CSi Weather…
REST OF TODAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 60s. Northwest winds 15 to 20 mph.
.TONIGHT…Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 40s. Northwest winds around 15 mph.
.WEDNESDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 50s. Northwest 15 to 25 mph with gusts to around 40 mph.
.WEDNESDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s.
Northwest winds 15 to 20 mph.
.THURSDAY…Partly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s. North winds
10 to 15 mph.
.THURSDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.
.FRIDAY…Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 50s.
.FRIDAY NIGHT…Decreasing clouds. A 20 percent chance of rain
showers. Lows in the upper 30s.
.SATURDAY…Partly sunny. A 20 percent chance of rain showers in
the morning. Highs in the mid 50s.
.SATURDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
.SUNDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 50s.
.SUNDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s.
.MONDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 60s.
State health officials say hospitalizations due to illness from the coronavirus reached a new high in North Dakota with 105 people receiving treatment in medical centers. The record reported Monday comes a day after state officials met with leaders at two hospitals in Bismarck who told a governor’s task force they are nearing capacity because of COVID-19. Burleigh County, which includes Bismarck, leads the state with 719 active virus cases. Three new deaths were reported, including a woman in her 60s and man in his 80s from Burleigh County and a man in his 80s from Rolette County. North Dakota continues to lead the nation in the number of cases per capita over a two-week period,
NDDoH
COVID-19 Stats
Mon. Sept.28, 2020
Posted 11-a.m.
Barnes
New Positives 0
Total Positives 235
Active Cases 37
Recovered 198
Stutsman
New Positives 1
Total Positives 513
Active Cases 49
Recovered 461
COVID-19 Test Results
The results listed are from the previous day. Additional data can be found on the NDDoH website.
BY THE NUMBERS
3,991 – Total Tests from Yesterday*
626,289 – Total tests completed since the pandemic began
260 – Positive Individuals from Yesterday*****
20,983 – Total positive individuals since the pandemic began
6.72% – Daily Positivity Rate**
3,669 Total Active Cases
-97 Individuals from yesterday
353 – Individuals Recovered from Yesterday (254 with a recovery date of yesterday****)
17,080 – Total recovered since the pandemic began
105 – Currently Hospitalized
+9 – Individuals from yesterday
3 – New Deaths*** (234 total deaths since the pandemic began)
INDIVIDUALS WHO DIED WITH COVID-19
- Man in his 80s from Burleigh County with underlying health conditions.
- Woman in her 60s from Burleigh County with underlying health conditions.
- Man in his 80s from Rolette County with underlying health conditions.
COUNTIES WITH NEW POSITIVE CASES REPORTED MONDAY
- Benson County – 1
- Bottineau County – 1
- Bowman County – 3
- Burleigh County – 69
- Cass County – 56
- Dunn County – 1
- Emmons County – 5
- Foster County – 1
- Golden Valley County – 1
- Grand Forks County – 5
- LaMoure County – 2
- McKenzie County – 3
- McLean County – 2
- Mercer County – 3
- Morton County – 19
- Mountrail County – 3
- Pembina County – 1
- Pierce County – 1
- Renville County – 1
- Richland County – 4
- Rolette County – 3
- Sioux County – 2
- Stark County – 23
- Stutsman County – 1
- Traill County – 3
- Walsh County – 3
- Ward County – 15
- Williams County – 28
* Note that this does not include individuals from out of state and has been updated to reflect the most recent information discovered after cases were investigated.
**Individuals who tested positive divided by the total number of people tested who have not previously tested positive (susceptible encounters).
*** Number of individuals who tested positive and died from any cause while infected with COVID-19.
**** The actual date individuals are officially out of isolation and no longer contagious.
******Totals may be adjusted as individuals are found to live out of state, in another county, or as other information is found during investigation.
For descriptions of these categories, visit the NDDoH dashboard.
For the most updated and timely information and updates related to COVID-19, visit the NDDoH website at www.health.nd.gov/coronavirus, follow on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and visit the CDC website at www.cdc.gov/coronavirus.
The North Dakota State Hospital reports, 20 patients and around 48 staff members have been diagnosed with the coronavirus since the start of the pandemic in March. The information is included with the results reported by the North Dakota Department of Health.
The State Hospital has been operating a special COVID-19 unit that treats and isolates patients of the State Hospital and would be available for patients that test positive in any of the three geropsychiatric units licensed across the state.
Bismarck (NDHP) The North Dakota Highway Patrol reports that on Friday, September 25, 2020, it conducted a sobriety checkpoint in Stutsman County. During the event 110 vehicles passed through the checkpoint with one driver being arrested for driving under the influence. The patrol continued with saturation patrols through Sunday morning. The saturation patrols resulted in one driver being arrested for impaired driving and another driver was arrested for drug charges. The North Dakota Highway is committed to taking impaired drivers and drugs off North Dakota roadways.

Dave Carlsrud
Valley City (CSi) Valley City Mayor, Dave Carlsrud’s Latest Message to the Community:
Last week a familiar face of our community retired after serving Valley City Citizens for 36 years. Jeff Differding is entering the next chapter of his life having more time for family, fishing and hunting. Jeff, thank you for your passion, talents and expertise exhibited while mentoring fellow workers and improving our community. You will be missed and always remembered fondly.
Voting for our November Election is open. Please exercise your right to vote.
The COVID-19 Virus is still progressing. Governor Burgum promotes, “A light touch of government with a large dose of individual responsibility”. That said, if we are to improve our numbers, IT IS UP TO US! ** Wash your hands, social distance and “Mask up” when you can’t social distance. Everyone, “Work towards “Green”.
*Kudos to VCSU & VCPS students and staffs for the good job you have done to minimize affects of COVID-19 in your systems. I know many changes from the “old normal” were needed for the successes achieved to date. Thank you.
*Our State Legislators are working feverishly to minimize affects of revenue shortages from oil tax, gas tax, the unknown of the DAPL situation and other factors. It is a tough job so whether or not you voted for particular legislators, say “Thank you for your efforts”.
“What if today, we were just grateful for everything?” (Peanuts, Charlie Brown)
Blessings, Pray and Be Safe,
Dave
Dave Carlsrud
Jamestown (Arts Center) The Jamestown Arts Center, invites the community to Join them October 2 & 3, 2020 at 7-p.m., when over 100,000 film lovers unite in over 400 cinemas across 6 continents to view and vote on the finalists films in the 23rd Annual MANHATTAN SHORT Film Festival!
MANHATTAN SHORT is the only event of its kind. The Final Nine are screened simultaneously across the world September 24 – October 31 (extended this year to allow for social distancing), with the Best Film and Best Actor awards determined by ballots cast by the audiences in each participating venue. By virtue of their selection by MANHATTAN SHORT, each short film is automatically Oscar-qualified.
The nine MANHATTAN SHORT finalists hail from nine countries with films from Australia, North Macedonia, Finland, USA, Iran, France, Russia, State of Palestine and Israel. These Final nine short films represent the best short films among 971 submissions from 54 countries received by MANHATTAN SHORT for 2020, testimony to the enduring vibrancy and creativity of short films.
Click here to view the trailer
You Be the Judge! Will MANHATTAN SHORT audiences select any Oscar winners this year? They did two years ago! MANHATTAN SHORT’s 2019 Final Nine will not only entertain a global audience but will be judged by them as well. Viewers will become instant film critics as they are provided a ballot to vote for the Best Film and Best Actor. The world’s directors and actors anxiously await Jamestown area votes.
Admission is $15 / $10 for Arts Center members. Pay at the door.
Jamestown (CSi) The St. John’s Academy Annual HOPE Dinner & Silent Auction is set for Saturday, October 3rd at St. John’s Academy in Jamestown, to keep tuition rates lower for their students.
Contact Peggy Etzold, at the St. John’s Academy Development Office at 701-252-0119 or E-Mail: development@stjamesbasilica.org, or call St. John’s Academy at 701-252-3397.
Bismarck (CSi) – The North Dakota State Investment Board (SIB) dedicated an additional $100 million in Legacy Fund investments to providing cost-efficient financing to companies seeking to develop new businesses and infrastructure in North Dakota – one of several actions taken by the board to put Legacy Fund investments to work for North Dakotans.
The $100 million addition to Bank of North Dakota’s (BND) In-State Investment Program will increase the program’s total size to $400 million. BND President Eric Hardmeyer stated the program’s outstanding loans were $86 million in September, excluding $102 million of pending loans and $375 million of “Projects in Pipeline Requesting Commitment.” BND serves as an approved SIB investment manager and is responsible for growing this important investment program for the Legacy Fund.
The state-owned Bank of North Dakota requested the increase to support future anticipated growth in this economic development program, which has been in place for over 30 years.
“This increase in funding will provide greater access to capital for businesses looking to launch new manufacturing, processing and value-added businesses and important infrastructure in North Dakota, while also ensuring that more Legacy Fund dollars are being invested right here in North Dakota,” said Lt. Gov. Brent Sanford, who chairs the SIB.
In addition to increasing the SIB’s commitment to the In-State Investment Program, managed by BND, the board also reviewed recent investment results:
- SIB Pension Pool returns, which include the Public Employees Retirement System (PERS) and the Teachers’ Fund for Retirement (TFFR), were ranked in the top 25% of Callan’s public fund database over the last 10 years with a net annual investment return of 8.4% for the 10 years ended June 30, 2020;
- Legacy Fund net income since its inception hit a new record high of $1.9 billion on July 31, 2020;
- The Legacy Fund was valued at a record high of over $7.2 billion as of July 31, 2020; and
- SIB client investments exceeded $16.8 billion as of July 31, 2020.
The SIB has statutory responsibility for the administration of the investment programs of several funds including PERS, TFFR and the Workforce Safety & Insurance (WSI) Fund. The SIB also maintains contractual relationships for investment management with certain political subdivisions. The 12-member Board consists of the lieutenant governor, state treasurer, state insurance commissioner, executive director of WSI, state land commissioner, three representatives of PERS and three representatives of TFFR in addition to one non-voting member from the Legacy and Budget Stabilization Fund Advisory Board.
Bismarck (CSi) – The United States and North Dakota flags have been flown at half-staff since Sept. 19 in honor of the memory and longstanding service of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg. Interment for Justice Ginsberg is scheduled for Tuesday, Sept. 29. Accordingly, flags should be returned to full-staff at sunset Tuesday, Sept. 29.
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The North Dakota Supreme Court says a North Dakota Republican lawmaker whose residence was challenged by Democrats is eligible for reelection. Kenton Onstad, who chairs the District 4 Democratic Party, had filed a lawsuit earlier this month asserting that Terry Jones is a resident of Wyoming, where he owns a farming, ranching and construction business. Jones argued that he owns a home in New Town, pays North Dakota income tax, and has led a congregation at a Mormon church there for years. In a ruling issued Friday, the high court cited 10 factors that favor Jones, including a state court complaint he filed in 2019 in which he swore under oath that he was a resident of Mountrail County.
MINOT, N.D. (AP) — Minot police say the deaths of two men last weekend appears to be drug related. Preliminary indications are the two men, both 24, died of an apparent drug overdoses. Their deaths were discovered Saturday. The Minot Police Department and Ward County Narcotics Task Force are investigating the deaths and are working on determining the type and source of the drugs involved. Authorities say they are concerned about the potential of other overdoses occurring. The names of the victims have not yet been released.
GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) — Police say a suspended driver is facing a list of possible charges after leading officers on a chase in Grand Forks. Authorities say the 51-year-old man was known to be a suspended driver when officers tried to stop him about 3:30 a.m. Monday. The driver pulled over, got out of his pickup as officers stopped him, but then got back behind the wheel and sped away. Officers used a blocking maneuver to bring the man’s vehicle to a stop and detain him. Police are recommending at least eight charges, including reckless endangerment and possessing illegal drugs.
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — A Republican state representative wants to become North Dakota’s next state health officer, a position from which three people have resigned during the unprecedented coronavirus pandemic. Rep. Rick Becker, who is a plastic surgeon in Bismarck, has a plan for addressing COVID-19 which calls for eliminating mass testing, contact tracing, guidelines for businesses and marketing campaigns for masking and social distancing. Interim State Health Officer Dr. Paul Mariani abruptly resigned after a close contact quarantine order, with a potential misdemeanor charge for violators, was rescinded one day after it was announced.
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments in a case that could result in the purging of about 130,000 people from voter rolls in the hotly contested battleground state. The arguments Tuesday come just five weeks before the election in one of several closely watched lawsuits in Wisconsin. However, it wasn’t clear if the court would rule in time to affect the Nov. 3 election that was just five weeks away. Attorneys for both sides didn’t expect a decision after the election. President Donald Trump won Wisconsin by fewer than 23,000 votes in 2016.
In sports…
Monday…
Blue Jays Girl’s Golf
Team results:
1. Century 332
2. Mandan 357
3. Legacy 362
4. Williston 363
5. Jamestown 368
6. Bismarck High 368
St. Mary’s 368
Minot 375
Dickinson 404
Watford City 556
Blue Jay results:
Kyra Vogel 90
Lauryn Hibl 92
Cora Wolsky 93
Bria Nieswaag 93
Olivia Sorlie 102
Grace LeFevre 113
Next up, Class A state tournament.
West Region Coach of the Year
Tracy Gustafson, Jamestown
Bella Dobrinski, Minot
Hi-Liner Boy’s Tennis…
Valley City wins 5-0 over West Fargo in a play-in match.
Today the Hi-Liners take on 2nd seed Grand Forks Red River in the quarter finals, of the North Dakota Eastern Dakota Conference Tournament in Grand Forks.
NDAPSSA H.S. Football Polls
(First-place votes in parenthesis)
Class AAA
Fifth Poll
Team Rec. Pts. LW
- Century (10) 3-0 80 1
- W.F. Sheyenne (5) 4-0 77 2
- Bismarck (4) 4-0 69 3
- Fargo Davies 4-0 35 4
- Fargo Shanley 3-1 15 5
Others receiving votes: Jamestown (4-0).
Class AA
Fifth Poll
Team Rec. Pts. LW
- Bis. St. Mary’s (19) 4-0 95 1
- Hillsboro/CV 4-1 73 2
- Kindred 2-0 49 3
- Beulah 3-1 46 4
- Central Cass 3-1 19 RV
Others receiving votes: Valley City (1-2).
UJ Men’s Golf
ELKHORN, Neb.– (uj.edu) The University of Jamestown men’s golf team is tied for sixth place after the first round of the Great Plains Athletic Conference Championship.
The Jimmies are tied with Dakota Wesleyan (S.D.) University after both teams shot a 31-over 319.
Morningside (Iowa) is in first at 7-over 295, followed by Doane (Neb.) at 15-over 303, and Northwestern (Iowa) at 19-over 307.
Tate Olson (JR/Cook, Minn.) carded the top score for UJ in round one, finishing at 2-over 74 which has him tied for sixth.
Jackson Worner (SO/West Fargo, N.D.) is 30th after a 9-over 81, followed by Treyton Forsman (JR/Lewiston, Idaho) and Hudson Roling (JR/Thermopolis, Wyo.), tied for 31st at 10-over 82. Benjamin Schaefer (FR/New Rockford, N.D.) is tied for 48th at 20-over 92.
Doane’s Conor Schubring leads the pack after a 2-under 70. Jonny Douglas of Morningside is second at even-par 72.
The second round of the Fall Championship begins Tuesday at 10 a.m.
UJ Men’s X-Country
DICKINSON, N.D.– (uj.edu) The University of Jamestown men’s cross country team saw its first action of the season Monday, coming in third place at the Shane Grever Invitational, hosted by Dickinson State University.
Noah Mang (JR/West Chester, Ohio) was the top finisher for UJ, finishing the 8K course in 29:48.3 to place 11th.
Andrew Hornung (SR/Jamestown, N.D.) and David Martin (SO/Wasco, Calif.) were the next two to cross the finish line, with Hornung 15th in 30:45.3 and Martin 16th in 31:14.4.
Obed Karege (JR/Amarillo, Texas) was 18th in 33:59.5, Elliot Quillon (FR/McKinney, Texas) 22nd in 36:49.0, and Jacob Juelfs (SR/Medina, N.D.) 23rd in 37:03.5.
Valley City State (N.D.) was first with 27 points, followed by Dickinson State with 33, and Jamestown 65.
The Jimmies will host the Jimmie Invitational at Parkhurst Cross Country Course on October 9.
UJ Women’s X-Country
DICKINSON, N.D. (uj.edu) — Three members of the University of Jamestown women’s cross country team saw their first action of the season Monday at the Shane Grever Invitational, hosted by Dickinson State University.
Allyson Schreiber (FR/Sparks, Nev.) covered the 5K course in 20:02.2 to place fifth.
Judies Yousa (FR/Fargo, N.D.) was 12th with a time of 22:26.7.
Jaymee George (SO/Jamestown, N.D.) ran 22:42.4 and placed 14th.
FERGUS FALLS, MINN. – VCSU junior Jocelyn Braunberger won medalist honors Monday as the Valley City State golf teams played their final tournament of the 2020 fall season.
Braunberger carded a round of 82 on Monday to best a field of 11 women’s golfers in the M-State Triangular played at Pebble Lake Golf Course in Fergus Falls, Minn. It was a career-best round for Braunberger and her fourth career victory.
Golfers battled windy conditions throughout the day and scattered precipitation in the morning.
The Viking men put together their best team score of the season Monday, carding a 317 to finish second in the three-team tournament. They were five shots back of M-State Fergus Falls, which won the triangular with a 312 total. VCSU’s 317 was 15 shots better than their team score Sunday on the same course.
VCSU’s Rory Gentzkow and Jayden Ewoniuk tied for third place individually after both shot rounds of 78 on Monday. Taylor Finlayson finished sixth with an 80 and Brady Warcken rounded out the team score with an 81 to place eighth.
Valley City State’s women shaved seven shots off their team score from Sunday on the same course. VCSU’s 364 was 10 shots back of champion Dickinson State. Hayley Shanks and Ashley McKittrick tied for sixth place after shooting rounds of 92, and Megan Haugrud placed 9th with a round of 98.
Up next: Valley City State golfers will take the winter off before resuming their season in early April.
NHL-STANLEY CUP FINAL
Bubble hockey champions: Tampa Bay Lightning win Stanley Cup
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — The Tampa Bay Lightning are the champions of bubble hockey.
Brayden Point scored his playoff-best 14th goal, and the Lightning beat the Dallas Stars 2-0 to win the Stanley Cup and finish off the NHL playoffs staged in quarantine during the pandemic.
The clock hitting zeros in an empty arena set off a wild celebration for a group that endured years of playoff heartbreak and two months in isolation.
Goals from Point and Blake Coleman and a 22-save shutout by Andrei Vasilevskiy were enough to power the Lightning to their second championship in franchise history after winning it in 2004.
Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. The playoffs became a showcase of the big Swede’s skills on both ends of the ice. He also showed key leadership in the absence of injured captain Steven Stamkos.
NHL-NEWS
Blackhawks acquire Pirri in trade with Golden Knights
CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Blackhawks have acquired Brandon Pirri in a trade with the Vegas Golden Knights, reuniting the forward with his first NHL team. The Blackhawks sent Dylan Sikura to Vegas for the 29-year-old Pirri, who split last season between the Golden Knights and Chicago of the American Hockey League. The forward had two assists in 16 games with Vegas and 15 goals and 20 assists in 38 games with Chicago.
Pirri was selected by the Blackhawks in the second round of the 2009 draft and made his NHL debut with the club in 2010.
NFL MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL…
BALTIMORE (AP) — Patrick Mahomes put on a scintillating show while outperforming Lamar Jackson, and the Kansas City Chiefs deftly played the role of defending Super Bowl champions in a 34-20 thumping of the Baltimore Ravens.
Just about everything Mahomes did worked against an overmatched Baltimore defense that had allowed only two touchdowns in its first two games. Mahomes threw four touchdown passes to help the Chiefs emphatically end the Ravens’ 14-game regular season winning streak while extending their own run to 12 games, including playoffs.
Jackson is 21-4 as the Ravens’ starting quarterback, with three of those losses to Mahomes and the Chiefs.
NBA NEWS
Doc Rivers out as Clippers’ coach, after seven seasons
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — Doc Rivers says he’s out as coach of the Los Angeles Clippers, though did not specify if he chose to leave on his own or if he was fired.
The Clippers say it was a mutual decision.
Rivers announced in a statement posted to Twitter that he is not returning as coach.
The move comes about two weeks after the Clippers wasted a 3-1 series lead and lost to the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference semifinals.
Rivers spent seven seasons with the Clippers, making the playoffs in six of them — major success for a once-woebegone franchise.
This season’s team, with the summer 2019 additions of Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, was expected to compete for an NBA championship.
NFL-NEWS
NFL’s Texans to allow fans for Vikings game
UNDATED (AP) — The Houston Texans will have up to 13,300 fans at NRG Stadium for their game Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.
The move comes after the Texans played without fans in their home opener on Sept. 20. The number of fans permitted is about 20% of stadium capacity. The team expects to allow the same number of fans at each of the remaining seven home games.
Fans age 10 and older will be required to wear masks while in the stadium unless they’re actively eating or drinking. No tailgating will be allowed.
In other NFL news:
— Chicago Bears coach Matt Nagy has confirmed Nick Foles will start at quarterback Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts. Nagy made the announcement today after hedging Sunday following the Bears’ 30-26 victory over the Atlanta Falcons. Foles had come on in relief of an ineffective Mitchell Trubisky.
— After completing a winless September with their 28-10 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sunday, the Broncos will now be without defensive lineman Jurrell Casey for the rest of the year. The 10th-year veteran and five-time Pro Bowler tore a biceps tendon in the game. He joins Von Miller, Courtland Sutton, Drew Lock and others who are sidelined so far in 2020. Denver has a short turnaround with a game Thursday night against the winless Jets.
— The Jacksonville Jaguars signed veteran place-kicker Steven Hauschka. He’s the team’s third kicker in the past week. Josh Lambo (hip) was placed on injured reserve last week. Jacksonville turned to undrafted rookie Brandon Wright against Miami. He missed an extra point and injured his groin. So Jacksonville will go with Hauschka at Cincinnati on Sunday.
— On second thought, Doug Pederson would not have played for a tie. The Philadelphia Eagles lined up for a 59-yard field goal on fourth-and-7 with 19 seconds left in overtime against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. After a false start penalty on Matt Pryor, Pederson elected to punt instead of going for it on fourth-and-12 from the Bengals 46 or letting Jake Elliott attempt a 64-yarder. After thinking about it overnight, Pederson changed his mind. Pederson said Monday he should’ve called a pass down the field on fourth-and-12 instead of punting.
MLB NEWS
Johnstone, 2-time WS champ and popular prankster, dies at 74
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jay Johnstone, who won World Series championships as a versatile outfielder with the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers while being baseball’s merry prankster, has died. He was 74.
His daughter, Mary Jayne Sarah Johnstone, says her father died last weekend of complications from COVID-19 and he also had suffered from dementia in recent years.
In the 1981 World Series, Johnstone had a pinch-hit, two-run homer in Game 4 that rallied the Dodgers to an 8-7 win over the Yankees.
In other baseball news:
— Slumping slugger Gary Sánchez will be benched in favor of Kyle Higashioka in the New York Yankees lineup for their wild-card opener. Yankees manager Aaron Boone confirmed Monday that Higashioka would catch ace Gerrit Cole to start the best-of-three series against the Cleveland Indians. With Giancarlo Stanton set to start at designated hitter, Sánchez — a two-time All-Star — won’t crack the starting lineup and will instead be available to pinch-hit.
TENNIS-FRENCH OPEN
Nadal, Williams advance
PARIS (AP) — Defending champion Rafael Nadal has reached the second round of the French Open after beating Egor Gerasimov 6-4, 6-4, 6-2. Nadal is looking for a record-extending 13th title at Roland Garros and a 20th major overall to equal Roger Federer’s men’s record.
— Also today, U.S. Open champion Dominic Thiem advanced to the second round by beating former U.S. Open champion Marin Cilic.
— Daniil Medvedev is now 0-4 for his career at the French Open. The runner-up at the U.S. Open last year and a semifinalist in New York last month failed yet again to win a match at Roland Garros. The fourth-seeded Russian lost to 63rd-ranked Marton Fucsovics 6-4, 7-6 (3), 2-6, 6-1.
— Tennys Sandgren has won an 11-9 fifth set to become the seventh American man to reach the second round at this year’s French Open — the most in nearly a quarter-century. Sandgren had been 0-3 at Roland Garros for his career until saving two match points and coming back to edge No. 29 seed Hubert Hurkacz of Poland in a match that lasted more than 4 1/2 hours.
— Qualifier Lorenzo Giustino took 6 hours, 5 minutes to beat Frenchman Corentin Moutet in the second-longest match in French Open history. The match was carried over from Sunday evening.
In women’s action, Serena Williams advanced to the second round of the French Open by beating Kristie Ahn. The 39-year-old Williams is a three-time French Open champion and is looking to equal Margaret Court’s record of 24 major titles.
— Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova advanced with a win over Oceane Dodin.
— Three-time Grand Slam champion Angelique Kerber lost in the first round of the French Open for the second straight year. The 18th-seeded German was beaten by 19-year-old Slovenian Kaja Juvan 6-3, 6-3.
— Two-time Grand Slam champion Svetlana Kuznetsova also went out. The 2009 French Open champion was beaten by Russian countrywoman Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
— Garbine Muguruza could have joined Kerber and Kuznetsova. But the 2016 French Open champion held firm to beat Tamara Zidansek 7-5, 4-6, 8-6.
Elsewhere at the French Open:
— The new roof over Court Philippe Chatrier is again proving its worth. The court hosted the only play as rain thwarted the start of all other matches at Roland Garros.
— A women’s doubles player has been removed from the main draw after she was declared a contact case following her coach’s positive coronavirus test. French Open organizers did not name the player. Doubles matches start on Wednesday.
VIRUS OUTBREAK-COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Notre Dame COVID-19 outbreak affects 39 players
UNDATED (AP) — Notre Dame says it has 39 football players in isolation or quarantine as it deals with the COVID-19 outbreak that forced the team to postpone last week’s game at Wake Forest.
The Fighting Irish are not slated to play again until Oct. 10 at home against Florida State.
In a news release, Notre Dame said 18 football players tested positive last week, seven of which had already been quarantined after contact tracing had determined they’d been exposed to people who had already been infected. The school says a total of 25 players were in isolation after testing positive and another 14 were being quarantined after contact tracing.
In other related virus news:
— Vanderbilt has changed its mind and will allow fans at sports events in October. The Commodores also will allow a limited number of students to attend Saturday night’s football game with No. 20 LSU. Athletic director Candice Lee announced the reversal Monday, calling it a small step toward normalcy based on the guidance from the university’s public health partners. Vanderbilt students are tested weekly with strict protocols on campus. The result is a low COVID-19 positivity rate.
HORSE RACING-PREAKNESS
Authentic favored against ten rivals
BALTIMORE (AP) — Kentucky Derby winner Authentic is the morning line favorite for Saturday’s Preakness in Baltimore. Authentic is 9-5 on the morning line and drew the No. 9 post in a field of 11 horses. The race will be run without spectators.
Art Collector, who was scratched from the Derby, appears to be the biggest threat to Authentic and is the 5-2 second choice.
In world and national news…
CLEVELAND (AP) — The first debate between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden looms as a milestone in an American election year like no other. It’s a potential pivot point for a race that has remained stubbornly unchanged in the face of historic tumult. But with partisan feelings hardened over the most polarizing of presidents, comparatively few undecided voters remain. That raises questions as to how, or if, Tuesday night’s debate might shape a race that has been defined by its bitterness and, at least so far, its stability.
AP-AS-CHINA-US-AMBASSADOR-INTERVIEW
AP Interview: US ambassador defends tough approach to China
BEIJING (AP) — The departing U.S. ambassador in Beijing is defending a tough approach to China that has riled relations between the world’s two largest economies. Terry Branstad says the Trump administration has made progress on trade and that he hopes it will extend to other areas including China’s treatment of diplomats and journalists. Branstad downplays the strained relationship, noting it has weathered ups and downs in the past. He concedes, though, that there is concern that pressure on China could lead to a downward spiral of growing restrictions. The longtime Iowa governor is returning to Iowa this weekend after three years and three months as ambassador. No successor has been named.
FRANCE-BELARUS
Macron meets Belarus opposition leader, pushes for mediation
BEIRUT (AP) — An international aid group is warning that an additional 700,000 children in Syria face hunger because of the country’s badly damaged economy and the impact of coronavirus restrictions. Save the Children said in a report released Tuesday that the new figures mean that in the last six months, the total number of food-insecure children across the country has risen to more than 4.6 million. After nearly a 10-year conflict that killed some 400,000 and displaced half the country’s population, Syria’s economy has been badly harmed by the war, widespread corruption, Western sanctions and a severe economic and financial crisis in neighboring Lebanon.
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. computer networks of a major hospital chain have been knocked offline in a cyberattack. Universal Health Services, which has more than 250 facilities in the U.S., acknowledged the outage Monday but would not confirm whether ransomware was responsible. Doctors and nurses at affected hospitals and clinics had to resort to paper records and described chaotic conditions, with lab work backed up. The company says no patient or employee data appears to have been accessed. The company also has hospitals in the United Kingdom, but a spokeswoman says its operations in that country were not affected.
NEW DELHI (AP) — The worldwide death toll from the coronavirus has eclipsed 1 million. The milestone, recorded by Johns Hopkins University, comes nine months into a crisis that has devastated the global economy, tested world leaders’ resolve, pitted science against politics and forced multitudes to change the way they live, learn and work. The virus has also spread untold misery. One million is greater than the population of Jerusalem or Austin, Texas. It is more than four times the number of people killed by the 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean. Even then, the toll is almost certainly a vast undercount because of inadequate or inconsistent testing and reporting. And more people are dying daily.
NEW YORK (AP) — Hundreds of thousands of elementary school students are heading back to classrooms Tuesday as New York City enters a high-stakes phase of resuming in-person learning during the coronavirus pandemic. The elementary school reopening was delayed twice and comes over objections from school principals who said the city’s complicated, changing plans put them in a staffing bind. Pre-kindergarteners and some special education students are already back in the city’s virus-altered version of in-person school, learning sometimes in classrooms and sometimes at home. In-person learning for middle and high school students is scheduled to begin Thursday.
Asian stock markets are mixed after Wall Street rallied ahead of a U.S. presidential election debate. London and Frankfurt opened lower while Shanghai and Tokyo gained. U.S. stock futures declined a day after Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 gained 1.6%, boosted by announcements of corporate acquisitions and gains for big tech stocks. Investors looked ahead to the first televised debate between President Donald Trump and his challenger in November, Joe Biden. It comes amid rising coronavirus deaths and trade tensions with China. Markets are watching for the November election’s impact on tax policy and how long it might take to determine the winner.
PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron is pushing for European mediation in the Belarus political crisis after a meeting with the country’s opposition leader. During a visit to Lithuania, Macron met Tuesday with Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the main opponent of Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko. Tsikhanouskaya went into exile in that country after the Aug. 9 presidential election in Belarus. Macron told reporters that “we had a very good discussion but now we need to be pragmatic and to support Belarus people and we will do all that.” Tsikhanouskaya told reporters that Macron promised ”to do everything to help with negotiations.” Opposition figures in Belarus say results that gave Lukashenko a sixth term in office were manipulated.
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