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Saturday, September 12, 2020

Tennis phenom Naomi Osaka pulls off comeback for U.S. Open win

Osaka humbly shared how the win against Victoria Azarenka was a full-circle moment for her

Naomi Osaka beat Belarusian tennis player Victoria Azarenka in Saturday’s U.S. Open final in New York to win her third Grand Slam title.

“First I want congratulate Vika,” The 22-year-old said after completing the match.  “I actually don’t want to play you in any more finals. I didn’t really enjoy that. It was a really tough match for me.”

Naomi Osaka of Japan celebrates with the trophy after winning her Women’s Singles final match against Victoria Azarenka of Belarus on Day Thirteen of the 2020 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2020 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

Osaka is the first woman in 26 years to win a U.S. Open final after losing the opening set. Even Lebron James sent a congrats to the young tennis star.

In the first set, Azarenka won 6-1. However, Osaka took the second and third sets both at 6-3, all while powering through her left hamstring injury. 

Osaka humbly shared how the win against Azarenka was a full-circle moment for her. 

Read More: Tennis star Naomi Osaka says her shyness ruined encounter with Jay-Z

“It’s really inspiring for me because I used to watch you play here when I was younger. So just to have the opportunity to play you is really great and I learned a lot, so thank you, ” Osaka said. 

After the match a reporter asked Osaka about her decision to wear seven different masks bearing the names of high-profile victims of police violence. 

“What was the message that you got?” she said.  “The point is to make people start talking.”

“For me, I’ve been inside of the bubble so I’m not really sure what’s really going on in the outside world. All I can tell is what’s going on on social media and for me I feel like the more retweets it gets – that’s so lame but … the more people talk about it.”

The coronavirus pandemic caused this event, like many other professional sports, to be played without fans. However her boyfriend, rapper Cordae cheered her on from the stands, while wearing a “defund the police” t-shirt. He jumped up with excitement when she took the victory. 

The game at Arthur Ashe Stadium was Osaka and Azarenka’s fourth matchup. They last met in the second round at the 2019 French Open, which Osaka won.

Read More: Statue to tennis star Arthur Ashe to stay put in Richmond after ‘White Lives Matter’ defacement

Two weeks prior, Osaka and Azarenka were scheduled to play in the Western & Southern Open final, but Osaka withdrew due to her injury.

The Women’s Tennis Association ranks Osaka No. 1 and she is the first Asian player to hold the top ranking in singles. She holds an undefeated 3-0 career record in the major finals.

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The post Tennis phenom Naomi Osaka pulls off comeback for U.S. Open win appeared first on TheGrio.



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Charles Barkley roasted LeBron James for wearing a durag

“The rag don’t do anything,” Barkley said.

Charles Barkley made fun of LeBron James, saying he should not wear a durag.

In a remark made by Barkley, James wearing a durag is pointless because he does not have a hairline.

READ MORE: LeBron James gets emotional during the filming of ‘Space Jam 2’

In an episode of Inside The NBA, after a close game between Los Angelos Lakers and Houston Rockets, he was spotted with durag, which made Barkley asked why.

“Did LeBron have a drag on?” Barkley said. “He don’t have enough hair for that to do anything.” 

“The rag don’t do anything,” Barkley said.

This is not the first time Barkley and company made of receding hairline.

On February 02, 2012, co-hosts Shaq, Kenny Smith, and Ernie Johnson Jr. along with Barkley mocked the star player’s hairline prior.

“Come on home, brah. Shave your head.” Barkley, who is bald said. Barkley then sported a headband, impersonating James’ balding like head.

“LeBron James started the NBA like this,” Barkley said wearing the band as one would normally wear it.

“Now, it is like this,” Barkley said as he then shifted the band irregularly to demonstrate how James’ hairline was moving away from his forehead as he became more established in the league.

James is a good sport about his depeting hair, and later followed up that episode by calling Shaq, Kenny, and Barkley “three bald-headed stooges” on the TNT program.

Although James’ hair has improved since the interview, James continues to mock himself from time to time.

READ MORE: LeBron James says he can’t celebrate playoff win after Jacob Blake shooting

Of course, James’ own teammates have mock his exposed bald spots and pushed back hairline.

In 2011,when he turned 27 years old during his tenure at the Heat, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade roasted the young James, calling him old.

The post Charles Barkley roasted LeBron James for wearing a durag appeared first on TheGrio.



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Mom and Daughter Make History, Open Black-Owned Shell Gas Station in Florida

lashawn flowers gas station

Meet 51-year old Lashawn Flowers and her 35-year old daughter, Shanita Vickers, the new owners of the only Black-owned gas station in Hollywood, Florida, and possibly the only Black-owned gas station in all of South Florida. As Shell franchisees, they are making history as women entrepreneurs and causing quite a stir on social media.

Lashawn and her daughter, who both grew up in Deerfield Beach, Florida, began their roots in entrepreneurship as the owners of a local hair and nail salon called Girlz Collectionz and later a local bar and nightclub called Groove City Bar & Lounge, which is currently closed because of the pandemic. Having to pivot sparked the idea of purchasing a gas station.

“We actually purchased two Shell gas stations,” says Lashawn. “We were able to negotiate a two-for-one deal.”

She says the process of purchasing two franchises was not hard, but it was a fairly tedious process. After completing a credit application, she had to prove that financially she really did have the capital to complete the purchase. The whole process, however, took just three weeks.

Keeping it in the family

Lashawn says that she and her daughter are partners in this business, and are partners in their other businesses as well.

“I really value having a family-owned business because family is who you can trust,” she says. “My daughter, Shanita, is a wonderful mom of two beautiful children and also a phenomenal entrepreneur who is awesome to work with. We work well together because we understand each other.”


Hard work pays off

But having her daughter at her side doesn’t mean that she underestimates the value of hard work. “I don’t believe in failing in anything I do,” Lashawn adds. “If you don’t work your business, it won’t be a success. You absolutely must put in the hard work.”

Their work ethic is already paying off because they are already receiving on-air shout outs from the likes of Rickey Smiley, not to mention that their story has already gone viral on social media which has sparked a huge influx of new customers.

Their Shell gas station is located at 2501 North University Drive, Hollywood, FL 33034, and they are already planning to open their second gas station in early 2021 possibly in West Palm Beach.



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Iran executes wrestler whose life Trump asked to be spared


TEHRAN — Iran’s state TV is reporting that the country’s authorities have executed a wrestler for allegedly murdering a man after President Donald Trump asked for the 27-year-old condemned man’s life to be spared.

State TV quoted the chief justice of Fars province, Kazem Mousavi as saying on Saturday: “The retaliation sentence against Navid Afkari, the killer of Hassan Turkman, was carried out this morning in Adelabad prison in Shiraz.”

Afkari’s case had drawn the attention of a social media campaign that portrayed him and his brothers as victims targeted over participating in protests against Iran’s Shiite theocracy in 2018. Authorities accused Afkari of stabbing a water supply company employee in the southern city of Shiraz amid the unrest.

Iran broadcast the wrestler’s televised confession last week. The segment resembled hundreds of other suspected coerced confessions aired over the last decade in the Islamic Republic.

The case revived a demand inside the country for Iran to stop carrying out the death penalty. Even imprisoned Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, herself nearly a month into a hunger strike over conditions at Tehran’s Evin prison amid the coronavirus pandemic, passed word that she supported Afkari.

Earlier, the U.S. president Donald tweeted out his own concern about Afkari’s case.

“To the leaders of Iran, I would greatly appreciate if you would spare this young man’s life, and not execute him,” Trump wrote last week. “Thank you!”

Iran responded to Trump’s tweet with a nearly 11-minute state TV package on Afkari. It included the weeping parents of the slain water company employee, Hassan Torkaman. The package included footage of Afkari on the back of a motorbike, saying he had stabbed Torkaman in the back, without explaining why he allegedly carried out the assault.

The state TV segment showed blurred police documents and described the killing as a “personal dispute,” without elaborating. It said Afkari’s cellphone had been in the area and it showed surveillance footage of him walking down a street, talking on his phone.

Also, Iran’s semiofficial Tasnim news agency dismissed Trump’s tweet in a feature story, saying that American sanctions have hurt Iranian hospitals amid the pandemic.

“Trump is worried about the life of a murderer while he puts many Iranian patients’ lives in danger by imposing severe sanctions,” the agency said.



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Biden’s transition team, fearing Trump’s moves, sets massive fundraising goal


Joe Biden’s transition team has expanded its fundraising goal far beyond what Hillary Clinton raised in 2016, anticipating that, should they prevail in November, the Trump administration could actively work against their efforts and that the coronavirus pandemic will make a presidential changeover more difficult than ever.

The Biden transition team is aiming to raise at least $7 million by Election Day and build a staff of at least 350 people, according to a person familiar with the transition’s planning, while another person said the total fundraising goal is $7 million to $10 million.

The budget far exceeds the $2.1 million that Clinton raised for her transition planning by Election Day 2016, or the $6.5 million Trump’s transition raised before he assumed the presidency. Mitt Romney in 2012 raised $8.9 million for what is considered the most robust prior effort to plan a transition hand-off between two different parties.

Several people involved in raising money for Biden’s transition said the pitch to potential donors leans on fears that President Donald Trump will not ease the handover process if he loses. That possible complication, along with the dueling health and economic crises hitting the country, will require more staffing and resources for a Biden administration-in-waiting.

“They’re quietly organizing people to say, this is going to be a very, very difficult transition,” said a California-based strategist who advises Democratic donors and requested anonymity to detail the fundraising pitch and other sensitive conversations about the Biden transition. “Trump is going to make this extremely difficult, so we need to be prepared.”

But a person close to the transition said that Trump’s potential to disrupt the process was not part of the pitch but may have come up in response to questions.


Evan Ryan, former Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs during the Obama administration and the spouse of longtime Biden advisor Tony Blinken, is helping to lead the fundraising effort. The group has also hired Marcus Switzer, a Democratic fundraiser who worked on Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign.

Erskine Bowles, White House chief of staff to Bill Clinton and a former longtime member of Facebook’s board, is also involved. A person close to the transition said Bowles was offering advice and context as a veteran of past administrations.

Money raised for the transition fund covers a range of bureaucratic priorities, particularly salaries for staff and advisers working on the incoming administration’s policies. After a winner is declared, the federal government also kicks in money to help cover transition costs for the president-elect.

Two people involved in Biden transition fundraising said it has already brought in at least $2 million, and one person said the transition has already raised $3 million. The committee declined to comment.

But one former Obama administration official said they were worried that the Biden effort wasn’t robust enough. “Given the enormity of the crises facing the country right now and the certainty that Trump will not go quietly, it’s concerning to me that their ambition of scale is lower than Romney’s,” the official said.

Former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, who headed Romney’s transition, said it was difficult to gauge the preparedness of the team based on fundraising alone. “A lot of this depends on how many operate as volunteers and how many operate on salaries,” he told POLITICO.

People involved in the Biden transition emphasized that it is not diverting resources from the election. Instead, they said, the transition team is approaching donors who have already contributed the maximum amount to the Biden campaign and to the Democratic National Committee. Individual donations to the transition are capped at $5,000.

Biden’s campaign is far from facing a cash crunch as it heads into the fall. Last month, it smashed fundraising records by bringing in a record $365 million along with the Democratic National Committee and affiliated groups, outraising Trump by $154 million.

“It’s prudent to raise as much as you can as early as you can,” said one former Democratic fundraiser who has advised previous transitions. The fundraiser continued: “The cost for staffing this effort balloons very quickly, especially when we can expect the briefing book that may be provided by the Trump administration to the Biden administration will contain a whole lot of nothing. They’ll literally be starting from scratch.”


Raising money for the transition is a discreet enterprise, as donors said they want to avoid the appearance of presumptuousness during the election. A memo obtained by POLITICO earlier this summer urged donors involved in the effort to keep it “quiet” so “we do not distract attention from the core task of winning the election.”

Earlier this month, the Biden campaign rolled out a long list of new hires to the transition committee, including advisers and co-chairs. They included both people from the left and the center as the Biden effort tries to show a united front after a divisive primary.

The transition also includes many veterans of the Obama administration, particularly those who served in the vice president’s office and are considered loyal lieutenants. Back in June, the Biden campaign announced that Ted Kaufman, Biden’s former chief of staff and Senate successor, would oversee the transition effort.

The transition fund isn’t the only post-election vehicle that could help with a potentially rocky transfer of power. High-dollar donors are also fielding appeals to give to legal and recount funds through the DNC. One Democratic strategist said that those who are giving to the transition fund “are individuals who are interested in agency assignments and ambassadorships.”

But other bundlers said they’ve “only gotten ‘yeses’ from donors” when asked to give to the transition.

“The reason is fairly obvious: The things that we need to do to unravel the mess that Trump has created is going to take a substantial amount of time and money,” said one Democratic donor, who is not directly involved in the transition effort. “This is a transition like no other.”



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