Photos show the scene in Beirut's Jnah area after an Israeli airstrike hits Lebanese capital

BEIRUT (AP) — An Israeli strike hit a building in a Beirut neighborhood just south of the heart of the Lebanese capital overnight. Cars were set ablaze as rescue workers rushed to search for victims. At least five people were killed and 21 others were wounded in the attack that came without warning, according to Lebanon's Health Ministry.

Associated Press A firefighter extinguishes a car at the site of Israeli airstrikes, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) Firefighters and rescue workers work at the site of Israeli airstrikes, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) People stand near a damaged van beside scattered debris following an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) Rescue workers inspect the scene of an Israeli airstrike as fires burn among damaged vehicles, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) A shoe lies amid debris as a man rides a scooter past the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) Rescue workers inspect the scene of Israeli airstrikes, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) Firefighters and rescue workers inspect the site of Israeli airstrikes, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) Two men ride scooters past charred debris at the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) Rescue workers inspect the scene of an Israeli airstrike as fires burn among damaged vehicles, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) A police vehicle is seen through a shattered windshield at the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) A man rides a scooter past a burned tree and charred debris following an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

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Associated Press photographers at the scene said first responders were recovering victims as firefighters scrambled to tackle the fire. Jnah is a residential neighborhood that also has a busy commercial area.

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The Israeli military said it conductedovernight strikes targeting members of the Hezbollah militant group.

This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Photos show the scene in Beirut's Jnah area after an Israeli airstrike hits Lebanese capital

BEIRUT (AP) — An Israeli strike hit a building in a Beirut neighborhood just south of the heart of the Lebanese capital o...
Supreme Court weighs Trump's contentious attempt to limit birthright citizenship

WASHINGTON — Tackling one of President Donald Trump's most provocative policies, the Supreme Court on Wednesday considers the lawfulness of his proposal to limit the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship for people born on U.S. soil.

NBC Universal Olga Urbina and her 9 months son Ares Webster participate in a protest outside the US Supreme Court (Drew Angerer / AFP via Getty Images)

Announced on the first day of Trump's second term in office as part of his hard-line immigration policy, theexecutive orderat issue would limit birthright citizenship to people who have at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen or a permanent resident.

As a result, babies born to temporary visitors who entered the country legally or to people who entered illegally would not be citizens at birth.

Trump said Tuesday heplans to attend the oral argumentin person, which would be a first for a sitting president.

His executive order upends the traditional understanding of a provision of the Constitution's 14th Amendment known as the citizenship clause.

"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States," the clause states.

The clause, ratified with the amendment after the Civil War to provide equal rights to formerly enslaved Black people, has long been assumed by officials at all levels of the government to apply to almost anyone born in the United States, regardless of the legal status of their parents.

The few exceptions understood at the time included children born to diplomats and foreign invaders.

Trump's executive order was immediately blocked by courts around the country and has never been in effect. Most legal experts predict he faces an uphill battle to win the case.

The plan, if it were implemented, would affect thousands of babies born every year across the U.S.

One woman, who asked not to be identified to protect her family, was heavily pregnant last year when she heard about the executive order. Originally from Argentina, she now lives in Florida on a student visa and was immediately alarmed about what legal status her child would have.

"My baby was actually going to be one of the first ones impacted. I immediately went into panic mode," she said in an interview.

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Determined to make sure her now-8-month-old son's citizenship was secured, she started making arrangements to apply for a passport for him before he was even born.

Although her son now has his passport, she said she is deeply sympathetic to other families expecting babies who remain unsure what will happen.

"I know there's probably a lot of different families and moms, pregnant moms, in my situation that are probably stressed," she said.

The administration's legal argument focuses on the "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" language in the citizenship clause, saying it has a much broader meaning than hitherto believed.

Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued in court papers that the citizenship clause was intended to apply primarily to the children of free slaves. People must be under the direct "political jurisdiction" of the U.S. and not have any allegiance to another country, he wrote.

He cited, among other things, the 1884 Supreme Court ruling in a case called Elk v. Wilkins that spelled out why Native Americans did not, at the time, have birthright citizenship. That case "squarely rejected the premise that anyone born in U.S. territory, no matter the circumstances, is automatically a citizen so long as the federal government can regulate them," Sauer wrote.

Experts on Native American law have questioned the government's reliance on that case,telling NBC Newsit was limited specifically to the unique status of tribes under U.S. law.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which is leading the legal challenge to Trump's executive order, responded in its brief that the text of the 14th Amendment is largely self-explanatory, as are the history and tradition of how it has been interpreted.

The group's lawyers also point to an 1898 Supreme Court ruling called United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which concluded that a man born in San Francisco to parents who were both from China was a U.S. citizen.

In addition to probing the language of the 14th Amendment, the justices may also examine whether the executive order falls afoul of a federal immigration law that usessimilar language, including "subject to the jurisdiction thereof." The court could rule that the executive order is unlawful under that law without having to decide the 14th Amendment question and put the onus on Congress to act.

The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority, whichrepeatedly ruled in Trump's favorlast year. But the court handed him amajor defeatin February when it ruled that his broad use of tariffs was unlawful.

Trump responded to that ruling withharsh criticismof the justices who voted against him in the 6-3 decision, calling them "disloyal to the Constitution."

Supreme Court weighs Trump's contentious attempt to limit birthright citizenship

WASHINGTON — Tackling one of President Donald Trump's most provocative policies, the Supreme Court on Wednesday consi...
They're in a race to save their children with a rare disease. A newly approved drug has given them hope.

Ever since her 15-year-old son Cole was diagnosed with a rare, progressive illness called Hunter syndrome when he was 2, Kim Stephens has been waiting. Waiting to see if Cole will lose his ability to walk. Waiting to see if Cole, who stopped speaking at about 9 years old, will lose more cognitive skills. And waiting in agony each year to see if Cole will be able to celebrate another birthday, since Hunter syndrome often kills before age 21.

NBC Universal Kim Stephens, her son Cole Stephens Mausolf and their dog, Rosie. Cole, 15, has a form of Hunter syndrome that has a life expectancy of about 10 to 20 years.  (Allison M. Donnelly for NBC News)

Stephens has been waiting for something else, too: hope for a medical breakthrough.

Last week, she got that when the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval for arevolutionary new drugfor Hunter syndrome. It was a development Stephens worried she would not see during Cole's lifetime.

"I've been in fight-or-flight mode since his diagnosis," said Stephens, who lives in Carrboro, North Carolina. Now, she said, "I can breathe."

Cole loves doing puzzles, which his mother, seen holding Cole's hand at left, treasures watching him still have the ability to do.  (Allison M. Donnelly for NBC News)

Like other children with Hunter syndrome, Cole is deficient in an enzyme required to break down certain molecules. Over time, toxins accumulate, and the genetic disorder ravages children's organs, including their heart — and in many cases, their brain, leading to dementia-like symptoms. The condition, also called mucopolysaccharidosis type II, or MPS II, affects about 500 people in the U.S., nearly all of them boys.

Experts believe the newly approved drug, an intravenous enzyme replacement therapy manufactured by Denali Therapeutics, will be a game changer — especially because the current standard of care slows only the physical aspects of the illness. Denali's drug also targets cognitive decline.

The new drug will not reverse regressions that have already occurred. But it could extend children's lives and prevent many symptoms from showing up for those who receive it early.

Dr. Joseph Muenzer is standing in the waiting room of the Muenzer MPS Center in Chapel Hill, NC. Photos of MPS patients are on the walls. March 29, 2026. (Allison M. Donnelly for NBC News)

"If we take a child, very young, and can treat them prior to damage, now the potential is almost unlimited," said Dr. Joseph Muenzer of the Muenzer MPS Research and Treatment Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, which sees children with Hunter syndrome and other rare mucopolysaccharide diseases.

"We don't know how well they'll do in the future, but they'll do dramatically different than they would have otherwise," he said.

Before he started to regress, Stephens' son, Cole, was learning to read and could talk in full sentences. As the disease set in, speaking became difficult: He could string together a few words, and then say just one word — "Mommy" — before he became entirely nonverbal. Despite now being a teenager, he is more like a 3-year-old developmentally, Stephens said.

The FDA's approval of the Denali drug was a welcome surprise not just to families of children with Hunter syndrome, but to the rare disease community as a whole. In recent months, the FDA has come under fire for rejecting a string of promising treatments for rare diseases, prompting patient advocates to stage amock funeral with a coffinoutside of agency headquarters and triggering an investigation by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., who, prior to the Denali approval,accused the FDAof "looking for excuses to say no" to treatments.

In an email to NBC News, the FDA said the number of approvals and rejections under this administration "are consistent with historical data over the last decade." It pointed to a statement from FDA CommissionerDr. Marty Makary, who called the Denali approvala "milestone day for children and their families battling Hunter syndrome." He added, "We will continue to do everything we can to accelerate treatments for rare diseases."

Those who have watched children suffer from Hunter syndrome and other rare diseases are hopeful that will be the case, including Muenzer, who was a principal investigator for the Denali trial.

"These are terrible disorders," Muenzer said. "Just because they're a minority doesn't mean we should ignore them."

Denali's drug, called Avlayah, is the first FDA-approved treatment in the U.S. in 20 years for Hunter syndrome — and the first one that penetrates the blood-brain barrier, enabling it to halt the neurologic complications of the disease.

Experts like Muenzer believe Avlayah has the potential to extend life expectancy based on promising data from aclinical trialthat showed that after 24 weeks, the levels of a key biomarker in cerebrospinal fluid associated with the disease were reduced so much, 93% of pediatric participants had levels comparable to individuals without Hunter syndrome.

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For many families of children with the condition, the approval of the drug meant more than just an exciting new treatment. It also meant recognition of their children's value.

In New Berlin, Wisconsin, 6-year-old Roran Jaskulski was diagnosed with Hunter syndrome when he was 4. He has always been nonverbal, and his mother, Kylie Jaskulski, said she worries that because Roran can't speak, people who don't know him may question if he has anything to offer to others — a heartbreaking mischaracterization of her energetic, affectionate child who loves to cuddle while he falls asleep and excitedly runs into school each day.

"He brings so much joy," Jaskulski said. "He brings happiness and peace to every person he interacts with."

Image: Six-year-old Roran Jaskulski, who was diagnosed with Hunters Syndrome at age two. (Courtesy Kylie Jaskulski)

Jaskulski said at first, receiving Roran's diagnosis felt like the worst day of her life. But as time went on, she realized the powerlessness to prevent her son from deteriorating was even more torturous.

If her insurance approves the Denali drug for Roran, she said, "maybe I don't just have to stand by and watch."

Like other children with Hunter syndrome, Roran receives a weekly infusion of the current standard of care, a drug called Elaprase approved by the FDA in 2006. The infusions help to stabilize his physical decline, though not entirely: In recent months, Jaskulski has noticed Roran developing weakness and pain on the left side of his body, affecting his gait. He also has mild hearing loss.

A patchwork of states from California to Rhode Island includeHunter syndrome on newborn screenings, with more states expected to start testing for it at birth in the future. That means children will have a better shot at preventing cognitive impairment if they take the new drug early, doctors say.

Most Hunter syndrome kids have the severe form of the disease, which has a life expectancy of between 10 and 20 years. Those with the non-neurological form of Hunter syndrome, which does not significantly affect the brain, can live into adulthood, though they still face progressive physical problems, primarily of their airways and heart.

Image: Kashton Estes (Courtesy Christina Coldwell)

The prospect of the new treatment is exciting for families of kids on both ends of the disease. In Newkirk, Oklahoma, Christina Coldwell's 3-year-old grandson Kashton Estes has Hunter syndrome without cognitive problems, and he receives Elaprase infusions, which he refers to as "going to get his Spider-Man juice." The treatment has been successful: Coldwell said the little boy "talks up a storm," runs, jumps and rides a bicycle.

Still, she is eager to get Kashton on the new Denali drug. Two of his cousins also have the genetic disorder, Coldwell said, and the family wants to stave off future health problems in all three kids.

"We're not asking for much: Just give us the medicine to keep our children alive," she said.

When asked about insurance coverage for its drug — which has a list price of $5,200 per 150-milligram vial — Denali Therapeutics said it has had "constructive" discussions with payers and said enabling Hunter syndrome families to have quick access to Avlayah is a "top priority." It also said it is looking to expand the drug's clinical evidence for young adults, since at the moment, it is only indicated for pediatric patients. Denali also said that it aims to use its blood-brain barrier technology for a wide range of other conditions, including other neurodegenerative diseases.

Stephens, the mother of 15-year-old Cole, cannot wait to start her son on the drug. She has dedicated her life to helping not only Cole, but others like him: In 2022, she became the executive director at Muenzer's MPS research and treatment center at UNC-Chapel Hill.

When news broke last week that the FDA had granted accelerated approval to the new drug, Stephens ran through the treatment center to tell patients and staff. Everyone hugged and cried.

Cole Stephens Mausolf prepares for his weekly infusion of Elaprase. (Allison M. Donnelly for NBC News)

Stephens knows Denali's drug cannot undo the regressions Cole already has. It won't enable him to go to college or to enter the workforce. But she said she's still incredibly grateful for it.

"My hope is he stays stable," Stephens said. "Stable with a progressive disease is a win."

They're in a race to save their children with a rare disease. A newly approved drug has given them hope.

Ever since her 15-year-old son Cole was diagnosed with a rare, progressive illness called Hunter syndrome when he was 2, ...
Are the Knicks heading for a postseason roadblock?

Shortly before New York's prime-time loss in Oklahoma City, Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns was asked about his assimilation under head coach Mike Brown's system — roughly eight months after the coach's hire.

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"I'm still working through it," Towns said. "Still trying to figure out where I could impact our team and winning the most. Right now, I'm just utilizing my experience so I can do the best I can."

A simple, brief, yet powerful statement. Towns' words offered a sliver of understanding into a season of existential crisis, contextualized within the construct ofwhothe Knicks think they are,whatreality presents and the widening gap between the two. It's simply shocking to realize Towns still finds himself attempting to fit 76 games into the regular season, but adaptability and viability have been two underlying storylines this season out of the Big Apple.

Following Tuesday's humbling 111-94 loss to the Rockets, New York (48-28) finds itself just half a game ahead of Cleveland for the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference. The game itself was a mess: Jalen Brunson struggled to generate any real offensive threat, finishing with 12 points on 5-for-14 shooting; Towns ended his night with 22 but needed 17 shots to get there, with the bulk of his scoring coming in the fourth quarter when the game was well out of reach; New York shot a woeful 29% from behind the arc; and the team, despite a hefty advantage on the offensive glass (23 second-chance points on 12 offensive boards), scored a measly 80.7 points per 100 half-court possessions — good for 10th percentile of all games this season.

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But therealissue, a growing concern about performances against tougher competition as the postseason nears, is expanding itself at a rapid rate. Earlier this month, the Knicks were riding the highs of a seven-game winning streak — including convincing wins over Denver and San Antonio at the beginning of March. But their third straight loss to a playoff team (New York also lost back-to-back games to the Lakers and Clippers and twice to the Thunder in March) is loud enough to raise concerns, especially this close to the playoffs.

From the 50,000-foot view, the Knicks, much like New Yorkers, are a confident, arrogant bunch. And why shouldn't they be? On paper, they're an easy sell as a contender: An uber-efficient offensive hub in Brunson; aggressive, switchable, lengthy point-of-attack defenders in OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart; a generational second-chance opportunist in Mitchell Robinson in an era predicated on winning the possession battle; and an elite floor-spacing unit with nine rotational players shooting 36% or better from deep, with six of them essentially at or beyond the 40% mark.

Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun fouls New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Houston, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

Need more? New York is fifth in points scored per-100-possessions against top 10 defenses and sixth in points allowed per-100-possessions against top-10 offenses, according to Cleaning the Glass. It's everything you should desire in a team built to win at the highest level.

The problems, the more you dig, are worrisome. The Knicks' 3-point defense is essentially non-existent, 27th in opponent attempt rate and 21st in conversion rate, numbers that won't get better after allowing Houston — which takes the fourth fewest 3s per game — to knock down 15-of-35 from deep, a 43% clip. But that's not even scratching the surface of where their defensive issues reside.

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The pairing of Brunson and Towns, which of course has a plethora of offensive perks, has become increasingly difficult to construct a Finals-worthy scheme to sustain them for 48 minutes. Houston repeatedly ran actions that involved either Brunson, Towns or both of them in pick-and-roll scenarios, extracting the worst attributes of both time and time again. Oklahoma City forced Towns to attempt to cover ample ground, which he's clearly unable to do, exposing his backside for cuts, lobs and easy finishes at the rim. Brown bemoaned his team's inability to contain the Rockets' offensively, which is saying something considering Houston has hovered around the bottom five in half-court efficiency since October.

"Our pick-and-roll defense was not good tonight," Brown said. "We tried a lot of different things. We tried to blitz, we tried to switch the matchups, we went to a little zone, too. But it was to no avail, and we have to do a better job in that area going forward, because it was really bad tonight."

The Knicks are 16th in defensive rating over the last two weeks, they're 16th in defensive rating since March 1 and … they're 16th in defensive rating since the All-Star break. New York's biggest strength (Brunson's offense) is also their biggest weakness (Brunson's defense). Its offense simply falls apart with him off the floor, 7.2 points per 100 possessions better in his minutes, 93rd percentile, per Cleaning the Glass. But the Knicks are surrendering nearly six more points defensively at the same time. (Hart, Jordan Clarkson and Robinson have all been net negatives at that end of the floor, too.)

"Mental lapses," Brunson said. "And things that shouldn't be happening in game 75 or 76 in the season. We got a long way to go."

The challenge for Brown between now and when the playoffs commence will be figuring outifthere's a way to make all of this work. In the postseason, teams will take pages from Houston's book, consistently hunting Brunson and Towns either separately or in tandem. Figuring out rotations might be an issue too, especially considering some of New York's issues with double-big lineups and finding anyone who can actually initiate offense outside of Brunson, etc. Consider this: Towns, according to Synergy tracking data, is allowing opponents to shoot 62.5% on shots he directly defended. For context, former teammate Donte DiVincenzo, close in quantity of shots defended, has fared better.

Could this mean Brown puts more trust in his bench lineups? Prior to Tuesday, New York was outscoring opponents by nearly 18 points per 100 possessions when Jose Alvarado and Clarkson shared the floor, per PBP Stats. So far, however, Brown has been hesitant to play, say, Alvarado and Miles McBride together, likely because of the lack of size. He has, however, loved pairing Brunson with either of those — which has produced a+16and+15.9efficiency advantage, respectively, on a sizable sample size.

Still, context matters. We're talking about a top-four seed in the East heading into the playoffs with arguably the deepest roster in basketball and three elite players, according to advanced analytics — Brunson 12th inEstimated Offensive Plus-Minus, Anunoby 17th inDARKOand Towns 26th inEstimated Plus-Minus. History tells us that teams with impactful players of this frequency — combined with above-average coaching — do well in playoff settings. But time is running out for the Knicks to find their groove.

"Overcommunication and holding each other accountable," Brunson said. "Just not getting discouraged. This is obviously a bump in the road, but we can't let outside noise mess us up internally. Just have to continue to fight."

"The last few games, we haven't had [a rhythm] and teams go through stretches like that," Brown added. "We got seven more games to try to find it."

Are the Knicks heading for a postseason roadblock?

Shortly before New York's prime-time loss in Oklahoma City, Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns was asked about his assi...
Shohei Ohtani's quest for Cy Young Award begins with 6 shutout innings as Dodgers beat Guardians

LOS ANGELES (AP) —Shohei Ohtanigot started on his bid to win aCy Young Award— just about the only major prize to elude him — with six shutout innings for the Los Angeles Dodgers in his first outing on the mound this season.

Associated Press Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani delivers during the second inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians in Los Angeles, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani smiles towards the Cleveland Guardians dugout during the first inning of a baseball game in Los Angeles, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani delivers during the second inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians in Los Angeles, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani delivers during the first inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians in Los Angeles, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani gestures to Cleveland Guardians' Angel Martínez after Martínez got hit by a pitch during the fifth inning of a baseball game in Los Angeles, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong)

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At the plate, the two-way superstar went 1 for 3 with two walks and a strikeout Tuesday night in a rainy4-1 winover the Cleveland Guardians.

The Dodgers have been waiting to see a full-time, two-way version of Ohtani since he joined them on a $700 million, 10-year deal before the 2024 season. He didn't pitch that year while recovering from a second major elbow surgery in September 2023 while with the Los Angeles Angels.

Last season, the team took a methodical approach to his return to the mound. Ohtani was 1-1 with a 2.87 ERA and 62 strikeouts in 47 innings over 14 starts. His fastball averaged a career-high 98.4 mph.

"Last year, I felt good," Ohtani said through a translator. "But this year I do feel a lot more loose and easy pitching overall. Looking back at today's outing specifically, that wasn't necessarily the case. So that's something I want to work on. But compared to last season I felt more loose and easy."

Ohtani was limited to two spring training starts for the Dodgers because he played — but didn't pitch — for Japan in theWorld Baseball Classic.

Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts has noticed Ohtani is more critical of himself as a pitcher than a hitter.

"He's never going to be satisfied," Roberts said. "There's always something that he can improve on or get better at and that's what fuels him."

Ohtani has thrown 22 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings in the regular season, dating to Aug. 27, 2025, against Cincinnati — the longest shutout streak of his career. He bettered his previous high of 21 2/3 innings set in June 2022 with the Angels.

"If he's able to do it the whole year, that's just a huge boost to our pitching staff," third baseman Max Muncy said. "I expect nothing short of almost a Cy Young out of him."

"I think he's got enough pressure already," Muncy said, "but it doesn't seem to faze him at all."

The only hit Ohtani allowed was a two-out double by Rhys Hoskins in the fourth. The right-hander struck out six and walked three.

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He was even successful on his first ABS challenge.

Ohtani retired his first seven batters before walking Gabriel Arias in the third. With two outs, he walked Steven Kwan to put runners on first and second. Ohtani had a 1-1 count on CJ Kayfus when he challenged a ball call. It was overturned, putting Ohtani ahead 1-2 in the count, and he got Kayfus on a swinging strike with his next pitch to end the third.

Heavy drizzle picked up over Ohtani's last couple of innings. The grounds crew groomed the front slope of the mound, specifically his landing spot, after he issued his third walk with two outs in the sixth. He used a metal tool to dislodge dirt from the bottom of his spikes. Ohtani then retired Hoskins with one pitch to end the inning.

"He's unflappable," Roberts said.

Offensively, Ohtani has yet to break out in his first five games. The four-time MVP is batting .167 with no home runs and no RBIs. He had 55 homers in 2025.

He extended his on-base streak to 36 games, tying the longest of his career.

"I've been able to get on base and that's a good thing," Ohtani said. "But on pitches that I should be making impact I'm not quite able to do that to the extent that I should be able to. That's the part that I'm not quite happy about."

Observing Ohtani's work habits on a daily basis has convinced Muncy that his first love is pitching.

"He's really bought into everything with pitching — his mechanics, how to attack hitters. He just focuses on it so much. You can really, really tell he loves it," Muncy said.

Roberts said Ohtani will get six days' rest before his next start.

"I believe the team should be prioritizing Yoshinobu (Yamamoto), (Tyler) Glasnow and (Blake) Snell when he's back," Ohtani said. "So I think it's easy to kind of fit me into that schedule whenever the team feels that's a good thing. What's most important is that we're all healthy in October."

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Shohei Ohtani’s quest for Cy Young Award begins with 6 shutout innings as Dodgers beat Guardians

LOS ANGELES (AP) —Shohei Ohtanigot started on his bid to win aCy Young Award— just about the only major prize to elude hi...
Italy's latest World Cup failure labeled '3rd apocalypse.' It's the new norm for the 4-time champion

ROME (AP) — The first time was considered a fluke. The second was treated as a crisis. Now, withItaly failing to qualify for a third consecutive World Cup, it has become almost expected for theonce-proud soccer nation.

Associated Press A broken soccer ball is pictured on a street in Rome, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) Italy players react during a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying playoff final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Armin Durgut) Italy's, from left, Gianluigi Donnarumma, Nicolò Barella and coach Gennaro Gattuso react during the World Cup qualifying playoff final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP) Italy's Marco Palestra, left, and Leonardo Spinazzola console each other after losing a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying playoff final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Armin Durgut) Italy's Francesco Pio Esposito reacts during the World Cup qualifying playoff final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Armin Durgut)

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The four-time champion'spenalty shootout loss to 66th-ranked Bosnia and Herzegovina in the qualifying playoffs comes after the Azzurri were eliminated at the same stage bySwedenahead of the 2018 World Cup and byNorth Macedoniain 2022.

A front-page editorial in the Gazzetta dello Sport on Wednesday labeled the latest ouster "The third apocalypse," noting "there's no longer a feeling of shock or an unexpected catastrophe. It's becoming the norm."

The issues in Italian soccer extend beyond the national team.

The last Italian club to win the Champions League was Inter Milan in 2010; while in this season's continental competition, all four Italian clubs were eliminated before the quarterfinals.

"It's like we're not ready for the big match. We're not ready when it matters … when you need to give that extra … when you have the pressure on," Salvatore Corso, a 34-year-old Italian who works in a tech startup, said after watching the Italy defeat at a pub in Rome on Tuesday.

National team neglected

Between the every-four-years failures, the national team gets neglected.

One Italy coach after another has lobbied unsuccessfully for more training camps outside the pre-set FIFA international breaks.

Under pressure from TV rights holders, Serie A consistently refuses to move up matches to give national team players more time to rest before Italy games — as evidenced when a Fiorentina-Inter Milan game featuring multiple Azzurri was held on the Sunday night before the training camp opened for these playoffs hours later on a Monday.

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Coaches don't want the Italy job

With the failures piling up, Italy's revered coaches don't appear to want the national team job.

Roberto Mancini left his position in charge of the Azzurri before the 2024 European Championship to take over Saudi Arabia's national team.

Gian Piero Ventura, who directed Italy during the defeat to Sweden in 2017, never coached a major club.

When Luciano Spalletti was fired after Italy lost its opening qualifier to Norway last year, Claudio Ranieri turned down an offer to replace him and the much less experienced Gennaro Gattuso was hired instead.

Italian soccer federation president Gabriele Gravina is still holding onto his job after also surviving the qualifying elimination for the 2022 World Cup.

"Next week we will make much deeper reflections on the situation," Gravina said, hinting that he could call for a new election for the country's top soccer position. "There are a lot of evaluations to consider."

Associated Press writer David Biller contributed to this report.

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Italy's latest World Cup failure labeled ‘3rd apocalypse.’ It's the new norm for the 4-time champion

ROME (AP) — The first time was considered a fluke. The second was treated as a crisis. Now, withItaly failing to qualify ...

Many people have played 'Two Truths and a Lie' and pushed it to its limit. It's a well-known classic that gets people talking. But let's be honest, the lie is usually pretty easy to spot. Whether it's an over-the-top story, a nervous giveaway, or obvious social cues, the truth often wins out. This quiz is different.

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In this '2 truths, 1 lie' challenge, you'll face 26 sets of statements, each containing two real facts and one convincing lie. Some of them are commonly believed myths, making them even harder to sniff out. Let's see if you can separate fact from fiction!

🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to theBored Panda Quizzesand explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀

Image credits:Ketut Subiyanto

Which factoid is actually a lie?

◯ Koalas are not bears◯ Chameleons only change colors for camouflage◯ Dogs sweat through their paws

Can you sniff out the lie?

◯ Our sun is yellow◯ Our sun is just a star◯ The Earth is closest to the sun during the Northern Hemisphere's winter

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Find the untrue statement.

◯ Pure water is an electrical insulator◯ Water expands when it freezes◯ Human blood is only red when it's oxygenated

Which of the answer options is a lie?

◯ Sunflowers always face the sun◯ Bamboo can grow over 30 inches in a day◯ Alpine plants can melt snow

Which claim doesn't hold up?

◯ Bulls are angered by the color red◯ Bats are the only mammals that can fly◯ Elephants cannot jump

Identify the incorrect statement.

◯ Antarctica is the largest desert on Earth◯ Orcas are natural predators of moose◯ The Vikings wore horned helmets

Which of these is a total fabrication?

◯ If you lose a sense, the others can strengthen◯ Skin is a sensory organ◯ Humans have 5 senses

Which factoid is actually a lie?

◯ Albert Einstein developed the theory of relativity◯ As a child, Einstein was not good at mathematics◯ Albert Einstein won a Nobel Prize

🧠 Curious to see the rest? Take the full quiz here 🧠

“April Fools!”: Identify 26 Lies And Prove You Cannot Be Tricked

Many people have played 'Two Truths and a Lie' and pushed it to its limit. It's a well-known classic that get...

 

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