers 61. How the Midwest was won. Few late-stage coaching revivals parallel what Sampson — in his seventh season at Houston — has just accomplished. This is the second Final Four run of his checkered career. The first came with the Sooners in 2002, when OU was a No. 2 seed. Just like what Houston is here. And in ’02 Sampson beat a No. 12 seed, just like Houston did Monday night. 

Half the Final Four is set. Gary Parrish and Matt Norlander recap Monday night’s action on the latest episode of Eye on College Basketball.

Sampson’s 19-year hiatus between Final Four runs is among the longest gaps by a head coach in college basketball history. The man paid a hefty price, had a comfortable-but-unfit exile to the NBA, then took the less-than-scenic route to link back up with his own rutted road to the Final Four.  

Sampson, 65, cut his teeth in his 20s and 30s at Montana Tech and Washington State in the 1980s and ’90s. He got to Oklahoma in 1994 and steadfastly built up the Sooners into a top-10 national program. As the world changed in the early 2000s, cell phones and modern technology outpaced the tortoise-tempo updates to the NCAA’s rule book. Haphazard bylaws were put in place in attempt to keep up with ever-changing tech. They lagged. But rules are rules, and Sampson broke them. He flagrantly broke them. 

Nowadays there are no limits on phone calls or text messages from coaches to recruits, at least not during live periods. But it was different 15 years ago. Sampson fled Oklahoma with the NCAA on his tail and he took the Indiana job, which amounted to one of the best coaching-swerve gambits in college basketball of that era. But Sampson couldn’t get out of his own way; Indiana was no better off when he took a $750,000 buyout and resigned in February 2008. The same violations that plagued him at Oklahoma did him in at IU. A five-year show cause came later, the punishment ranking among the biggest ever at the time for a former head coach. Sampson claimed the whole way he didn’t knowingly misinform investigators.

What was done was done. And in 2008, a lot of people thought Sampson’s time in college basketball was done. Forever.

He shuffled off the NBA, where he tried to adapt but didn’t find soulful satisfaction. Three years with the Milwaukee Bucks, then three more with the Houston Rockets. At one point early on as an assistant, Sampson was working in practice with a big man and laying into the player about jumping a screen on defense. Sampson was just being Sampson: a fiery teacher trying to better a player — albeit a veteran.

The player turned to Sampson, and this is a paraphrase, but essentially said, “Coach, you’re a great guy and trying to help. But let me tell you something. I will never jump a ball screen. Everything in my contract says I have to block shots and rebound. That’s where my bonuses are. So I’m going to block shots and rebound. I won’t be jumping one ball screen for you.”

Sampson knew then and there the NBA life was never truly going to be for him. 

In 2013, when the show cause was lifted, he ached to get back to college. But what school would take him? The one in the city he lived in. There was a once-proud program down the street that needed more than a rebuild. It needed an architect, an engineer, an inventor and a force of coaching nature in one. Someone great enough to turn around Houston, but also desperate enough to take the job. 

No candidate was better for it than Sampson. 

Houston might have had the worst facilities (decades past their expiration date) and infrastructure of any program with multiple Final Four appearances to its name at that point.

“He took the job because he wouldn’t have to move,” one source close to the Sampson family told CBS Sports. “He was with the Houston Rockets. He liked the idea you could recruit in Houston and be home for dinner. It wasn’t a blue blood, and so there wasn’t huge pressure.” 

The entry point was perfect, though the team was anything but. Sampson was 57 at the time. If he was going to coach again, it would be a family affair — literally. His son, Kellen, would join the staff. His daughter, Lauren, would be the director of external operations. Running a program comes with a lot of stresses, like engaging with oft-trying boosters. Lauren Sampson is the go-between. Many consider her the glue to it all. When Hurricane Harvey devastated Houston in 2017, it was Lauren who ran the operation that brought loads of money donations and clothing that helped thousands in Houston and the surrounding region.   

Sampson filled out his staff by hiring his former Sooner players — Quannas White and Hollis Price — men who are family to Sampson. 

“It’s basically a team of people that he is super comfortable with that believe in him,” the source said. “After you watch how a situation like Indiana unfolds, where people are against you from the minute you get there, obviously you want people that you know are there for you.”

Sampson went from 13 wins in Year One to 22, 21 and then 27 by Year Four, which marked a long-awaited return to the NCAA Tournament — for UH and for Sampson. The family operation, college basketball’s Mom and Pop Shop, made it big. Houston made the tournament again the next year, in 2019, and returned better than ever this season. It did so even after losing arguably its best player, Caleb Mills, to transfer early in the season. 

The family stays tight. This Kellen Sampson tweet from Monday night speaks to that in a powerful way.

There have been bigger job opportunities in recent years, none more than Arkansas in 2019. The Razorbacks got Eric Musselman instead, and that’s working out amazingly well to this point. (The Razorbacks fell to Baylor in the other regional final on Monday.) But Houston is home. Kellen is in line to succeed his father, whenever Kelvin decides he’s had enough. 

How could he stop now? The Cougars used to represent something magnificent in college basketball. For nearly two decades this was a nationally relevant outfit with some of the greatest players in the sport. In 1984 no one could have imagined the three-decade drift into obscurity that was coming. The man to restore the luster was someone who was forced into obscurity himself. Sampson is no redemption story; he knocked himself off down the mountain. 

But he’s also proof that, if you are great at your craft in college athletics — ask anyone; Sampson is great — there is almost always a way back. 

And if you’re willing to jump a ball screen, you might even get there a little bit quicker. 

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Major Xbox Live Outage Repaired, All Services Available

Xbox is reporting that users should now be able to log into Xbox Live, according to Xbox Support on Twitter.

Xbox’s official status page is also indicating all services are up and running.

Update:

Reports are trickling in that some users are managing to log into Xbox Live. According to IGN’s sister site DownDetector, users across North America are finding services coming back online, though it is by no means fixes across the whole platform.

Xbox’s official Status page still lists services like the Store, Multiplayer, and Cloud gaming as being out, and Xbox Support Twitter account has not provided an update since 1 pm PST/4 pm EST.

IGN will continue to monitor the situation for updates, including when Xbox Live is completely stable again.

Original Story: Xbox has announced that its Xbox Live services are currently down after players began reporting issues with signing in. The official Xbox Support Twitter account confirmed the outage.

According to the Xbox Status page, several services are currently down, with no cause or estimated time of repair announced. Things like Account and profiles, the Xbox Live Store and subscriptions, multiplayer and cloud gaming are all currently offline according to Xbox.

The official Xbox Support team says it’s working to fix these issues but until that services like Xbox Live, multiplayer, and xCloud are all down for the moment.

It’s unclear what the cause of the outage is, but it’s severe enough to knock out all of Xbox’s major services. IGN will update this story as it develops, but for the time being, anyone looking to play multiplayer or cloud games on Xbox will have to wait.

Matt T.M. Kim is News Editor at IGN.



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