SPORTS
The land under this stadium once belonged to them. They want it back.
Published
7 hours agoon
By
Lynn Straub
LOS ANGELES. Standing less than a mile from Dodger Stadium on a recent Saturday afternoon, Vincent Montalvo could hear the roar of the stadium crowd.
It was Jackie Robinson Day, and more than 50,000 fans settled into their seats, waiting for the game against the Chicago Cubs. But Montalvo had no intention of attending.
It’s been over 30 years since he stepped foot in Dodger Stadium. His father took him to the baseball stadium when he was a child in the 1980s during “Fernandomania”, a craze for star Mexican pitcher Fernando Valenzuela.
But the seemingly harmless act of attending this game has deepened the wound that festered in the Montalvo family and the city’s Hispanic community. Paying off this pain was a challenge for the Dodgers as the team struggled to strike a balance between acknowledging this and expanding the team’s broad Hispanic fanbase.
Long before the Dodgers won their first World Series at Dodger Stadium in 1963 and Sandy Koufax played the team’s first flawless game in 1965, the land on which the football stadium was built was home to hundreds of families who lived in communities called Palo Verde, La Loma and Bishop. .
These neighborhoods and their residents were relocated in the 1950s by the City of Los Angeles, citing affordable housing plans. But the land was eventually given to the Dodgers to build a baseball stadium after the team moved to the city from Brooklyn in the late 50s. The area is now commonly referred to as Chavez Gorge, a term that has become synonymous with Dodger Stadium.
Montalvo’s grandparents were born and raised in Palo Verde. Even though Montalvo’s father didn’t know about it before going to that game in the 80s, Montalvo’s grandfather was outraged that they visited the baseball stadium that replaced his neighborhood.
“We never came back,” Montalvo said.
The story of this move is detailed in books, news articles and videos. But in recent years, descendants of marginalized communities in California have been successful in obtaining restitution for land taken from them in the form of money or land back. Inspired by this momentum, the descendants of the three communities of Los Angeles see a chance to achieve their own justice. The land on which Dodger Stadium was built should be returned to them.
Bought out or pushed out
Grandpa Montalvo was reluctant to talk about his life in Palo Verde for a long time. But over time, Montalvo gathered little information about the community, including that many residents supported themselves by growing their own food.
“It was like their little oasis,” Montalvo said.
But in the early 1950s, the city of Los Angeles began to displace the residents of Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop through voluntary purchases and eminent domains with plans to build an apartment complex in the area.
It was never built, and eventually, after the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles, the team acquired ownership of the land. The condition was to build a stadium with a capacity of at least 50,000 people.
The process of resettling 300 families from the area was long and painful for many residents. While many sold their land to the city, others held on.
The last of the families was forcibly evicted by sheriff’s deputies in May 1959. One woman, Aurora Vargas, known as Lola, was notorious for being carried out of her home by police officers. Article in Los Angeles Times On May 9, 1959, the scene is described as a “long shootout”. Vargas kicked and screamed, and the children “howled hysterically,” the newspaper reported.
A few years later, 48-year-old Melissa Arechiga learned about the eviction from her mother and that Vargas was her aunt Lola. Arechiga found it hard to believe.
“When she told me it was more like something out of a movie,” Arechiga said.
Start of movement
Montalvo and Arechiga met in 2018 and founded Buried Under the Blue, a non-profit organization that seeks to raise awareness of the displacement history of Palo Verdean, La Loma, and Bishop residents.
As the so-called land recovery movements gained momentum, Montalvo and Arechiga worked to determine what reparations meant to them and how to get them.
“We know we’re going uphill,” Montalvo said. “But we also know this: Now in politics, both up and down, it’s time for reparations.”
These reparations in California were reinforced by the history of Bruce Beach, a property that was bought by a black couple, Charles and Willa Bruce, in 1912 in what would become the city of Manhattan Beach, California. The land was taken from the Bruces in 1924 when city officials denounced it as eminent domain, saying it was needed for a public park.
Last year, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted to transfer ownership of the land to the great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren of Charles and Willa Bruce. They sold the land to the county for $20 million.
Those buried under Blue and the descendants of those who were displaced have political support, including from Younice Hernandez, a member of the Los Angeles City Council, who said she supports them.
“A lot of times we find ourselves in these situations because companies, corporations, people with big money think that other communities are worthless,” Hernandez said. “We are still facing these moments even today, and so we must demand that these corporations, these companies give back to the communities what they have taken.”
But Hernandez said she would like to see a concrete plan from the organizers of what the reparations would look like before moving forward.
Buried Under the Blue leaders also met with descendants of indigenous tribes that once lived in the Los Angeles basin. They say that in a real land recovery effort, the land must be returned to the indigenous groups who were the original inhabitants.
“There can be no real return of the land without the participation of indigenous peoples,” Arechiga said.
Even if the land is returned to the descendants of the indigenous tribes, displaced homeowners and tenants still deserve financial compensation for their investment in the community, Montalvo said.
Buried Under the Blue has yet to determine what it will do with the land if it is ever returned, and it’s unclear if that ever will happen or how long it will take.
At Dodger Stadium
Chavez Gorge is home to one of baseball’s most iconic stadiums, tucked away between the San Gabriel Mountains and downtown Los Angeles. Dodger Stadium hosts dozens of games a year, as well as concerts and other events. One of the richest teams in Major League Baseball plays here.
Effectively ousting the Dodgers may seem unimaginable to some.
“It’s going to take a long time,” Hernandez said. “They are not going to oppose a small company. It is a brand and a company that is known across the country and around the world, and so I just think that people need to get organized and get as many people, power and support as possible to meet their demands.”
These days, when strolling through Dodger Stadium, fans almost immediately encounter Spanish in several forms.
There are fans who speak Spanish, others who speak Spanish. Julio Urias, Dodgers pitcher from Mexico, enters the pitch to “Soy Sinaloense” – I’m Sinaloan – Gerardo Ortiz. At Dodger Stadium, fans wear Los Dodgers jerseys and T-shirts, and the restrooms and other areas of the stadium are signposted in English and Spanish.
The Dodgers built their Hispanic fan base, one of the largest in Major League Baseball, thanks in part to their long history of fielding Hispanic players, including Valenzuela and Adrian Gonzalez.
However, building this Hispanic support took time after the displacement of so many Mexican American families in the late 1950s. Adrian Burgos, a professor at the University of Illinois who teaches race, sports, and society, said the expulsion of locals “created a very bad relationship between the Mexican American community and the Dodgers.”
“It really doesn’t change much before Fernando,” Burgos said, referring to Valenzuela. “He started letting Mexicans cheer for the Dodgers.”
Margaret Salazar-Porcio, a curator at the National Museum of American History who has worked on initiatives such as Latinos and Baseball: In the Barrios and the Major Leagues, said Valenzuela’s arrival with the Dodgers was a sort of “symbolic reconciliation with many Latinos.” in Los Angeles at this time.
“He is somewhat like your uncle or brother,” said Salazar-Porzio. “Fernando Valenzuela gave the Mexican Angelenos a reason to celebrate and come to the games.”
The Dodgers also hosted the first full-time Spanish-language broadcast in MLB, under announcer René Cárdenas, who was joined by Jaime Harrin.
“He very quickly became one of the most recognizable voices in Los Angeles Hispanic families,” Salazar-Porcio said of Harrin. “He brought the Dodgers to our homes.”
Amendment
Since the 1980s, the Dodgers have continued to grow their Hispanic fan base with the help of players like Urias, who was at the top of his game. 2020 Team World Series final win.
But the team, which did not comment on this article, was still puzzling over how to make amends with the displaced residents and their descendants.
In 2000, team officials, including former president Bob Graziano, joined the former residents and their families in a ceremony at the church. It is reported by The Los Angeles Times. that one former resident even hugged Gratiano at the ceremony and they took communion together.
The story of the displacement of residents in Palo Verde, La Loma and Bishop was news to some Dodgers fans, especially the younger ones. It’s hard for some to believe that a team that built such a large Hispanic fan base is playing in a land that was once owned by so many Hispanic families.
Some fans, like 23-year-old Manny Truchio, say they “know the basics of it.” Others, like Louis Montes, 29, say they don’t know anything about history.
“It’s easier to forgive if it’s not your family members who were forcibly taken out,” Burgos said. “The reality is that most of the Dodger fans we see in the stadium today are much younger and their grandparents may have heard about it and knew about it.”
Salazar-Porzio, for example, said she didn’t know the history of Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop until she went to college. The story prompted her to learn more about the layers of resettlement, starting with the city’s plan for affordable housing.
“Some people understand this distinction,” Salazar-Porcio said. The Dodgers did play their part, but it wasn’t like the Dodgers kicked out the people of Chavez Gorge.”
She said learning about the story also made Salazar-Porzio think about how she felt about the team, having grown up playing Dodgers games.
“It’s very difficult,” she said. “All this happened, but all this also happened. I’m really proud of the memories I have with my father, Fernando Valenzuela. This personal connection is the layer of my story with which I choose myself.”
Most of the former residents of Palo Verde, La Loma and Bishop are now in their 90s. As they get older, Arechiga and Montalvo say their grandparents still often don’t want to talk about that period of their lives.
Correcting their “painful history” serves as a motivation for making amends, Montalvo said.
Taking back the land and effectively driving out the Dodgers was next to impossible. But Arechiga said her family is hopeful.
“They also wonder: is it possible? Can it be obtained?” Arechiga said. “We believe it is.”
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UFC 288 broadcast accidentally insults Russell Westbrook in bizarre graphics
Published
7 hours agoon
May 7, 2023By
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Russell Westbrook unexpectedly got lost on Saturday night during UFC 288 and wasn’t even in the Prudential Center building in Newark, NJ.
During Saturday’s UFC event headlined by Aljamain Sterling and Henry Cejudo, Daniel Cormier revealed his keys to defeating Gilbert Burns in his second welterweight bout against Belal Muhammad.
Cormier’s list, which appeared as a drawing called “DC’s Keys to Victory” for viewers watching TV at home, included three instructions for Burns; Close the Distance, Safe Takedowns, and Don’t Be Russell Westbrook.
Russell Westbrook caught a tramp pic.twitter.com/fZzsaRrleg
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Cormier attempted to draw a comparison between Burns’ attempts to become a UFC champion and Westbrook’s NBA career, during which the ring eluded him. Westbrook reached the NBA Finals with the Thunder in 2011–2012, but Oklahoma City lost to the Heat in five games. He has not returned to the final since.
Burns, on the other hand, entered Saturday’s fight against Muhammad, needing a win to earn the title shot that Dana White had previously guaranteed the winner at UFC 288.
Unfortunately, it does not appear that Burns followed the strategy recommended by Cormier with sufficient accuracy. A title shot was on the line, and the 36-year-old Brazilian was defeated by a decision after five rounds.
After losing at UFC 288, Burns posted a career high of 22-6-0.
SPORTS
Canelo Alvarez beats the valiant John Ryder in a raucous homecoming in Mexico | boxing
Published
11 hours agoon
May 7, 2023By
Lynn Straub
Canelo Alvarez made a victorious return to Mexican soil after a 12-year absence on Saturday night, winning a wide decision over a bloodied but defiant John Ryder, successfully defending his undisputed 168-pound title in front of a roaring hometown crowd.
The 32-year-old four-division champion from Guadalajara broke Ryder’s nose in the third round, landed a heavy knockdown in the fifth, and poured punishment in the later stages when the gap in skill and class between the super middleweights became apparent. . The resilient Londoner refused to give up and surprisingly recreated his best moments of the night in the final stretch, but had to settle for an ennobling defeat after finishing the fight on his feet in front of more than 50,000 rowdy spectators at Akron Stadium.
One of the ringside judges was stern, scoring the lockout at 120–107, while the other two dealt cards at 118–109. (The Guardian had 117-110.)
Ryder, a 34-year-old southpaw from Islington nicknamed The Gorilla, fought bravely from start to finish and showed his best against a weary champion when the outcome was far out of reach. counted.
It was Álvarez’s 35th professional fight in Mexico, but the first since 26 November 2011 when he stopped Kermit Cintron in five rounds in the third defense of his WBO junior middleweight title. So much has happened since then: Alvarez added titles at 160, 168 and 175 pounds, creating a resounding atmosphere on Saturday at the sprawling home of Liga MX team CD Guadalajara, which is expected to host the 2026 World Cup.
“This is a historic moment for me,” Alvarez later said in much-improved English. “I am happy to be here with my people who supported me from the very beginning. I am happy to be here and grateful (for being here) with my people.”
Alvarez was constantly landing, hitting the body with a left hand from the first bell, while Ryder’s measured activity from a distance did not allow the champion to land combinations during the first two rounds. But the Briton’s solid start was abruptly halted at the start of the third fight when Alvarez’s hard right hand exploded right into his nose, from which blood immediately began to flow, which covered both fighters during periods of fight. Encouraged, Alvarez, not caring about Ryder’s strength, began to go into his pocket, landing devastating blows to the ribs, expecting Ryder to drop his glove long enough to close the show with an overhand right hand.
The one-way drive continued until the fifth, when Alvarez landed a devastating one-two combination that threw his opponent to the tarp along the ropes and ignited the crowd. Ryder bravely got to his feet at nine before incredibly reaching the bell with sheer willpower.
Alvarez continued to punish for the next three rounds, rocking Ryder several times with devastating blows to the head and stomach. But the challenger held his own, even as he stood in his corner between rounds in a desperate attempt to revive his rubber legs.
Ryder almost went down again in the ninth round with a series of crippling right punches thrown in the worst possible way, but somehow remained upright. The referee stepped forward towards the end of the frame, but the close inspection only seemed to motivate Ryder, who fired back just enough to buy himself more time. For what purpose, given the skewed scorecards, was unclear.
The knockout that seemed like a fait accompli just a couple of rounds ago never happened. An increasingly frustrated Alvarez seemed to tire out over the last three sessions, reduced to throwing single right hand punches while hitting the show stopper as a busier Ryder launched combos on resurrected legs. By that point, the result was in no doubt, but the Brit, showing tenacity, courage and resilience in extreme conditions, will undoubtedly lead to profitable opportunities to move forward.
“Maybe he’s not in the best shape anymore, he couldn’t get me out, he wanted to stop me, but he couldn’t,” Ryder said at a press conference. “Things could have been a little different if not for the problem with my nose. It took me a few rounds to get used to.”
Alvarez praised Ryder for being a “very strong fighter”, adding that his own status as boxing’s biggest star tends to cause it in his opponents.
“He’s a very strong fighter, man,” said Alvarez, who landed 179 of 459 punches (39%) compared to Ryder’s 80 of 457 (17.5%), according to Compubox’s punch stats. “When they go to all [all four championship belts], they turn it on. They become more difficult than usual. But I know it. I have been in this position for a long time and I know. I respect my opponents because I know they are ready for anything.”

Alvarez entered a Saturday fight after 2022 that didn’t impress his sky-high standards. Moving up in weight to fight light heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol ended with his first loss in nine years before he settled for a decision win in the trilogy’s climactic date with a faded Gennady Golovkin. Then came a long-delayed operation on his left arm, which he said took several rounds on Saturday to feel normal.
“[The left hand] felt really good,” Alvarez said. “Not at the beginning. “It took me a couple of rounds, three rounds to start hitting to know that I was doing well with my hand. But now I know.”
No sooner had Alvarez crowned himself with the gilded laurels of the winner than he called Bivol, a rematch that both fighters want, but which can be difficult to negotiate. Alvarez wants the rematch to take place at light heavyweight, where he will be a significant underdog but will also retain his WBA, WBC, WBO and IBF super middleweight titles if he loses again. Bivol insisted that the fight take place at 168 pounds, which is much more comfortable for Canelo, but which gives him the opportunity to win all four of Alvarez’s super middleweight championship belts.
“The same rules, the same conditions, everything is the same,” Alvarez said. “Everyone knows that we want a rematch with Bivol, (but) if there is no fight with Bivol, then we’ll see. I can fight everyone.”
SPORTS
Joel Embiid of the 76ers starts Game 2 with a 15-point loss to the Celtics.
Published
4 days agoon
May 4, 2023By
Lynn Straub
-
Tim Bontemps, ESPNMay 3, 2023 10:46 AM ET
BOSTON — Philadelphia 76ers superstar center Joel Embiid, who was named NBA Most Valuable Player Tuesday night, returned from a right knee LCL strain and started Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Semifinal Series in a 121-87 loss to Boston. Celtics Wednesday night.
Embiid had 15 points, three rebounds and five blocks in 27 minutes.
On Wednesday evening, he went through his usual pre-match training with a knee brace and moved around without any problems. Embiid was ruled out 90 minutes before the Sixers won Game 1 on Monday night.
He was the last player to appear on the court during the shootout on Monday morning, but on Wednesday, when the team arrived at TD Garden, everything changed. Embiid was the first player to enter the arena bowl, quickly put on his shoes, and began filming footage for several minutes before the 15-minute media review period expired and filming began.
When asked how he was feeling after the firefight, Embiid said that there was a “possibility” to return, but he would rely on the advice of the team’s medical staff.
“I’m going to listen to these guys and see what they have to say, doctors, and obviously I want to play,” Embiid said. “Everyone who knows me, I just love being on the court and I love playing. There’s an opportunity, and if I get the green light, we’ll go ahead.
“But I feel pretty good, just like in the last game. I felt like we had a huge opportunity and we were going to win, and tonight, whether I play or not, I believe in these guys.
Embiid went through a full workout on Tuesday, which sources said went well, but the determining factor for Game 2 will be how his knee responds to that strain.
“It’s just health related,” 76ers coach Doc Rivers said Tuesday afternoon. “If he can play, he plays. If he can’t, he can’t. And if it’s 50/50, we’ll probably err the other way. [and not have him play]because we’ve been doing it all year.”
Philadelphia are looking to take a 2-0 lead in this best-of-seven series after James Harden’s impressive 45-point play stunned the Celtics in Game 1.
Embiid was injured on April 20 when he landed awkwardly after contesting a shot by Brooklyn Nets forward Cam Johnson in Game 3 of Philadelphia’s first round.


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