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ABC News staffers are “pissed” at Terry Moran and some are calling for his head after he blasted Trump aide Stephen Miller as a world class hater, The Post has learned.

Moran’s diatribe on social media over the weekend, which he has since deleted, was condemned by ABC News executives for lacking “objectivity and impartiality.”

The veteran newsman was suspended “pending further evaluation” Sunday, but some colleagues felt the punishment did not go far enough.

“He should be fired,” one ABC News insider told The Post on Monday. “People inside are pissed at Terry for screwing things up for the network.”

“Everything that Trump has said about the media — that they are haters and they are biased — Moran proved it true,” the source explained, adding that journalists are supposed to “check your biases at the door and only deal with the facts.”

Firing Moran may serve Debra OConnell, President of ABC News Group and Networks, Disney Entertainment, who is in the throes of trimming the budget amid larger cuts at Disney.

A source with knowledge said a journalist with Moran’s level of experience — namely a senior-level correspondent who has covered the White House and co-anchored “Nightline” — likely makes between $600,000 and $900,000 a year.

“That could save the network a lot of money, and she would demonstrate to the White House that ABC takes the issue seriously,” the person said.

ABC News declined to comment.

Moran did not respond to requests seeking comment.

His early-morning screed Sunday tore into Trump’s Deputy Chief of Staff.

The thing about Stephen Miller is not that he is the brains behind Trumpism. Yes, he is one of the people who conceptualizes the impulses of the Trumpist movement and translates them into policy. But thats not whats interesting about Miller, Moran railed on X.

Its not brains. Its bile. Miller is a man who is richly endowed with the capacity for hatred. Hes a world-class hater, the ABC News reporter added. You can see this just by looking at him because you can see that his hatreds are his spiritual nourishment. He eats his hate.

The verbal onslaught came after Moran landed an interview with Trump in April as controversy over the administration’s tariff policies swirled.

Sources said Moran has close ties to ABC News vice president and Washington DC bureau chief Rick Klein.

Moran had ingratiated himself with Klein by expressing that he had some Trump-friendly views, such as the importance of networks providing unbiased coverage geared toward the entire country, which has been a White House criticism of left-leaning networks, one of the sources said.

But the interview quickly turned testy, with Trump telling Moran that he agreed sit down with the correspondent because he “never heard” of him.

A source with knowledge said it wasn’t that cut-and- dry and that Trump officials held conversations with the network about possible interviewers and that they agreed on Moran because of his national reporting and White House experience.

According to reports, the president did not want to be interviewed by Stephanopoulos or star anchor David Muir, whom he previously criticized for wrongly fact-checking him during a September presidential debate.

“I was shocked that Trump picked him,” said a second source, who had previously worked with Moran. “Terry is a little pompous. He would weigh in on things he had nothing to do with. He always wanted to voice his opinion — even in emails that he was cc’d on.”

The source called the attack on Miller “stupid.”

“Terry has always had a high opinion of his opinions,” the person said.

ABC News said it suspended Moran over concerns about him violating the outlets standards on impartiality and objectivity.

ABC News stands for objectivity and impartiality in its news coverage and does not condone subjective personal attacks on others. The post does not reflect the views of ABC News and violated our standards as a result, Terry Moran has been suspended pending further evaluation, a spokesperson previously told The Post.

Staffers lamented that Moran’s outburst undermined the inroads OConnell had been making with the administration in recent months. 

OConnell and other network execs have taken trips to West Palm Beach, Fla. and held meetings with Trump officials, a source with knowledge said.

One such meeting took place in December, shortly after ABC parent Disney paid $16 million to settle a defamation lawsuit against the network over This Week anchor George Stephanopoulos for saying Trump was found guilty of raping E. Jean Carroll. 

A New York court had found Trump guilty of sexual assault — not rape, a key legal difference — in the civil case. 

Trump has denied wrongdoing in that case.

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Reds’ Burns fans 1st 5 hitters in his MLB debut

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Reds' Burns fans 1st 5 hitters in his MLB debut

CINCINNATI — Rookie Chase Burns became the first starting pitcher in the expansion era to strike out the first five batters he faced in his major league debut.

He was not able to carry the momentum through the rest of the game.

The 22-year old Cincinnati Reds right-hander, the second overall pick in last July’s amateur draft, allowed three runs over five innings Tuesday night in a 5-4, 11-inning win over the New York Yankees.

Burns struck out his first five batters before Jazz Chisholm Jr‘s single. He gave up six hits and struck out eight, the seventh Cincinnati starter to have at least that many in his first career start.

“We watched for everything,” Reds manager Terry Francona said of Burns. “He didn’t get too excited. I think he enjoyed the competition. There’s a lot to like.”

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Burns also joined the Yankees’ Al Leiter and Tampa Bay’s Wade Davis as the only pitchers since 1961 whose first six outs in their debuts were strikeouts. Both gave up a run during the first two innings.

Burns struck out seven of the his first 10 hitters and allowed only one hit until Ben Rice led off the fourth by connecting on a hanging slider that went 413 feet and two-thirds of the way into the right field sun deck at Great American Ball Park.

Aaron Judge followed with a base hit. Burns retired the next two hitters, Chisholm got aboard with a single and Anthony Volpe hit a two-run triple when center fielder TJ Friedl made an ill-advised dive and the ball got by him.

“I think he’s a good pitcher,” Francona said. “I don’t think him giving up a couple runs is going to make somebody fold. If that was the case, we wouldn’t have brought him up.”

Burns averaged 98.1 mph with 48 fastballs, topping out with a pair at 100.1 mph in the first inning. He threw 24 sliders, eight changeups and one curveball. New York was 1-for-9 with six strikeouts in his first time through the order and 5-for-9 with a triple and home run the second time through.

Burns threw 53 of 81 pitches for strikes. His first big league pitch was a 98.4 mph fastball to Trent Grisham that just caught the inside corner of the plate. He got Judge to chase a 91.1 mile slider for the third out in the first inning.

“I guess you have to say Judge. I have watched him. He’s a big dude and one of the best hitters in the game,” Burns said when asked if any one strikeout stood out more than the others. “It was probably my favorite one.”

Burns fell behind 3-0 on three of the first 10 batters before ending up with strikeouts, and started 11 of 21 batters with strikes and induced 12 swing and misses. He is the fifth first-round selection from last year’s draft to reach the majors, joining Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz, Royals outfielder Jac Caglianone, Angels second baseman Christian Moore and Astros outfielder Cam Smith, who was selected by the Cubs before going to Houston in the Kyle Tucker trade last December.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Latz’s no-hit bid could land him in Texas rotation

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Latz's no-hit bid could land him in Texas rotation

BALTIMORE — Jacob Latz might have earned a spot in the Texas Rangers‘ rotation.

Manager Bruce Bochy says he’ll consider it.

“Of course,” Bochy said. “He’s a weapon whether he starts or he’s in the bullpen, but he’s stretched out. You’ve heard me say he’s got starter’s stuff.”

Latz took a no-hitter into the seventh inning Tuesday night against Baltimore, and although the Rangers blew a four-run lead, they recovered to win 6-5 in 10 innings. Latz set career highs in innings pitched (six-plus) and pitches (88) and lowered his ERA on the season to 3.22.

“I don’t know the plans going forward. I was kind of just trying to soak it all up today,” Latz said. “It was just a lot of fun out there.”

In his third career start and second of the season, Latz didn’t allow a hit until Ramon Laureano singled to center to start the bottom of the seventh. A walk later, Latz was removed, but a 4-0 Texas lead didn’t last much longer.

Chris Martin came on and gave up homers to each of his three batters — Gary Sanchez, Ramon Urias and Ryan O’Hearn — and left with the Rangers down 5-4. But a sacrifice fly by Jonah Heim the following inning tied it, and Evan Carter slid home safely on Sam Haggerty‘s grounder in the 10th.

Latz walked three and struck out four — including the last three hitters of the fifth inning. His previous longest outing in the majors was Thursday, when he threw 5 2/3 innings of relief in a loss to Kansas City.

“That’s one of the better jobs in all of baseball — to be a starting pitcher,” Latz said. “I’m not going to say I don’t want to be a starting pitcher. Obviously I do. I’m comfortable either way obviously. If it’s in the rotation, it’s great.”

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Pirates remove Cruz after he loses track of outs

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Pirates remove Cruz after he loses track of outs

MILWAUKEE — Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Oneil Cruz said he lost track of the outs when he didn’t run out a double-play grounder, a move that led to his removal in his club’s 9-3 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday night.

The Pirates trailed 7-3 and had a runner on first with one out in the seventh when Cruz grounded into a 6-4-3 double play. Cruz slowed down after the Brewers got the force play at second, and he said afterward he believed that was the third out of the inning.

Pirates manager Don Kelly removed Cruz in favor of a defensive replacement in the eighth inning and said it was due to Cruz’s “energy and effort going down the line.” Cruz said after the game he understood Kelly’s decision.

“DK had all the rights to do what he did, and I’ll back him up on that,” Cruz said through an interpreter. “It was my fault because I thought there were two outs in that situation. That’s why I let off running to first base.”

Kelly said he explained to Cruz the reason for the benching.

“We talked,” Kelly said. “He knows the expectation. Right there, I feel we fell a little short.”

When he was asked whether Cruz would be back in the starting lineup Wednesday, Kelly was noncommittal.

“We’re going to sit down and talk, and we’ll figure that out,” Kelly said.

Cruz, 26, has batted just .156 (12-of-77) with 31 strikeouts this month after having a productive start to the season that included owning a .911 OPS in early May and hitting a 122.9 mph homer against the Brewers on May 25. That homer was the hardest-hit ball since Statcast started tracking that data in 2015.

Cruz is now hitting .208 with a .321 on-base percentage, a .404 slugging percentage, 13 homers, 31 RBIs and 26 steals in 71 games.

“He’s struggling at the plate right now,” Kelly said. “It’s difficult when you’re going through that and trying to figure it out. He’s working hard to do that. That’s one thing we’ve got to be mindful of, is not letting that offense carry over to defense and base running, and the energy and effort that we’re giving on any other aspects of the game as well.”

Cruz said his hitting slump “had nothing to do with what happened today” and isn’t impacting his focus on the basepaths or in the field. But he also said he appreciated Kelly’s instructions to him and noted how he can learn from veteran teammates Andrew McCutchen and Tommy Pham.

“They’re a really good example,” Cruz said. “They always run hard. They always go out there to do their 100%. That’s a teaching point for me. I accepted the way DK came to me and explained it and presented it to me.”

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