Gophers name pitching coach Ty McDevitt as new baseball coach

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Minnesota Athletics Director Mark Coyle announced Wednesday that Ty McDevitt, a former Gophers baseball player and the program’s current pitching coach, has been named head baseball coach, succeeding the U’s all-time wins leader John Anderson, who retired after his 43rd season with 1,390 wins.

McDevitt, 31, and the U agreed to a three-year term, pending the completion of a background check.

Ty McDevitt

McDevitt is Minnesota’s 16th head coach but only the program’s fourth head coach since 1948. Dick Siebert led the Gophers from 1948-78 and was followed by George Thomas, who was at the helm from 1979-81, and then Anderson.

McDevitt had served as the team’s pitching coach since 2019. The Apple Valley native was a volunteer assistant for the Gophers from 2017 to 2018.

“I am deeply honored and humbled to accept the position of head baseball coach at the University of Minnesota,” McDevitt said in the university’s news release. “This program is steeped in rich history and tradition, built on the hard work, dedication, and passion of countless players, coaches, and supporters who have come before me. As I step into this role, I am committed to upholding the values and excellence that define Gopher Baseball. Together, we will strive to build upon this storied legacy, fostering a culture of integrity, resilience, and success both on and off the field.”

McDevitt played for the Gophers from 2012-2016 where he was a stabilizing presence in the bullpen.

McDevitt is known for his ability to develop high school arms into major league draft prospects. During his time at Minnesota, he worked with future MLB draftees Brett Schulze, Jake Stevenson and Nick Lackney among others.

Max Meyer is the most well-known player to ascend the ranks under McDevitt. Meyer joined the Gophers in 2018 as a 34th-round draft pick out of Woodbury High School. When he left Minnesota after the 2020 season he was taken in the first round with the third overall pick by the Miami Marlins in the 2020 MLB Draft.

 

Behind the scenes: Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Bazzar’ brings artistry, acrobatics and a lot of shoes to a big top at MOA

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Within nine days, a parking lot just north of the Mall of America was transformed into a sprawling tent complex — the home, for the next month, of Cirque du Soleil’s show “Bazzar.”

The show, which runs May 18 to June 16 — though the official premiere is Thursday, May 23 — is the Canada-based circus troupe’s first Twin Cities big-top show in a decade or so.

“Bazzar,” which is inspired by the origins of Cirque du Soleil in the 1980s, debuted in 2018 in Mumbai as part of an effort to bring Cirque shows to new parts of the world, said Christine Achampong, a publicist who travels with the troupe. The original version of the show was scaled down for easier transport, but it was expanded and relaunched in 2022 under a full-size big top.

Still, “Bazzar” has a slightly smaller cast and more intimate feel than other Cirque shows, artistic director Johnny Kim said. It’s less about flashy tricks and more about acts that showcase artistry and storytelling, he said.

“Everyone brings their own character to it, their own natural personality,” Kim said. “I really love to pull out the individual within the artist, so there’s a new shade, a new color, a new brightness that comes to the table. … Everyone has a different way of interpreting what they want to say in their movement.”

Every time the show moves to a new city, the entire stage infrastructure has to be disassembled and rebuilt. Then begins the several-day process of “validations,” or safety checks, where technicians test each piece of equipment with weighted bags to simulate performers’ bodies. By the time that’s done, there’s only enough time for each performer to have about a 30- to 60-minute slot onstage to run through their act.

On a recent afternoon, Josefina Oriozabala, from Argentina, rehearsed an aerial act in which she’s suspended above the stage by a ring knotted into her hair. After she got a feel for any quirks in the set-up this time around, her time was up: Mélodie Lamoreux, a Canadian hula hooper, had the stage next.

This fast pace is not uncommon. Before the current production hit the road about a year and a half ago, all the performers and crew decamped to Cirque du Soleil headquarters in Montreal to rehearse, rehearse, sit for 3D body scans for custom-made costumes and rehearse some more. But when they’re on tour, the cast and crew frequently have to adjust on the fly.

Costume shop, shoe repair

Backstage, there’s a full costume repair shop, a makeshift physical therapy clinic and a mini shoe factory.

A pair of shoes are in progress backstage at “Bazzar,” a Cirque du Soleil show, on May 17, 2024, under a big top near the Mall of America. Shoes are custom-built and painted for each performer. (Jared Kaufman / Pioneer Press)

The performers wear through shoes at a stunning rate, Achampong said: about one to two pairs per month, per person — and each is custom-built and painted, so the on-staff shoemaker is always busy.

There’s also a sizable gym, a kitchen/dining tent and laundry facilities.

And if a performer gets injured or needs to fill in for another act, the whole show shifts a bit: There are 178 slightly different versions of “Bazzar” that each account for different scenarios, Achampong said, and sometimes the cast has to quickly huddle up and pivot to a different version mid-show while a clown act keeps the audience none the wiser.

The Twin Cities is the last U.S. stop for “Bazzar.” A slate of Europe shows are up next, though the cast gets a two-month break first while their equipment crosses the Atlantic in several dozen shipping containers.

“Bazzar” showtimes are 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays; 12:00, 3:30 and 7 p.m. most Saturdays; and 1 and 4:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets range from $37 to about $150, with discounted multi-ticket bundles for families available.

Tickets can be purchased online at cirquedusoleil.com/bazzar.

Cirque du Soleil’s Bazzar by the numbers

The Cirque du Soleil logo is painted onto a storage trunk in the backstage area of the big top tent for the “Bazzar” show on May 17, 2024, near the Mall of America. The show, which has been on tour for about a year and a half, travels from city to city in 71 semi-trucks. (Jared Kaufman / Pioneer Press)

2,600: Seats under the Big Top, individually installed

100: Traveling crew members including coaches, stage technicians, sound engineers, accountants, a plumber, two physical therapists, three costume-makers, four chefs, three musicians and one singer

85: Local workers, mostly construction workers but also a masseuse, acupuncturist and barber

71: Semitrailers to transport the entire show — minus the people — from city to city

45–150: Minutes for each performer to create their own makeup look before each show

35: Performing artists in the show

25: Countries represented among the performing artist cast

18: Languages spoken on tour, though English and French are the most common

15–18: Loads of laundry on Saturdays, the troupe’s busiest day of the week

9: Days to transform an empty parking lot to a performance-ready Big Top

3: Fire-safety technicians, dressed in all black, who crouch alongside the stage for the duration of every show in case of emergency

1: Hotel the entire cast and crew stay in for the entire time they’re in a city (though some members find alternate lodging)

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Buy now, pay later companies must adhere to credit card standards, consumer agency says

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By CORA LEWIS (Associated Press)

NEW YORK (AP) — Buy now, pay later companies must provide consumers with the same legal rights and protections as credit card lenders do, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Wednesday in a new rule.

That includes the right to demand a refund and to dispute transactions. The agency began an inquiry into the short-term lending industry two years ago, and it issued the rule in response to ongoing consumer complaints, it said.

Here’s what you need to know.

WHAT’S BEHIND THE NEW REGULATION?

Buy now, pay later loans are typically marketed as zero-interest, or low interest, and allow consumers to spread out payments for purchases over several weeks or months. They’re marketed as a way to buy expensive products and services over time, and the service is typically offered at checkout for online shopping. It’s often used for big-ticket items, like furniture, clothes and airline tickets.

In a report, the CFPB found that more than 13% of buy now, pay later transactions involved a return or dispute, and, in 2021, people disputed or returned $1.8 billion in transactions at the five companies surveyed.

“Regardless of whether a shopper swipes a credit card or uses Buy Now, Pay Later, they are entitled to important consumer protections under longstanding laws and regulations already on the books,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in a statement.

HOW IS THE INDUSTRY RESPONDING TO THE RULE?

Two major buy now, pay later players — Affirm and Klarna — say they welcomed the regulation.

“We are encouraged that the CFPB is promoting consistent industry standards, many of which already reflect how Affirm operates, to provide greater choice and transparency for consumers,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. Affirm currently offers “dispute and error resolution assistance,” the spokesman added.

A spokesperson for Klarna said the company also already investigates consumer disputes and covers related refunds.

The agency’s announcement is a “significant step forward” in regulating the buy now, pay later industry, Klarna said in a statement. It said it has been calling for regulatory oversight “over many years.”

While some in the industry have voluntarily chosen to operate at the standard now mandated by the CFPB’s new rule, there remain significant differences between credit card lending and buy now, pay later loans. For instance, buy now, pay later lenders do not all report their loans to the three major credit bureaus. Some analysts have said this can lead consumers to overextend themselves or take on more debt than they can manage or afford.

WHAT RIGHTS DO CONSUMERS HAVE?

The CFPB said that buy now, pay later lenders need to extend many of the same rights and protections as classic credit card providers. “Importantly, these cover dispute and refund rights,” the agency said.

The agency clarified that, with its new rule, buy now, pay later lenders must:

— Investigate disputes. Lenders must also pause payment requirements during the investigation and sometimes must issue credits.

— Refund returned products or canceled services. Buy now, pay later lenders must credit the refunds to consumers’ accounts.

— Provide billing statements. Consumers must receive periodic statements of money owed similar to the ones received for classic credit card accounts.

“The failure to provide dispute protections can create chaos for consumers when they return their merchandise or encounter other billing difficulties,” the CFPB said.

___

The Associated Press receives support from Charles Schwab Foundation for educational and explanatory reporting to improve financial literacy. The independent foundation is separate from Charles Schwab and Co. Inc. The AP is solely responsible for its journalism.

Twins’ Edouard Julien trying to rule again

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WASHINGTON — It made its way through the Twins clubhouse this spring training until Edouard Julien finally heard it.

In the song titled “Edouard Julien, Are You Gonna Rule Again?” FanGraphs’ Davy Andrews, asks the simple question repeatedly.

“It was funny because I’ve never heard any song about me,” Julien said of the song, which was accompanied by a music video with multiple cutouts of his face bouncing around the screen. “I wasn’t expecting that.”

Tuesday, he was serenaded in person.

Andrews showed up at the Nationals Park pregame — Twins bench coach Jayce Tingler had told Julien that Andrews would attend a game in either New York or Washington D.C. — and after the Twins’ 10-0 win over the Nationals, he performed his song in the middle of the clubhouse with Julien sitting right next to him.

“Obviously I’ve heard (it) a lot in spring training, and it was good to have him in person here and get in front of the guys,” Julien said. “It was fun.”

The performance, starter Joe Ryan said, was “electric.” Manager Rocco Baldelli referred to the song multiple times as “a hit.”

Andrews’ song is set to the same tune as California rock band Wckr Spgt’s song about former French president François Mitterrand, replacing the lyric “François Mitterrand, do you have the heater on?” with “Edouard Julien, are you gonna rule again?”

“I think Eddy was loving it. The rest of the guys were loving it,” Baldelli said. “I think he added a new verse to what Jayce would call the ‘smash hit.’ I think he added a new verse for us, which is just lovely. I mean, great day.”

The music video was embedded in an article about Julien, posted to FanGraphs in late January, about Julien’s breakout rookie season. His sophomore campaign hasn’t gone quite as well thus far, but the second baseman is doing his best to try to rule again.

“I’ve just got to trust my approach and trust it’s going to work,” Julien said. “I keep going away from it and being indecisive. I’ve just got to trust it and ride it for a couple weeks and see how it goes.”

Julien excelled as a hitter in college, in the minor leagues and during his rookie year in the majors, so this has been something new for him, but it’s something Baldelli said Julien is well-equipped to handle.

“He can do this. There is nothing standing in his way,” Baldelli said. ” … He’s got a really good head for the game. There are a lot of things I could say that are really complimentary about the way he handles things, so he should be able to handle this. I have no doubt about it.”

Julien, who went 0 for 3 with a strikeout in the Twins’ 3-2 win over the Nationals on Wednesday, is hitting .207 this season with a .696 OPS. He’s encountered a recent rough patch and is hitless since May 15. Known for his eye at the plate, Julien hasn’t drawn a walk since May 11.

“It’s for sure tough when you don’t perform as well as you want to do,” Julien said. “You always feel like you’ve got to work and do all that stuff to get out of it, but sometimes it’s just get a rest and being in a better mental spot than you are, and I think that’s a problem for me. I think a little too much, and that’s the game. It’s not always physically. It’s always mentally. For me it is. I’ve got to be better with my approach.”

Baldelli’s 400th

It took eight tries, but the Twins manager finally captured his 400th win on Tuesday.

Though he’s never one to tout his personal accomplishments, Baldelli did enjoy the postgame moment, in which the team toasted him. Getting it done for Baldelli, center fielder Byron Buxton said on Tuesday, “was beautiful.”

“Any time there’s a good reason to get the team together for a few minutes after the game, that’s worth it to me,” Baldelli said. “I don’t like being out there and accepting things, but when it comes from our guys, it’s nice.”

A lineup card will eventually make its way to Baldelli’s Target Field office, where it will join the cards he has hanging from other milestone wins.

“It’s for the players so I can see all their names up there,” Baldelli said. “I don’t need to see it thinking about a personal record. It’s all about them in my mind.”

Briefly

Trevor Larnach was in the outfield on Wednesday for the first time since May 9 as he deals with a foot issue. Baldelli said Larnach still isn’t at 100% but playing the outfield was something they thought he could handle at this point. …  The Twins have Thursday off before hosting the World Series-champion Texas Rangers over the weekend.

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