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Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo on Thursday signed the bill pledging $380 million in taxpayer money toward a $1.5 billion stadium for the Oakland Athletics to move to Las Vegas, leaving only the approval of Major League Baseball to finalize the first relocation of a franchise in nearly two decades.

SB1, the bill passed by the Nevada legislature during a seven-day special session called for by Lombardo to hammer out a financing package, was approved this week by the state Senate and Assembly after the addition of amendments that called upon the A’s organization to guarantee $2 million annually to the community, among other small concessions.

Lombardo signing the bill was the latest victory for A’s owner John Fisher, who over protests from Oakland fans and politicians had focused efforts in recent months on moving the team from its home since 1968. The last MLB team to move was the Montreal Expos, who in 2005 became the Washington Nationals. The A’s need the support of the other teams, who are expected to rubber-stamp the move in the coming months without the team needing to pay the standard $1 billion relocation fee after commissioner Rob Manfred said he would waive it as long as the organization received public funding to support its stadium efforts.

“I’m excited to officially sign SB1 this afternoon,” Lombardo said in a statement. “This is an incredible opportunity to bring the A’s to Nevada, and this legislation reflects months of negotiations between the team, the state, the county, and the league. Las Vegas’ position as a global sports destination is only growing, and Major League Baseball is another tremendous asset for the city.”

The A’s, whose lease at the dilapidated Oakland Coliseum runs through 2024, are expected to move at latest in 2025 to Las Vegas, a city that before the NHL’s Golden Knights arrived in 2017 didn’t have a major professional sports team. The team hopes the proposed stadium, a 30,000-seat retractable-roof building at the site of the Tropicana hotel on the Las Vegas Strip, would be ready by 2028. Until then, the A’s would play about 30 minutes west, at their AAA affiliate’s 10,000-seat park, before moving into the smallest stadium in MLB.

The A’s move, initiated by Fisher following more than two decades of failed efforts to build a stadium in the Bay Area, prompted Oakland fans to initiate a so-called reverse boycott Tuesday, in which they drew a season-high 27,759 fans, many of whom spent the game chanting for Fisher to “sell the team.”

Fisher, an heir to the Gap clothing fortune who bought the team in 2005, declined comment at the quarterly owners’ meetings in New York this week. Manfred, who spoke derisively about the fans showing up for the reverse boycott, said: “I feel sorry for the fans in Oakland. I do not like this outcome. I understand why they feel the way they do. I think the real question is what is it that Oakland was prepared to do? There is no Oakland offer. They never got to the point where they had a plan to build a stadium at any site. It’s not just John Fisher. … The community has to provide support, and at some point you come to the realization that it’s just not going to happen.”

Oakland mayor Sheng Thao has said previously that the city had $375 million in commitments toward a new stadium. The desire of Fisher and A’s president Dave Kaval to instead pursue a massive, $12 billion development project at Oakland’s Howard Terminal site, a spokesperson for the mayor said in a statement, complicated what could have been a straightforward transaction.

“There was a very concrete proposal under discussion and Oakland had gone above and beyond to clear hurdles, including securing funding for infrastructure, providing an environmental review and working with other agencies to finalize proposals,” the mayor’s statement said. “The reality is the A’s ownership had insisted on a multibillion-dollar, 55-acre project that included a ballpark, residential, commercial and retail space. In Las Vegas, for whatever reason, they seem satisfied with a 9-acre leased ballpark on leased land. If they had proposed a similar project in Oakland, we feel confident a new ballpark would already be under construction.”

Over the last two years, as the A’s received permission from MLB to pursue relocation, Las Vegas emerged as the favorite to land its third major men’s team, after the Knights and the NFL’s Raiders, who also moved from Oakland. Over the last five years, all of Oakland’s pro sports teams — the A’s, Raiders and the NBA’s Warriors — have moved out of the city.

“We will now begin the process with MLB to apply for relocation to Las Vegas,” the A’s said in a statement. “We are excited about Southern Nevada’s dynamic and vibrant professional sports scene, and we look forward to becoming a valued community member through jobs, economic development, and the quality of life and civic pride of a Major League Baseball team.”

The A’s have spent most of the season as the worst team in MLB. Fisher forced the trades of key Oakland players, and after going 60-102 last season, they’re on pace to finish a historically bad 43-119 this season.

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5-year sentence sought for Franco; verdict Thu.

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5-year sentence sought for Franco; verdict Thu.

PUERTO PLATA, Dominican Republic — Dominican prosecutors requested on Monday that suspended Tampa Bay Rays player Wander Franco, who faces charges of sexual abuse involving a girl who was 14 years old at the time of the alleged crimes, be sentenced to five years in prison.

The prosecutors said in court that there is sufficient evidence to prove Franco had a relationship with the minor for four months and that he transferred large sums of money to the minor’s mother to consent to the illegal relationship.

During raids on the house of the minor’s mother, prosecutors say they found $68,500 and $35,000 that they allege was delivered by Franco.

“We are requesting a five-year prison sentence for the proven crime of sexual abuse against a minor,” prosecutor José Martinez said.

The prosecutors also requested that Franco be sentenced to prison in Puerto Plata and that the minor’s mother be sentenced to 10 years in prison, arguing she sexually trafficked her daughter.

In a previous hearing, prosecutors described the evidence presented as “convincing” and “compelling.”

“What is Wander? Is he an accomplice of Vanessa or is he the material author of the criminal conspiracy offense?” said Irina Ventura, one of Franco’s lawyers arguing ambiguities on the part of the prosecutors.

Franco’s lawyers also asked the court to clear Franco of the charges and to dismiss the case.

After the closing arguments from both, the collegiate court of Puerto Plata in northern Dominican Republic, where Franco’s trial is being held, announced that it will issue the final decision on the case Thursday afternoon.

Documents that prosecutors presented to the judge last year and that were viewed by The Associated Press alleged that Franco, through his mother, Yudelka Aybar, transferred 1 million pesos ($17,000) to the mother of the minor on Jan. 5, 2023, to consent to purported abuse.

Franco was in his third major league season when his career was halted in August 2023. He agreed to an 11-year, $182 million contract in November 2021. He is currently on Major League Baseball’s restricted list after initially being placed on administrative leave.

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Woodruff, Cortes nearing return from IL stints

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Woodruff, Cortes nearing return from IL stints

MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Brewers pitchers Brandon Woodruff and Nestor Cortes are finally getting closer to returning after lengthy recoveries from their respective injuries.

Woodruff and Cortes both pitched in simulated games Monday. Woodruff, who hasn’t pitched in a major league game since September 2023, threw 60 pitches. Cortes, who made just two starts this year before going on the injured list in early April, threw 22-23 pitches in the simulated game and about 25-30 more in a bullpen session.

Brewers manager Pat Murphy said the staff would work together to determine the next steps for Woodruff, who is hopeful he might need only one more rehabilitation outing before making his long-awaited return from postseason shoulder surgery in 2023.

“I’ve always been a guy, when I’m ready, I’m ready,” Woodruff said. “I kind of know that. I’m not saying that’s going to lead to results, but I know that I’m ready to go pitch and compete. I think I’m to that point now.”

Cortes says he’s aiming to start a rehabilitation appearance in early July before rejoining the Brewers just after the All-Star break as the 30-year-old left-hander recovers from a flexor strain in his throwing elbow.

“That’s when we believe is the safest — and I guess the safest and quickest way to get back — combination of both,” Cortes said.

Woodruff, 32, already has been on two separate rehabilitation stints this year.

The two-time All-Star right-hander left the first one with tendinitis in his right ankle. He was pitching for Triple-A Nashville again on June 3 when a 108-mph line drive struck him in the right elbow, leaving a bruise that delayed his return.

“It’s been the hardest thing,” Woodruff said. “If you don’t stay positive with it, it makes coming to the field miserable, to be honest. When the team’s on the road and I’m here, me and Nestor are here by ourselves, it’s a pretty lonely place.”

Woodruff said his family has helped him stay positive. That’s also worked for Cortes.

Woodruff and his wife, Jonie, have a daughter named Kyler who turns 5 in August and a son named Bowen who was born last July. Cortes’ wife, Alondra, gave birth to Nestor Cortes III in April.

“That’s been the biggest help for me,” Woodruff said. “I was thinking about it last night. Getting to feed my little boy a bottle at night before he goes to bed, you don’t get that when the team’s on the road. All these experiences, and getting to see him about to start walking, getting to see that day to day, family’s been the biggest thing for sure. That’s filled the time up until the game starts and I’m watching the games. Having two kids has definitely kept me busy.”

While Woodruff and Cortes move closer to a return, the Brewers await word on the severity of a minor league prospect’s injury.

Third baseman Brock Wilken, the 18th overall pick out of Wake Forest in the 2023 draft, hurt his knee during Double-A Biloxi’s celebration of its Southern League South Division first-half title last week. Murphy said Monday that Wilken had a dislocated patellar tendon and was awaiting a second opinion regarding the injury.

Wilken, 23, was hitting .230 with a .392 on-base percentage, 18 homers, 41 RBIs and 57 walks in 65 games with Biloxi.

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Reds DFA Candelario halfway through $45M deal

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Reds DFA Candelario halfway through M deal

The Cincinnati Reds reinstated infielder Jeimer Candelario from the injured list Monday and designated him for assignment.

The move comes just a year after Cincinnati signed the veteran infielder to a three-year, $45 million contract.

“We felt this gives us our best chance to win games to keep the guys we had here versus activating him,” Nick Krall, the Reds’ president of baseball operations, said Monday, according to The Athletic.

Krall called it a “sunk cost because you can’t bring a player that’s not going to help his team win.”

Candelario, 31, had started 12 games at third base, seven at first base and three at designated hitter before landing on the 10-day injured list in late April with a lower back injury. He had struggled at the plate before his injury, hitting just. 113 with two home runs and 13 RBIs in 22 games. In an extended 17-game rehabilitation assignment at two minor league levels, he hit .238 with a home run and 13 RBIs.

The 10-year major league veteran hit 20 home runs with 56 RBIs in 2024, his first season with the Reds, but hit just .234 and struck out 117 times in 112 games.

He has a career batting average of .237 with 110 home runs and 384 RBIs in 880 games.

The Reds are moving forward with Christian Encarnacion-Strand, Noelvi Marte and Spencer Steer as their main corner infielders.

Field Level Media contributed to this report.

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