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PARADISE VALLEY, Ariz. — New Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell will continue to be a presence around the Badgers during Tuesday night’s Guaranteed Rate Bowl at Chase Field in downtown Phoenix, but not as the man in charge, he said Monday.

Fickell plans to be on the sideline, wearing a headset and coaching where he can help, but he’ll continue to let interim head coach Jim Leonhard handle his duties against Oklahoma State.

“I’m coaching in a way that’s letting, really, these guys kind of handle things the way that they’ve handled them,” Fickell said during the Badgers’ media day. “And they’ve been great. They’ve been really mature about it. Jim’s been awesome.

“I’m kind of a guy that just, you know, maybe a little bit more of a figurehead and we’ll communicate with those guys in situational stuff, but we have changed nothing — the way we practice, the way they go about a Tuesday practice, a Wednesday practice, a Thursday practice, a Friday practice, how they’re gonna do game day.”

Fickell said his communication during the game Tuesday night will be “much different” than it normally would be during a game. He’ll help relay Leonhard’s plan to the team while trying to keep “everything as similar as possible.”

“I think that’s the only chance that gives you to be successful,” Fickell said.

Fickell, who was hired away from Cincinnati on Nov. 27, made a strategic decision to not take the reins away from Leonhard when he came on board, but he wanted to find a way to be around his new team.

It was a balance he had to discover.

“I didn’t wanna be that guy that was on the Zoom call while the game was going on, and while the guys in your program and team are sweating and working their butts off and things like that,” Fickell said. “And, really, just with the new age of what college football is right now, and how can you really take care of your program and your team and your guys if you’re not around them? … I mean, if you are not talking to them in this day and age, somebody else is, and I don’t think there’s any way to keep what you’re doing intact unless you’re constantly around them and communicating with them.”

Fickell has been deferring to the current staff to handle basically everything. He said he’s been asked who the starting quarterback will be Tuesday night but refuses to answer.

“How arrogant would you have to be to walk in in three weeks and think you know better about what’s going on within the program, what these guys have done over, whether it’s a five-year period with Chase Wolf or even a year period with Myles [Burkett], to make that decision,” he said.

Fickell has been at the bowl practices, a whistle in tow, senior safety John Torchio said, but has been in more of an administrative role than any sort of coaching job.

Having him on the sideline Tuesday will be “different, obviously,” Torchio said.

“It’s our third head coach of the year,” he said. “I don’t know how many times that’s happened in college football.

“You just gotta roll with it. That’s just how the season has been so far.”

Fickell’s future players have enjoyed having him around to get to know Fickell, the person, and Fickell, the coach.

“It’s cool just to kind of have him around,” sophomore running back Braelon Allen said. “Just for him to be here with us and just kind of build a relationship with him, kind of see what his coaching style is like, although he hasn’t really been with the running backs or the offense too much, just kind of being more of a defensive guy.

“But just having him around, being able to build a relationship and a connection, it’s been cool. I’m excited for him to take over everything and make it his show.”

Being at practice but not truly coaching hasn’t been easy, Fickell said.

He has taken a lot of notes during the past few weeks but added that watching how another coach handles his team could be helpful.

“Every practice has been pretty hard,” he said with a laugh. “It’s been hard during practice to just, kind of, bite your lip a little bit and just keep moving around and, then it’s difficult, too, because you don’t [know the] lingo. I know the defense, but I don’t know the defense. So, it’s challenging in those ways because you don’t want to spend too much time studying and learning it all because obviously some things are going to change here in a couple weeks.

“So, all those things together, it’s been uncomfortable.”

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DeRosa to manage U.S. in World Baseball Classic

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DeRosa to manage U.S. in World Baseball Classic

CARY, N.C. — Former major leaguer Mark DeRosa will manage the United States for the second straight World Baseball Classic, USA Baseball said Thursday.

DeRosa led the U.S. to the championship game of the 2023 tournament, where it lost to Japan 3-2 as Shohei Ohtani struck out Mike Trout to end the game.

Michael Hill, Major League Baseball’s senior vice president of on-field operations and workforce development, will be the team’s general manager, a position Tony Reagins held for the 2023 tournament.

DeRosa, 50, is a broadcaster for MLB Network. He had a .268 average with 100 homers and 494 RBIs over 16 major league seasons.

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Adell’s two-HR fifth inning keys Angels’ rout

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Adell's two-HR fifth inning keys Angels' rout

TAMPA, Fla. — Jo Adell became the third player in Angels history to homer twice in the same inning, Mike Trout and Taylor Ward also homered twice and Los Angeles routed the Tampa Bay Rays 11-1 on Thursday.

Adell led off the fifth against Zack Littell (0-3) with first first homer this season for a 3-1 lead and capped an eight-run fifth inning with a three-run drive against Mason Englert. Adell matched a career high with four RBI.

Rick Reichardt homered twice in a 12-run inning at Boston on April 30, 1966, and Kendrys Morales homered twice in a nine-run sixth at Texas on July 30, 2012.

Ward homered on the game’s second pitch and Nolan Schanuel hit an RBI double in the second.

Jonathan Aranda closed the Rays to 2-1 with a run-scoring single in the fourth off José Soriano (2-1).

Trout hit a two-run homer in the fifth against Littell and added a solo homer in the ninth off Hunter Bigge for his fifth home run this season and the 27th multihomer game of his big league career. Trout also homered in the July 30, 2012, game.

Ward also homered in the fifth, a two-run drive against Littell.

Los Angeles has won four straight series.

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‘I told them the best option was him’: Pete Alonso showing why he’s the guy Juan Soto wanted hitting behind him

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'I told them the best option was him': Pete Alonso showing why he's the guy Juan Soto wanted hitting behind him

NEW YORK — Juan Soto had several questions for the New York Mets during his free agent negotiations this past winter. One was about their lineup construction.

Soto had just spent the 2024 season in the Bronx as half of a historically productive duo who drew constant comparisons to Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. He and Aaron Judge, the American League MVP, were a strenuous puzzle to solve in the New York Yankees‘ lineup. The left-handed Soto hit second. The right-handed Judge batted third. They protected each other and pulverized pitchers. Leaving the Yankees would mean leaving Judge.

“That was one of the essential parts of the discussion,” Soto told ESPN in Spanish on Tuesday. “Who was going to bat behind me?”

The answer seemed clear. Pete Alonso remained a free agent. The first baseman is homegrown and adored in Queens. More importantly, for lineup construction purposes, he’s a right-handed slugger. He isn’t on Judge’s level — who is? — but he ranks right behind Judge in home runs since debuting in 2019. He was an obvious complement to Soto.

“I told them the best option was him,” Soto said.

By late January, Alonso’s return still appeared unlikely. Mets owner Steve Cohen, during a fan event at Citi Field, called the negotiation “exhausting” and “worse” than the Soto pursuit. He left the door open, but much to the chagrin of Mets fans in the crowd that day, he also said the organization was ready to move on from the four-time All-Star.

Less than two weeks later, just days before spring training, the sides came to an agreement on a two-year contract with an opt-out after this season. The 30-year-old Alonso went from seemingly in the Mets’ past to protecting the franchise’s $765 million investment. Two months into the partnership, the early returns of the 2025 season support Soto’s opinion. The best example came in Tuesday’s win over the Miami Marlins.

The Mets, leading 6-5, had runners on the corners with one out in the sixth inning for Soto. Marlins manager Clayton McCullough brought in right-hander Ronny Henriquez — and, despite the runner on first, made the unusual decision to intentionally walk Soto. That loaded the bases for Alonso and created an inning-ending double-play opportunity with a righty-righty matchup — though McCullough made another unusual call by pulling in the infield and the outfield. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said he wasn’t surprised by the Marlins’ decision to walk Soto.

“I think it gets to a point where it’s pick your poison there,” Mendoza said.

Two pitches later, Alonso cracked a 93-mph sinker into the left-center field gap for a bases-clearing triple, blowing the game open on a cold, blustery afternoon in Queens.

It was Alonso’s second double of the day — his first, a Texas Leaguer to right field in the third inning, drove in the Mets’ first two runs. Alonso has served as the offense’s engine in the three hole, behind leadoff man Francisco Lindor and Soto, batting .333 with three home runs, 15 RBIs and a 1.139 OPS through the club’s first 12 games.

“It seems like teams are trying to not get beat with Soto,” Mendoza said. “And then, before you know it, they’re making mistakes with Pete, and he’s been ready to go and making them pay.”

Alonso is looking to reverse a three-year decline in offensive production, making better swing decisions after the worst offensive campaign of his career in 2024. It’s early, but so far Alonso is laying off pitches outside the strike zone more often. He’s barreling pitches over the plate at a higher percentage. He’s crushing pitches the other way — in the Mets’ home opener Friday, he clubbed a 95-mph fastball from Kevin Gausman down and out of the strike zone for a two-run home run to right field.

Hitting behind Soto, who has a .404 on-base percentage as a Met, has made his work a little easier.

“He’s such a pro,” Alonso said of Soto. “Obviously, we know he has power, he has the hit tool. He can hit for average. Super dynamic player offensively. But the thing that I really benefit from is just seeing — because he sees a ton of pitches and just kind of seeing what they’re doing to him, obviously, it really helps because they’re trying to stay away from the middle of the zone with him and I can kind of take some mental notes with that.”

With more pitches to Soto, the game’s most disciplined hitter, comes more strain for pitchers. With more runners on base, comes more pitches — and fastballs — over the plate for Alonso to devour. It is a formula Soto envisioned over the winter. Whether it extends beyond this season remains unknown.

There’s no question he is popular with fans. During the Mets’ home opener Friday, Citi Field roared for Alonso during pregame introductions. The fans did so again when he stepped into the batter’s box for his first at-bat. And then once more, moments later, when he emerged from the dugout for a curtain call after hitting a two-run home run.

This week, one option for replacing Alonso was taken off the board when first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays agreed to a 14-year, $500 million contract extension. Guerrero’s contract should help Alonso’s earning potential if he chooses, as expected, to opt out of his contract and hit free agency again this winter.

For now, in his seventh season, Alonso is thriving as the Mets’ first baseman, hitting behind his team’s most valuable player.

“That’s why you want [protection] like that,” Soto said. “First of all, to have the chance to do more damage and stuff. But whenever they don’t want to pitch me, I know I have a guy behind me that could make it even worse for them.”

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