BLOG: TCU drills Texas creating second half turnovers for 37-27 win – KXAN.com

FORT WORTH (KXAN) Texas better be ready for the TCUs top notch defense. The Horned Frogs sport the best run defense and the second best passing defense in the conference.

The Longhorns defense doesnt appear to be a confident bunch after allowing 48 points and 560 yards to Kansas at home last week. Texas survived the game with a Cameron Dicker field goal for the 50-48 victory.

Texas hasnt won at Amon G. Carter Stadium since 2013 being outscored 74-14 in their last two games in Fort Worth.

TCU will be motivated dealing with a two-game losing streak. The Longhorns are struggling with injuries in the secondary.

Defensive backs Caden Sterns, Chris Brown, Josh Thompson and DeMarvion Overshown have all be ruled out for this contest.

TCU first possession, first quarter

What happened: This drive was a big boost to a Texas defense that desperately needed some confidence. TCU converted on its first third down conversion, but the Longhorns defense held near the 50-yard line to force a TCU punt

Texas first possession, first quarter

What happened: Texas head coach Tom Herman normally goes for it on fourth and short situations in the red zone. He didnt follow the trend during Texas first possession settling for a 21-yard Cameron Dicker field goal. Texas drove 80 yards in five minutes.

Score: Texas leads 3-0

TCU second possession, first quarter

What happened: The Longhorns snagged their 13th turnover of the season on a Max Duggan interception. Brandon Jones played the middle of the field and Duggan likely didnt see the senior safety on a deep ball. A blindside block penalty on freshman Tyler Owens erased a 40-yard return placing the ball at the Texas 12-yard line.

Texas second possession, first quarter

What happened: Sam Ehlinger threw his second interception in as many weeks deep in his own territory. Linebacker Garret Wallow got the pick. The Horned Frogs are set up in the Longhorns red zone at the 20-yard line. This is Ehlingers fourth interception and sixth forced turnover by the TCU defense this season.

TCU third possession, first quarter

What happened: Another win for the Texas defense being placed in a difficult situation. The Longhorns stopped TCU for a three-and-out. Jonathan Song kicked a 20-yard field goal to tie the game.

Score: Game tied at 3

TCU fourth possession, second quarter

What happened: Defensive tackle Keondre Coburn took a bad penalty that extended the TCU drive. Coburn was called for roughing the passer on a third down at the Texas 46 yard line. With new life, TCU took five plays to get into the end zone. Max Duggan floated a pass down the middle of the field and receiver Pro Wells caught it for a 24-yard touchdown. On further evaluation, it feels like Texas safety Montrell Estell should have been able to make a play on the ball to prevent the completion.

Score: TCU leads 10-3

Texas fourth possession, second quarter

What happened: It took four plays for the Longhorns to equalize the score. Devin Duvernay made a great play on an Ehlinger deep ball down the right side. With Duvernays speed, the TCU defense didnt have a chance to catch up on the 47-yard score.

Score: Game tied at 10

Texas fifth possession, second quarter

What happened: The Longhorns got a gift on the ensuing kickoff. Jalen Reagor fumbled the ball on the return near the 25-yard line. Byron Vaughns forced the fumble. The Longhorns couldnt capitalize on the turnover.

Cameron Dicker missed a 26-yard field goal to the left. It looked like Dickers plant leg slipped right before he kicked.

Score: Game tied at 10

Texas seventh possession, second quarter

What happened: Keaontay Ingram was wide open in the flat and Ehlinger executed the throw for a 17-yard touchdown pass. The big play of the drive came on third and 16 from their own 11-yard line. Collin Johnson made an unbelievable catch on the right sideline for a 25-yard gain. The catch was reviewed and confirmed. Devin Duvernay followed with a 28-yard reception to the TCU 36. After falling behind 10-3, the Longhorns have scored 14 straight points.

Score: Texas leads 17-10

TCU eighth possession, second quarter

What happened: Griffin Kell nailed a 52-yard field goal after Texas head coach Tom Herman used a timeout to try and ice the TCU kicker. The field goal attempt that was stopped for a timeout missed badly, but didnt count.

Score: Texas leads 17-13

HALFTIME NOTE

With Ehlingers touchdown pass to Ingram in the second quarter, the Longhorns junior quarterback now ranks second in school history in total touchdowns with 82. Ehlinger passed Vince Young on the career list.

Texas possession, third quarter

What happened: Devin Duvernay does it again. On third down, Ehlinger found Duvernay on the slant two broken tackles later Duvernay broke off a 63-yard run. For the game, the senior receiver has seven receptions, 169 yards and a touchdown. The Longhorns couldnt punch it in for a touchdown and a two possession lead, however. An offensive pass interference penalty on Collin Johnson forced a Dicker 38-yard field goal.

Score: Texas leads 20-13

TCU possession, third quarter

What happened: TCU is starting to take some shots deep on the Texas secondary. Max Duggan hit Taye Barber for a 51-yard pass play to get TCU inside the five-yard line. Sewo Olonilua ran for a one-yard touchdown run.

Score: Game tied at 20

Texas possession, third quarter

What happened: Ehlinger threw his fifth interception of the season on third down of the drive. Momentum is snowballing toward the Horned Frogs sideline. It looked like Ehlinger couldve run for the first down, but instead opted for the ill-advised throw that was intercepted by ArDarius Washington.

TCU possession, third quarter

What happened: That didnt take longDuggan goes deep to Jalen Reagor who absolutely burned DShawn Jamison in coverage. Reagor scored on a 44-yard deep ball for the Horned Frogs lead. TCU is finally trying to attack the young Texas secondary and its working to perfection.

Score: TCU leads 27-20

Texas possession, fourth quarter

What happened: Ehlinger is forcing throws and just forced his way into a third interception in his own territory doubling his interception mark for the season. TCU has scored 13 points off Texas turnovers. Jonathan Song connected on a 33-yard field goal after the interception.

Score: TCU leads 30-20

Texas possession, fourth quarter

What happened: Ehlinger needed a good drive to keep the game going. He converted on two passes on third and long and ran for 26 yards during a 12 play, 75 yard drive capped off by a Roschon Johnson two-yard touchdown.

Score: TCU leads 30-27

TCU possession, fourth quarter

What happened: This Texas defense cannot get off the field on third down and its going to result in their third loss of the season. The pivotal play came on third and 14 near midfield. Duggan, facing heavy pressure, just lobbed a deep ball up near Taye Barber and he made the catch on freshman Tyler Owens to the 11-yard line. Duggan finished the drive a play later with an 11-yard touchdown run.

Score: TCU leads 37-27

Texas possession, fourth quarter

What happened: TCU closed out the game with a fitting ending on an Ehlinger interception. Ehlinger throws his fourth interception on his 48th pass. The interception is a career-high.

FINAL: TCU wins 37-27

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BLOG: TCU drills Texas creating second half turnovers for 37-27 win - KXAN.com

Night of the Walking Redheads – The New Yorker

Every so often, word circulates on the Internet, and in the peripheries of the mainstream media, that people with red hair, like polar bears and coral reefs, are not long for this world. The arguments tend to involve pseudosciencespeculation about the effects of increased sunlight over the British Isles in a warming climate, misunderstanding of the nature of recessive genesand can often be traced, like much quackery, to profit motive. An interest in selling ancestry tests, say, or hair dye. Duncan Crary, a red-bearded redhead in Troy, New York, gets particularly energized when discussing an extinction-forecasting study produced more than a decade ago by the Oxford Hair Foundationa group funded by Procter & Gamble. Its a P.R. scam! he says. Crary likes to refer to his fellow-gingers, who represent between one and two per cent of the global population, as a permanent minority.

Shortly before 6 P.M. the other day, Crary surveyed the crowd at a riverside bar in Troy, exposed the whites of his green eyes with mischievous delight, and muttered, The red tide is coming. It was the seventh annual meeting of his club, the League of Extraordinary Red Heads, which convenes in October because of pumpkins and rusty foliage. Among the attendees were an eight-year-old boy sporting a T-shirt that read MC1R, a reference to the gene responsible for his Day-Glo follicles; a mother of three blue-eyed gingersthe rarest combination, she saidwho recalled the efforts of a childhood nemesis to connect the dots of her freckles with permanent marker; and a Conor McGregor look-alike named Jason Eveleth, whom Crary offered as an alternative to the so-called Ed Effect. This was more quackery, attributing a recent uptick in the self-reported sex lives of male redheads to the celebrity of Ed Sheeran. Crary noted that, whereas female redheads have historically been hypersexualized (think Jessica Rabbit), their male counterparts have been stereotyped as dweebs (think AlfredE. Neuman). Ed Sheeran is not a real macho guy, Crary said. Eveleth, on the other hand, has a mobsters nose and twenty-inch biceps. He objected to Crary calling him a bodybuilder, on grounds of political correctness. Im a professional fitness athlete, he said.

The red tide soon numbered two hundred and spilled onto the back deck. Crary climbed a fire escape and called the meeting to order. There are two items on our agenda, he said. And the first one is us. He singled out a local real-estate agent who brandished a fresh tattoo of the clubs logoa Rubiks-like quadrant of red, orange, umber, and whiteon his forearm. The second item was them. Crary mentioned Game of Thrones, and said, Red-headed characters did pretty well, didnt they? to whoops of applause. He proposed a special toast for GeorgeR.R. Martin, the author of the novels on which the series was based and a distinguished whiteheada spiritual cousin. On the count of three, echoing a line from the show, the crowd shouted, Gingers are kissed by fire!

As a troupe of fire dancers prepared to perform, Crary received word that there was a random red on the premisesa potential member who had arrived unwittingly. We get one every year, he said. This one, named Catherine Keighery, was from Ireland, and was visiting friends in Albany. Shed gone hiking that morning in Vermont, and then stopped off in Troy for dinner, on impulse. Some ginger guy with a beard and a dog stopped me and said, Are you going to the Redhead Night? she explained.

Keigherys bangs shone like copper wire. In Ireland, once a year, we have a Kiss a Ginger day, she said. And the wise guys, they kickOh, Im so sorry, they say. I misheard. Because we are a marginalized group, as Im sure you know. She gestured at Anasha Cummings, a hirsute Troy councilman who was elected after distributing his campaign platform printed on the backs of wearable red-beard cutouts. Were you bullied as a child? she asked.

I was homeschooled, he said.

Crary presented Keighery with a League membership card. Theres no dues to pay, because you already paid them growing up, he said.

So true! Keighery said. You know, the gingers are a dying breed. Were getting bred out. Its a fact.

Crary snorted. Thats been debunked! he said. We are not going extinct, girl. I think we predate humans. Neanderthals may have been redheads.

So we dont all have to go ridin a redhead? Keighery asked, sounding disappointed.

Nearby, a dark-haired man bummed a light from a bald man, who nodded in approval. Another leper, he said, referring not to the shared absence of ginger but to the cigarette habit.

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Night of the Walking Redheads - The New Yorker

England must keep their discipline in heat of World Cup knockout stages – The Guardian

The last time the All Blacks lost a World Cup match was in 2007. It was a match I do not have fond memories of, having played in it, but incredibly valuable lessons were learned considering New Zealands record in the tournament since. Two things stand out when looking at why we lost that match against France. Firstly, we tinkered with our game plan throughout the pool stages and we just didnt quite get it right in the quarter-final. Secondly, we had not been tested at all in the pool stages and we came up against a team on a completely different level to anything we had experienced.

The first point shows the danger of not having clarity but I am not sure the second is relevant at this World Cup. Back then we put 70-odd points on Italy, more than 100 on Portugal, we thrashed Scotland because they were fielding a weakened team and scored another 80 against Romania.

You then get to the quarter-finals and the difference is huge. That is not the case any more. The lesser teams are competitive for long spells and while some scorelines have ended up as blow outs, things have improved so much in terms of athletic ability and physicality all teams hit hard. All teams have strength and conditioning coaches, they have nutritionists and the benefits are being reaped.

Having said that, there is inevitably a different feel when it becomes knockout rugby. Suddenly there is no tomorrow and all the players will all be aware of that. The key, and this is where the coaching staff come in, is to try and keep everything process driven as much as possible. When you start worrying about the outcome, thats when you have a problem. That was the big thing that changed for the All Blacks after 2007.

You have to try and keep the mood and the atmosphere in the camp the same, or as similar as you can, whether it be a pool stage match against Portugal or a quarter-final against France. For New Zealand, it was the development of the players leadership group after 2007 that has been key. How they learned to deal with the pressure and how they kept ice cold blue heads rather than panicked red heads in the crucial situations.

It will be interesting to see how England deal with the transition. I do not believe that the cancelled match against France will be much of a problem. Teams such as New Zealand and England can use that extra time to their benefit. Yes both teams have a couple of players who would have benefited from the extra game time, Mako Vunipola and Brodie Retallick for example, but both sets of players have been afforded a bit of downtime and then they can put in the extra analysis everything will be that little bit more detailed.

Where things could be problematic for England is the lack of experience of knockout international rugby. They did not get out of their pool four years ago which means there are only a few players in the squad with experience of playing a sudden-death World Cup match. Making up for that though, is the fact that the core of this team has huge experience of playing knockout club rugby. You look at the Saracens spine of this team and the amount of European matches they have won Super Rugby does not have that kind of equivalent.

The biggest concern I have over England is their discipline and whether it stands up when the heat is on in the knockout stages. It is the only area where I worry about them and how a game could slip away from them. They play right on the edge, defensively they are right on that line and the one thing you do not want to do in a quarter or a semi-final is give teams easy outs. If England find themselves charging into rucks when there is no genuine chance of winning the ball, or if they find themselves going in at the side, it would not surprise me to see referees clamping down on that sort of thing the deeper we go into the tournament.

With the pool stages now complete we are going to have very experienced assistant referees and that makes a difference very little is going to go unnoticed. If Englands opponents try and get under their skin, how will they react?

Because I fully expect that sort of challenge from Australia on Saturday. At the breakdown Australia will really try and put them under pressure, slow the ball down and try to take the sting out of Englands power game. It will be niggly and how Englands discipline holds up will be fascinating.

To give them their dues, England have been clinical so far. Theyve responded and adapted to what has happened to them. Teams want to lift their performances against England but Eddie Joness players have found a way to get the result they needed. I think they are in a good place. The expectation will come from outside the group but I do expect an awkward, potentially scrappy game against Australia. The breakdown will be a massive contest and that could make it stop-start and help England in terms of their tactical kicking.

Either way, it should be a cracking encounter and it will be proper knockout rugby. These are the matches that everyone has been waiting for and while weve had a wonderful pool stage, bookended by New Zealand and South Africa going at it and then Japans incredible win over Scotland, it is now that the World Cup really starts.

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England must keep their discipline in heat of World Cup knockout stages - The Guardian

Cara Delevingnes moth-eaten jumpsuit look turned heads on the red carpet. but can it work in real life? – The Sun

CARA Delevingne looked like shed had a moth infestation in her wardrobe when she stepped out this week.

We have all heard of ripped denim but the model, 27, took the trend a step further by wearing a hole-ridden Guy Laroche jumpsuit to an LA awards do.

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BOMB DEAL Teen claims her hair has turned permanently pink after using Lush bath bomb

Warning

terror vision I heard a pop and lost my eye when I dried my face with a towel

Fine for balmy California temperatures but how would the look fare on a drizzly October day in London?

We sent model Eilie Bennett, 30, from Glasgow, out in our DIY version made using a 32.99 New Look jumpsuit.

Here, she reveals how she got on.

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Cara Delevingnes moth-eaten jumpsuit look turned heads on the red carpet. but can it work in real life? - The Sun

Amazon’s Lord Of The Rings Series Is Casting For ‘Hairy People’ And More – CinemaBlend

Amazon's Lord Of The Rings series is casting for "hairy people," among other traits, as posted in fascinating casting calls. Sounds like the upcoming show is looking for some Gimlis -- along with some "character faces," very tall and very short people, and even folks with missing teeth. Hey, how about this guy?

OK, I already knew that, Gollum, stop rubbing it in.

The Lord of the Rings prequel series on Prime will be filming in New Zealand -- just like Peter Jackson's movies -- so these casting calls are for people in New Zealand. You probably can't get cast yourself, but the notices put out by the Amazon team do give us some hints on what we'll see on screen.

The casting notices cover a lot of types, but there's definitely an emphasis on hair. Talento talent agency of Auckland, New Zealand recently shared this look at what the Amazon series was asking for:

The upcoming Amazon Original series based on THE LORD OF THE RINGS.

We are looking for a mix of people of all ages, genders/other from multi-racial backgrounds with interesting character faces and physicalitys.These are for Background and Featured Performer roles:

EXAMPLES OF PEOPLE WE ARE LOOKING FOR...

Character Faces (Earthy, Weathered, Dark Skin Tonnes, Missing teeth, Wonderful Noses etc etc)Bearded Hairy Biker Men/Woman/OtherLean Tall Androgynous LooksBeautiful, Fair Fine boned FacesTALL People - 6 ++TALLER People 68 ++Small People 46 to 411Musicians

This past weekend there was a similar open casting call in Aukland, and New Zealand talent agency BGT shared the details:

Casting for....

1. short people under 4 foot 122. Tall people over 6 foot 53. Character faces, wrinkles and lots of them please :-)4. Androgynous men and women5. Hairy hairy people of all ages and ethnicities6. Tall, Long Lithe dancers7. Circus performers who can juggle, stilt walk!8. Stocky mean-looking bikers9. Eurasian people of all ages.10. Hispanic - Latino, Mexican, South American - HOLA11. Red heads all ages, shapes and sizes.12.HAIR HAIR HAIR - if you natural red hair, white hair, or lots and lots of freckles.

I'm intrigued about so much of that -- beyond the HAIR HAIR HAIR emphasis. Like the bikers. What bikers lived in the Second Age of Tolkien's work?! I'm guessing the fine-boned, lean, tall, and androgynous people will be elves, but we'll see. It does look like the series will feature a lot of interesting different looks -- from lots of wrinkles to "wonderful noses" and of course all that hair. As the Talento casting call noted, they were looking for talent for background (extras) and also featured performer roles.

Amazon's Lord of the Rings series was announced with a five season order, including a possible spinoff. So this thing is ambitious to an extreme. It's expected to end up the most expensive series of all time potentially costing a billion dollars.

The Lord of the Rings series has to strictly follow Tolkien's canon and it can only cover the Second Age, or reference things that happened beforehand, but that rules out the storylines we saw in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings movies, since they were set in the Third Age. But the Second Age has a huuuuge timespan, and there's plenty of room for the creative team to stretch their legs.

One of the Tolkien experts working on Amazon's Lord of the Rings series said he heard Season 1 would have 20 episodes, but that has yet to be confirmed. Not much has been confirmed, since they are still getting their acts together, with filming expected to start in 2020 for a Season 1 premiere on Amazon in 2021. So far, two stars have been reported for the Lord of the Rings, with at least one said to be in a leading role. He's probably not playing Sauron, though, right? We'll still need one.

Here's more of what we know so far about Amazon's Lord of the Rings series.

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Amazon's Lord Of The Rings Series Is Casting For 'Hairy People' And More - CinemaBlend

Lord of the Rings TV series: Bearded men, missing teeth and people over 200cm wanted – Stuff.co.nz

Talent agencies are calling on Kiwis with specific looks to apply to be part of Amazon's Lord of the Rings TV series.

It was confirmed in September after months of speculation that the series would be filmed in Auckland and shooting would begin early next year.

Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED) has yet to reveal exact shooting locations but one is believed to beKumeu Film Studios, north-west of the city.

Talent agencies, such as Talento and BGT, announced on Wednesday evening that they were looking for people to apply to be in the show.

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The Lord of the Rings series will be filmed in Auckland.

READ MORE:* Lord of The Rings TV series: What we know so far * Lord of the Rings TV series: Potential filming locations in Auckland* Amazon's The Lord of The Rings TV series to start filming in Auckland* Amazon teams up with Warner Bros and Tolkien estate to make a Lord of the Rings television series, reports

"We are looking for a mix of people of all ages, genders/other from multi-racial backgrounds with interesting character faces and physicality's [sic]," Talentosaid on Facebook.

This included people with "earthy, weathered, dark skin", missing teeth and "wonderful" noses.

They were also looking for "bearded hairy" biker men and women, and people with lean, tall androgynous looks.

The agencies were also looking for people with "beautiful, fair, fine bones faces" who would be willing to wear shear clothing.

FACEBOOK

Talento posted on Facebook on Wednesday night looking for talent.

Short people between 137cmand 149cm were wanted, as well as people who were very tall - up to 182cm and over 200cm.

Musicians were also sought after.

As well as the above characteristics, BGT said it was also looking for circus performers who can juggle and walk on stilts.

SUPPLIED

Kiwis with unique looks are wanted to take part in the series.

Red heads "of all ages, shapes and sizes" were wanted - as well as people with lots of freckles.

Theshowis set to be the most expensive series ever made, with costs expected to exceed US$1 billion (NZ$1.3b). Itis expected to premiere in 2021.

When it was confirmed it would be filmed in Auckland,showrunnersand executive producersJ.D Payne and Patrick McKay said "as we searched for the location in which we could bring to life the primordial beauty of the Second Age of Middle Earth, we knew we needed to find somewhere majestic, with pristine coasts, forests, and mountains, that also is a home to world-class sets, studios, and highly skilled and experienced craftspeople and other staff".

ANNA LOREN/STUFF

One shooting location is believed to be Kumeu FIlm Studios.

"And we're happy that we are now able to officially confirm New Zealand as our home for our series based on stories fromJ.R.R. Tolkien'sThe Lord of the Rings.

"We are grateful to the people and the government of New Zealand and especially Auckland for supporting us during this pre-production phase."

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Lord of the Rings TV series: Bearded men, missing teeth and people over 200cm wanted - Stuff.co.nz

Ed Sheeran and Prince Harry unite in video for World Mental Health Day – WRAL.com

By Matthew Robinson, CNN

CNN Prince Harry and Ed Sheeran have teamed up in a video to raise awareness for World Mental Health Day -- with a light-hearted jibe at their own plight as Britain's most famous redheads.

In the video, shared on the official Sussex Royal Instagram account, the famous duo discuss the issue of mental health, and urge everyone to "look out for anybody that might be suffering in silence".

Yet despite the serious message, the video starts on a humorous note. When the pair sit down to discuss their collaboration, Prince Harry explains that Sheeran has the right "skill set" to create a song to help fight the problem.

"This for me is a subject and conversation which is just not talked about enough, I think people all over the world are really suffering," Harry says in a serious tone.

It soon becomes clear that wires have been crossed, when Sheeran begins describing a song he has started writing to challenge the stigma faced by redheads.

"People don't understand what it's like for people like us," he says. "With the jokes and snide comments. I just feel like it's time we stood up and said, 'we're not going to take this anymore. We're ginger and we're going to fight'."

"Umm slightly awkward," Prince Harry responds, noting that he had invited the singer to his house to discuss World Mental Health Day. When Harry explains the miscommunication, Sheeran is seen deleting the words "Gingers United" from a presentation on this laptop.

At the start of the video Sheeran is seen ringing Prince Harry's doorbell, which chimes to the tune of God Save The Queen. Harry opens the door and jokes: "It's like looking in the mirror."

The pair conclude the video with a serious message, urging everyone to reach out to those struggling with mental health issues.

"Guys this World Mental Health Day, reach out, make sure your friends, strangers look out for anyone who might be suffering in silence; we're all in this together," Prince Harry says.

A message released by Kensington Palace in connection with the video, added: "Both Prince Harry and Ed Sheeran want to ensure that not just today, but every day, you look after yourself, your friends and those around you.

"There's no need to suffer in silence -- share how you're feeling, ask how someone is doing and listen for the answer. Be willing to ask for help when you need it and know that we are all in this together."

Mental health has become a cornerstone of Prince Harry's philanthropic work and he spearheaded the Heads Together campaign alongside Prince William and The Duchess of Cambridge in 2017.

That initiative brought together a coalition of eight charities in a bid to tackle stigma surrounding mental health issues, raise awareness and improve the provision of services for sufferers.

World Mental Health Day is marked annually on October 10, and the World Federation for Mental Health chose suicide prevention as the main focus for this year's event.

Every year close to 800,000 people die from suicide around the world, according to the World Health Organization. In the UK alone there were 6,507 deaths from suicide in 2018, government data shows.

To mark the day, Prince Harry also visited a school in the British city of Nottingham to talk with students about mental health and the challenges they face in education.

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Ed Sheeran and Prince Harry unite in video for World Mental Health Day - WRAL.com

Deep south’s only Democratic governor heads into election runoff – The Guardian

Louisiana governor John Bel Edwards told supporters to brace for a barrage of national Republican efforts trying to unseat him, in the five weeks leading to a runoff election.

The deep souths only Democratic governor fell below 50% voter support on Saturday night and was forced into a 16 November run-off against Republican businessman Eddie Rispone.

Donald Trump held an election eve rally urging Louisianas voters to reject Edwards. The president took credit on Twitter for keeping Edwards from a primary victory, and praised Rispone.

The media is not talking about the big Republican victory last night in Louisiana, Trump tweeted on Sunday, where a sitting Democrat Governor was forced into a runoff by not getting 50%. Big upset! Now Eddie Rispone who will be a great Governor, will win!

Edwards told supporters: Weve got a little more work to do. But he said he believes Louisiana voters will embrace the spirit of bipartisanship in November and re-elect him.

Edwards needs cross-party support to win in ruby red Louisiana. He ran on bipartisanship, saying he worked across party lines on all the major initiatives he achieved in his first term in office.

Rispone saw off another Republican, US representative Ralph Abraham, to make the run-off. Trump backed both men.

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Deep south's only Democratic governor heads into election runoff - The Guardian

Justin Trudeau Heads North, Fighting for Every Seat in a Tight Race – The New York Times

This is a special Canada Letter for the 2019 Canadian election. Sign up for the newsletter here.

Monday night brought the first official debate of this years campaign, an event largely marked by the six leaders talking over one another. After cycling back home well into the evening from the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Quebec, home of the debates, I was up before dawn the next morning for a very particular election experience.

On Tuesday, the traveling roadshow that is Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus campaign dropped into Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut, for a few hours. Its probably not a tour experience anyone will soon offer the general public.

As the election enters its final phase, polls suggest that neither Mr. Trudeau nor Andrew Scheer, the Conservative leader, have managed to change voters views in any significant ways, at least when it comes to the popular vote. As they were at the beginning, the two parties and their leaders are deadlocked in a tie.

So this has become an every-seat-counts kind of election. (A reminder for non-Canadian readers: Canadians will not vote for a party or prime minister on Oct. 21. They are electing 338 local members of Parliament.) Nunavut, all 2 million square kilometers of it, is just a single electoral district. The Liberals won it in 2015 and clearly hope to repeat that. Tuesday was Mr. Trudeaus third trip to Nunavut in a year.

Not only is the contingent of reporters who follow Mr. Trudeau and the other leaders around considerably smaller than in the past, its now almost entirely made up of journalists from television networks. Mr. Trudeaus staff told me that reporters and columnists from Canadian newspapers have floated in and out. But a reporter for The Canadian Press news service and I were the only representatives of what event organizers now call print and digital media on the Iqaluit outing.

Like any day on the Liberal campaign, journalists, or more precisely their employers, paid 1,000 Canadian dollars to come along.

Mr. Trudeaus campaign planes have attracted unusual attention this election. First a bus carrying reporters unwisely tried to drive under the wing of one of the planes, damaging it. Then, the Conservatives charged that having two planes undermines Mr. Trudeaus climate change agenda. The Liberals shot back by noting that they buy carbon offsets, while the Conservatives do not.

For reasons no one could explain, we flew to Iqaluit on the Boeing 737-200 usually used by Mr. Trudeaus advance team to move around equipment rather than the one with giant red TRUDEAU banners painted on its sides. I was told by other journalists that the decorated plane is quite nice. As for our aircraft, there are good reasons its called the cargo plane, although its lack of storage space was only matched by an extraordinary lack of leg room.

While several of Mr. Trudeaus aides and his children Ella-Grace and Xavier wandered back to where journalists and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police sat, the prime minister didnt budge from his seat until we landed, three hours after taking off in Ottawa. From an overhead bin, he retrieved a special Nunavut campaign parka, which was overkill given the 5-degree-Celsius temperature.

In 2015, the successful Liberal candidate was Hunter Tootoo who was named fisheries minister by Mr. Trudeau. But an alcohol problem and a messy affair, in which Mr. Tootoo was said to have had relationships with a young female staffer and her mother at the same time, led to his removal from the cabinet and the Liberal caucus.

This time around, the Liberal candidate is Megan Pizzo-Lyall, a former Iqaluit city councilor who is now operations manager for an Inuit investment company. She is facing Leona Aglukkaq, the Conservative who held the district for two terms and had several cabinet posts in Stephen Harpers government.

Mr. Trudeaus agenda included events clearly designed to boost Ms. Pizzo-Lyalls campaign, including a visit to an Inuit seniors center where one woman recalled meeting him as a child when he had accompanied his father, the former Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, to the community. Two other women, however, continued with their card game.

But the trip also allowed Mr. Trudeau to use the stunning and thats understating it scenery of Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park as a backdrop for cameras as he spoke to a national audience about his governments record on the environment and curbing carbon change in particular. The reporters questions? They were mainly focused on the debate.

Along the way, he worked a small crowd that included a grade 10 high school class and received a plastic bag of dried and smoked fish from a woman for the plane ride home.

In an airplane services building at the airport, the reporters and his staff were fed Arctic char panini, something that in an ideal world would be coming to a restaurant near everyone. Three and a half hours after the cargo plane touched down in Iqaluit, it was airborne for Toronto.

Even the vastness of Canadas Arctic, however, provided no relief from the comparative smallness of the countrys political world. At the Toronto airport, Mr. Trudeaus plane had to taxi up next to Mr. Scheers. And as the two red Liberal buses headed out to a suburban hotel, Mr. Scheers big blue buses were pulling in.

On Oct 17, join Ian Austen and Dan Bilefsky for an election-themed phone conversation about where the parties stand and the issues most important to Canadians. Is this close race at a tipping point? RSVP for the call here, and send your questions to nytcanada@nytimes.com.

A native of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto, lives in Ottawa and has reported about Canada for The New York Times for the past 16 years. Follow him on Twitter at @ianrausten.

Were eager to have your thoughts about this newsletter and events in Canada in general. Please send them to nytcanada@nytimes.com.

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Justin Trudeau Heads North, Fighting for Every Seat in a Tight Race - The New York Times

Its coming, its coming: Did Washington finally find the keys to unlocking its offensive firepower? – The Seattle Times

TUCSON, Ariz. The crisis was mounting, the frustration was growing, the criticism was multiplying and confusion and ineptitude seemed to be ingrained into Washingtons beleaguered offense.

The Huskies were headed, by all appearances, to another demoralizing defeat against an ostensibly inferior opponent. This was one that would have punctured, once and for all, their hopes of mustering something from a season that once brimmed with optimism. This would have been a stake into the heart.

And then halftime happened, and that narrative was blasted into the Tucson desert, in the wake of a slow-developing but deeply satisfying 51-27 rout of Arizona.

At least for now. The Huskies will head into their vital showdown with Oregon next week believing with evidence to back it up this time that they can indeed be a fully-functioning offense. They feel they unlocked some doors behind which were hidden the keys to shake them out of the offensive malaise which threatened to bury their season.

When you finish a game strong, you carry that over into the next game, said running back Sean McGrew, who exceeded 100 yards for the second time this year and was nearly joined by Salvon Ahmed with 95.

But when the Huskies put on the tape of this game, they will also see a first half that mirrored the multi-faceted breakdowns a week earlier against Stanford. Chris Petersen had been unable to muster much second-half magic in his Washington reign. As was chronicled by Seattle Times columnist Matt Calkins, the Huskies had lost 10 straight games under Petersen in which they were trailing at halftime, and 15 of their last 16.

But this time, he and his staff conjured up some remedies. Or maybe the players just finally were fed up with being stymied by one of the lesser defenses in the Pac-12, knowing that one of the best in the country awaits them next week in the Ducks.

I think we just came together as an offense and realized what we needed to do and just kind of manned up, Ahmed said. It was like, weve got to get this done. Weve got to come out of here with a win.

Sputtering with just 134 yards of total offense in the first half, despite being bestowed with numerous scoring opportunities by their defense, the Huskies unleashed the kind of explosive attack that had been reserved this season mostly for non-conference patsies. After intermission, they put up 316 yards while outscoring Arizona, 38-10.

The instigator on the field was quarterback Jacob Eason, who for a half was heading a passing attack that seemed just as jittery and halting as it had been against Stanford. But in the second half, with a vitally needed new target in freshman Puka Nacua (three catches, 97 yards), Eason went 8-for-10 for 178 yards and two touchdowns.

And the instigator off the field may have been Eason as well. Though Petersen and Ahmed both said that there wasnt much of a fiery message at halftime (There wasnt a lot to be said, but there was a lot to still do, is how Ahmed put it) Eason said he stepped out of his comfort zone to assert a vocal leadership presence. He plans to keep doing that, which might be the most promising development of all to come out of this victory.

The players clearly responded to all of it the 17-13 halftime deficit, the mounting red-zone woes and inability to sustain an offensive rhythm. Ahmed said they challenged themselves to be more physical on offense, and felt their running game eventually wore down the Wildcats. And the Huskies responded in a huge way to Easons challenge that it was time to get it done.

It was a message of, we know what we can do, Eason said. We know the kind of offense we are, we know the guys we have, the skill players, the o-line. We can move people up front, We can make plays on the ball and we can run the ball really well. We just have to be able to believe that.

Like I told Puka, its coming, its coming, its coming. In the fourth quarter, he had that go-ball conversion. Guys have to believe in themselves. When the guys believe in themselves, were a dangerous team. That showed in the second half.

This was a game that the Huskies should have seized control of almost immediately, wringing the spirit out of Arizona before it was allowed to be restored. But in the first half, it was the Huskies who were rendered confused and on the verge of demoralization.

The Husky defense, chided last week for being out-physicaled by Stanford, came out with a vengeance, augmented by a ferocious special teams unit. The combo produced a blocked punt, a scoop-and-score touchdown, and a fumble recovery at the Arizona 8 on a muffed punt.

Yet the Husky offense did not reward that largesse in the slightest in the first half, succumbing to the same old maladies. Inept red-zone performance. Head-scratching play calling. A passing game that seemed lost at sea, and a rushing attack that couldnt get the tough yards near the end zone.

Just a really slow start on offense, but our defense was spectacular, really, that first quarter and a half, Petersen said. We just couldnt get any rhythm going on offense. We had these unbelievable field positions, and then three and out, field goal, whatever. So the whole first half was very, very frustrating on offense.

And then that frustration morphed into the exhilaration of their second-half surge. Asked if it was something the Huskies could sustain and carry forward to next week, Petersen let out a big sigh and gave a wan smile.

I sure hope so, right? I think the thing thats as frustrating as anything is being in the red zone, having that unbelievable field position, and just not getting anything done there.

We have to spend more time in practice in that area. We just have to. We have to allow more time to it, and your time is so tight with these different situations. But we just have to spend more time there.

Just maybe, on Saturday, the Huskies offense showed what they can do when they put their mind to it.

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Its coming, its coming: Did Washington finally find the keys to unlocking its offensive firepower? - The Seattle Times

The Flint House, Brighton: Its all about satisfying dishes restaurant review – The Guardian

The Flint House, 13 Hanningtons Lane, Brighton BN1 1GS (01273 916333). All dishes 4-14 (apart from shared steak at 42), desserts 8, wines from 23

Being on trend in the restaurant business isnt difficult, if youve got a few miles on the clock: sniff the air to work out which direction the robata grill smoke is blowing from; flick through a few mags with a grizzled I can do that frown. It doesnt matter that you made your name, say, knocking out a massive raviolo or ripping off the Tatin sisters. Why shouldnt you now do some ersatz take on somewhere called Asia you dont know much about outside of a sweaty mini break at the Park Hyatt Tokyo? If thats what the Swarovski-encrusted iPhone crowd want right now, give it to them. Buy in a few trinkets wholesale from that department store in Nihonbashi, stack the fridge with Cristal and offer up a menu full of miso-smeared cod and dishes that punch you in the face repeatedly with gochujang. Yours for 100 a head.

Being up to date while remaining true to yourself takes more skill. Chef Ben McKellar and his partner Pamela have it. If you havent heard of them, its because you dont live in Brighton, where they have run multiple restaurants for the past 21 years. Their places usually have the word ginger in the title. Its Bens way of celebrating his once luscious head of russet hair.

I first ate his eminently trustworthy food at the Gingerman inside the mildly formal Drakes Hotel in 2005, and then again in 2008 at a laid-back pub called the Ginger Fox just outside Brighton. Back then, there was a touch of St John to his cooking. I still mutter wistfully about his toast fried in duck fat, laid with horseradish cream and pink folds of roast beef. He might put a mince and onion pie on the menu, but raise the humble to the extravagant, or put a cake of crisped pigs head alongside slices of fillet. His dishes have always been on the plate what they promise on the menu.

And now heres the shiny Flint House, in a new development within the citys Lanes. Its seemingly unlike any other McKellar outpost before, which may explain the absence of Ginger in the title. Upstairs is a dining room and cocktail bar looking out over the Brighton rooftops. Downstairs is dominated by a counter around a fully open kitchen for those who like a bit of nerdy cooking theatre. Thrill to the induction hob with its plancha fitting; perv over the Thermomix and the Pacojet, and the prepped ingredients waiting in their plastic pots for their moment.

Its all polished surfaces and sharp angles and yes, of course, small plates because everything is right now. They do not take bookings, because this is meant to be a restlessly modern venture that you fall into and out of at speed. So far so modish. Dont be distracted. Dig through the unstructured menu, its belt unloosened to the last notch. Take in the nods to Spain and Italy. The bit of the menu headed encouragingly Fried/toast/snacks, for example, includes ham croquettes with saffron mayo, which feels like a departure from his overtly British agenda. But youll still find the big fat McKellar thumbprint: its about solid dishes that dont sacrifice substance for looks. The bchamel in those croquettes isnt just flavoured with ham; its spun through with ribbons of the stuff, as if determined to make its point.

Rock oysters are dressed with an apple and cider-vinegar granita, which makes them brisker than they might already be. We watch a hunk of hispi cabbage being seared on the plancha, until the edges are browned and toffee-like. It comes with a thick, mustardy ravigote sauce below and an autumnal leaf fall of crisped golden onions above. Courgettes are browned and pelted with handfuls of pine nuts and a dollop of confit garlic. A slab of treacly bread is toasted and laid with Ortiz anchovies, the brand name a reassurance. There are rings of lightly pickled onion to send it on its way.

As with Ortiz, so with Hannan, the Northern Irish meat producer, who ages his beef in a room lined with the shimmering pink of Himalayan salt. Im still to work out exactly what the salt does, but I know the beef is exceptionally good. Like some terrible brand fetishist, I relax when I see his name on a menu. A serious cut of that beef is the most expensive dish here at 42 (for sharing). Theres also his ox cheek, cured to a rosy red and given a ride through a sugar pit, to produce something on more than nodding terms with the very best maple-syrup-sweetened bacon. Theres a toasty onion pure beneath. It needs the heavy grating of nose-slapping horseradish to tip it away from cloying. And then there are rings of hugely flavoured lambs belly, from an animal with proper time on the hoof, crisped and perched on a pile of the freshest of peas and dressed with more anchovy.

For dessert there is muscovado sugar crme brle. Apparently, there are blackcurrants in there, too, but all I get are the sultry, caramel tones of the brown sugar. I am rarely convinced that there is much point trying to improve upon a classic vanilla crme brle, and this one doesnt change my mind. Far better is a block of chocolate and pistachio parfaits, pushed together and sandwiched within a biscuit shell alongside a cherry cream. Its both fun and clever. Its lunchtime and, to the disgust of many reading this, Im off the booze. Instead I have a glass of their own rhubarb soda, and feel almost virtuous, even though I surrendered my virtue years ago.

My job is to ramble through as much of a menu like this as I can, and I do put my back into it. But sometimes you need to step back from such an experience and work out what its for. Over the years the McKellars have run businesses built around the special occasion; restaurants where milestones are marked and devotion is proved. The Flint House is not one of those. Its about a couple of satisfying dishes, rather than the works. Its a restaurant that makes its point one dish at a time so that what could seem at first to be just a nice enough lunch or dinner, turns out to have been rather more than that. And every town really could do with a place like that.

A little more on McKellars thatched pub the Ginger Fox, just outside Hurstpierpoint, 15 minutes from Brighton. It may be chocolate box-pretty but the food is bang up to date. Starters might include a rabbit scotch egg with carrot and chipotle remoulade, followed by venison loin with braised celery and a wild mushroom jus. Sunday lunches, which come fully accessorised, are a highlight (thegingerfox.com).

Restaurateur Alan Yau, who launched an entire restaurant sector with Wagamama, before opening Hakkasan and Duck & Rice, has three new ventures in London next year. Two will be in Canary Wharf. Chyna will combine Cantonese and European cookery and boast a water market from which customers can choose live seafood. Next to that will be a Japanese place built around counter dining. The third, at Westfield Shopping Centre, will be part of his Turkish street food brand, Yamabahce.

Steve Groves, who won Masterchef: The Professionals a decade ago, has another title. He has been named Craft Guilds National Chef of The Year. Groves, who heads the kitchen at Roux at Parliament Square, won with a menu including red mullet with shellfish mousse and bouillabaisse sauce, and suckling pig with Jerusalem artichokes.

Email Jay at jay.rayner@observer.co.uk or follow him on Twitter @jayrayner1

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The Flint House, Brighton: Its all about satisfying dishes restaurant review - The Guardian

Seahawks at Browns final score, takeaways: Seattle hangs on to beat Cleveland in back-and-forth game – CBS Sports

The Cleveland Browns continue to show they are an undisciplined football team, seemingly incapable of winning games. They were the better team for most of Sunday's game against the Seattle Seahawks but four turnovers and nine penalties secured their demise in a 32-28 loss. The Browns fall to 2-4 entering their bye week. Seattle improves to 5-1.

Baker Mayfield completed 22 of 37 passes for 249 yards, a touchdown and three interceptions.Nick Chubb had 20 carries for 122 yards and two touchdowns. He also had five receptions for 17 yards and a fumble.

Russell Wilson threw his 13th and 14th touchdowns of the season, and he has still yet to throw an interception. Chris Carson continues to build on a strong season recording 124 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries. Seattle does have weaknesses though. The defense did not record a sack. The offense fumbled three times, with two of those being recovered by the defense.

Pete Carroll and his team host the 4-2 Baltimore Ravens next week.

They made fewer errors and they capitalized on Cleveland's. Seattle fumbled three times and was penalized 10 times for 65 yards. The Browns scored zero points off the Seahawks' lone turnover. Meanwhile, Wilson led his squad to 17 points off their opponent's three turnovers and blocked punt.

Wilson does a tremendous job of extending plays while also not putting the ball in harm's way. He has thrown 14 touchdowns this season without a single interception in 176 attempts through sis games. Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers set the record for most consecutive pass attempts (402) without an interception in 2018.

Pick and choose. There were a number of unfortunate occurrences including multiple passes that hit receivers hands only to be intercepted by Seattle. It was the second consecutive week that the Browns threw an interception in the red zone during the waning moments of the first half, and then allowed the opposition to march down the field and score a touchdown. It would be easy to pick any of their nine penalties or the lack of protection on what resulted in a blocked punt by Seattle. It boils down to undisciplined play and that falls on the shoulders of players and coaches alike. The same explanation could be copied and pasted for all but one of their games this season.

For the second consecutive week, it was Cleveland throwing an interception in the red zone before halftime. Baker Mayfield threw a pass behind Jarvis Landry, who tipped it into the hands of Seahawks safety Tedric Thompson. Seattle had time to march down the field and score a touchdown before halftime. It was 20-18 and they were set to get the ball back to start the second half.

The Dawg Pound can hang their hats on this catch by wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. On a 41-yard pass from Mayfield, Beckham hauled in an improbable sideline catch over safety Tedric Thompson. Well...improbable for everyone else in the league, but we've gotten used to this from OBJ.

During the week, Browns coaches and players said that they need to get the ball to Beckham more. He made six catches for 101 yards but he also dropped a few passes.

There were some controversial calls in this game just as there are in every game. The reason for Cleveland's loss lies more in their lack of execution than officiating, but Mayfield was not afraid to voice his opinion after the game:

"The refs are never an excuse and I'll probably get fined for saying this but it was pretty bad today. The guy was squared up with him, running at him, he was lowering his head into Jarvis. What is he supposed to do? Avoid him? It isn't bull fighting. I don't know. It ticks me off," Mayfield said following the loss.

The 'angry' quarterback was also irritated that officiating missed Seattle grabbing Nick Chubb's facemask on a 4th down stand later in the game.

"Yeah, I was calling it out," he said of his motions at the time. "They didn't see it. It was in the middle of the pile. Another one that we had to overcome."

Seattle's receivers paid homage to legendary boy band N'Sync. Justin Timberlake would have been proud with this celebration following a 17-yard touchdown pass from Russell Wilson to Jaron Brown before halftime. Timberlake is a Packers fan by the way.

Cleveland heads into a much needed bye week. They'll head to Foxboro to take on the New England Patriots though coming off the bye. Seattle gets to face the Baltimore Ravens in Week 7. Lamar Jackson and the Ravens improved to 4-2 this season with a 23-17 win over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday, and Jackson put on a record setting show.

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Seahawks at Browns final score, takeaways: Seattle hangs on to beat Cleveland in back-and-forth game - CBS Sports

Tom Herman’s tone Monday seemed calculated to make a point to his Longhorns ahead of the Red River Showdown – The Dallas Morning News

AUSTIN -- On a table next to Tom Herman's lectern, one of the phones used by media to record his buttoned-up thoughts suddenly lights up, as does the coach.

"Anyone expecting a call from Fraud Risk?" he asks, then picks up the phone and answers it himself.

"This is Coach Herman."

Except it wasn't.

The jocular fellow at Monday's news conference bore little resemblance to the terse, tightly wound coach who usually leads Texas' weekly news conference. Most Mondays he doesn't have much fun. Only last week, before the West Virginia win, he essentially cut his usual 30-minute availability in half. Given the insight of the answers, no one seemed to mind the quick exit.

Considering that this week at the State Fair, the 11th-ranked Longhorns will play sixth-ranked Oklahoma, a 10-point favorite and purveyor of the nation's most prolific offenseaveraging nearly a first down per play, you'd have thought Herman might retreat further into his shell. Maybe even take the fifth.

On the contrary, his jovial tone Monday seemed calculated to make a point to his team, if no one else:

Lighten up. We got this.

If he wasn't exactly Barry Switzer, at least he tried to be accommodating. When a reporter asked what it's like to play at the Cotton Bowl in October, he repeated a favorite from his days as a graduate assistant at Texas.

Team bus rolls up outside the Midway, where an elderly woman greets the Horns with a two-finger salute. Next to her, a child sweetly follows granny's lead.

"The old double bird," Herman said, smiling. "It crosses a lot of different generations."

He paused after relating the story in front of a bank of cameras, realizing that, in the telling, he might have acted it out a little too well.

"I hope I didn't actually put those up," he said. "That'd be a meme in a heartbeat."

He thought a little more and reminded reporters that the seats ringing the tunnel at the Cotton Bowl's south end belong to Oklahoma fans, who come prepared for the day's events.

"They do a good job of looking up your girlfriend's name and your mom's name and all that stuff," he said.

"There is a lot of not-nice things said."

Of course, the trash talk runs both ways. It's not Sunday school. The idea is to get in the head of a blood rival any way possible.

The mind games didn't start this week, either. Last week against West Virginia, for instance, the Longhorns unveiled a trick play with nine minutes left and Texas up by 11 at the Mountaineers' 12. Samuel Cosmi, a 6-7, 300-pound offensive tackle, caught a long lateral from Sam Ehlinger, then used all 10 gears to cover the 12 yards in question.

Now, you might ask, as an Austin columnist did, why not save such an unexpected play for Oklahoma?

Why pile up points in Morgantown while tipping your hand to the Sooners in the process?

"We don't like kicking field goals in the red zone," Herman said. "So we are going to pull out all the stops to score touchdowns down there."

What he didn't say: Now Oklahoma has to spend time in practice this week preparing for another Samuel Cosmi rumble, just in case.

What all parties should expect otherwise is another barn burner. Might not end like last year, when the Longhorns held off a wild comeback led by Kyler Murray. But, as Herman said Monday, it ain't going to be 10-7, either.

And as the points mount, emotions invariably rise with them. A young secondary depleted by injuries needs to understand as much going in. On its best day, the Texas defense won't stop an offense conceived by Lincoln Riley and executed by Jalen Hurts.

Herman's job this week will be to persuade his kids that no matter what happens or how many points the Sooners ring up in a setting unlike any other in college football, they can't lose their heads. In order to accomplish such a mission, it's better to be loose than uptight.

So Herman will remind his players that they're 10-point underdogs. He'll tell them that no one expects them to win, even though their only loss is to a team far better than anyone Oklahoma has faced. Chances are, it might even play.

Never mind that if Texas loses Saturday, any lingering CFP hopes are buried. The committee wouldn't take a two-loss Texas team, no matter what it does in the Big 12 title game.

Naturally, that wasn't the message Monday, subliminal or otherwise. Even on his way out the door, Herman stuck to his theme.

"Somebody better call Fraud back, by the way."

No, he's no Mike Leach. Props for trying, though.

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Tom Herman's tone Monday seemed calculated to make a point to his Longhorns ahead of the Red River Showdown - The Dallas Morning News

Gilligans Island star Tina Louise shares how the show ‘represented this great escape’ – Fox News

Tina Louise, one of the last surviving members of Gilligans Island, is speaking out about the shows 55th anniversary.

The actress famously played Ginger Grant, also known as The Movie Star. The only other living cast member is Dawn Wells, who played Mary Ann Summers.

In a recent interview with Closer Weekly, the 85-year-old actress said shes proud of the shows lasting legacy.

'GILLIGAN'S ISLAND' STAR DAWN WELLS SAYS SHE IS 'GRATEFUL' FOR 'FRIENDS AND FANS WHO CARE' WHILE SUFFERING FINANCIALLY

Russell Johnson (as the Professor, in white shirt), Alan Hale Jr. (1918 - 1990) (as the Skipper, in blue shirt), Bob Denver (1935 - 2005) (as Gilligan, in red shirt), Dawn Wells (as Mary Ann, hand on chin), Tina Louise (as Ginger, standing), Jim Backus (1913 - 1989) (as Thurston Howell III, holding radio), and Natalie Schafer (1900 - 1991) (as Mrs. Howell). (CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images)

On this 55th anniversary of Gilligans Island I want to say how wonderful it is that our show is still on the air after all these years, Louise told Closer Weekly. I honestly feel like I have so many friends out there who just love what we did and what we shared and the joy we brought. Im so happy to have been part of something that was so special to American television.

The beloved Gilligans Island explored how seven men and women are stranded on an uncharted island following a storm. It also starred Bob Denver, Alan Hale Jr., Jim Backus, Natalie Schafer and Russell Johnson. The sitcom aired from 1964 until 1967.

When we first aired, our country was in turmoil, Louise reflected. We were just past the Cuban Missile Crisis and the tragic assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Vietnam War was escalating and I think people really needed an escape. Then we lost our beloved Martin Luther King and in a time of uncertainty, Gilligans Island represented this great escape.

CHRISTIE BRINKLEY RECREATES HER 'GIRL IN THE RED FERRARI' MOMENT FROM 'NATIONAL LAMPOONS VACATION'

Tina Louise (left), Dawn Wells and Natalie Schaefer on "Gilligan's Island." (Getty)

This sweet, silly show provided its fans with calm and joy in a frightening time and has continued to do so, Louise continued. Well done television transports people into a fantasy and no matter what turmoil exists in the world, Gilligans Island has provided that escape in an enduring way. Considering the state of everything these days, we should all be happy its still in reruns!

The magazine shared Louise originally pursued a modeling career before finding fame in Hollywood. At age 2, she appeared in an ad for her fathers candy store. By age 17, she was studying acting, singing and dancing at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City.

Louise would go on to make her acting debut in 1952s Twos Company on stage, which led to several other Broadway productions. She appeared in film with 1958s Gods Little Acre. She is still active in front of the big screen and most recently appeared in 2019s Tapestry opposite Stephen Baldwin and Burt Young.

Back in 2013, Louise told Esquire that being a redhead wasnt always easy.

A lot of men are afraid of redheads, she told the outlet at the time. Theres not that many and were different.

LUCILLE BALL ENDURED RUTHLESS CRITICISM ON LIFE WITH LUCY, SAYS CO-STAR: THEY WERE SO BLOODY

Most men are most comfortable with brunettes, she continued. Brunettes arent gonna run away from them; theyre not gonna leave. Men worry that a redhead will. Which is ridiculous! Cause if Im with you, Im with you for a darn good reason, and Im staying there.

Tina Louise circa 1960. (Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)

Louise also admitted that appearing on Gilligans Island was completely different from what she learned as an actress over the years.

[Teacher] Lee Strasberg was important, she shared. Hed pick up your arm and see if and how it would drop to determine the level of relaxation in your body and spirit. Hed say, Make a sound. Some people would start to laugh and that would sometimes turn to tears. You didnt have to be sad it all came from deep relaxation. I learned a lot from Lee about deep relaxation to get at something you were working toward. And then I found myself on Gilligans Island, where somebodys telling you, Go to the right. Go to the left. That was an adjustment. Gilligans Island is what it is, and I am who I am.

'ROOM 222' STAR KAREN VALENTINE RECALLS 'AWFUL' ENCOUNTER AFTER 'THE DATING GAME'

Louise also told the outlet that aside from work, shes been happily volunteering since 1996 and is a proud member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Tina Louise attends The New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children's 2018 Spring Luncheon at The Pierre Hotel on April 17, 2018, in New York City. (Photo by Jared Siskin/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

I love being part of the Academy, she said. I try to see everything on the big screen. I see about two films a week. I dont eat popcorn. I loathe it when people are eating popcorn in a movie house. Im used to concentrating on a film in very quiet places.

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Age is not a number, Louise added. Some people are way older than others who are the same numerical age because of the way they carry themselves, because of the way they dont stand up straight, or the way their bellies stick out. I dont think you should label people with numbers.

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Gilligans Island star Tina Louise shares how the show 'represented this great escape' - Fox News

Heads must roll as Trent Bridge becomes theatre of base comedy – The Times

Hail Essex and Darren Stevens, weep for woeful Nottinghamshire, says Michael Henderson in his county season review

County cricket, devalued over the years by a governing board that knows the price of everything and the value of nothing, is rather like Hamlet in Tom Stoppards Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Its a play going on in the background while the eyes and ears of the audience are elsewhere. Yet without it there will be no Test cricketers of the future, so it is prudent to pay attention to the doings in the shires, however unfashionable they may appear to be.

It also has interest in its own right and we were granted one last golden hour of the season at Taunton. At 4.30pm last Thursday, with the floodlights on, the sun, whose rays are all ablaze, appeared for the first time since Monday morning.

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Heads must roll as Trent Bridge becomes theatre of base comedy - The Times

MotoGP heads to Thailand with Marquez on cusp of Championship victory – Mcnews.com.au

2019 MotoGPRound 15 Thailand,Buriram International Circuit

Thailand will mark the 15th round of the season and the precursor to the three-week back-to-back tour which takes in Japan, Australia and Malaysia, making this a very busy time both in terms of logistics and racing action for the whole MotoGP paddock.

The first time MotoGP visited Buriram, the race was a duel to remember. To add a little more to the history books at the PTT Thailand Grand Prix second time around, this year the Championship hangs in the balance as Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) has the chance to win title number eight. So what are the chances? Fairly high.

The reigning Champion won here last year and hes 98 points clear with only four races remaining. To boil the maths down to its simplest form, Marquez has to score two or more points more than Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) and be 100 points or more clear when the flag falls on Sunday. He already has too many wins to be caught on that count.

Marc Marquez

We had a great weekend in Aragon and it was a delight to win in front of the home crowd. I want to carry this confidence and energy to Thailand so we can put in a strong weekend. Our approach doesnt change even with the circumstances, we will do our work to be as strong as possible come Sunday. Last year we had a very exciting race here in Thailand so hopefully we can put on another good show for the fans!

Winning races and Championships is far more than a numbers game, however. Its no mean feat beating Dovizioso, and Marquez knows that better than anyone. Buriram 2018 is the one last corner duel against the Italian Marquez has won, so if were on for a repeat performance, the number 93 will have to pull it off again and upend the last corner statistics once more

Grands Prix arent just about the title fight though. Last year Yamaha werent far behind the leading duo and Maverick Viales and Valentino Rossi will be gunning to put Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP back on the podium, and Danilo Petrucci, Doviziosos teammate, needs a result. After a tougher run of form in the last few races, Buriram could be a good track for the Ducati man to bounce back, and hell want to quickly.

Why? His fight for third with Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar). After Rins stunning win at Silverstone, the Spaniard has floundered on race day and hes another who needs a good haul of points, although it could be tougher going for the Hamamatsu factory machines at the venue. Hell want to at least try and take the fight to Petrucci though, with the two close in the standings fighting for third overall just a point apart.

Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) is another who will want to maximise the Ducatis potential at Buriram and take some good points. An impressive third podium of the year at MotorLand saw him deny Viales the chance to finish on the podium three times in a row for the first time in the premier class, and crucially Miller also finished two places ahead of Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT).

The ever impressive Quartararo is well on top in the fight for Rookie of the Year, but hes also fighting for top Independent Team rider and Miller is his key rival as it stands. The Frenchman is only six points clear of the Australian as we head into the flyaways

FabioQuartararo

I think itll be a little better for us than Aragon was because theres a lot of long, slow corners that will suit our bike. The more-experienced riders have less of an advantage there as its only the second time racing there, so well work hard to adapt quickly and do our best. This is my favourite time of the year, heading into the four races in Asia and Australia, because I love travelling and Ill have a chance to rest after Thailand too.

Meanwhile, KTM will want to use Buriram to hopefully see Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) back on track but also to gain some more daylight over Aprilia in the manufacturers Championship.

With Pol Espargaro sidelined through injury in Aragon and Aleix Espargaro and Andrea Iannone putting on an impressive show for Aprilia Racing Team Gresini, the Noale factory closed in a little and it will be interesting to see how Mika Kallio, replacing Johann Zarco, can go in Thailand as he aims to score for KTM as well.

Of course there is also the KTM Tech3 squad of Miguel Oliveira and Hafizh Syahrin, and as always Tech3 Team ManagerHerv Poncharal gave us a great preview of the event from their pit garage.

Herv Poncharal Red Bull KTM Tech3 Team Manager

The next round of the calendar is the Thailand GP in Buriram, which is a place, where we have great memories from last year and myself personally I have to give away the trophy for the best Grand Prix organization in 2018, because it was clearly an incredible event, it was well organized, we had a nice paddock, saw great racing, met friendly people and they were very efficient. I think the whole paddock will travel to Thailand with a smile on their faces, as last year nobody knew what to expect and now we know it and we are positive about rediscovering everything there. This is obviously an important round being the first on in South-East Asia, which is the place in the world where anything related to the motorcycle business is booming and it is an important market, where all the manufacturers want to shine. Wed love to do well with KTM there. I believe that Miguel will be almost 100% fit, because he already felt so much better after just one week in Aragon, so we are quite confident, that he is almost back to his form and the understanding of the bike weve had in Spielberg and Silverstone. We are positive and confident, that Miguel can do well, also because I think he likes that circuit. This will be another interesting place to rediscover everything with our new bike and a new rider coming from Moto2. We are looking forward to see this. Hafizh, is almost a local boy there with a lot of support and fans coming to cheer for him. I know, that theres almost a love story between him and the Buriram circuit, because it was the first time he tested a GP bike in February 2018 there, he felt really good and was fast. We were truly impressed and decided to hire him for the full season, so for him everything started in this place. He likes the circuit and sure, he aims to please the crowd, plus the heat will be no problem for him, because he already flew to Malaysia straight after Aragon, therefore he will be better accustomed to the weather and the time than the other riders coming over from Europe. We also expect a lot from him, in addition he could be pleasantly surprised by a few updates coming from KTM for Hafizh. Hopefully we manage to handle that well and will receive a great result. Now its time to pack our suitcases, leave to the airport and fly to beautiful Thailand.

After a crash ruled Jorge Lorenzo out of the 2018 Thai GP, the five-time World Champion is looking forward to the prospect of racing in Buriram for the first time. Consistent times in practice during the Aragon GP showed that Lorenzos condition and feeling with the RC213V is improving and he is aiming to continue this trend in Thailand.

Jorge Lorenzo

Last year I did not have the best weekend in Thailand with a big crash ruling me out of the race. I am looking forward to completing the race there and we saw from Marc last year that the RC213V is strong at this circuit. After the difficult race in Aragon, I am hoping we can have a good weekend. During practice we showed that our pace is getting better and delivering on this potential is our objective for Thailand.

Talking Tyres

Michelin has already despatched its ranges of tyres for these four fly-away races via a mixture of sea and air freight, where the range of Michelin tyres travel in temperature-controlled containers so they arrive at the circuits in the ideal condition ready for race-action.

The first race of this fly-away tour is an especially testing one for Michelin, as the specific layout of the 4,554m, 12-turn Buriram circuit demands a special rear tyre to contend with the high temperatures that are produced due to the tracks long straights.

Available in a soft, medium and hard compound with an asymmetric design with a harder right-hand side, the Michelin Power Slick rear for the Thailand circuit has a different construction to that which is used all other racetracks throughout the season, with the exception of Spielberg in Austria. These two tracks have similar configurations and use this specific construction to control the build-up of heat that is generated and give the riders the drive and control they need and expect from a Michelin rear tyre, without any compromise to performance from overheating.

Piero TaramassoMichelin Motorsport Two-Wheel Manager

This is our third visit to Buriram following the test and race there last year and each time we have learned more and been able to assess the tyres and makes changes for the next visit. It is a very severe track on rear tyres and creates a lot of heat for the rubber, so we have a special construction which we also use just in Austria to counteract this situation. Last year we were told it would be cooler and wet during October, but it was hot and dry, so we have prepared a range of tyres that can contend with all conditions. There was a big crowd at Buriram last year and it was a great event, we are sure it will be the same this year and that Michelin will play a part in giving the fans a race to enjoy.

Time Schedule

Tune in on Sunday 6th October as lights go out for the MotoGP race at 1800 Sunday night for those Australian states that are lucky enough to enjoy the change to Daylight Savings Time this weekend. Full time schedule further down the page.

Two wins on the bounce had given Augusto Fernandez (Flexbox HP 40) some serious momentum in Moto2, but a mistake at MotorLand Aragon has seen the Spaniard slip to third overall and over 40 points off the top now leap-frogged by Jorge Navarro (Beta Tools Speed Up).

Is time running out for those on the chase to catch Alex Marquez?

Mathematically, it isnt, but it would likely need some serious drama to intervene in the rest of the races to really derail the story of the season so far.

That story, ultimately, is one of consistency. Marquez has lost out once through a mistake of his own, and hes reaping the rewards of the combination of speed and settling when its necessary. Navarro just behind him has been a fairly consistent presence each race weekend too, although hes yet to stand on the top step. That means that if Marquez does start to feel the pressure, Navarro could end up challenging for the crown from the rare position of not being a race winneryet.

Others have seared their way to glory, however, and theres something to be said for reeling in the wins thats what put Fernandez where he is. And Brad Binders (Red Bull KTM Ajo) two wins in the latter half of the season have helped put him just 53 points down, in fifth. Given an incredibly tough start to the season for Austrian factory KTM, thats something to really write home about and the tracks coming next get the South African grinning.

Tom Lthi (Dynavolt Intact GP), meanwhile, is still looking for a bit more of his early season form. The Swiss rider has kept reeling in the points, but hes not been on the charge like weve seen. Can he bounce back as we head into the flyaways? Will teammate Marcel Schrtter mix it up with the frontrunners again once hes back from injury? And what of Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46), the only man on the grid whos previously been on the podium at the track?

Home hero Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia), though, will likely have most of the crowd on his side. There may be a title fight happening at the top, but the intermediate class rookie will be the true hero of the hour for the Thai crowd.

At MotorLand Aragon, Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) was on fire and key rival Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) had a difficult day at the office. In short, 25 points for Canet vs an eleventh place for the Championship leader mean its almost as you were in the tightest title fight of the season, with just two points separating them on the way to Thailand. The see-saw rivalry of the summer is back and Buriram could be an interesting place to head next.

Weve only raced once at the Thai track and last years first contact makes good reading for Dalla Porta. He came second, only a tenth down, and Canet? He didnt race. The Spaniard arrives with no former knowledge of the venue after he missed the event last year due to injury, so it could prove more of an uphill struggle for him. With the rest of the grid, minus the rookies, joining Dalla Porta in having more experience, that only adds to Canets challenge.

Tony Arbolino (VNE Snipers), especially, is not yet out of reach of a charge for the top, although the Italian had a more difficult first race at Chang International Circuit last season. John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) did too, but the likes of Gabriel Rodrigo (Kmmerling Gresini Moto3) and Marcos Ramirez (Leopard Racing) showed some good form as did Dennis Foggia (Sky Racing Team VR46), who took his first podium. Will the rest of the field avoid the attrition of 2019?

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MotoGP heads to Thailand with Marquez on cusp of Championship victory - Mcnews.com.au

The Strange, Uncertain Fate of One of the World’s Most Valuable Salmon Habitats – The Nation

Fire and water: Tenders set anchor in Egekik Bay as the sun sinks in a sky painted gray by wildfire smoke. (Nathaniel Wilder)

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Coffee Point, AlaskaAnna Hoover and I ease up and down in limestone-colored water on a warm, windless afternoon in early July, our backs to the mouth of the Egegik River. Shes distracted, perched in the captains seat of her 32-foot drift boat. She glances at her phone, checking the time. The state manages fishing on a tight schedule here, opening the waters to fishermen and then closing them every few hours to let some salmon travel to their spawning grounds. Weve got five minutes until we unspool our nets.1Ad Policy

We sit 300 miles west of Anchorage in Bristol Bay, home to the largest, healthiest red salmon run on earth, where most wild-grown grocery-store fillets caught in the United States come from. Hoovers parents and grandparents fished here, and she has been hauling reds from this fertile finger of saltwater for most of her 34 years.2

This is her first summer as the captain of her own boat. She never doubted the decision to buy it. Shes always seen herself here, her hair pulled back in a bandanna, rubber coveralls flecked with fish scales, eyes gritty from sleep deprivation, adrenaline rising and falling with the tides that carry salmon into the nets.3

We joke how there are two kinds of peoplethe ones who cant stand it out here and the ones who cant live without it, she says. Fishing is in my blood.4

Still, no matter how many years you fish, she says, you always get a crackle of anxiety as you slip your nets into the water. So much can go wrongweather, gear tangling, mechanical problems, bad timing, the catastrophe of the fish failing to show up. The risk, though, is part of the draw. Fishermen, she tells me, have always been gamblers.5Current Issue

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For her generation of fishermen, investing here is more of a gamble than ever. Twin threats hang over this place where many of Americas salmon dinners come from: a rapidly warming climate, which has already scrambled the pattern of the seasons across vast swaths of Alaska, and Pebble Mine, a proposed open pit mine at the bays headwaters, which has been given new life by Donald Trumps administration. Many who live and fish here, including Hoover, worry that once the mine is built, pollution is inevitable and that together these two forces could destroy this rare, pristine ecosystem, threatening salmon, communities, and whole ways of life.6

I think of generations. So many people in the fishery have learned it from their families and want to pass it on, Hoover says. Around the world, people have disrespected salmon populations and their environments to the point where they are extinct or they are farmed. This place doesnt have thatyet.7

Hoover maneuvers us into position. Two crewmen stand ready on the deck. One is a high school English teacher with a toddler at home, the other a high school studenta good kid who never gets tired. There isnt room to mess this up. They have to make money this summer.8

At 4:45 precisely, Hoover motors forward. Her net sails into the sea.9

Catch of the day: Hoover navigates the scrum of fishing vessels to get in line to sell her haul toa tender. (Nathaniel Wilder)

Make a backward L with your right hand. Now rotate your arm as if youre looking at a wristwatch, so that the web between your thumb and index finger faces your body. Your hand will look like a rough map of Alaska, with your thumb as the southeastern panhandle and your index finger as the Alaska Peninsula, which stretches toward the Aleutian chain.10

Bristol Bay is tucked between your index and middle fingers, a wide body of water fed by a network of riversamong them the Cinder, Egegik, Igushik, Kvichak, Meshik, Nushagak, Naknek, Togiak, and Ugashikand dozens of lakes, large and small.11

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For millennia, several Alaska Native groupsthe Athabascans from the interior, the Yupik people from the southwest region, and the Aleuts from the southern coastal areacame here to fish. Commercial fishing began in the late 1800s, and the bay remains a rare jewel in a network of Alaska fisheries that are increasingly challenged by climate change. Roughly 38 million red salmon return to the bay every year, according to the Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Development Association. When they do, small fishing operations like Hoovers pop up to catch them over about six weeks of summer, a burst of industry that employs 14,000 people and generates $1.5 billion in revenue.12

Fishing is always volatile. The annual earnings in Bristol Bay might increase or decrease by $100 million, says Garrett Evridge, a fishing economist in Anchorage. But recently, fishing in the bay has been more lucrative than ever, defying patterns elsewhere in the state. Earnings more than doubled from 2015 to 2018. Some science indicates that warmer water in lakes and rivers has sped up the life cycles of young salmon, sending them out into the sea sooner, increasing their abundance. Scientists arent sure what that might mean over time.13

There is anxiety that the seasons have been too good and that the bay is headed to a reset or just back to historical averages, Evridge says. This is tough if youve just sunk your life savings into a boat and permit.14

Hoover grew up fishing out of Egegik, a tiny village on the southern part of the bay. Her great-grandfather fished halibut in the Gulf of Alaska before he settled in the region. Her grandfather ran a cannery. In the off-season, she lives in Naknek, working as a filmmaker.15

Hoover bases her fishing operation out of a camp in Coffee Point, which sits on land acquired by her husbands father after World War II, just across the river from Egegik. The camp has a big kitchen and living hall with bunks for a crew of 16. A collection of wood-sided outbuildings rises from the dunes, among them a massive shed for working on machinery, a tidy fleet of cars and ATVs, and a small cabin where Hoover and her husband, Eddie Clark, stay with their daughter, Amlia, who is 3. The workdays run around the clock. Hoover fishes, sells her catch, rides home, eats, sleeps for a few hours, and then heads back out.16

At the beginning, its exciting because you know the fishing is picking up, Hoover says. Once youre in it and doing two tides a day for two weeks, youre wiped out. Its a test.17

From her seat above the main cabin of the boat, Hoover eyes the arch of the net, white corks on the water like a string of pearls. Soon, splashes and flashes of silver scales churn along the line, just under the surface. Theres movement on all the boat decks around us.18

When the fish hit, Hoover says, you get an electric current in your heart. You marvel at your luck, at the abundance of the bay, fish thumping on the deck like coins pouring out of a slot machine. Theres a boat somewhere out there called Little Casino, she says. Lots of boats have names like that.19

If you are lucky, $50,000 worth of salmon can be caught in a day, Evridge says later. And all fishermen think they are lucky.20

To get to Coffee Point, Hoover must fly an hour west of Anchorage to King Salmon and then drive 10 miles to the fishing hub of Naknek. From there, she flies her own plane to the camp.21

Before she took a photographer and me on the boat, Hoover came to fetch us in a low-wing Piper Cherokee 140 with Amlia in a pink booster seat in the back. The plane is just large enough to seat four people and carry a few bags. It rattled down the rocky Naknek airstrip and lofted us into the air. We cruised low along the coast over the flat, green country, braided through with streams and rivers, stippled with too many lakes and ponds to count. This is the worlds purest salmon country.22

Throughout the Pacific Northwest over the last 50 years, in-river problems like dams, pollution, and deforestation have harmed many salmon runs. In Alaska, too, the fisheries have suffered. Over the last decade, king salmonthe largest kind, prized for their fatty meathave been consistently smaller, and their returns have fallen below expectations, for reasons scientists cant explain. Towns built around king salmon fishing tourism, like Kenai, south of Anchorage, have had to reenvision their economies. Locals in small river communities who relied on kings to fill their freezers for winter have had to switch to other species. In Southeast Alaska, commercial fishing forecasts have been grim.23

Red salmon had almost always been plentiful, but last summer a number of stalwart red fisheries in the Gulf of Alaska faltered. Returns came in late and weak; others barely came in at all. Fishermen used to four decades of strong fishing on the Copper River came home empty-handed. Off Kodiak Island, at the beginning of the season, boats pulled in nets full of jellyfish and nothing else. The starkest losses came in Chignik, a small Alaska Native community on the Alaska Peninsula, where commercial fishing is the only economy. From 2013 to 2017, the local fleet harvested an annual average of 18 million pounds of salmon, worth more than $15 million. But last year, the fleet earned less than $5,000, Evridge says. The state declared it an economic disaster.24

Scientists have been cautious about saying what happened with reds last year, insisting they need more time to study it. But many suspect the anomalies may have to do with rising ocean temperatures. A large pool of warm ocean water called the Blob moved north from Mexico in 2014. Blooms of toxic algae followed. Birds and mammals washed up dead.25

Yet even with last years weak returns elsewhere, Bristol Bays fishing remained strong, with fishermen harvesting some 232 million pounds of salmon worth nearly $281million, according to the Alaska Department of Fishing and Game. The reason, according to Tom Quinn, a University of Washington professor of aquatic and fishery sciences who has spent more than 30 years studying Bristol Bay, stems from the remote bays particular geography and topography, which makes it uniquely positioned to resist climate change. The lakes and rivers around it are fed by snowmelt, rain, and glacial runoff, and they have different depths and temperatures. This provides a diverse set of freshwater habitats for young salmon.26

Its undammed and unpolluted, Quinn says. Its not quite as God made it, but its in very, very good condition.27

Moreover, he adds, there isnt competition from Japanese fishermen as there once was, and the area is well managed by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.28

Still, the threat of climate change looms large, hovering at the edge of every fishermans consciousness. This past summer was the hottest in Alaskas recorded history, with record-breaking temperatures and unprecedented drought. Quinns team reported the warmest temperatures it has ever seen in its decades studying the bay. Plus the flow of water in the rivers is extremely low.29

We will have to see how the salmon fare under these conditions, he says. If it becomes the new normal, there is reason to be very concerned.30

Netted: Red salmon are picked from a gill net at a frenetic pace to make sure the fish are delivered fresh to the buyer. (Nathaniel Wilder)

Hoover and I watch the big metal spool on the boat deck turn, reeling in the net. The fish come in C-shaped and muscular, with scales the color of moonlight, suspended in their last conscious moment. Mouths open, needle teeth. The crewmen shake them loose, each one a little puzzle of tangled line and fins. The fish pile around their boots. The deck glitters with a thousand scales.31

The average sea surface temperature outside Egegik in July has trended higher each decade since Hoover started fishing in elementary school. Today it is nearly 60 degrees, roughly 10 degrees higher than it was at the same time 30 years ago, according to the Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy. In August it reached 62.7 degrees, the highest temperature since records have been kept.32

Sometimes the fish are so warm when you pick em up, you can feel it through your gloves, Hoover says.33

Nature has become erratic in Alaska, with each season seeming to bring eerie new surprises. The state had never seen a year like this. In the spring, river and sea ice vanished earlier than ever before in many places. Temperatures soared 10 to 20 degrees above normal. Summer brought a severe, unprecedented drought. Anchorage hit 90 degrees for the first time on record. Birch leaves turned brittle and fell from the trees. Fires shut down the highway system for days, and one of them north of Wasilla chewed into a neighborhood, turning 51 homes to ash. Smoke hung over almost the entire state in late June and early July.34

Scientists are still sorting out the signs of trouble in the ocean. Seals, krill, seabirds and thousands of blue mussels washed up dead on the beaches. Hundreds of salmon perished in the lower Kuskokwim River, where water temperatures reached the 70s, before theyd had a chance to spawn. Scientists theorized the fish died from heart attacks caused by the heat. Later in the season, Hoover heard about Bristol Bay fishermen rescuing salmon from warm, shallow river water, carrying them in bags upriver toward their spawning grounds. By September, another mass of warm water similar to the Blob had formed off the Pacific Coast and was expected to move toward Alaska.35

Out on the bay on this early-July day, though, theres nothing but pink sky and the far-off sight of grassy muskeg atop sandy cliffs. Theres also fish. For three hours, we watch the crew slide their bodies across the deck into the cool, foamy water of the hold. The boat is heavy with them. In the captains seat, Hoover chews dried apples and sips tea. We pull in the final net of the day.36

(Nathaniel Wilder)

Climate change, for all its disruptions and distortions, isnt the only threat lurking over the bay. Far more menacing, from the point of view of Hoover and many others, is the prospect of Pebble Mine. The controversial extraction operation was first proposed 30 years ago. Hoover isnt an emotional person, but if you ask her about it, her voice thins.37

Pebble Mine is a large copper, gold, and molybdenum open pit mine set to be located in the Kvichak and Nushagak water systems, which feed into Bristol Bay. In its current iteration, it is slated to cover 8,000 acres, including a 608-acre pit thats almost 2,000 feet deep. This version, which is smaller than previous ones, would produce 1.4 billion tons of materials over 20 years.38

Environmentalists, scientists, and fishermen have warned for years about the dangers that would be posed by any mine in the area. The process of extraction would generate a massive amount of acidic toxic water that must be kept out of the larger ecosystem. The mine development would require building roads, power lines, pipelines and ports on undeveloped land, putting new stressors on fish habitat, says Lindsey Bloom, a longtime fisherwoman and a strategist with Salmon State, a political advocacy group opposed to the mine. It directly impacts thousands of years of subsistence relationships with the landscape, tens of thousands of jobs, billions of dollars a year in economic activity at regional, state and global networks, she adds.39

There was a time during the Obama administration when it seemed that the anti-Pebble forces won and the project would be stopped. In 2014 the Environmental Protection Agency issued what amounted to a preemptive veto of the mine proposal after determining that it would pose significant risks to the unparalleled ecosystem; later that year, a successful voter initiative gave the state legislature the power to approve or reject the mine, putting up an additional hurdle. Along the way, Northern Dynasty Minerals, the Canadian company behind the mine, lost several of its major backers.40

But now, as with many once-stalled extraction projects in Alaska, Pebble Mine is moving forward again, in a more modest form. In late July the EPAs leadership formally reversed the agencys 2014 position, reportedly after Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy, a Trump ally and mine supporter, met with the president on Air Force One. (Notably, EPA scientists still object. Theyve submitted over 100 pages of comments critical of the newest plan, saying that substantial concerns remain about adverse effects on the ecosystem.) The partnership now developing the mine has been pushing to get as far as it can through the federal permitting process before the next presidential election.41

For many of the mines opponents, the greatest concern is the possibility that the dam designed to contain a basin of concentrated toxic mine tailings could fail. They talk about other mine catastrophes, like the one in Brumadinho, Brazil, in January that buried hundreds of people and the Mount Polley disaster in British Columbia in 2014 that spilled a torrent of toxic water into neighboring lakes and rivers. Though the current mine plan is smaller than before, many say that once the mining begins, the size of the operation will expand.42

I talked about that with Cameron Wobus, a geomorphologist and consultant who specializes in assessing the hydrologic impacts of mining. He was hired by the Nature Conservancy, an international conservation group, to study the Pebble Mine proposal and presented his findings to the state legislature in April. He says that Pebbles tailings storage facility is 10 times larger than the Mount Polley mines and more than 50 times larger than the Brumadinho mines. The dam has to survive forever, but the plans project the odds of its failure only over 20 years, he says.43

Even barring a large disaster, smaller-scale pollution would be almost impossible to prevent, Wobus continues. They cant capture and treat all their contaminated water. It is not a stretch to say mines always leak. Water quality downstream of mines is never what it was before you built the mine.44

As currently planned, Pebble Mine would have massive water treatment needs, he adds. He says it would be the biggest mine-water treatment plant in North America.45

A spokesman for the Pebble Partnership, Mike Heatwole, states that the group fundamentally disagrees with the claim that all of the contaminated water produced by the mine cannot be treated and contained. He stresses that the mines footprint has shrunk and that more safeguards have been put in place to prevent pollution and help address environmental concerns. The facility is designed to stand the test of time, he adds. We continue to try to reach out to [fishermen] and try to share as much as we can, because we do understand peoples concerns.46

The EPA is now working with the Army Corps of Engineers to determine whether to grant the permit that Pebble needs under the Clean Water Act. The EPA can still raise concerns, but that may not stop the proposal from going forward. The cynic in me says the permit will go through, Wobus says, but I still have hope that science and reason could actually prevail.47

(Nathaniel Wilder)

Some communities in the region support the Pebble Mine project because of the jobs it would provide. But in Naknek, anti-Pebble signs are everywhereat the engine repair shop and the bar and on the bumpers of old trucks, right next to faded Sarah Palin and Trump stickers.48

Hoover pulls her boat into a long line at the tender, a larger vessel that will hoist the fish from our holds and weigh them. On the decks around us, crewmen mend nets. I count a half-dozen anti-Pebble flags catching the wind.49

After a long while, its our turn. The fishermen on board the tender are red-eyed and wired, facial hair gone feral. They scribble the weight of our fish on a sticky notepad and shovel them into the hold. Wildfire smoke makes the sinking sun glow crimson as a salmon egg.50

Friends have gotten law degrees to help fight the mine, Hoover tells me. She has written a dozen letters to officials involved with the permit process. Weve all testified so many times, she says.51

Still, the proposal moves forward. Assuming it survives the federal process, it will likely see a number of court challenges. Next will be a state permitting process. If the plan proves successful, the mine could begin operations within the next decade.52

Maybe I could get my boat paid off, Hoover says, before it really starts up. What she wants most of all, though, is for Amlia to know this life, too, and to be able to take it on someday.53

With the boat finally empty and our eyes dry with smoke and salt, we rock home in the dusky light, passing lines of fishing boats moored up, the crews napping in their cabins.54

Hoover tells me she listened to a story on NPR recently about how partisan the United States has become. Theres a fracture between two ways of thinking in the country, she says.55

Theres a fracture at the center of life in Alaska, as well. The oil revenues that used to pay for state government have declined, and the state budget is in crisis. Alaskans all have a deep allegiance to the wild place. But there are also the rich resources that bring people here and help them stay. Alaskans arent usually staunchly on one side or another, but still they find themselves in conflict. How much development can be done without risking the core of the place? The sides have gotten so far apart.56

For me, a healthy ecosystem is sacred, Hoover says. I respect it. If I could communicate it well enough, I feel that we wouldnt still be having this conversation.57

Hoovers drift boat comes to rest offshore from the fish camp. Clark, her husband, motors out to us in a smaller boat. As we glide over shallow water toward land, we see Amlias face in the square of Clarks truck window on the beach. She wiggles out of the open door, scampering to greet us. Hoover has a salmon to feed the crew. Amlia reaches for it, insisting she is big enough to hold it. Hoover gives it to her, and the little girl leads us back to camp, the head of the salmon hoisted high, its tail drawing a line in the sand.58

See original here:

The Strange, Uncertain Fate of One of the World's Most Valuable Salmon Habitats - The Nation

Red Sox CEO says ‘there’s a chance’ the team keeps Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez – Boston.com

With the Red Sox finishing a disappointing 2019 season on Sunday, the team heads into the offseason with more questions than answers. The question at the forefront of many discussions is what the team will do with Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez.

The Red Sox held their end-of-the-year press conference Monday morning, and team president and CEO Sam Kennedy fielded questions about the state of the team. When asked if theres a possibility of keeping both Martinez and Betts, Kennedy said, yes, there is a way, but obviously it will be difficult given the nature of their agreements.

The Red Sox have made it clear that their intention this offseason is to get the teams payroll under the $208 million Competitive Balance Tax (CBT) for the 2020 season. This is a difficult task with the teams payroll currently sitting at nearly $230 million.

Martinez has a player option for the 2020 season and may opt-out of his remaining three years of his contract, making him a free agent. Betts has one year left on his deal before becoming a free agent in 2021 and will go to arbitration this offseason unless a contract extension is agreed upon.

There is a possibility that one or both of Bett and Martinez are no longer with the club at the start of the 2020 season, but Kennedy insists that both players are wanted long-term.

You want J.D. Martinez in the middle of your lineup, Kennedy said. Hes a world champion and was a key part of last years success, so we will see where it goes in the future, but we havent engaged in any specific discussions.

Kennedy also discussed his admiration for Betts.

We absolutely love Mookie Betts as a player, as a person, weve gotten to know his family, you hope that hes a guy that is here for the long term, Kennedy said.

Red Sox chairman Tom Werner said that team is hopeful Betts will accept an extension this offseason to avoid arbitration, where he is likely to receive around $30 million for the season. If Betts is unwilling to sign an extension, Werner said that the team will look into, what is Plan B or Plan C.

The Red Sox still have yet to fill the vacant general manager position let empty when the team chose to part ways with Dave Dombrowski. Free agency begins following the end of the MLB postseason.

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Red Sox CEO says 'there's a chance' the team keeps Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez - Boston.com

Women’s football welcomes fans but must prevent offensive chanting – The Guardian

Growth brings change. It is inevitable. Womens football is growing at an impressive rate. Attendances are starting to climb. The showpiece fixtures 24,790 at the London Stadium on Sunday, 24,564 at Stamford Bridge and 31,213 at the Etihad on the opening weekend are stealing the headlines and attendance figures are already closing on the number of fans across all 110 WSL games last season (92,000). But the more standard home venues of womens teams are also seeing more fans through the turnstiles too.

Providing a welcoming environment for all is important. It would be easy and understandable for long-time fans of the womens game, who have stuck with it through the cold and empty lows, to resent slightly the arrival of new kids on the block or any changes to their usual routine or to the way things are done.

And there is an element of that in the attitudes towards Manchester United fans on the clubs re-entry to womens football last season. These are not fans of womens football per se, they are fans of Manchester United and, as such, bring the everybody hates us but we dont care swagger of the clubs supporters as a whole into Leigh Sports Village to cheer on Casey Stoneys side each week.

What is not OK is when chants are offensive. The always the victim, its never your fault chants directed at Liverpool by United supporters at Leigh on Saturday have rightly been flagged to the FA by the Merseyside club.

For victims, families and fans that had to embark on a gruelling 30-year fight against multiple sections of the establishment to be cleared of any blame for the deaths of 96 supporters at Hillsborough it is hugely offensive and triggering. Never your fault has over the years made a mockery of their fight for the truth.

There is no place for this type of chanting in football. To have this chant rear its head at a womens football match is unprecedented and hugely disappointing. Manchester United and the FA have said they are both investigating and it is right that this incident is dealt with firmly.

In May fans of Manchester City mens team defended a version of Allez, Allez, Allez using the line victims of it all and battered on the streets being sung by players and staff members on a plane saying they were referring to the incident between Mo Salah and Sergio Ramos in the 2018 Champions League final. Manchester United mens team fans have previously claimed to be using the chant in reference to the Luis Surez racism row. But if something is considered offensive, just saying it is not, or challenging the affronteds interpretation, does not make it inoffensive.

But one has to be careful about blaming the influx of new fans into the womens game for this incident. Football reflects attitudes in wider society. Hate speech and bullying have seeped into the mainstream, where to shock is the norm, where the Katie Hopkinses and Tommy Robinsons of the world can make livings from being controversial and offensive. In a week where Boris Johnson, Dominic Cummings and their ilk are the focus of a debate around appropriate language it should be no surprise that there are similar conversations about respect in football.

There is a lot to like in the fiery atmosphere more fans bring. For one, players like playing in intense environments; they thrive off their passion on the pitch being mimicked in the stands. After Toni Duggan scored in front of a sold-out 60,739 fans at the Wanda Metropolitano against the Atltico Madrid team she has now joined, she gushed about the quality of the crowd being more important than the quantity.

Theres a picture of me celebrating and behind me theres actually a man putting one finger up, she recalled. Im not promoting that or saying its a good thing but it kind of showed what it meant. You could feel the passion in the stadium that day. It was a real atmosphere.

When United played champions Arsenal for the first time in the Womens Super League a week ago, tensions were high. That it was an 89th-minute goal that would give the Gunners all three points ensured the ground became more of a cauldron as the clock ticked. The booing of Jordan Nobbs, whose return from a World Cup-ending cruciate ligament injury has been well documented, when she was scythed down in her own half was a little distasteful. The same old Arsenal, always cheating was just a bit irrelevant to followers of the womens team.

The Man City reject chants at Mel Lawley were slightly ironic given the player she had slid into, Ella Toone, was also a former Manchester City player. The boos as players names were read out and the booing of substitutes, all added to a feeling that they are going against a sort of unwritten rule that in womens football you should cheer not jeer, that the family friendly atmosphere must be preserved.

But why? And what exactly is a family friendly atmosphere? Part of the joy of standing in the stands watching mens football, particularly as a child, is watching and experiencing collective euphoria/devastation/frustration. It is of seeing your parent or sibling swear with raw instinctive emotion, unusually uncensored, and feeling as if, for once, you are being treated as an adult and trusted to use your judgment rather than being tiptoed around.

There is a difference between a family friendly environment and an infantilised and sterile one that casts aside some of the best bits of fandom in search of a purified utopia. The balance must be found.

More people in the womens game means a bigger demographic and wider views will be represented at grounds. That includes a sometimes vocal minority. That does not mean inappropriate behaviour should be accepted. Football can and should lead the way on challenging lazy stereotypes, racism, sexism and offensive behaviour and use education, bans and its influence to change things. But until these ugly views from society are eradicated they will rear their heads in sport, which must make sure it keeps cracking down on them.

Seattle Reign confirmed a place in the NWSL play-off finals with a 2-0 win over Portland Thorns. With Chicago Red Stars beating Utah Royals 1-0 and Washington Spirit earning a surprise win against North Carolina Courage, the final games of the season will determine who plays whom.

Chelseas Millie Bright has withdrawn from the England squad for the Lionessess upcoming friendlies against Brazil and Portugal. Manchester City defender Gemma Bonner has been called up.

ESPN have reported that US Soccer have made an approach to Arsenal manager Joe Montemurro about the US Womens National Team top job. Montemurro is said to have expressed an interest in the role but has been blocked from interviewing for the position by Arsenal, having signed a long term-contact extension in November.

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Women's football welcomes fans but must prevent offensive chanting - The Guardian

Celtic fun kicks off with Kiltober in Lakewood Ranch – YourObserver.com

Lakewood Ranchs John Hanlon can relate to a T-shirt he saw. It read, There are the people who are Irish and those who wish they were.

Hanlon happens to be one of the lucky ones.

Im first generation, he said. My parents (Michael and Teresa Hanlon) are from Ireland.

He grew up visiting their home country, playing Irish football and Gaelic hurling, and being exposed to the countrys music and culture.

Its easy to fit in, he said of the Irish culture. Celtic people are welcoming, in general. Theres always lively music, adult beverages and good stories and jokes.

Its that sense of fun and camaraderie Lakewood Ranch resident Frank Shea hopes to instill in others, starting at the Kiltober event Sept. 28 at Grove. Its an Oktoberfest event with a Celtic flare that will offer Celtic food and drink as well as live music by West of Galway, Clovers of Revenge and Bucky Lastard.

The event, created by Shea and Grove, will also highlight Sheas newly formed Lakewood Ranch Club, the Celtic Heritage Society, which aims to provide Lakewood Ranch residents with information about their Celtic heritage. Monthly meetings will be a forum at which members can learn about history, Celtic customs and Celtic dance and even have questions, such as why do the Scottish wear kilts or where the idea of leprechauns came from, answered. He wants to have demonstrations and speakers to keep meetings fun and exciting.

Our goal is to keep some of these traditions alive, Shea said.

Shea said an estimated 30% of Americans have some sort of Celtic heritage.

Tara Preserve resident Sharon Stewart does not know what percentage of her lineage is Irish, but she knows shes part of a fourth generation of red-heads. She enjoys going to Celtic events because theyre both fun and remind her of her upbringing.

You get to laugh out loud, Stewart said. All cultures certainly need to be identified in their tradition, but I think the Irish theres so much history. I think its the one that most commonly speaks to the majority of the people in this community because its something they grew up with. Everybody knows the Irish jokes, the Irish dancing.

Irish culture is fun. We dont have to worry, she said. Its no drama.

Lakewood Ranchs Steve and Kelly Christie both enjoy their Celtic heritage. They were married in Ireland, and Steve Christie, who has more Scottish history than Celtic, said he likes wearing his kilt on special occasions. In fact, he opts for a black kilt in lieu of a tuxedo for more formal affairs, he said.

Shea said he grew up in Boston, where there is a strong Celtic presence, and missed Celtic-style get-togethers, drinking beer at pubs and other customs when he first moved to Lakewood Ranch 12 years ago. He didnt feel at home at Celtic holidays and would travel back to his hometown for bigger celebrations, such as St. Patricks Day.

However, after he helped Lakewood Ranch Community Activities Corp. start the Irish Celtic Festival about 10 years ago, he began meeting other Celts and enjoying the camaraderie he experienced in Boston.

Shea said the Celtic bond is special. Historically, the Celts were pushed out of their homelands by other groups, but they fought to remember their heritage and keep their traditions alive. Their lively culture resonates with people, whether Celtic by blood or not.

People love parties, Shea said. People love having fun and joining in.

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Celtic fun kicks off with Kiltober in Lakewood Ranch - YourObserver.com