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GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida will turn to one of its greatest players for help before facing rival and fifth-ranked Florida State on Saturday.

The Gators, the National Football Foundation and the College Hall of Fame will jointly honor 2007 Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow in the Swamp at the end of the first quarter. Coach Billy Napier, meanwhile, has asked Tebow to speak to his struggling team in the locker room beforehand.

“I’m always open to always talking to the team,” Tebow said during a Zoom call Friday. “I just would always want them to know first that it’s never about me. Saturday isn’t about me. It’s about them.

“It’s an amazing opportunity, and it’s something that if they can harness three hours of excellence, they will have a chance to be one of the more remembered Gator teams because they get a chance to knock off an undefeated FSU team. That doesn’t happen all the time.”

Tebow, a member of the 2023 College Football Hall of Fame class that will be inducted on Dec. 5 in Las Vegas, went 4-0 against the Seminoles during his four seasons in Gainesville, and the three games that Tebow started were lopsided victories. Tebow developed a reputation for being a fiery leader and usually showed his emotions in the locker room, on the sidelines and in the huddle.

He grew up in nearby Jacksonville rooting for the Gators and remains a huge fan while serving as a college football analyst for ESPN.

The Gators (5-6) already had plenty to play for against the Seminoles (11-0) before Tebow was added to the mix. They need to end a four-game skid to become bowl eligible, have a chance to knock FSU out of contention for the College Football Playoff, will honor 18 seniors before the game and are trying to defend their home field at night in front of a sellout crowd.

Tebow, though, should take it up a notch. He set more than two dozen school records during his career and led Florida to 22 consecutive victories between 2007 and ’09, a school-record winning streak.

He was added to the school’s ring of honor in 2018 and inducted into the university’s hall of fame two years later. His bronze statue stands outside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium along with those of Steve Spurrier and Danny Wuerffel.

Few players have the same outlook on the often-heated, in-state series that’s played a role in several national titles.

“Every year growing up, we would watch the game, and if we won, it was – ask my parents – arguably the best day of the year,” Tebow said. “And if we lost, it was mortifying. I would lose perspective and it felt like the world was ending. I begged them to let me not go to church on Sunday because I couldn’t handle the FSU fans. It was always bigger than a game.”

Tebow said the Swamp’s home-field advantage “has to factor in the game” considering the Seminoles are turning to backup quarterback Tate Rodemaker to replace injured star Jordan Travis.

“It can be a very intimidating place,” Tebow said. “For Gator nation, I hope that it is.”

He also offered some advice for Florida quarterback Max Brown, who is making his first start in place of the injured Graham Mertz.

“Embrace the moment,” Tebow said. “When I say that, I kind of mean don’t shy away from it. When you have the opportunities, let it rip. Be aggressive.”

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Astros say Hader won’t throw for about 3 weeks

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Astros say Hader won't throw for about 3 weeks

HOUSTON — Astros All-Star closer Josh Hader will be shut down from throwing for approximately three weeks after the team announced Friday he has been diagnosed with left shoulder capsule strain.

Hader was placed on the injured list on Monday for the first time in his nine-year major league career because of a shoulder strain. Astros manager Joe Espada said Wednesday that Hader would seek a second opinion before determining a next course of action.

A six-time All-Star, Hader, who is in his second year with the Astros, is 6-2 with a 2.05 ERA and is tied for third with 28 saves in 48 appearances this season.

The Astros entered play on Friday leading the American League West by 1½ games, despite having 13 players on the injured list.

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Brewers activate rookie Misiorowski from IL

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Brewers activate rookie Misiorowski from IL

CINCINNATI — Milwaukee Brewers rookie pitcher Jacob Misiorowski has been activated from the injured list after missing about 2½ weeks with a left tibia contusion.

The move potentially clears the way for the All-Star right-hander to pitch in the NL Central-leading Brewers’ series opener Friday at Cincinnati as they attempt to earn a 13th straight victory, which would match the longest winning streak in franchise history. The Brewers won their first 13 games in 1987.

Misiorowski last pitched July 28 in an 8-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Misiorowski’s knee appeared to buckle in the first inning that night as he fielded a dribbler and threw wildly to first base, though he remained in the game and ended up lasting four innings.

He owns a 4-1 record and 2.70 ERA in seven starts. Misiorowski has struck out 47 batters over 33⅓ innings.

In other moves Friday, the Brewers optioned right-handed pitcher Grant Anderson to Triple-A Nashville, placed outfielder Blake Perkins on the bereavement list, put outfielder Isaac Collins on the paternity list, and recalled infielder Tyler Black and outfielder Steward Berroa from Nashville.

Anderson, 28, was 2-3 with a 3.07 ERA in 53 relief appearances with Milwaukee.

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Amid woes, Cubs focus on process, not results

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Amid woes, Cubs focus on process, not results

CHICAGO — Mired in a collective offensive slump, the Chicago Cubs are preaching sticking with the process — and not worrying about the results — as a way out of it.

The team has lost three consecutive series for the first time all season, culminating in a 2-1 defeat to the Toronto Blue Jays on Thursday when the Cubs failed to push across the tying run in the eighth inning despite having runners on second and third with no outs.

“There’s a tendency to make everything sound worse than it is in our game,” manager Craig Counsell said Friday before facing the Pittsburgh Pirates. “That’s the nature of it when it’s every day.

“Things not going right is not what’s happening. I think that’s what you fall into. This is baseball that’s happening. You have to be tough enough to roll with that.”

Chicago ranks 28th in runs scored since the All-Star break after being at the top of the league for most of the first three months of the season. There’s no single culprit, as most of the top and middle of the order has struggled.

Right fielder Kyle Tucker was asked how to break out of it.

“I don’t know,” he said. “You just figure it out. We play so many games, you just got to get through it at times.”

Tucker is hitting .195 since July 1 with just one home run and four extra-base hits. After jamming his right ring finger on a slide in early June, he finished the month strong but has gone backward since.

The finger is “fine,” Tucker said.

He isn’t the only one struggling. Designated hitter Seiya Suzuki has driven in just eight runs since the break — he had 77 RBIs in the first half — while hitting .182. First baseman Michael Busch is batting .171 since the break, while left fielder Ian Happ is at .228.

But no one has struggled more of late than center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, who had just three hits and 15 strikeouts in August before a second-inning double Friday.

“It becomes the self-inflicted pressure when you feel like you’re not playing your part in contributing,” Crow-Armstrong said before Friday’s game. “When stuff starts to kind of pile up like that, it sucks, but it’s also baseball and I still have however many fricking weeks left this season, and it’s still a lot of time to begin to produce again.”

Counsell added: “Sticking to the things that get you results and being OK it might not happen at that exact time you want it to is the right way to be your best self. I think we have to be consistent with that. For us to focus on results is harmful, so you focus on things that contribute to us being good.”

That’s the collective feeling of the group inside the clubhouse as the Cubs continue to maintain a spot in the wild-card race, even if the division seems as if it could be slipping away. Wins are still coming — just not at the clip they were during the first half. And the club still hasn’t been swept in a three- or four-game series — one of two teams in baseball that can make that claim.

There’s still time to find that offensive groove again as the Cubs look to cut into the Milwaukee Brewers‘ lead in the division while also staving off the Cincinnati Reds in the wild-card race.

“Brewers are hot,” Crow-Armstrong said. “The Reds are playing good baseball. It’s another division matchup [this weekend]. I mean, the Cubbies are the Cubbies. We’re going to go keep playing the same baseball we played all year. … It’s been an interesting two weeks, but we’re fine. I don’t think there’s any worry in the world.”

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