logo
Scenes from Dodger Stadium as ICE denied entry into parking lot

Scenes from Dodger Stadium as ICE denied entry into parking lot

USA Today15 hours ago

Scenes from Dodger Stadium as ICE denied entry into parking lot
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Arrests reported as anti-ICE protests grow to other cities
"Absolute chaos." Anti-ICE protests were seen in cities around the country, from Seattle to San Antonio to the NBA Finals in Indianapolis.
The Los Angeles Dodgers host the San Diego Padres Thursday night, but before the fans had even entered the parking lot, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attempted to beat the traffic and enter the parking lot to use as a staging area.
The first wave of vehicles arrived shortly after 10 a.m. local time. Shortly after, protestors arrived at Gate E, chanting at the officers, and preventing their entry. LAPD officers eventually arrived as well, and escorted ICE out of Dodger Stadium entirely.
The Los Angeles Dodgers confirmed as much with a statement on social media.
All in all, the protestors were successful in their mission: preventing ICE from entering the stadium parking lot. The standoff between the protestors and the organization lasted multiple hours, and tons of footage was captured by the protestors.
ICE AT Dodger Stadium: Los Angeles Dodgers say they denied ICE access to Dodger Stadium parking lots
Scenes from ICE outside Dodger Stadium

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former UD Flyer Obi Toppin sparks Pacers to help force Game 7 in NBA Finals
Former UD Flyer Obi Toppin sparks Pacers to help force Game 7 in NBA Finals

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Former UD Flyer Obi Toppin sparks Pacers to help force Game 7 in NBA Finals

A former University of Dayton men's basketball star helped the Indiana Pacers force a Game 7 in the 2025 NBA Finals. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Obi Toppin came off the bench to score a team-high 20 points in the Pacers' 108-91 victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder. Advertisement He was one of six Indiana players in double figures. Toppin made 6-12 shots, including 4-7 from three-point range in 23 minutes of action. TRENDING STORIES: OKC jumped out to a 10-2 lead, but Indiana went on an 11-2 run to take a 13-12 advantage. The Pacers never looked back as they built their largest lead to 31 points, 93-62, in the fourth quarter. Andrew Nembhard added 17 points while Pascal Siakam had 16. Indiana plays at Oklahoma City Sunday night. This will be the first Game 7 of the NBA Finals since 2016. The Associated Press contributed to this story. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Only the Pacers can prevent the dawn of a dull Thunder dynasty
Only the Pacers can prevent the dawn of a dull Thunder dynasty

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Only the Pacers can prevent the dawn of a dull Thunder dynasty

The Pacers will not let their story end. They will dance on their deathbed, offering hope until there is no time remaining. It should be no surprise after the past two months. It should not be shocking that the Pacers have pushed the NBA's most dominant team to the edge of collapse, saving their season and forcing the NBA Finals to a Game 7, following a 108-91 blowout win over the Thunder on Thursday night in Indianapolis. After manhandling the top-seeded Cavaliers and beating the Knicks on the momentum of one of the most improbable comebacks of all time, the Pacers are now only one win from their first NBA championship, one win from pulling one of the most unlikely upsets in championship history. Advertisement The Pacers moved the ball like the 1970s Knicks and forced turnovers (21) like the 2025 Thunder, while Oklahoma City showed its youth in its biggest moment (8-of-30 from 3, eight turnovers from MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander). Tyrese Haliburton played through an injured calf, gutting out 14 points and five assists in 23 minutes, and five other teammates scored in double figures.

Thunder wilt in first crack at NBA title, setting up Game 7 for ‘everything' or ‘nothing'
Thunder wilt in first crack at NBA title, setting up Game 7 for ‘everything' or ‘nothing'

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Thunder wilt in first crack at NBA title, setting up Game 7 for ‘everything' or ‘nothing'

INDIANAPOLIS — On the second Oklahoma City Thunder possession of Thursday's Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander wandered into danger and lost his dribble to a pair of Indiana Pacers more ready to grapple and pounce on a loose ball. A minute later, they didn't even need to double-team to pick his pocket. Andrew Nembhard took the ball from Gilgeous-Alexander on a slow-developing post-up. This was the earliest alarm bell for what would develop into arguably the Thunder's worst performance of the season at their potential pinnacle moment. They had a chance to win an NBA title. They instead fell down 31 points and were blown out 108-91. 'The way I see it is, we sucked tonight,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'We can learn our lessons. We have one game for everything. For everything we've worked for. And so do they.' Advertisement Those were two of Gilgeous-Alexander's eight turnovers, tying a career-high in any game. The high-usage, low-turnover, typically sharp guard who entered the night as the presumed finals MVP if his team could win its 84th game of the season, instead delivered a sloppy, unfocused night of point guard play. His team followed suit. The Thunder finished with 21 turnovers, their most in any of their 104 games this season. 'We tried to do too much one-on-one,' Alex Caruso said. 'They were active with their hands and aggressive defensively. We were just a little slow.' The desperate Pacers flew around. The Thunder arrived with a level of carelessness that played directly into their hands, throwing away enough possessions to deliver enough transition points to fuel a team and arena that felt tense before they blew it open into a Game 6 party. 'That's uncharacteristic for us to turn it over like that,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'That led to fast-break points. I thought that's what ignited them.' Here's an example. Jalen Williams gets a defensive rebound in the middle of the first quarter. He attempts to fling it upcourt. T.J. McConnell senses it, throws his arms up in the air, deflects it toward the sideline, outhustles the Thunder to a steal and then sets up Obi Toppin for a wide open 3 to juice up the crowd. The Game 6 loss was reminiscent of the Game 3 loss. Gilgeous-Alexander had six turnovers that night, tying a season-high that he'd surpass on Thursday. The Thunder turned it over 19 times. McConnell stole three inbound passes. The Thunder offense only generated 22 attempted 3s. That's been a problem on the road in this series. The Thunder's three biggest turnover games in these playoffs are the three Indianapolis games and, those three nights, they've gone 10 of 22, 3 of 17 and now 8 of 30 on 3s. That's an accuracy problem — 30.4 percent — and a volume problem. Advertisement That's 23 attempts per game for a team that averaged 38.8 per game in the regular season. They went 1 of 11 in the first half and didn't create a corner 3. 'It's definitely been an issue in some of these games,' Daigneault said. 'Game 4 comes to mind. I think we got 17 (attempts) in that game. I thought we found some things in Game 5. I thought they did a really good job on us tonight. The low volume and the accuracy was reflective of the way they guarded us and our inability to create a rhythm.' The Thunder will be significant favorites at home in Game 7, but they were significant favorites in Game 1 and lost. They've delivered themselves into serious danger again, similar to the Denver series. The Thunder went down 1-0 and 2-1 against the Nuggets, crawled ahead, delivered a Game 6 no-show and then survived with a Game 7 blowout. 'I see it as the same thing,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'In Round 2, if we had lost, I would have been just as disappointed. We would have went home and our season would have been over. If we lose (on Sunday), the season is over in the wrong way. Either way, I would have been extremely disappointed, so I don't think it's any different.' The Thunder blew the Nuggets out by 32 points in Game 7. They don't need a repeat margin, but a win or loss either way will ultimately define their season as success or failure. 'One game for everything you ever dreamed of,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'If you win it, you get everything. If you lose it, you get nothing. It's that simple.' (Photo of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store