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Scoreboard roundup — 10/4/20

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Sunday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS
Miami 115, LA Lakers 104 (LA leads 2-1)

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Tampa Bay 38, LA Chargers 31
Cleveland 49, Dallas 38
Baltimore 31, Washington 17
Carolina 31, Arizona 21
New Orleans 35, Detroit 29
Cincinnati 33, Jacksonville 25
Minnesota 31, Houston 23
Seattle 31, Miami 23
LA Rams 17, NY Giants 9
Buffalo 30, Las Vegas 23
Indianapolis 19, Chicago 11
Philadelphia 25, San Francisco 20
Pittsburgh at Tennessee (Postponed)

WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS
Seattle 104, Las Vegas 91 (Seattle leads 2-0)

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

Los Angeles FC 3, Real Salt Lake 1
Atlanta at D.C. United (Canceled)
Columbus at Miami (Canceled)
FC Dallas at LA Galaxy (Canceled)
Houston at Minnesota (Canceled)
Cincinnati at Montreal (Canceled)
Toronto FC at New York (Canceled)
New England at Orlando City (Canceled)
Chicago at Philadelphia (Canceled)
Los Angeles FC at Real Salt Lake (Canceled)
Colorado at San Jose (Canceled)
Nashville at Seattle (Canceled)
New York City FC at Sporting Kansas City (Canceled)
Portland at Vancouver (Canceled)

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Soccer star thanks manager, teammates for support after forfeiting match over homophobic slur

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ABC NewsBy KELLY MCCARTHY, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — U.S. soccer legend and current USL manager Landon Donovan took his team name to heart on Wednesday when he stood firm to back one of his players after an alleged anti-gay remark was made during the match.

The San Diego Loyal coach ultimately pulled his team from the pitch mid-match while leading 3-1 against the Phoenix Rising and forfeited after one of Rick Schantz’s players allegedly used a homophobic slur directed at openly gay midfielder Collin Martin.

“I was pretty shocked. It obviously was an exchange that first started with some bad language,” Martin told ABC News’ Good Morning America on Friday. “That’s normal. It happens. But it escalated to a place where it crossed the line and I’m just at a point where in my career I’m an out gay player and I can’t stand for having a homophobic slur said to me during a game.”

He continued, “It was pretty upsetting and honestly it took me a little bit to totally soak in what was said to me, but I’m honestly proud of myself for bringing it to the ref and not standing for it.”

Near the end of the first-half stoppage time, referee Joseph Salinas whistled the play dead and mistakenly gave the Loyal midfielder a red card that ejected him from the match.

His teammates swarmed the ref and insisted that the wrong player was being penalized, followed by Donovan who approached the ref on the pitch to get an answer.

Donovan then came face-to-face with Schantz over the incident and in their exchange called out the comment, saying it was “homophobia.”

“I give Collin tremendous credit because — in the heat of battle you want to play and compete and when you’re beating a rival, really badly, you just want to finish the game and win the game,” Donovan said. “But Collin, to his immense credit, said something, he acted and he spoke and we just decided that if that player was not going to be removed from the game either through a red card by the referee or from the other team subbing him off the field, that we had to act and so I give our team a ton of credit for taking that stance.”

The Loyal coach explained further that “the context matters quite a bit” because just one week prior the team had experienced another upsetting slur.

“A player on our team, Elijah Martin, was exposed to a racial slur and we went back and forth all week on whether we should even play this next game because we were pretty upset about it and we were also upset we didn’t say anything during the game,” Donovan explained. “And of course, the next week this happens.”

Schantz denied that he was downplaying the alleged slur and claimed he was only asking about Donovan’s reaction.

Despite what was on the line, the team fully supported Martin and forfeited the match leading into the USL playoffs.

“Landon was pretty adamant right away that he wanted us off the field,” Martin said. “We took the time at halftime to hear everything that happened and to see what the team wanted to move forward with and they were all adamant that we weren’t going to play. So I was pretty uncomfortable by it, to be honest. It was a big game for the team and we were winning and I thought let’s just finish the game. Let’s beat them and move on with it. But I mean they weren’t having it.”

Donovan recalled that when he was a player in the early 2000s “gay slurs were used quite often and it was almost like a normal thing and people said it quite often until a stand was finally taken and people just didn’t accept it anymore.”

“It’s not something we hear every week and there’s not bigotry or homophobia expressed every week, but like I said, I think the world was trying to tell us something and it’s still clearly around and we just have to get it out of our game,” he said. “It cannot be in any sports environment. It can’t be in our society and unfortunately, the only way that change happens is by doing something drastic.”

Junior Flemmings, the Rising midfielder accused of making the offensive comment, denied that the incident happened.

“At no point did I say a homophobic slur towards Collin Martin. I stand in solidarity with the LGBTQ+ movement,” he wrote on Twitter.

Flemmings and the Phoenix Rising head coach have been put on administrative leave.

Ryan Madden, vice president of communications and public relations for the USL, said in a statement: “Foul and abusive language of any type has absolutely no place in our society and will not be tolerated in USL matches.”

“In addition to implementing comprehensive training and education, the USL will get to work immediately – alongside the Player’s Association and the Black Players Alliance – to put even more severe repercussions in place going forward. This has to stop. It simply won’t be allowed to occur,” he continued.

A conclusion is expected to be reached in the ongoing investigation before the weekend.

The league also announced that every USL owner, executive, player and staff member will undergo comprehensive sensitivity training ahead of the 2021 season.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 10/1/20

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Thursday’s sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

AMERICAN LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
Oakland 6, Chicago White Sox 4

NATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
Atlanta 5, Cincinnati 0
San Diego 1,1 St. Louis 9
L.A. Dodgers 3, Milwaukee 0
Miami at Chi Cubs (Postponed)

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Denver 37, NY Jets 28

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

A grandpa's note, a bucket of baseballs and an emotional tweet

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manusapon kasosod/iStockBy GENEVIEVE SHAW BROWN, GMA

(NEW YORK) — Sometimes the simplest gestures are the ones that tug at the heartstrings.

That’s certainly the case with a bucket of baseballs, a sweet note and a grandson’s now-viral tweet.

On Monday Ethan Anderson, Twitter handle @TheBigE_21, tweeted a photo that’s now been liked more than 200,000 times. He wrote, “My grandad left an old bucket of balls at the batting cages we used to go to with this note on them…. I’m not crying, you’re crying.”

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Anderson assures the commenters in subsequent tweets that he does visit his grandfather and though it’s been some time since they went to the batting cages he’s making plans to do so soon.

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Many granddads, dads and sons chimed in with their memories of playing ball.

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

MLB to allow fans in stadium for NLCS, World Series

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33ft/iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — MLB announced it will allow fans inside a ballpark for the first time since the COVID pandemic.

The league will sell 11,500 tickets per game for the National League Championship Series and World Series, which will be played at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. The stadium’s seating capacity is 40,300.

The league said 10,550 fans will be spread throughout the ballpark while 950 will be in suites, and there will be precautions in place.

Tickets will be sold in groups of four contiguous seats, called pods, and individuals will be limited to one pod per game. Each pod will be at least 6 feet apart from each other and the pods will be at least 20 feet away from players.

All fans are mandated to wear masks and tickets within pods can’t be broken up for sale.

The NLCS begins Oct. 12 and the World Series begins on Oct. 20. The American League Championship Series, being held in San Diego, will not allow fans.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.