The Washington Post - USA (2022-02-22)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
After fracas, Michigan
Coach Juwan Howard is
banned for five games. D3

HOCKEY


The Capitals have their full


lineup at practice for the


first time this season. D3


KLMNO


SPORTS


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 , 2022. WASHINGTONPOST.COM/SPORTS M2 D


BY KYLE MELNICK

After leading his first 50-min-
ute lesson Sunday morning, Ca-
leb Wein distributed report cards
to young skaters wearing color-
ful Lego-, cat- and dinosaur-
themed helmets. One boy, cov-
ered in black pads, beamed after
receiving strong grades as he
skated toward his family outside
the rink at Rockville Ice Arena.
“Thank you, Coach Caleb!” the
boy yelled as he headed toward a
hot dog lunch. Wein smiled and
nodded before turning his atten-
tion to his next group of trainees.
Wein and his ice dance part-
ner, Angela Ling, remember the
joy and optimism of learning to
skate as 4-year-olds. After a
strong session, their lifelong
dreams of competing in the
Olympics didn’t seem so far
away. Wein and Ling, one of the
top young pairs in the country,
have continued chasing the
sport’s grandest stage even as
their perception of Olympic
SEE SKATE ON D5

Young skaters dream on

Controversy clouded the Olympics, but beginners’ enthusiasm for the sport hasn’t been dampened

BY GUS GARCIA-ROBERTS
AND JACK DOUGLAS

The trial of former Los Angeles
Angels communications director
Eric Kay, which ended last week
with the jury finding him guilty of
giving pitcher Tyler Skaggs the
fentanyl-laced oxycodone that led
to his death, at times seemed to
spill secrets about a drug scourge
in Major League Baseball club-
houses.
MLB players, including former
star pitcher Matt Harvey, gave
testimony that suggested some
were self-medicating with black-
market pain pills. They were there
ostensibly to help prosecutors
prove Kay was distributing drugs
to players. But like a miniature
version of the Pittsburgh drug
trials of 1985 — during which
more than a dozen players testi-
fied about rampant cocaine and
amphetamine use — their testi-
mony also appeared to pull back
the curtain on a broader problem
in baseball, with p rosecutors
SEE OPIOIDS ON D4

Trial raises issue, but depth of opioid abuse is unclear

Despite the g uilty verdict in Skaggs’s death, MLB’s testing numbers suggest the lack of a problem

NFL flaunts its seductiveness


by hiring Lynch to fight Flores


What may be most
remembered
about the fight in
2016 against a
North Carolina
law that stripped
LGBT people of
anti-
discrimination
protections is that the NBA that
summer announced it was
moving its planned All-Star
Weekend in Charlotte out of the
state in protest. What may be
forgotten is that the league was
amplifying a challenge by the
Obama administration against
North Carolina launched late
that spring.
To be sure, the nation’s top law
enforcement official stated
during a May 2016 news
conference: “The legislature and
the governor placed North
Carolina in direct opposition to


federal laws prohibiting
discrimination on the basis of sex
and gender identity. More to the
point, they created state-
sponsored discrimination against
transgender individuals... a
right taken for granted by most of
us. Today, we are filing a federal
civil rights lawsuit against the
state of North Carolina, Gov. Pat
McCrory, the North Carolina
Department of Public Safety and
the University of North Carolina.”
That official was Attorney
General Loretta E. Lynch, the
first Black woman to hold that
title. She is the same lawyer, now
in private practice, who was
unveiled by the NFL last week as
its defense against a
discrimination lawsuit filed by
Brian Flores after he was fired as
the Miami Dolphins’ coach. (If
ever the phrase Black-on-Black
SEE BLACKISTONE ON D2

Kevin B.
Blackistone


Maryland at Indiana
Thursday, 7 p.m., Fox Sports 1

BY PATRICK STEVENS

Eric Ayala looked like himself
again Monday night. That bodes
well for a Maryland men’s basket-
ball team still harboring hopes of
salvaging something from a sea-
son full of frustration.
Ayala’s push in the second half
helped the Terrapins create some
separation from Penn State dur-
ing a 67-61 victory at Xfinity
Center, bringing Maryland with-
in a game of .500 with four regu-
lar season contests remaining.
The 13-point effort — including
10 in a little more than five min-
utes — was arguably Ayala’s best
game in nearly a month. The
senior had shot 22.6 percent
while averaging eight points over
his previous five games, and he
SEE MARYLAND ON D3

Ayala’s rise

after halftime

gives Terps

a needed lift

MARYLAND 67,
PENN STATE 61

PHOTOS BY KATHERINE FREY/THE WASHINGTON POST

Caleb Wein and Angela Ling, a dance pair that qualified for the world junior championships
in Bulgaria later this year, are also teaching y ounger children to skate at Rockville Ice Arena.

MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Angels outfielder Mike Trout gestured toward a photo of teammate Tyler Skaggs, who died in 2019.

BY DES BIELER

The Kentucky Horse Racing
Commission announced Monday
that Medina Spirit, who finished
first in the Kentucky Derby on
May 1 before testing positive for an
anti-inflammatory that is banned
on race day, was formally disquali-
fied and stripped of his victory.
Bob Baffert, the horse’s Hall of
Fame trainer, was suspended
from all Kentucky racing facilities
for 90 days and fined $7,500.
Baffert, whose horses won the
Derby six times before last year,
will appeal the decision, accord-
ing to his legal team.
In June, Baffert was handed a
two-year suspension by Churchill
Downs Inc., which hosts the Der-
by. Monday’s decision extends the
ban to all facilities in the state
under the KHRC’s jurisdiction
from March 8 through June 5.
Churchill Downs issued a sepa-
rate statement Monday recogniz-
ing Derby runner-up Mandaloun
as the winner of last year’s race,
and it offered congratulations to
SEE DERBY ON D6

Medina

Spirit’s win

in D erby

is stripped

Kentucky commission
also fines trainer Baffert
and bans him f or 90 days

Still locked out: The sides meet
again to begin a week of talks. D4
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