Tennis star Coco Gauff also will be staying home after testing positive.
Officials have reported at least 12 new coronavirus cases connected with the games since Sunday and already tests have surfaced the first cases among athletes inside the Olympic village.
Toyota pulls Olympic ads
Toyota, which is a major financial supporter of the Olympics, is pulling its Olympics-related ads airing in Japan. It is a response to how polarizing the games have become in Japan just days from the opening ceremonies.
SEC says it will not delay games this year if a team is infected
The Southeastern Conference is not forcing football players to be vaccinated this fall, but commissioner Greg Sankey warned that the conference will not reschedule games this season if a team gets infected with COVID-19. If the team is not healthy enough to play, it will forfeit. Only six of the 14 SEC teams have 80% of their players fully vaccinated with six weeks to go before kickoff.
Federal judge upholds state university’s vaccine requirement
A federal judge says that Indiana University can require all students to get COVID-19 vaccinations before returning this fall. It is the first of what is certain to be a lot of lawsuits involving the more than 500 universities nationwide requiring students to be vaccinated.
Judge Damon Leichty wrote, “Recognizing the students’ significant liberty to refuse unwanted medical treatment, the Fourteenth Amendment permits Indiana University to pursue a reasonable and due process of vaccination in the legitimate interest of public health for its students, faculty, and staff.”
Eight students filed the lawsuit opposing the mandatory vaccinations. The students say they will appeal the decision.
Mayors are making COVID-19 decisions when the feds or states won’t
The mayor of Orange County (Orlando), Florida is urging people to wear masks when they are indoors. Orange County reported nearly 2,000 new COVID-19 cases in three days — all among unvaccinated people. The mayor cannot force a mask mandate because Gov. Ron DeSantis forbids local governments from issuing local mask orders.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio says he won’t impose a new mask mandate on his city even after the head of the New York health committee said the city should impose mask restrictions.
The sheriff of Los Angeles County says his department will not enforce Los Angeles’ mask mandate.
A hospital requiring vaccines is seeing a case spike
Methodist Hospital in Houston, which made news recently when it fired workers who refused to get vaccinated, says it is seeing an “alarming” spike in new COVID-19 cases, including its first case of a variant you probably have not heard of — the Lambda variant.
KPRC TV reports:
As of Monday, it has more than 185 COVID-19 patients. According to officials, the majority of its hospitalizations are those who are unvaccinated. About 85% of its hospitalized COVID-19 patients have the Delta variant, officials said.
Wall Street is taking the rise in COVID-19 cases seriously, S&P drops 1.6%
Your retirement savings took a hit Monday as Wall Street tried to digest what a rise in COVID-19 cases means to travel, tourism and spending. Norwegian Cruise Line and United Airlines each fell 5.5%, which is a lot for one day. Both had been soaring as Americans grew optimistic — maybe overly optimistic — that the pandemic was behind us.
Shortages may ease soon
If you have tried to buy a washing machine, furniture, a car and a zillion other things, you know about the global supply shortage of all sorts of materials. A new report from the Bank of America says the worst of the shortages may be over. One shortage that may not be over, the report says, is the labor shortage, as businesses struggle to hire people. But the BOA research says as extended unemployment benefits expire in September, more people may take jobs that they don’t want now.
The spin rate on MLB pitches is way lower since a ban on sticky substances
What a cool story. If you look at the timing of Major League Baseball’s crackdown on pitchers using sticky substances on baseballs and compare that to how quickly balls have been rotating since then, there seems to be a big change.
The spin rate changes how a ball “moves” on the way to a batter. Just a small increase in rpms can make a significant difference in how difficult it is to hit a pitch.
Since the spin rates started to drop, the number of batters being walked is up while strikeouts are down. And the number of batters getting on base is up since the new enforcement.
The New York Times analyzed 1.7 million pitches from the last four years and they came up with a list of the pitchers whose pitches are spinning a lot less right now.