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Orange County Football Preview 2019: Preseason Top 10

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The Orange County high school football preseason top 10:

ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10

Mater Dei football players Myles Murao (74), Kody Epps (4), Dean Neely (52), Bryce Young (9), Tai Marks (73) and Nate White (20) in Santa Ana, CA, on Tuesday, Aug 13, 2019. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

1. Mater Dei

One of these seasons Mater Dei is not going to be a national championship contender. This is not that season. The Monarchs have a bevy of returnees from last year’s team that won the CIF-Southern Section Division 1 championship, the CIF State Open Division title and was selected national champions by USA Today, High School Football America and others. Among the top players coming back are senior quarterback Bryce Young (5-11, 175) who threw for 3,846 yards and 39 touchdowns in 2018, and All-County offensive lineman Myles Murao (6-2, 312), a senior who has committed Washington.


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JSerra High School’s football team starts the season ranked number two in Orange County. This year’s standout for the Lions include Jaden Genova, Brody Crane, Jeff Persi, Brandon Fliess and Chris Street. (Photo by Bill Alkofer, Contributing Photographer)

2. JSerra

This JSerra team might be better than last year’s team that finished 9-3, was third in the Trinity League and beat Long Beach Poly in the CIF-SS Division 1 playoffs. Returning is All-CIF senior running back Chris Street (5-11, 205) who last season rushed for 1,342 yards and 17 touchdowns. The quarterback will be General Booty, a junior transfer from Texas. Lions coach Pat Harlow is high on the linebackers corps that includes 2018 all-league selections Jaden Genova (6-0, 200), a junior, and sophomore Malaki Te’o (6-0, 220).

Mission Viejo football players Lance Keneley (92), TJ Roelen (5), David Meyer (27) and Keanu Tanuvasa (57) in Mission Viejo, CA, on Monday, Aug 12, 2019. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

3. Mission Viejo

The Diiablos have a transfer at quarterback in junior Peter Costelli (6-3, 205) who was at Santa Margarita last year and spent his freshman year at St. John Bosco. Costelli has scholarship offers from Arizona, Cal, Colorado and Oregon. Mission Viejo’s defense will have new faces in the backfield but Coach Chad Johnson said that group might not get tested much. “Our defensive line might be the best in Orange County,” Johnson said.

Mark Redman, Ethan Garbers and John Humphreys, from left, of the Corona del Mar High School football team. Photographed on Thursday, August 8, 2019. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)

4. Corona del Mar

Sea Kings coach Dan O’Shea says Corona del Mar’s strengths are obvious. “With 10 starters back on offense and six starters back on defense, we should be pretty good,” he said. That could be an understatement. Among the returning starters on offense are quarterback Ethan Garbers (6-3, 190) who last season completed 67 percent of his passes for 3,853 yards and 54 touchdowns. Last season Corona del Mar shared the Sunset League championship with Los Alamitos and advanced to the CIF-SS Division 4 final.

Guard Jeminai Leuta-Ulu, wide receiver Damien Moun, tight end Jake Overman, and wide receiver Zedakiah Centers, from left, of the 2019 Servite football team in Anaheim on Thursday, August 8, 2019. Servite is starting the season ranked No. 5 in Orange County. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)

5. Servite

Troy Thomas, entering the second season of his second stint as Servite’s coach, expects the Friars to be much improved after they went 4-5 overall and 1-4 in the Trinity League last season. A strong freshman class last season indicates that Servite is on the way up, but how fast remains to be seen. This year’s team will have many non-seniors among the starters. “We have a lot of different guys that produce,” Thomas said. “We don’t have to rely on one or two guys. We have a lot of kids who can make plays on both sides of the ball.”

Top Villa Park High School football players, from left, Zion Alefosio, Anthony Hakai, Davin Ancich and Jonah Kuresa in Villa Park on Thursday, August 1, 2019. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

6. Villa Park

The Spartans again will be among the top public-school teams in Orange County. Among the many returnees is Zion Alefosio, who was the 2018 Crestview League player of the year. Alefosio (6-1, 190), will play safety and wide receiver, will return kickoffs and punts and he might see some snaps at quarterback. “Zion is our big-time playmaker,” said Villa Park coach Dusan Ancich. “We’re going to find any way we can to get him the ball.” The quarterback is Josh Stupin (5-11, 175), a transfer from Fountain Valley.

Los Alamitos High receiver/defensive back Oscar Brown V, left and quarterback Cade McConnell in Los Alamitos on Monday, Aug. 12, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

7. Los Alamitos

Griffins coach Ray Fenton is exuberant about this year’s team. He sees fine players at every position and winning attitudes up and down the roster. “This will be my fourth year here at Los Alamitos,” Fenton said. “These players’ maturity and understanding of our football program now is where it should be.” Fenton is especially excited about senior running back Oscar Brown whom Fenton called “as good as anybody I’ve seen.”

From left, La Habra receiver Kris Koontz, quarterback Ryan Zanelli, cornerback Clark Phillips and tight end Mason West pose for a portrait after football practice at La Habra High School in La Habra, Calif. on Tuesday July 23, 2019. (Photo by Raul Romero Jr, Contributing Photographer)

8. La Habra

Senior quarterback Ryan Zanelli (6-2, 190), the Freeway League offensive player of the year in 2018 when he threw for 3,180 yards and 42 touchdowns, is set for a terrific year. “He’s so sharp,” La Habra coach Frank Mazzotta said. “Last year even as a junior we could do so many different things on offense because of him.” Also returning is the 2018 Freeway League player of the year, Clark Phillips III (5-11, 178) who last season had 54 receptions for 1,210 yards and 19 touchdowns. Phillips, whose strongest position is cornerback, committed to Ohio State during the summer.

Orange Lutheran running back Jared Amasio scores a touchdown against Servite in a Trinity League football game at Cerritos College in Norwalk on Friday, October 19, 2018. (Sam Gangwer, Contributing Photographer)

9. Orange Lutheran

The Lancers are inexperienced at several key positions including quarterback. Sophomore Logan Gonzalez (6-2, 180), the starter on the freshman team last season, will battle for the starter role against a large field of candidates. “Offensively,” Lancers coach JP Presley said, “we’re going to have a lot of young, new guys on the field. But we’ve got good size up front and good depth.”

Tesoro quarterback Sean Lindgren carries the ball during a quarterback keeper play in Friday’s game against Los Alamitos on September 21, 2018. (Photo By Jeff Antenore, Contributing Photographer)

10. Tesoro

Edison, San Clemente and Santa Margarita were among the candidates considered for the No. 10 position in the preseason top 10, but Tesoro gets the spot. “We have a very strong senior class,” said Tesoro coach Matt Poston. “This group was 10-0 as freshmen three years ago. We have a good mix of skill players and linemen.” Four of last season’s five starting offensive linemen return. Poston expects senior quarterback Sean Lindgren (6-1, 165) to continue the improvement he made last season. Senior Justin Schaefer (6-1, 170) was All-South Coast League first team last year when he had 58 receptions for 811 yards.

 


Vela, Miller help LAFC beat Real Salt Lake, clinch playoff berth

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SANDY, Utah — Carlos Vela scored his MLS-leading 24th goal of the season, Tyler Miller had four saves and Los Angeles FC beat Real Salt Lake 2-0 on Saturday night to clinch a playoff berth.

LAFC played a man down after defender Walker Zimmerman, who was shown a yellow card for time wasting in the 17th minute, was given a red for unsporting behavior in the 48th., Real Salt Lake’s Aaron Herrera, who blocked two would-be goals in the first half, was shown a straight red for denial of a goal scoring opportunity on Vela, who then converted from the spot to make it 1-0 in the 64th minute.

Vela, whose 15 assists are tied with Diego Valeri of the Portland Timbers for the league lead, broke the MLS record for combined goals and assists. Sebastian Giovinco’s had 22 goals and 16 assists for Toronto FC in 2015.

Miller has eight shutouts this season for LAFC (18-3-4), who have won four consecutive games and seven of their last eight dating to June 28.

Adama Diomande side-netted a rising right-footer to cap the scoring in the 82nd minute.

Salt Lake (12-10-4) had its six-game unbeaten streak, including three straight wins, snapped and allowed multiple goals for the first time since a 4-0 loss to the New York Red Bulls on June 1.

Del Mar: Higher Power wins Pacific Classic

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  • Hronis Racing’s Higher Power and jockey Flavien Prat win the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

  • Owner Kosta Hronis, left, has a hug for jockey Flavien Prat, right, after Higher Power’s victory in the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA.. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

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  • Hronis Racing’s Higher Power and jockey Flavien Prat win the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

  • Hronis Racing’s Higher Power and jockey Flavien Prat win the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

  • Jockey Flavien Prat guides Higher Power to the winner’s circle after their victory in the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

  • Hronis Racing’s Higher Power and jockey Flavien Prat win the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

  • Jockey Flavien Prat guides Higher Power to the winner’s circle after their victory in the Grade I, $1,000,000 Pacific Classic, Saturday, August 17, 2019 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA. (Courtesy of Benoit Photo)

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DEL MAR — Who needs McKinzie, Gift Box and Catalina Cruiser when you have a horse that turns in the type of performance Higher Power did in Saturday’s 29th running of the $1 million Pacific Classic at Del Mar?

Track management might have been a little disappointed when the aforementioned big three couldn’t make the race for various reasons, but Higher Power picked up the slack quite nicely, cruising to a 5 1/4-length victory over Draft Pick while scoring the first graded-stakes victory of his 13-race career in front of an on-track crowd of 20,686.

It was the first Pacific Classic victory in five tries for jockey Flavien Prat, who picked up the mount from Drayden Van Dyke after the latter had ridden the 4-year-old Medaglia d’Oro colt to a second-place finish in the Wickerr Stakes on July 21 at Del Mar and a victory in an $80,000 optional claimer on June 14 at Santa Anita, both on the grass.

“Flavien is the top rider here,’ winning trainer John Sadler said. “He’s having a great meet and he’s one of the real bright superstars coming up along the ranks. He won the (Kentucky) Derby this year and he’s just really doing great. It was just a trainer’s decision. He was available and I wanted to use the best rider for this horse today. He’s an up-and-coming rider, there’s no question about that.”

Prat’s agent, Derek Lawson, described his discussion with Sadler leading up to the race.

“I had John Sadler call me into his office and he said, ‘Listen, we’re going to run in the Pacific Classic because I don’t want to run Catalina Cruiser in there,” Lawson said. “He said, ‘You don’t have a mount in there,’ we didn’t, and he gave us the opportunity to work the horse first. Flavien came back after the work and said, ‘This horse worked really well over the main track.’”

Higher Power drilled 6 furlongs in 1:13.40 on Aug. 10 over Del Mar’s main surface, signifying the colt was ready to roll at the juicy price of 9-1.

“The work the other day was very, very important because he not only worked (great), but he galloped out close to a mile, and when (Prat) came off the horse he said, ‘Well that was really easy. This horse really likes the main surface,’” Lawson said.

Enough so that he registered the fifth largest victory in the Pacific Classic, behind only Accelerate (12 1/2 lengths), Game On Dude (8 1/2), Beholder (8 1/4) and Skimming (5 1/2) while earning an all-expenses-paid berth into the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic on Nov. 2 at Santa Anita.

Higher Power’s victory also gave Sadler and the horse’s owners, Hronis Racing, an unprecedented second consecutive Pacific Classic victory for trainer/owner with different horses after Accelerate’s smashing victory last summer. Sadler’s the first trainer to win in back-to-back years with different horses.

“The second time is just as sweet,” Sadler said. “It developed pretty much the way we thought. We thought there would be some speed on the inside (Quip set the pace from the No. 2 post) and the plan was to stalk. It came out the way we thought it would.”

Said Prat, who’s enjoyed a spectacular year by also winning the Derby via disqualification and one of Canada’s biggest races, the Queen’s Plate: “When we entered the backside he really grabbed the bit and I was travelling really well. Once the leader fell apart, he really jumped into the bridle and did everything on his own.

“I didn’t know if somebody would come from behind, but definitely I thought that was the right thing to do. It has been a great year so far and I’m really happy to win the Pacific Classic at this track. It means a lot to me.”

The victory also meant a lot to Team Sadler/Hronis, who have been on a roll the past 12 months with consecutive Pacific Classic victories and also a win in last fall’s Breeders’ Cup Classic with Accelerate, giving Sadler his first Breeders’ Cup victory.

So what do they do for an encore?

“Let’s do that (again),” Kostas Hronis said.

Added Sadler: “What I’m so happy about this year, too, is that I don’t have to go through, ‘You haven’t won one (Breeders’ Cup race) yet. So you guys (reporters) are going to have to find some other angle to torture me with.”

Higher Power’s winning time of 2:02.43, over a main track that has played slow all summer, was the slowest non-Polytrack time in Pacific Classic history. It was the fourth slowest ever, counting the Polytrack years (2007-14).

Mongolian Groom finished third, a neck behind Draft Pick. Seeking the Soul, one of a race-record four shippers from out of state and the 2-1 favorite, finished seventh. The pacesetting Quip wilted to finish ninth in the 10-horse field, ahead of only 46-1 longshot For the Top.

Hronis’ wife had successful surgery Friday and he said he was going to skip the race, but his wife had other ideas.

“Higher Power was an appropriate name today,” he said. “I was going to stay with her today and she said, ‘No, you’re going to the race. If you don’t, I’m never going again.’ I called her right after the race and she was thrilled.”

High School Football Preview 2019: All of our stories, lists, rankings, photos and more

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This is the place to find all of the Register’s high school football preview content for the 2019 season.

All of the stories, rankings, lists, photos and more.

Make sure you check it out before the games begin.


Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now


The Southern California News Group’s High School Football Preview magazine is included for subscribers in the Sunday, Aug. 18 edition of the Orange County Register. The magazine is also available for purchase at the Register’s office in Anaheim during regular business hours.

The Southern California News Group’s High School Football Preview magazine was published Sunday, Aug. 18 and was available to subscribers.

PLAYER RANKINGS

OCVarsity Hot 150: Our list of the top impact players for 2019

Top Quarterbacks

Top Running Backs

Top Wide Receivers

*More position rankings coming soon.

 

TEAM RANKINGS

Mater Dei football players Myles Murao (74), Kody Epps (4), Dean Neely (52), Bryce Young (9), Tai Marks (73) and Nate White (20) in Santa Ana, CA, on Tuesday, Aug 13, 2019. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

No. 1 Mater Dei

No. 2 JSerra

No. 3 Mission Viejo

No. 4 Corona del Mar

No. 5 Servite

No. 6 Villa Park

No. 7 Los Alamitos

No. 8 La Habra

No. 9 Orange Lutheran

No. 10 Tesoro

*The full Orange County Top 25 will be published Monday, Aug. 19.

 

NEWS, ANALYSIS & PREDICTIONS

A Santa Ana fan waves a school flag during the CIF-SS Division 12 quarterfinals game against Godinez at Santa Ana Stadium in Santa Ana on Friday, Nov. 17, 2017. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

The Best of Friday Night Lights: Where are the best places to watch HS football?

Top story lines for the 2019 season

Week-by-week look at the top matchups

Preseason All-County Team

New CIF-SS playoff format designed to deliver exciting competition

 

UNDER THE RADAR 2019

Under the Radar Teams

Under the Radar Players

 

MEDIA DAYS

Fryer on football: Trinity League media day was lively, informative

Fryer on football: Public schools accomplish their goals with own ‘media day’

 

Meet Rev. Gadget — at the top of the electric vehicle custom conversion trend

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If you call Greg Abbott a revolutionary you would be accurate.

You could also call him: inventor, entrepreneur, reality TV host, hobbyist, environmentalist, trend-setter, cat lover.

But the name he prefers is simply gadget, actually Rev. Gadget, a playa name he took during a recent experience at Burning Man, a place in the Nevada desert people go to detach from the real world and discover their true selves.

“I’ve always been the gadget guy,” he said. “I take an old car, make it all electric by modifying it,” Greg “Rev. Gadget” Abbott, 60, said during an interview at his burnt-orange warehouse in Florence near Long Beach.

Gadget, CEO and president of Left Coast EVs, is at the top of the pyramid of a new kind of car customizing trend. Instead of adding spoilers and Hemi engines, Gadget “soups up” a car by stripping away the internal combustion engine and exhaust systems and replacing them with battery packs, electric motors and computer controls. The trend is profitable for companies who are acting on state mandates to convert gas-powered shuttle buses, vans and small trucks into battery-powered electric vehicles that pollute less and cut carbon emissions.

“This trend just continues to grow. And there is a growing need,” said Mark Duvall, director of energy utilization at the Electric Power Research Institute in Palo Alto.

About 30 miles east of Gadget’s EV customizing lab, the operating floor of Phoenix Motorcars in Ontario is filled with internal combustion engine shuttle buses that have been stripped bare. To the left lies a pile of ICE engines, mufflers and exhaust pipes. To the right are rows of new lithium-ion battery packs. Last year, the company delivered 29 converted battery-electric shuttle buses to LAX, John Wayne, Ontario and Burbank airports, said spokesperson Jo Anne Avelar.

“This is popular, especially here in California where the (California Air Resources Board) mandate is that all transit companies have to be electric by 2040,” with at least 25% conversions starting in 2023 for some, said Tarek Helou, vice president of sales at Phoenix Motorcars.

So far, Phoenix conversion vehicles have traveled 1.8 million electric miles on customer routes, everything from airport shuttles to school buses to city utility vans, Helou said. “They are coming to us, asking us to electrify their fleets,” he explained.

Finding an electric niche

While some manufacturers, such as Protera, with a warehouse in City of Industry, and BYD in the Antelope Valley make larger transit buses, Phoenix has secured a niche in conversions of smaller vehicles. Like Gadget, they take an existing gas-powered vehicle and make it battery-electric.

The scales may differ but the philosophy is the same. No burning of fossil fuels. No exhaust. And less carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the gas which gets trapped and is linked to global climate change. But there’s also something ethereal going on.

“It is part of the American experience to take cars and make them into different things, to customize them,” Duvall said.

From old to new

Gadget, who grew up in Torrance, built his first car at age 15½ while attending Palisades High School in West L.A. There he met a teacher who owned classic old cars, including a Bentley that tickled his fancy. He soon developed a fetish for cars from the ’30s, ’40’s, ’50s and ’60s and was one of the first to make a living converting them into EVs.

He drives a Porsche Speedster that runs all electric but remembers the 1947 Triumph Roadster he worked on back then. “The one where the trunk turned into a rumble seat,” he said, his smile moving his mustache up a notch.

Gadget made a name for himself as an early adopter of EVs. He was featured in both cult documentaries, “Who Killed The Electric Car?” (2006), about the demise of GM’s EV1, and “Revenge of The Electric Car” (2011), which tracks the EV resurgence. Gadget is prominently featured in the second Chris Paine film as the EV car converter who refuses to wait for the big car makers to join the EV parade.

Some people still call him to retrofit their cars after seeing these movies on YouTube.

“The phone has been ringing off the hook with people wanting to bring me their cars (for conversions),” he said.

One of his first projects more than 12 years ago was a lead-acid battery conversion of a 1967 Camaro for client Anthony Kiedis, lead singer for Red Hot Chili Peppers. Since then, he’s done hundreds of custom conversions, some for celebrities he’s not at liberty to name. But after turning 60, he only does four a year at most. A full conversion can cost between $125,000 and $250,000, he said.

He’s working on a 1947 Ford pickup truck, which sits in his warehouse floor with a new steel frame, air bags, electric windows and disc brakes — all added — ready to have a Tesla battery back and battery management system installed.

“I have a rule. I don’t let it in here with the gasoline parts,” said Gadget, the man who answered “Big Oil” to the question who killed GM’s first electric car in the documentary.

Celebrities and TV shows

Gadget was introduced to Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk during Tesla’s auction of its very first EV, the Tesla Roadster, at Santa Monica Airport. He’s known for being Musk’s interrupter at parties. “Well, we are acquaintances,” Gadget said. “We will end up at the same parties together. I will go on and say: ‘Elon, you are needed over here,’” when Musk wants to extricate himself from a time-consuming guest.

He’s won awards for his designs of upholstery from Chrysler. He has produced art installations designed by artists at LAX and other places, including fabricating the giant needle sticking out of a building in the Garment District of downtown L.A.

His own celebrity status includes stints on several Discovery Channel reality shows. “Big!” featured him and other engineers breaking Guinness Book world records, including building the biggest vacuum cleaner. After building the world’s largest guitar, the producers brought in Peter Frampton to play it, Gadget said.

In “Smash Lab,” he blew up 23 Crown Victoria sedans in an attempt to find better steering or collision-avoidance systems. In one episode, he wore a GPS device and threw himself overboard and floated in Long Beach Harbor until rescuers detected his signal and found him. In “The Colony,” another show, he was hired as a consultant to come up with crazy ideas and was given the title “post-apocalyptic survivor expert.”

“I understood people. I understood physics. I could tell the producers who was going to get mad. I could predict when a fight would happen,” he said with a wry smile.

Creating a new future

With a resume too long to list, Gadget sits back in a chair in his dimly lit warehouse, feet stretched out, Othello, his cat, resting comfortably on his legs. He ponders how he wants to be remembered.

“I love being a designer. But it is not as interesting as somebody who re-imagines old cars for electric,” he said, dreaming about finishing the Ford pickup and taking it on a test drive — to San Francisco and back.

Duvall sums up the soul of a man like Gadget this way:

“The heart of customization is to see something new,” Duvall said.

Whicker: Chargers’ Andre Patton takes a step toward Sunday

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  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Andre Patton (15) hauls in a touchdown pass in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Andre Patton (15) hauls in a touchdown pass in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

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  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Jordan Smallwood (9) sits on the bench in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen didn’t suit up for the game in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Easton Stick (2) hands the ball off to running back Detrez Newsome (38)in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Artavis Scott (10) returns a punt in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers enjoys some sunflower seeds from the bench in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn, left, greets New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton after the game in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Easton Stick (2) throws a pass down the field in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers running back Detrez Newsome (38) runs the ball in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • New Orleans Saints defensive back Justin Hardee (34) breaks up a pass to Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Justice Liggins (82) in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Artavis Scott (10) makes a reception in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn watches the action from the sideline in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) slips as he drops back for a pass in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) throws the ball as he’s pressured by New Orleans Saints defensive end Wes Horton (50) in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • New Orleans Saints strong safety Vonn Bell (24) breaks up a pass to Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Travis Benjamin (12) in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) throws a pass in Carson on Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (Photo by Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/SCNG)

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CARSON – The rule of fractured thumb is that most news in an NFL training camp is bad news.

It is also the rule of hamstring, embolism, stress fracture, holdout and sprained ankle.

The Chargers, on the cusp of something big for approximately the 25th time in their history, do not have their top running back, their top receiver, their left tackle and their Defensive Rookie of the Year.

Good training camps are defined almost solely on who is ready for Week 1. That is still three weeks off, but Chargers fans are bitterly accustomed to Jack Murphy’s Law.

The least of their worries was this 19-17 preseason loss to New Orleans Sunday. The Chargers led 17-3 when most of their consequential guys played, and they gave up the lead because the Saints went with third-string QB Taysom Hill, who is a perplexing weapon even at midseason.

Rookie QB Easton Stick had a chance to move the Chargers to the winning field goal with 1:05 remaining and a timeout on the board.

He got sacked, threw a sweet 44-yarder down the middle to Artavis Scott, and then got intercepted by Colton Jumper, which pleased the Saints fans that turned this place into an open, tiny-house Superdome.

It wasn’t a big game. It was a bunch of little games, meaningless to most, vital to some.

Trent Scott, an undrafted free agent last year, is Russell Okung’s stand-in at left tackle. He picked up a penalty and allowed a sack when Tyrod Taylor didn’t get rid of the ball on time, but otherwise looked fine.

Derwin James’ stress fracture means some adjustment in the Chargers’ deep secondary, and that was fine, too. The Saints only had four first downs in the first half.

“Offensively we were awful,” said Sean Payton, the New Orleans coach.

The Chargers’ Troymaine Pope, on his sixth NFL team in his fourth season, burst for an 81-yard touchdown on a punt return. That means something.

So did the 24-yard touchdown pass from Cardale Jones to Andre Patton, also in the second quarter. Patton caught three other balls for a total of 62 yards. It means the third-year receiver might finally see some given Sundays.

“There are position battles going on at wide receiver,” Coach Anthony Lynn said. “Andre made a move today.”

Patton played reliably at Rutgers, but didn’t light up enough stopwatches to get drafted. The Chargers signed him as a free agent.

His training camp was good enough to get him on the practice squad. Last year, too.

Technically you’re ineligible for the practice squad when you reach Year 3, but teams do find loopholes. If Keenan Allen is out for a while, it helps Patton. On Sunday, he helped himself.

“I saw that look they gave us all week in practice,” said Patton, since New Orleans worked out with the Chargers on Thursday and Friday. “It was there, and I just took it.”

He gave a pretty good impression of an NFL receiver, and that’s what he’s been doing the past two years, generally on weekdays. The practice squad wears “pinnies” in the color of the Sunday opponent and runs the same stuff.  It certainly beats clerical work. But it’s also 17 weeks of drudgery that follow six weeks of stress, when all that’s on the line is your livelihood.

“You got 90 guys on the team,” Patton said. “I don’t really think about it when the game is going on.”

How about the six days and 21 hours when the game isn’t going on?

Patton said meditation helps. For several years he has been a yoga practitioner, going through the routines with the help of Ompractice, which brings yoga to his computer screen. He and his former girlfriend, who has been a member of the Brooklyn Nets’ dance team, have used it together.

“It’s a little harder to find time during the season,” Patton said. “In the offseason you do it three or four times a week. Absolutely, it helps you mentally.”

Patton also toes the mental line when it comes to all those practice-squad days: “You have to bring the same mentality as the guys on the 52 (man roster). I try not to hone in on what the coaches are doing, whether they’re noticing me or not. If I run the right routes and catch the ball and do my assignments, that’s what I need to do.”

So the end zone was not the end result. There are two more preseason games that will be little noted nor long remembered except by those whose careers swing by their threads. Patton knows that.

“But the touchdown can’t hurt,” he said, hinting at a smile. “I think it did me justice.”

Dana White gives UFC 241 an ‘A+’ grade at Honda Center

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Last week when running down the seven previous UFC shows in Anaheim, UFC President Dana White marveled at the last one at the Honda Center.

UFC 214, with three championship fights and headlined by the light heavyweight title rematch between Daniel Cormier and Jon Jones, not only was it the UFC’s best in Anaheim in terms of attendance (16,610), but it was its most lucrative ($2,448,870 gate).

“You know what the moral of the story is?” White said last week. “We bring our ‘A’ game when we come to Southern California.”

Tough to do better than that, but in White’s eyes, UFC 241 did, as the final three fights on the card had the arena and fight fans buzzing.

Chiseled middleweights Paulo Costa and Yoel Romero engaged in the Fight of the Night, a three-round slugfest that ended with Costa getting the unanimous decision much to the crowd’s dismay.

Paulo Costa (blue) delivers a punch to the head of  Yoel Romero. Costa defeated Romero  by unanimous decision during UFC 241 at the Honda Center in Anaheim Saturday, August 17, 2019. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

In the co-main event, welterweight Nate Diaz showed ring rust is a myth as he dazzled the crowd with a dominant unanimous decision over former lightweight champion Anthony Pettis.

And in the main event, nearly 14 months after suffering a first-round knockout to lose his heavyweight title, Stipe Miocic reversed the momentum in the fourth round and got revenge on Cormier via TKO to regain the most coveted belt in MMA.

In an exclusive postfight interview, White minced no words: “Tonight was our ‘A+’ game.”

The numbers don’t lie. The sold-out crowd of 17,304 set a Honda Center MMA record. The bigger number was the $3,237,032 gate, which set a California record by eclipsing UFC 60’s $2,900,090 when 14,802 filed into Staples Center to see welterweight champion Matt Hughes’ first-round TKO of UFC legend Royce Gracie on May 27, 2006.

White attributed the success to the company’s deal with ESPN. Last year, ESPN and the UFC reached a five-year, $1.5 billion deal to stream UFC fights on ESPN+ and air fights on its cable channels. In March, they struck a seven-year agreement for the rights to sell and stream pay-per-view bouts exclusively on the ESPN+ streaming service.

“This year, we’re going to break the gate record for the year. Almost every event we’ve been doing is selling out, and not just selling out, but crushing our budgets,” he said. “International pay-per-view is up. The Fight Pass went up, even though were on ESPN+, ratings are through the roof. Every part of our business is through the roof right now, so the ESPN deal has been phenomenal for us.”

All Diaz, all day

No fighter received more cheers all week than Diaz, and Saturday was no different.

Nate Diaz (blue) battles Anthony Pettis during UFC 241 at the Honda Center in Anaheim Saturday, August 17, 2019. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

After a three-year layoff, Stockton’s own ripped through Pettis like he had never left and had the crowd on its feet and chanting his name.

According to Diaz, it’s not that he didn’t want to fight during his time away. It was more a case of the UFC not offering compelling matchups and no one else calling his name.

“ … They’re scared or something,” Diaz said. “But like I said, I don’t want to sound all full of myself and riding around on a high horse and talking (bad), but I’ve got way too much money to be fighting someone who is not interesting.”

One name Diaz did throw out is Jorge Masvidal, who is quickly becoming a fan favorite for his violent style and “take no prisoners” approach. Masvidal was in attendance Saturday and smiled widely at the suggestion as the fans roared their approval.

Count White as a fan of it too. “I didn’t see that coming. I love that fight. I don’t think anybody would not want to see that fight.”

Miocic reigns again

Miocic joins Cain Velasquez, Randy Couture and Tim Sylvia as the UFC’s only two-time heavyweight champions.

Stipe Miocic (blue) and Daniel Cormier trade punches during UFC 241 at the Honda Center in Anaheim Saturday, August 17, 2019. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

He spent the past 13-plus months spending time with his newborn daughter and continuing to work as a Cleveland firefighter – two inspirations for coming back to reclaim his title.

“I wanted to show my daughter that times get tough and you have to dust yourself off and get back up,” Miocic said. “A bunch of guys at the station, when I lost, they cried. That really bothered me.”

This time, it was Cormier who was emotional, struggling in the Octagon to address whether he might hang up the gloves at 40. “I’m going to go back and talk to [wife] Selina and my coaches and we’ll figure out what’s next.”

Cormier said he should have focused more on wrestling Miocic, which he did in the opening round, at one point scooping up Miocic, holding him aloft for several seconds before slamming him and scoring points via top control.

“That was the strategy. That’s probably the biggest letdown is how I let my coaches down,” Cormier said. “They were begging me to wrestle. That’s probably the most disappointing thing is that I didn’t do what I was trained to do. I feel like I let my coaches down.”

White credited Miocic digging left hooks to Cormier’s body in the fourth round – “Whoever came up with the game plan to start going to the body … brilliant … that was the move” – for changing the fight in his favor.

Cormier has no reason to be upset, White said, as the former light heavyweight champion was winning the fight – 30-27 on one card, 29-28 on the other two – and is still considered one of the sport’s greatest fighters.

In fact, Cormier (181) and Miocic (123) combined for a UFC heavyweight-record 304 significant strikes landed.

“When you see two really good guys fighting each other, it’s always like, it’s tough to see anybody lose,” White said.

AVP: Canadian team of Sarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes win Manhattan Beach Open

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  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, left, and Sarah Pavan celebrate after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes makes a dig during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

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  • April Ross leaps to serve during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Fans react to a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match between April Ross and Alix Klineman, and Melissa Humana-Paredes and Sarah Pavan at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes celebrates after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, back, and Sarah Pavan celebrate their win over April Ross and Alix Klineman in AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Alix Klineman, right, tips the ball over Melissa Humana-Paredes during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Alix Klineman celebrates a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Alix Klineman, top, spikes the ball over Sarah Pavan, right, during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes celebrates a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, left, and Sarah Pavan celebrate after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Sarah Pavan makes a dig during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, left, makes a dig over Sarah Pavan during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, left, and Sarah Pavan raise their trophy after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • April Ross, front, makes a dig during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes reacts after defeating April Ross and Alix Klineman in AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Melissa Humana-Paredes, left, and Sarah Pavan celebrate after defeating April Ross and Alix Klineman in AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

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MANHATTAN BEACH – Melissa Humana-Paredes and Sarah Pavan seemed to be at a disadvantage going into the championship match of the Manhattan Beach Open on Sunday.

The Canadians were a No.11 seed coming into the iconic tournament and taking on top seeds and local favorites Alix Klineman (Manhattan Beach) and April Ross (Costa Mesa), who had won 30 consecutive matches and five consecutive AVP events coming in.

Plus, the match was played on Klineman’s home court.

But Pavan and Humana-Paredes are no strangers to high caliber beach volleyball on the international stage and demonstrated their skill and tenacity in Manhattan Beach with a 28-26, 16-21, 16-14 championship victory.

As winners of the tournament, the pair will have their names emblazoned on a plaque to be permanently displayed on Manhattan Pier’s famous Volleyball Walk of Fame.

The pair is only the second foreign team and first Canadian team to win at Manhattan Beach“We have been watching the AVP since we were little kids up in Canada and this is always the event we’ve dreamed to play in,” said Pavan, who finished with 17 kills, eight blocks and a .533 hitting percentage with a single hitting error.

“To get the chance to play here and win it and become immortalized on the pier means so, so much.”

The victory for Pavan and Humana-Paredes avenges their three-set loss to Klineman and Ross in the finals of the Huntington Beach Open on May 5.

However, the Canadians defeated Klineman and Ross in the finals of FIVB World Tour gold in Edmonton on July 22

“They’re an amazing team obviously,” Humana-Paredes said. ‘We’ve battled them so many times this year and every single time, it’s a constant grind. Today, we didn’t play our best. We got it together when we needed to.

The first set was arguably the most competitive of the tournament for both teams.

The score was tied 12 times and neither team and except for an 8-5 lead by Klineman and Ross, neither team lead by more than a point.

The score was tied five times during overtime before a kill by Pavan and a hitting error by Klineman accounted for the final two points for Canadians.

Klineman and Ross pulled away late in the second but made two critical serving errors late in the third set, enabling Pavan and Humana-Paredes to win the match.

“To know that we are a part of beach volleyball history in Canada and globally is humbling, Humana-Paredes said. “It’s so surreal.”

Klineman and Ross declined to make comments after the match.

The day started with a women’s semifinal berth on the line and No.4 Sara Hughes and Brandie Wilkerson defeating No.2 Emily Day and Betsie Flint, 21-12, 16-21, 17-15.

That put Hughes and Wilkerson in a semifinal against Klineman and Ross, who advanced to the finals with a 21-16, 19-21, 15-12 victory.

Pavan and Humana-Paredes defeated No.5 seeds Teresa Cannon and Kelly Reeves 21-16, 21-15 in the other women’s semifinal.


AVP: Trevor Crabb, Reid Priddy team up for first time, emerge as Manhattan Beach Open champs

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  • Trevor Crabb, left, and Reid Priddy celebrate after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, left, and Reid Priddy celebrate after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

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  • Trevor Crabb, left, and Reid Priddy celebrate after winning AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, right, and Reid Priddy celebrate after defeating Casey Patterson and Chase Budinger during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, center, and Reid Priddy, right, celebrate after defeating Chase Budinger and Casey Patterson during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, center, and Reid Priddy, right, celebrate after defeating Chase Budinger and Casey Patterson during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Chase Budinger celebrates a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Chase Budinger, right, leaps to spike during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, center, leaps to spike during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Reid Priddy dives to save the ball during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb dives for a dig during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, right, and Reid Priddy celebrate a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb celebrates a point during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Casey Patterson, center, leaps to spike over Trevor Crabb during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Trevor Crabb, center, tips he ball over Chase Budinger, left, during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

  • Chase Budinger, right, leaps to spike over Trevor Crabb during AVP Manhattan Beach Open championship match at Manhattan Beach on Sunday, August 18, 2019. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)

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MANHATTAN BEACH – Reid Priddy and Trevor Crabb had no experience as teammates prior to pairing up for the Manhattan Beach Open this weekend.

But from the way the pair performed at the most famous beach volleyball tournament in the world, it appeared as though they’d spent their careers on the same side of the net.

On Sunday, Priddy and Crabb, who came in as  No.4 seeds, swept No.2 seeds Casey Patterson and Chase Budinger 21-15 and 21-19 to walk off the sand as the Manhattan Beach champions.

The victory represents the first in an AVP event for both players, who joined forces after Crabb’s regular teammate, Tri Bourne, got injured after the Hermosa Beach Open, and Priddy came in as a late fill in.

“We knew coming into this that our main goal was to just to come out, compete have fun and play hard,” Crabb said. “We knew everything wasn’t going to mesh right away.”

Crabb and Priddy had to do it the hard way, fighting their way out of the  losers’ bracket and having to win three matches in one day, knocking off the top three seeds in the process.

The pair started the morning with a 21-15, 17-21, 15-13 victory over No.3 seeds Tim Bomgren and Troy Field.

The victory put them into a semifinal, where they had to face No. 1 seeds Phil Dalhausser and Nick Lucena, one of the most decorated beach volleyball teams in the world.

Crabb and Priddy swept the top seeds, 21-12 and 23-21 to advance  to the finals.

“After that first match, I wasn’t sure how much I had left in the tank,” Crabb said. “I had some kind of a second wind there in the second match and everything  came back together.”

Patterson and Budinger, who were coming off a first place finish at Hermosa Beach, defeated No. 26 Bill Kolinske and Eric Beranek to advance to the finals.

“No one knew how to scout them out because they are new,” Patterson said of Crabb and Priddy. “It was Reid’s serve and them getting the bang-bang plays. They scrambled well. That is what Trevor has always been known for.”

The Manhattan Beach Open was an AVP Gold Series event, with increased prize money of $300,000 ($150,000 each for men and women) up for grabs.

Both first place teams took home $30,000 – $15,000 for each player.

“This is the tournament everyone wants to win,” Crabb said. “I think its thee greatest beach volleyball event ever. To have our names on the  pier forever … There is nothing like it. I’m super stoked.”

Rams lose linebacker Micah Kiser to pectoral injury

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Second-year Rams linebacker Micah Kiser, projected as a likely starter this season, will undergo surgery Tuesday to repair a pectoral injury and will be out indefinitely, the team announced Sunday night.

Kiser, a fifth-round pick of the Rams in the 2018 NFL Draft, was injured in the Rams’ 14-10 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in an exhibition game Saturday in Honolulu. He underwent an MRI Sunday, and the results apparently revealed the need for surgery.

With Kiser out, four-year veteran Bryce Hager is likely to move into Kiser’s spot as a starting inside linebacker next to Cory Littleton in the Rams’ 3-4 alignment. Hager, a seventh-round draft choice of the St. Louis Rams in 2015, has contributed mostly on special teams during his first four seasons.

Before learning the extent of Kiser’s injury Sunday, Rams coach Sean McVay was asked about Hager’s ability to play a bigger role in the event Kiser were to miss extended time and said Hager is “capable of being a starting player in this league.”

“In practice, you certainly feel his ability to play at a high level, understand some of the intricacies of that inside linebacker spot and what that entails from a communication standpoint from the adjustments that are necessary based on what offenses present,” McVay added. “He’s a guy that we do have a lot of confidence in and that’s exactly why we re-signed him in free agency this year.”

 

 

Could GOP slip to No. 3 in Orange County?

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Families don’t get much more staunchly Democratic than the one that raised Arianna Barrios. So it was no surprise that in 2008, when she made an unsuccessful bid for a board seat with Orange Unified School District, she was registered as a Democrat.

Then Barrios married a staunch Republican, which challenged her worldview. And she opened her own public relations, which sparked frustration with regulations that pushed her “a little more to the right.”

But the Orange native said she also didn’t agree with a trend where she saw both major political parties gravitating toward the “furthest fringe element” to win elections.

“I’m a fiscal conservative but a social liberal. I just felt very left behind.”

Barrios decided to leave the Democratic Party and join the growing number of residents locally, statewide and across the country who are registered to vote as “no party preference.”

Such voters already account for the second biggest registration bloc in California. In mid-2018, the number of no party preference registrations pulled ahead of Republicans statewide. Now, less than two weeks after Democrats overtook Republicans in Orange County, observers are already speculating about whether — or when — the rise of independents will make GOP the No. 3 political brand in formerly conservative Orange County.

Technical challenges could delay such a change, at least for a bit. Independent voters who want to participate in the presidential primaries currently face some hurdles. Also, there’s widespread confusion among people who believe they’re signing up to be politically independent when they register for the far-right American Independent party.

Pending legislation and a lawsuit aim to tackle both issues.

But since this enigmatic no party voting bloc can easily swing elections — particularly in places like Orange County, where fewer than 2,000 registered voters separate the two big parties — independents are finding themselves targeted by the very parties they’ve spurned. And those efforts have been paying off this year in Orange County, where voting data shows that in recent months more than 10,000 local independents moved back to the main parties.

Growing stronger

The percent of independent voters in California steadily rose from 1999 to 2009, records show, growing from 12.9% to 20% of the electorate. The no party preference bloc grew by an average of 0.71 percentage points each year, picking off Democrats, members of third parties and, most significantly, Republicans.

But that growth slowed for several years, before 2015, when the no party preference bloc started to gain again, expanding by about 1.2 percentage points a year. By February of this year, no party preference registrations accounted for 28.3% of California’s electorate.

The registration numbers in Orange County generally have tracked the state trend. Irvine, where registered Democrats outnumber registered Republicans, has the biggest slice of independents, at 34.7%, while deep red Villa Park has the smallest, at 21.7%.

The registration data reflects a likely anomaly that took place in the second half of last year, when no party preference surged at an unprecedented rate. Paul Mitchell, who tracks voter behavior for consulting firm Political Data Inc., pins that on the Department of Motor Vehicles’ automatic registration process, which initially required people to click a secondary online page to select a party. The issue was fixed Jan. 1 and the numbers have settled into more typical ranges. Now it’s up to voters who unwittingly registered as independents during that window to update their registration status.

Since April, the ranks of independent voters have fallen by a full percentage point in Orange County — something that might reflect the early (March 3) date for California’s 2020 presidential primary.

Mitchell said similar trends hit statewide each election cycle, as voters key in to party-oriented political messaging and register with a party so they can make sure to have a say in which candidates make it to the November general election.

Who are independents?

Registration data shows Barrios, who flipped to no party preference after being registered as a Democrat, took the political road less traveled. The biggest share of the NPP voting bloc — particularly in Orange County in recent years — is former Republicans.

President Donald Trump is the “toxic factor” driving the recent exodus from the Republican Party, according to veteran Newport Beach pollster Adam Probolsky with Probolsky Research.

“People are moving away from the party based upon the fact that he’s the leader and the party doesn’t reject him,” Probolsky said.

Conventional wisdom says independent voters behave at the polls much like their neighbors. Voters who aren’t registered with a major party tend to vote red in red communities and blue in blue ones. Since Orange County only recently flipped from red to blue (and neither party holds an outright majority) conventional wisdom suggests a good portion of the county’s 27.3% of voters who now are registered as NPP will support Democrats in 2020.

Despite their desire to steer clear of the two major parties, surveys show most people who are registered as no party preference, or who view themselves as independent, actually lean pretty strongly right or left in the ballot box, said Carole Uhlaner, political science professor at UC Irvine. In some cases, partisan lean is even more pronounced among NPP voters than it is among the average Democrat or Republican.

Randall Avila, executive director of the Republican Party of Orange County, said he’s knocked on doors of independent voters who said they left the GOP because they didn’t feel the party was standing behind Trump enough.

And then there are people like Barrios, who feels both parties have strayed too far from the center.

She’s among a growing group that would like to see a strong third party emerge in California — or at least for independent candidates to have a shot at state seats. But she thinks it’ll be years before those options are viable.

In the meantime, Barrios — who’s on the Rancho Santiago Community College District board and running for a city council seat in Orange — said she votes for candidates on both sides of the aisle.

“I love having that freedom,” she said.

Hurdles for independent voters

Freedom, of course, almost never comes free. And for Californians registered outside the two major political parties, freedom from party allegiance can mean headaches come election time.

Independent voters get to participate in the November general election and cast ballots for most partisan and nonpartisan seats in the primary. But each political party gets to decide by Oct. 21 whether to let independents vote for their presidential candidates in the next year’s primary.

In recent years, Democrats, American Independents and Libertarians have let NPP voters request partisan ballots to vote for their presidential candidates in the primary. The California Republican Party has not.

Cynthia Bryant, executive director of the California GOP, said the primary is the official process for choosing the California delegates to the Republican National Convention, and “we believe Republican voters should make that decision.”

By eschewing “party purity” and opening their primaries, Dan Howle, executive director of the nonpartisan advocacy group Independent Voter Project, said Democrats can build a database of voters who, while registered as no party preference, actually vote for liberals and liberal ideas. Those voters then can be targeted for advertising by the Democratic party in future elections. Also, those left-leaning no party preference voters can be urged to turn out and vote in presidential primaries, ballots that include lots of other offices and issues. Since California lets the top two candidates in the primary advance to the general election regardless of party, a left-leaning turnout in March could result in more down-ballot November races featuring only Democrats.

As the 2020 primary draws closer, county registrars must send postcards to independent voters who are registered to vote by mail. (In Orange County, that’s nearly 70% of independents.) Voters can select which eligible party’s crossover ballot they wish to receive, then mail the postcard back to the county so they receive the appropriate mail-in ballot.

Independents who miss those postcards can contact their registrar to request partisan mail-in ballots. And, if they don’t do so by mail, independent voters can request crossover ballots at their polling places on election day.

But data shows most independents won’t do that. Many later admit they didn’t know they could request partisan ballots.In the 2016 primary, just 18.5% of California’s independents and 19.6% of Orange County’s independents requested crossover ballots.

That means eight out of 10 independents — hundreds of thousands of people in Orange County and a few million statewide — didn’t weigh in on which presidential candidates made it to the November election.

Legislative fixes

The Independent Voter Project floated a bill that would’ve given NPP voters primary ballots that list all presidential candidates, from all parties, with the caveat that the state political parties would not be forced to consider NPP votes when choosing their candidate. But Howle said the bill’s sponsor dropped it at the last minute. Now, his organization is suing Secretary of State Alex Padilla, arguing the primary is not truly “open” because California’s 5.6 million independent voters may not have a voice in presidential candidates.

Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, who is running for Secretary of State in 2020, recently introduced a bill that would require election officials to send all voters in California three notices leading up to a primary. The notices would tell the voters what party they are registered in, what type of ballot they can cast in a presidential primary, and how to change registration if they’re so inclined. The bill is in the Appropriations Committee’s suspense file, reserved for pricey legislation, since it would cost an estimated $25 million per primary election to implement.

State Sen. Tom Umberg, D-Santa Ana, authored a bill aimed at stopping California’s independent voters from mistakenly registering as American Independents.

Senate Bill 696 would prohibit the name of a political party from including the terms “independent,” “decline to state,” “no party preference” or any variation of those words. If the bill passes, the American Independent party would have to change its name on future ballots.

“If a voter wants true freedom from party affiliation, the state must ensure they are not misled,” Umberg said.

That bill also is in the Appropriation Committee’s suspense file due to the one-time cost of about $400,000 to update state voting records. But the bill has strong support and, if passed, could take effect before the March 3 primary.

Review: Why you should get a Disneyland Flex annual pass right now

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Disneyland’s Flex pass seemed too good to be true, but somehow the new annual passport has surpassed even my high expectations.

If you’re in the market for a Disneyland annual passport, you should buy the Flex pass — right now.

Sign up for our Park Life newsletter and find out what’s new and interesting every week at Southern California’s theme parks. Subscribe here.

The Flex pass can save you hundreds of dollars a year on your annual pass and get you into Disneyland and Disney California Adventure nearly every day of the year.

SEE ALSO: Is it worth getting Disneyland’s new $599 Flex annual pass?

Disneyland issued me a complimentary Flex pass in May to test out during the initial launch of the new $599 annual passport. So far, I’m in love. The love affair is still in its passionate beginnings stage, so there is still plenty of time for disillusionment. But at the moment, I’m ready to get down on one knee and make Flex my forever annual pass.

Believe me, it’s taken a long time to make the leap again. Because I’ve been burned before by the Disneyland annual pass. I was in a long-term relationship with the Disneyland annual pass that lasted 17 years until I couldn’t take the constant price increases anymore. It was never a fair relationship. Disneyland kept taking away perks like parking and adding more block-out dates while charging more for less.

I finally broke it off with the Disneyland annual pass in 2017 when I realized my four to five visits per year were costing me nearly as much as the daily general admission ticket price.

I’ve met a lot of other spurned lovers over the years that have broken up with their Disneyland annual passes and they all tell a very similar story. It just became too expensive. There just wasn’t enough return on investment to justify the continually increasing costs. They miss the good times, but not the big bills.

But enough about the bad ol’ days. Let’s talk about young love.

First, the basics. The new annual pass comes with a unique twist: Flex pass holders need to make advance reservations to get into Disneyland and Disney California Adventure on busy days. In theory, the Flex pass offers visitors access to Disneyland and California Adventure every day of the year but the two weeks around Christmas. In practice, Flex pass holders could face more than 200 block-out days a year when reservations are required.

SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know about the Disneyland Flex annual pass

When I first got the Flex pass I was really worried that I was going to get blocked from the park all the time. But that has never happened. Except for the Fourth of July, Disneyland has never blocked the Flex pass on a “requires reservation” day. Which means, so far, the $599 Flex pass has worked just like the $1,149 Signature pass at nearly half the cost.

The first few weeks I had the Flex pass I religiously booked the maximum two dates at a time out of fear that the dates I wanted to go to the park would be blocked out at the last minute. I would show my Flex pass at the Disneyland front gate and immediately make another reservation a few feet inside the park. It took me about a month to realize my fears were completely unfounded. The last few times I’ve been to Disneyland I booked my reservation as we headed out the door from home to the park. Once I booked a reservation while I was sitting in Downtown Disney because I figured, “Why not, I’m here.” Currently I have no reservation dates booked on my Flex pass. Why worry? I can go any day I want. Now that’s a trusting relationship.

That’s not to say everything is perfect with the Flex pass. Its Achilles heel is the lack of parking tied to the pass. That means the more you use the Flex pass, the more it costs. Disneyland’s $25 daily parking fee serves as a de facto users fee built into the Flex pass. And that’s not lost on Disney’s number crunchers. It’s no accident the Flex pass launched just as the $100 million Pixar Pals parking structure was opening. Disney’s got to pay for that garage somehow.

Another minor issue I have with the Flex pass is the inability to cancel your reservation when you book on the day of your visit. Now that I’m doing that regularly, it’s become more of a problem. That means you can’t cancel your reservation if you book at the last minute.

Disney allows Flex pass holders to make last minute cancellations up until 11:59 p.m. the night before your visit. After three no shows, Flex pass holders will find their existing reservations canceled and a hold put on new reservations.

Once I went to the park for an hour just so I wouldn’t end up in the Disney doghouse. On the spur of the moment, I made a last minute Flex pass reservation and then made other plans for the evening. That’s not the world’s biggest problem, but it would be nice if Disney gave same-day bookers an hour-long grace period to bow out.

One unexpected consequence of the Flex pass is that I’m ending up at Disneyland on really busy days. That never used to happen when I had the Deluxe annual pass. I loved the Deluxe pass because it was typically blocked out on the busiest days of the year when locals don’t need to be anywhere near the parks. I miss that unintended backstop.

I was also worried that the unfettered access of the Flex pass would come to an abrupt end when all the annual pass holders who were blocked out all summer started returning. But so far, those fears also appear unfounded. Flex pass reservations are still available on the dates when Deluxe passholders can return to Disneyland on Aug. 19 and Southern California passholders can return to the park on Aug. 26. Flex pass reservations are not required when SoCal Select passholders can return to Disneyland on Sept. 3.

Breaking up with your existing annual pass could be hard to do. As you might expect, Disneyland doesn’t want annual pass holders with the $1,149 Signature or $799 Deluxe passes dialing them down to the cheaper $599 Flex. On the other hand, the Mouse is happy to upgrade pass holders with the lower-priced Southern California and Southern California Select passes to the Flex.

Of course, not everybody needs a Disneyland annual pass. I once heard a Walt Disney Imagineer refer to Disneyland as Southern California’s country club. It’s a luxurious perk of living so close to the Happiest Place on Earth.

SEE ALSO: Is Disneyland pricing itself out of fans’ reach?

I understand $600 is a lot of money and there are many other things that are more necessary in life than getting into Disneyland. I also agree that Disneyland is expensive and annual pass prices have skyrocketed in recent years. If you don’t want to go to Disneyland or you think it’s too expensive, that’s your prerogative. Feel free to vent in the comments section below.

But for those in the market for a more affordable way to get into Disneyland, the Flex annual pass is an amazing bargain. My advice: Get a Flex pass right now before everybody has one and Disneyland has to actually start using the “reservation unavailable” option.

Wall Street’s ‘inversion’ curve translates to ‘Be worried, California’

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Wall Street is filled with funny phrases that don’t translate well into everyday conversation.

Take the current buzz about “inverted yield curves,” which are often cited as stock prices gyrate wildly of late. This is bond market talk for a quirky condition in which investors want to be paid exactly the opposite of what’s the norm: higher rates for short-term investments vs. longer-term stakes. And what this upside-down logic signals, at a minimum, is the financial market’s anxiousness about the current economic outlook.

Plenty of Wall Street stats can be twisted to say whatever the messenger wants you to hear. But history strongly suggests that when interest rates are inverted like they are today — watch out! Financial challenges — if not actual recessions — have a bad habit of following rate inversions.

So how does this oddity in interest rates translate to the California economy?

While the state’s fortunes are linked to the national, if not global, ups-and-downs, the Golden State — with the world’s fifth-largest economy by some counts — can dance to its own beat.

I loaded my trusty spreadsheet with three key indicators using their quarterly averages dating back to 1975: the gap between 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields, the state’s jobless rate, and a federal index of California home prices.

The spreadsheet tells me we’ve seen four inversions in which 2-year yields were higher than 10-year yields over the past four-plus decades. Three of these periods of upside-down rates accurately signaled upcoming economic upheaval. And what seems to be the outlier was more of a warning signal badly ignored.

Let’s walk through these four periods and to see how California’s bosses and home prices reacted. At a minimum, you must conclude it’s hard to ignore risks when short-term rates top long-term ones.

1978-82: Fed’s heavy foot

In the late 1970s, the Federal Reserve pushed up short-term rates nearly to 20% — yes, that’s no typo. Why? To put the brakes an overheated but sagging national economy saddled by double-digit inflation rates.

What the rates did: Inverted for 12 out of 15 quarters from late 1978 through mid-1982.

California unemployment: 6.7% when rates inverted to a peak of 10.9% at the end of 1982.

Statewide home prices: Up 15.6% a year at inversion to falling 0.7% at the end of 1982.

California was in its formative fast-growth stage, so the impact of the inversion was somewhat delayed and modest. Still, joblessness jumped and eye-catching home-appreciation rates ran down to basically nothing.

1989: Short but insightful

Twin shocks of the 1987 stock market debacle and the collapse of the nation’s savings and loan industry spooked many. So this inversion wasn’t terribly surprising.

What rates did: Inverted for the first two quarters of 1989.

California unemployment: 5% when rates inverted to a peak of 9.8% at the end of 1992.

Statewide home prices: Up 20.5% a year at inversion to falling 5.9% at the start of 1995.

What’s lost in these numbers is the harm to California’s economy caused by the demise of real estate’s friendly S&L lenders, plus massive cuts in the state’s aerospace industries as the Cold War ended.

The early 1990s were more of a lengthy business-climate malaise rather than any sharp drop. For example, home prices were down, year-over-year, for 17 straight quarters. But the price index, peak to trough, fell just 13% drop over five years.

2000: Mortgage mania wins

The bursting of the dot-com bubble should have clobbered California’s overall economy.

This inversion — decidedly a reaction to technology stock zooming up, then eventually cascading down — barely signaled weakness for the state’s economy.

What rates did: Inverted for all of 2000.

California unemployment: 5% when rates inverted rising to a peak of 6.9% at mid-2003.

Statewide home prices: Up 10.9% a year at inversion with gains rising to 28.5% by summer 2007.

Just as the state’s important technology industry was running out of sizzle, California’s real estate machine took over.

But please remember what it took for the state economy — and home prices — to avoid the 2000 inversion’s warning signal: Incredibly stupid mortgage-making practices.

Easy money created temporary real estate wealth in numerous ways: from sky-high home appreciation to oodles of spending money from cash-out mortgage refinancings to booms in home-lending jobs and construction work.

It took another inversion to restore sanity. Painfully.

2006-07: The Great Inversion

Something had to give. And by 2006, financial markets were getting extra queasy about a globe’s worth of new real estate riches.

Essentially, the money spigot was turned off. Financial havoc came next, bringing the world economy to near implosion conditions.

What rates did: Inverted for four out of five quarters beginning with the start of 2006.

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California unemployment: 5% when rates inverted to a peak of 12.3% at the end of 2010.

Statewide home prices: Up 18.4% a year at inversion to falling 23% in the summer of 2008.

Please take note of this downturn’s awful pain.

Joblessness soared to levels not seen since the Great Depression. And home prices fell for five-and-a-half years, slashing values 41%,  from top to bottom.

Hopefully, lessons were learned. One of which is that some Wall Street lingo can be translated to everyday life on Main Street.

Do not forget: “Inversion” means “worry” to California.

California’s slow-motion pension disaster

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Sacramento city officials, led by Mayor Darrell Steinberg, have been discussing how best to spend proceeds of an additional sales tax that the city’s voters passed last year.

Measure U continued a half-cent sales tax that was due to expire and added another half-cent that, city officials said optimistically, would generate nearly $50 million a year.

Steinberg, the measure’s chief advocate, described it as a “game-changer.” In pitching for the tax hike, he said he wanted to ramp up spending for infrastructure, affordable housing, cultural amenities and incentives to attract new business, with an emphasis on improving conditions in the city’s poorest neighborhoods.

“With more capital, we can direct and lead more of the change we want to see,” Steinberg said.

After the measure passed, Steinberg, city council members and representatives of various neighborhoods and interest groups began dickering over what specific projects and services would receive its revenue.

Just this month, officials debated whether to use Measure U funds to guarantee bonds for an aquatic complex in one middle-class neighborhood, or devote them to projects in poor areas.

As they pore over proposals to spend Measure U money, however, Steinberg, et al, try to avoid the financial gorilla that is prowling city hall – rapidly rising costs of pensions for city employees that threaten to soak up all the money.

The city’s current budget declares that over the next five years, mandatory payments to the California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) will increase by 58 percent or $47.3 million a year – almost exactly what the extra half-cent of sales tax in Measure U would raise.

Most of that money is directed at reducing the immense unfunded liabilities that CalPERS acquired during the Great Recession a decade ago and has not been able to erase despite an extended period of economic prosperity. Recently, CalPERS reported that its earnings during the preceding year fell a bit short of expectations, which means its unfunded liabilities grew even more.

Eventually, to meet its ever-increasing pension payments, Sacramento will either have to use Measure U’s revenues, thus setting aside the ambitious civic improvements Steinberg and others want to make, or cut other city services. It’s simple, inescapable arithmetic.

Sacramento certainly isn’t alone. Throughout California, as pension payments accelerate faster than property and sales tax revenue, city officials are facing similar tradeoffs and/or asking their voters to raise taxes.

A new study by UC-Berkeley Professor Sarah Anzia, using data from a variety of sources, sees it as a nationwide problem. “My analysis here,” Anzia writes, “shows that as local governments spend more on pensions, they have fewer public-sector jobs to offer – an implication that is not positive for government employees or their unions.”

Anzia foresees a “pension-induced transformation of local government” and suggests that “the future of local government may look very different than the past” as a result.

One could frame it as a slow-motion emergency, or even disaster, that can be directly traced to some very expedient, ill-considered decisions in the Legislature and in local governments two decades ago. They sharply increased pension benefits retroactively without setting aside money to pay for them.

CalPERS was complicit by declaring that new benefits would be fully covered by healthy trust fund earnings. Within a few years, however, it and other pension funds were being hammered by the Great Recession and their slide began.

CalPERS, once 100 percent funded, now has scarcely two-thirds of what it needs to cover pension promises. As it hammers local governments, their residents will pay the bills in higher taxes and/or lower services.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary

Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Costa Mesa home sales drop 12% as O.C. suffer worst 1st half in 8 years.

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Homebuying in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa fell 12% as Orange County sales slumped to the slowest pace in eight years.

CoreLogic homebuying stats show 2019’s first six months were Orange County’s slowest-selling first half since 2011, just after the Great Recession ended. House hunters’ resistance to buy was certainly key to the countywide median selling price running flat over the year. Falling mortgage rates could not override slipping consumer confidence and a cooling California economy.

ICYMI: California home values a national laggard

How do these homebuying patterns translate locally? Well, CoreLogic found these 15 trends in 9 ZIP codes covered by The Current, weekly edition of the Orange County Register for beach cities for 2019’s first half …

1. Purchases: Home sales for 2019’s first half totaled 1,315 vs. 1,492 a year earlier, a decline of 12% in a year.

2. Who’s up: Prices increased in 6 of the 9 ZIPs as sales rose in 1 ZIPs.

3. Countywide: $735,000 median selling price, flat in the period. Orange County saw 15,792 existing and new residences sell vs. 18,048 a year earlier, a decline of 12.5% in a year. Prices rose in 35 out of 83 Orange County ZIPs; sales were up in 17 out of 83 ZIPs.

Here is how prices and sales moved in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa …

4. Laguna Beach 92651: $1,900,000 median, up 10.1% in a year. Price rank in Orange County: No. 5 highest of 83. Sales of 195 vs. 219 a year earlier, a decline of 11.0% in a year.

5. Costa Mesa 92626: $815,000 median, up 1.7% in a year. Price rank? No. 23 of 83. Sales of 203 vs. 218 a year earlier, a decline of 6.9% in a year.

6. Costa Mesa 92627: $840,000 median, down 10.2% in a year. Price rank? No. 22 of 83. Sales of 282 vs. 307 a year earlier, a decline of 8.1% in a year.

7. Corona del Mar 92625: $2,535,000 median, up 3.5% in a year. Price rank? No. 4 of 83. Sales of 107 vs. 148 a year earlier, a decline of 27.7% in a year.

8. Newport Beach 92660: $1,728,750 median, up 1.7% in a year. Price rank? No. 6 of 83. Sales of 259 vs. 230 a year earlier, a gain of 12.6% in a year.

9. Newport Beach 92661: $3,000,000 median, down 42.3% in a year. Price rank? No. 2 of 83. Sales of 41 vs. 43 a year earlier, a decline of 4.7% in a year.

10. Newport Beach 92662: $3,150,000 median, up 15.6% in a year. Price rank? No. 1 of 83. Sales of 10 vs. 18 a year earlier, a decline of 44.4% in a year.

11. Newport Beach 92663: $1,550,000 median, up 3.3% in a year. Price rank? No. 7 of 83. Sales of 121 vs. 185 a year earlier, a decline of 34.6% in a year.

12. Newport Coast 92657: $2,637,500 median, down 4.1% in a year. Price rank? No. 3 of 83. Sales of 97 vs. 124 a year earlier, a decline of 21.8% in a year.

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Plus, three more countywide trends found in 2019’s first six months vs. the first half of a year ago …

13. Single-family-home resales: 9,912 Orange County sales vs. 10,833 a year earlier, a decline of 8.5% in the period. Median: $780,000 — a dip of 2.4% in the period.

14. Condo resales: 4,308 sales vs. 4,813 a year earlier, a decline of 10.5% in 12 months. Median: $499,500 — a dip of 0.9% in 12 months.

15. New homes: Builders sold 1,572 residences vs. 2,396 a year earlier, a decline of 34.4% in 12 months. Median: $1,013,750 — a rise of 5.9% in a year.


Paging more doctors: California’s worsening physician shortage

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By Elizabeth Aguilera, CalMatters

In a northern California valley stretching under miles of bright blue sky between two snowy volcanic peaks, Mt. Lassen and Mt. Shasta, Daniel Dahle is known as a godsend, a friend, a lifesaver, a companion until the end.

For more than three decades, “Doc” Dahle has been the physician in Bieber, serving a region about the size of five smaller U.S. states. When he started, he was one of five doctors in the region.  Today he is joined by only one other full-time physician.

At 71, Dahle has delayed retirement for years — waiting for someone to take his place.

“I was going to retire November 8th of last year; it was going to be a third of a century,” he said. “It’s tough to recruit young new vibrant family practitioners or internists or pediatricians to come up here.”

Unfortunately, Dahle’s situation is not unique.

California is facing a growing shortage of primary care physicians, one that is already afflicting rural areas and low-income inner-city areas and is forecasted to impact millions of people within 10 years. Not enough newly minted doctors are going into primary care, and a third of the doctors in the state are over 55 and looking to retire soon, according to a study by the Healthforce Center at UC-San Francisco.

That means by 2030, the state is going to be in dire need of physicians. Studies show the state could be down by as many as 10,000 primary care clinicians, including nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Some areas — the Central Valley, Central Coast and Southern Border region — will be hit especially hard. So too will be remote rural and inner-city residents, communities of color, the elderly, those with mental illness or addiction, and those without health coverage.

Many people will be forced to wait longer for doctor visits, travel longer distances to see someone, and may become so discouraged they forego preventative care and even care for chronic, serious disease until emergency treatment is necessary.

The federal government’s Council on Graduate Medical Education recommends 60 to 80 primary care doctors per 100,000 people. Statewide in California, the number already is down to just 50 per 100,000 — and in some places, it’s even lower:  down to 35 in the Inland Empire and 39 in the San Joaquin Valley, according to a report from The Future Health Workforce Commission.

Among the causes of the physician shortage:

  • High student loan debt induces medical students to go into specialty care, which pays more than primary care — currently only 36 percent of doctors provide primary care.
  • Low Medi-Cal reimbursement rates for primary care drive doctors away from low-income areas and primary care.
  • Even primary care physicians often shy away from rural areas, opting instead to practice in big cities near medical centers and specialists.
  • Medical school students don’t reflect the diversity of the state, which also influences where new doctors practice — and where they don’t.

UC Davis Medical School Dean of Admissions and Outreach Mark Henderson said his medical school is focused on trying to eliminate the shortage between Davis and the Oregon border.

At Davis, where there is a focus on primary and rural care, about half of graduates go into primary care. But at most other medical schools, that percentage is 20 to 30 percent and it’s not enough.

“We still don’t take enough students from (rural and underserved) communities that will have a deep desire to want to go back to the community,” Henderson said. “You have to take a different type of a student, you can’t take the same old usual suspect.”

New doctors “take these specialty areas that pay higher, and that leaves us with a shortage of primary care physicians including pediatricians, internists, family practice physicians and OB/GYNs,” said John Baackes, CEO of LA Care Health Plan, which has the largest number of Medi-Cal members in the state.

He said in rural areas, veteran doctors who are solo practitioners are having a hard time bringing in new doctors to take over.

“Young doctors are increasingly going to salaried positions” at institutions such as Kaiser, said Baackes.

In low-income areas, a different deterrent comes into play. Dismal Medi-Cal reimbursement rates  keep some students out of primary care and repels some primary medical graduates, said Elaine Batchlor, CEO of MLK Jr. Community Hospital in South Los Angeles.

“It’s difficult for physicians to support a practice in that environment and organized medical groups are not attracted to the community because of low (Medi-Cal) reimbursements,” she said.

The California Future Health Workforce Commission — made up of business, elected and health care leaders — released areport earlier this year warning of the looming shortage of health workers to meet the needs of the “growing, aging and increasingly diverse population.”

“If we’re looking to the future in a state where we have everyone covered, we can’t do it with the workforce we have and we are not doing it well now in many places,” said Assemblyman Jim Wood, a Santa Rosa Democrat who was part of the commission.

The commission found that already 7 million Californians live in federally designated Health Professional Shortage Areas because they lack primary care physicians, dentists and mental health professionals. Most are in the Inland Empire, part of Los Angeles, the San Joaquin Valley and in remote parts of the state, like where Dahle practices.

He tries to assist the next generation of providers: He takes physician-assistant trainees nearly year-round from the University of Iowa, where one of his former physician assistants runs a program.

“These guys are smarter than me already,” Dahle said. “Actually, we teach each other. We teach them the art of medicine and they teach me all the new science of medicine. It works out really good.”

The trainees live with Dahle in his log cabin on 160 acres just outside of town, down a 5-mile dirt road. His dog Clint, a Pyrenees he rescued, eagerly awaits him each afternoon.

Over the course of two recent days, Dahle treated patients with hyperthyroidism, migraines, diabetes, swollen lymph nodes, chronic ear infections, knee pain and constant nausea, and performed a skin biopsy to test for cancer.

Inevitably, country doctors have to be able to do more with less — and be willing to live far from urbanity.

“The younger generation of providers, they don’t have the clinical skills or know-how. They’re not trained the same as Dr. Dahle,” said Shannon Gerig, CEO of Mountain Valleys Health Centers, which operates seven centers across 6,000 square miles in the northern part of California including in Bieber, where Dahle is the lone doctor at that center. “It’s a scary thing for them to come out and be so remote, and know that they are going to be solo a lot, and they are going to be depended on by the mid-level staff…and they don’t have specialty (doctors) around them.”

Dahle has birthed thousands of babies, diagnosed cancers, done skin biopsies, assisted in minor surgeries, attended to patients on their deathbeds and occasionally rushed out into the forest or to a ranch to treat those whacked by a falling hay bale, a downed tree or a stubborn horse. He once finished a pelvic exam by flashflight because the power went out, did minor toe surgery in his office while taking direction from a surgeon on the phone, and jumped in a helicopter transport to accompany a patient with a broken neck enroute to a far-away trauma center.

He also works in the Fall River Mills’ emergency room one 24-hour shift a week, and makes hospital rounds first thing most days.

One recent morning, he greeted and joked with Wilma Chesbro, 88, who used to be an operating room scrub nurse with Dahle, and now is a patient in long-term care.

She grasped his hand, reminding him that when they first met decades ago she thought he was a “yokel” because he’s from a local town. But Chesbroe cried and lost her breath every time she tried to express just how much Dahle meant to her.

“He’s brilliant,” she said through her tears. “But he doesn’t show it. I have so much respect for him.”

Earlier this year he was named Country Doctor of the Year by AMN Healthcare, the largest health staffing agency in the country. The welcome sign to Bieber announces it has 510 residents; the health centers there cater to about 17,000 residents across several towns.

Much of the area is designated “frontier” by the federal government because so few people live there. Beiber has one motel, and passersby who blink might miss the Big Valley Market, where Dahle gets a maple bar for breakfast most days. Fields and ranches dot the wide-open valley, giving way to forests and rising peaks. The nearest Safeway grocery store is in Burney, 40 miles away. The isolation has made some prospective physicians make a U-turn and drive away, without ever stepping foot in the clinic for their scheduled interview. Many have told Dahle their spouse or partner saw the town and said “no way.”

Doc Dahle grew up in nearby Tulelake, the son of a potato farmer. He was drafted from college to Vietnam. Later he finished college at Oregon State, then was turned down for medical school there four times before he was accepted at the University of Rochester. When he graduated he returned to northern California to practice. His cousin is Brian Dahle, a GOP state senator who represents the area.

But Doc Dahle may just be the better known of the two. Thousands of residents in these parts go out of their way to see him.

“Patients are fine waiting because they know when they see Dr. Dahle he will take whatever amount of time he needs to talk with them, to get the care they need. I guess you’d call it old school,” said Gerig, who was Dahle’s patient before becoming his boss.

She began working as a registered nurse with Dahle 25 years ago, and he delivered her three babies via C-section. It seems everyone has a connection like that. At a local bar, a group of guys ticked off what Dahle has done for them — one called him a “lifesaver” for diagnosing a 99 percent carotid artery blockage.

This is why Dahle is fired up about finding his replacement. This is his “family,” he said.

He’s got his eye on a young doctor couple out of Davis. But there is one hitch. The local hospital in Fall River Mills, just about 25 miles up the road, closed its obstetrics unit, forcing pregnant women to go at least a hundred miles to Redding or Shasta to deliver.

Unless the hospital reopens that wing, Dahle may not be able to land the couple despite their interest. The husband is in primary care and has already filled in at Dahle’s clinic, but the wife, who is from Fall River Mills, is training to be an OB-GYN.

“We’re not going to be able to recruit these homegrown kids to come back here without something changing,” said Dahle. “We have got to do this for our community.”

That’s the reason he’s sticking around, for the community and to work on bringing the couple back home.

“I love my job,” said Dahle, who is twice divorced, acknowledging it was always hard to stay married because he is wedded to medicine. “I have never regretted ever being a doctor.  Every day I go to work and say that I help somebody.”

If he ever does retire, he plans to scuba dive, hunt rocks and travel.

But he’ll still probably have lunch on Tuesdays at the Roundup Bar, just like he does now for the hot dog special. Sometimes, if someone sees Dahle heading over, they’ll call the bar and buy Dahle’s beer.

“He’s a staple in our community. He holds us all together,” said bar owner Scott Johnson.“This is like his second office. He comes here and everyone gathers round and asks him questions to avoid a doctor visit.”

5 budget alternatives to Disney for theme park fans

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Feeling priced out by big theme parks such as Disneyland? Or maybe you’re just in the mood for something different?

Theme parks around the country this month have been announcing their new rides for the 2020 season. Here are five suggestions for parks that are building rides every bit as good as those at the big parks, but whose tickets cost a fraction of the big parks’ prices.

Holiday World in Santa Claus, Ind.: If you want to find the best value in the theme park industry, find your way next summer to this family-run park just off Interstate 64, about an hour west of Louisville, Kent., In addition to its four world-class roller coasters, Holiday World offers free parking, free sunscreen and free unlimited soft drinks. In 2020, its Splashin’ Safari water park is declaring itself the “water coaster capital of the world” by opening Cheetah Chase, its third such ride, which use magnets to propel rafts on roller coaster-style launches.

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Silver Dollar City in Branson, Mo.: One of the Ozarks’ top tourist attractions, Silver Dollar City is opening Mystic River Falls in 2020 — a rapids ride with what will be the biggest drop of its kind in the United States. Throw in the recently opened Time Traveler, the world’s tallest, fastest and steepest spinning coaster, and Outlaw Run, a top-flight coaster from the same company that did Six Flags Magic Mountain’s Twisted Colossus, and Silver Dollar City is well worth the journey, even before you tuck into the food that many consider among the best in the industry.

Busch Gardens in Williamsburg, Va.: SeaWorld’s sister park, located just down the road from Colonial Williamsburg, offers a European theme in one of the nation’s most beautifully landscaped parks. Its new ride for 2020, the Roman-themed Pantheon, uses the same ride system as the delightful Hagrid’s Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure that opened this summer at Universal Orlando. But without the Harry Potter theme, perhaps fans will be able to get on Pantheon with less than Hagrid’s hours-long waits.

Hersheypark in Hershey, Pa.:  Yes, it’s a candy-themed park in the chocolate company’s hometown. But its sweetest addition next year will be Candymonium, a 210-foot hyper coaster with a top speed of 76 miles per hour that will wrap around the park’s new entrance. If you visit, save time for the Hershey’s Chocolate World experience next door — a collection of Disney-style attractions devoted to the making of chocolate treats.

Visitors ride The Joker, a roller coaster at Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson, N.J. (Photo by Julio Cortez, Associated Press)

Roadtrip to a bunch of Six Flags parks: The Six Flags chain will announce all of its new rides for 2020 on Aug. 29. Its parks also offer deep discounts on annual passes and memberships that week, making it the best time of the year to get a Six Flags pass. But those passes and memberships are good for admission at all of the chain’s parks, too, making it possible to ride many of the world’s best roller coasters, in parks across the country, for less than the cost of a single day at Disneyland. With parks near Dallas, St, Louis, Chicago and Atlanta, as well as one in New Jersey halfway between New York and Philadelphia, Six Flags memberships can be a great deal for a thrill-loving family on the road for the summer.

Live coverage: Funeral of CHP Officer Andre Moye Jr.

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California Highway Patrol Officer Andre Moye Jr. is being remembered Tuesday, Aug. 20 during a 10 a.m. funeral service at Harvest Christian Fellowship Church that the public can attend.

A private internment will follow.

Moye, a 34-year-old motorcycle officer from Moreno Valley, was a three-year veteran of the department known as a giving and caring person, CHP officials said last week.

Moye was shot during a traffic stop Monday, Aug. 12. Two other officers were injured.

A procession at 7:50 a.m. will leave Acheson & Graham Mortuary on Magnolia Avenue and make its way along Magnolia Avenue, Madison Avenue, Arlington Avenue and Adams Street.

Officers from various agencies throughout the region are expected to attend the service.

Moye is survived by his wife, Sara, father, mother, stepfather, brothers and sisters.

The CAHP Credit Union has set up a memorial fund for Moye’s family: Donations can be made online at www.cahpcu.org/OfficerAndreMoyeJrMemorialFund or mailed to: Officer Andre Moye Jr. Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 276507, Sacramento, CA 95827.

Radio programmers take note: The Wow Factor aims to make money and attract listeners

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A couple of weeks ago I mentioned a new local format that launched on KDRI AM-FM in Tucson, Arizona. Programmed by Bobby Rich, The Drive (as it is called on the air) is designed to attract listeners aged 45-54, a demographic often ignored by corporate radio.

John Sebastian — the radio vet not the Lovin’ Spoonful singer — thinks he can go one better. By super-serving the baby boomer age group of 55-72, he thinks he can not only dominate in the ratings but in ad revenue as well, in part by bringing advertisers back to radio that long ago left for television.

Sebastian has been in radio 51 years, and has worked at or programmed numerous stations over the course of his career, including KDWB/Minneapolis,  WCOZ/Boston, KSLX/Phoenix, KUPD/Phoenix, KISW/Seattle, WSM-FM/Nashville, KPLX/Dallas, and here in Los Angeles, KHJ (930 AM), KTWV (94.7 FM), KZLA (now KLLI, 93.9 FM), and KLAC (570 AM).

He believes that boomers not only are getting the short end of the stick when it comes to programming but that stations owners are missing out on a lot of boomer income.

“Sure, there are stations that boomers listen to,” he explained, “but that’s more of an accident. Most stations try to attract a younger audience, some go for an older audience, and boomers will tend to listen to those stations because they like radio and it’s the best they have.

“But no one programs directly to them. And yet they are the group most loyal to radio

At the same time, Sebastian says that radio has ceded to television most of the advertising directed toward boomers … to their own detriment. The 75 million boomers, he says, hold 70% of the wealth in the United States and account for 42% of consumer spending. Sebastian claims that radio stopped trying to directly attract them long ago.

Sebastian’s solution? The Wow Factor.

Designed to dominate the 55-72-year-old age group — of which Sebastian is a member — The Wow Factor will attract multi-generational (family) listening, meaning that listeners both younger and older will find it appealing.

Special features of The Wow Factor include:

• A wide variety of music boomers literally grew up with. Top-40, AOR, classic rock, smooth jazz and country are all part of the mix. “We are testing the entire wide-ranging library right now,” Sebastian says, calling the mix “eclectic … never before heard on radio.”

• Few traditional elements of music radio’s past. “The days of constantly giving traffic and weather are gone,” Sebastian explains. “Smartphones give us all that and more, making much of what we’ve always broadcast superfluous. With The Wow Factor, I am going against my own philosophies I’ve held in the past. I want to reinvent radio … everything is being thrown out.”

• The morning show will be unique and feature a “storyteller.” Think fascinating histories behind the music, songs and artists … with brevity.

• Surprises, as in “Wow, I can’t believe they’re playing that song,” i.e. The Wow Factor.

To back up the format, Sebastian says the sales effort will be as unique as the programming and help bring both local and national advertisers back to radio. “Upscale auto dealers, banks, investment companies, insurance companies, upscale restaurants, vacation clients, retirement homes and communities, senior care, specialty physicians, plumbers, handymen … “in general what you see on television right now and not heard much on the radio.”

He’s holding out for a full-power FM station as his first client (as opposed to my idea of taking an AM station and proving AM music radio is still viable) and says he has some good stations interested. He wants it to become a nationwide phenomenon, so make sure it’s done right, he will move to the first Wow station’s city and program it personally “to ensure it’s done to perfection.” Sound familiar? Much of that was done by Bill Drake and Gene Chenault when they set the world on fire with Boss Radio as heard locally on KHJ starting in 1965.

And it worked well.

The format idea has been spinning in Sebastian’s head for a long time and has been perfected and marketed over the past year. It will be interesting to watch this develop once he lands a client.

Next week: I have a new favorite afternoon show, and I bet it’s not what you think. You tell me yours and I’ll tell you mine.

White House insists fundamentals of US economy are ‘very strong’

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By ZEKE MILLER and JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON — The “fundamentals” of the U.S. economy are solid, the White House asserted, invoking an ill-fated political declaration of a decade ago amid mounting concern that a recession could imperil President Donald Trump’s re-election.

Exhibiting no such concern, senior adviser Kellyanne Conway declared to reporters on Monday, “The fact is, the fundamentals of our economy are very strong.”

It’s a phrase with a history. Republican John McCain was accused of being out of touch when he made a similar declaration during the 2008 presidential campaign just hours before investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, setting off a stock market crash and global financial decline.

In this Aug. 9, 2019, photo, President Donald Trump talks to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. Trump is showcasing the growing effort to capitalize on western Pennsylvania’s natural gas deposits by turning gas into plastics. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

A case can be made for the White House position. The U.S. job market is setting records for low unemployment, and the economy has continued uninterrupted growth since Trump took office. But growth is slowing, stock markets have swung wildly in recent weeks on recession fears, and indicators in the housing and manufacturing sectors have given economists pause. A new survey Monday showed a big majority of economists expecting a downturn to hit by 2021 at the latest, according to a report from the National Association of Business Economics.

Trump begs to disagree.

“We’re doing tremendously well. Our consumers are rich. I gave a tremendous tax cut and they’re loaded up with money,” Trump said on Sunday. “I don’t think we’re having a recession.”

Still, the Republican president took to Twitter on Monday to urge the Federal Reserve to stimulate the economy by cutting interest rates and returning to “quantitative easing” of its monetary policy, an indication of deep anxiety beneath his administration’s bravado. And he backtracked last week on taking the next step in escalating in his trade war with China, concerned that new tariffs on consumer goods could hamper the critical holiday shopping season.

FILE – In this July 31, 2019, file photo, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference following a two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington. President Donald Trump is calling on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by at least a full percentage-point “over a fairly short period of time,” saying such a move would make the U.S. economy even better and would also “greatly and quickly” enhance the global economy. In two tweets Monday, Aug. 19, Trump kept up his pressure on the Fed and Powell, saying the U.S. economy was strong “despite the horrendous lack of vision by Jay Powell and the Fed.” (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

White House aides and campaign advisers have been monitoring the recent turbulence in the financial markets and troubling indicators at home and around the world with concern for Trump’s 2020 chances.

Any administration has to walk a fine line between reflecting the realities of the global financial situation and adopting its historical role as a cheerleader for the American economy. For Trump, striking that balance may be even more difficult than for most.

For decades, economic performance has proven to be a critical component of presidential job approval, and no American leader so much as Trump has tied his political fortunes to it. The celebrity businessman was elected in 2016 promising to reduce unemployment — a task at which he has succeeded — and to bring about historic GDP growth, where he has had less success.

The situation today isn’t nearly as dire as in September 2008, when the U.S. and the world were heading into the Great Recession. There are no waves of home foreclosures, no spike in layoffs, no market meltdowns and no government rescues to save powerful banks and financial companies in order to contain the damage. What does exist is a heightened sense of risk about the economy’s path amid slowing global growth and the volatility caused by the trade dispute between the United States and China.

There are other reasons as well for the administration’s rosy pronouncements, said Tony Fratto, a former Treasury Department spokesman in the Bush administration during the onset of the financial crisis. He said he sympathized with the Trump administration for having to choose between answering “honestly or responsibly” or otherwise about the state of the economy, noting that any hint of concern “could be self-fulfilling.”

“So much of the story of the economy is how people feel about it,” said Lanhee Chen, a Hoover Institution fellow and former economic adviser to 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney. “And that’s an inherently a difficult thing to measure.”

Highlighting a disconnect between the nation’s broad economic indicators and the “personal economies” of voters in swing states is a priority for Democratic candidates and outside groups heading into 2020.

Trump’s advisers acknowledge there are few tools at his disposal to avert a slowdown or recession if one materializes: Internal concerns over a ballooning federal deficit, in part due to the president’s 2017 tax law, are stifling talk of stimulus spending, and skepticism abounds over the chances of passing anything through a polarized Congress ahead of the election. But that hasn’t stopped the White House from exploring ways to make the political cost less painful.

Seeking to get ahead of a potential slowdown, Trump has been casting blame on the Federal Reserve, China and now Democrats, claiming political foes are “trying to ‘will’ the Economy to be bad for purposes of the 2020 Election.”

If the Federal Reserve would reduce rates and loosen its grip on the money supply “over a fairly short period of time,” he tweeted, “our Economy would be even better, and the World Economy would be greatly and quickly enhanced – good for everyone!”

Those actions he’s talking about are the sort a central bank would traditionally take to deal with or try to stave off a slowdown or full-blown recession.

Strong fundamentals? A lot depends on which ones the administration highlights or ignores in public comments.

Conway and other Trump aides have accurately described the rising retail sales and the solid labor market with its 3.7% unemployment rate as sources of strength.

Yet factory output and home sales are declining, while business investment has been restricted because of uncertainties from Trump ratcheting up the China trade tension.

Even if the economy avoids a recession, economists still expect growth to weaken.

Federal Reserve officials estimate that the gross domestic product will slow to roughly 2% this year, down from 2.5% last year. During his presidential campaign, Trump had boasted he would achieve long-term growth of 4 percent, 5 percent or more.

AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon contributed.

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