Counterprotester throws improvised explosive at anti-Islam event in NYC, police say

NEW YORK (AP) — A devicethrown by a counterprotesterat an anti-Islam demonstration in New York City on Saturday was confirmed to be an improvised explosive, according to a preliminary police analysis.

Associated Press

Two people were in custody for their alleged role in the confrontation, which unfolded during a "Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City" event led by the far right activist Jake Lang outside the Manhattan residence of Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

The sparsely attended event drew a far larger group of counterdemonstrators, including one person who tossed a smoking object containing nuts, bolts, screws and a "hobby fuse" into the crowd, police said.

In a social media post Sunday, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the department's bomb squad determined the object wasn't a hoax device or smoke bomb, but an "improvised explosive device that could have caused serious injury or death."

The device extinguished itself steps from police officers, Tisch noted. The same person who threw it then received a second device from another counterprotester, which was dropped and did not appear to ignite, the commissioner said.

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Charges against the two counterprotesters were still pending. Tisch said police were working with federal prosecutors and the FBI on the case.

"Violence at a protest is never acceptable," Mamdani said in a statement Sunday. "The attempt to use an explosive device and hurt others is not only criminal, it is reprehensible and the antithesis of who we are."

A person associated with Lang's protest was also arrested and charged with reckless endangerment, assault and unlawful possession of a noxious matter after allegedly macing counterprotesters, police said.

Lang was previously charged with assaulting an officer with a baseball bat, civil disorder and other crimes before receiving clemency as part ofPresident Donald Trump's sweeping act of clemencyfor Jan. 6 defendants last year. He recently announced that he is running for U.S. Senate in Florida.

Earlier this year, Lang organized a rally in Minneapolis in support of Trump's immigration crackdown, drawing anangry crowd of counterprotestersthat quickly chased him away.

Counterprotester throws improvised explosive at anti-Islam event in NYC, police say

NEW YORK (AP) — A devicethrown by a counterprotesterat an anti-Islam demonstration in New York City on Saturday was confi...
Epstein prison guard made 'suspicious' cash deposits before financier's death

The last prison guard to see Jeffrey Epstein alive made suspicious cash deposits in the 12 months before his death, US Department of Justice (DoJ) files reveal.

The Telegraph Security footage revealed the pair did not check on Epstein for eight hours on the night of his death

Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York on Aug 10, 2019. His death wasruled a suicide.

Tova Noel, 37, one of two officers accused of falsifying prisoner record checks that night, made a final cash deposit of $5,000 (£3,729) into her bank account less than a fortnight earlier on July 30.

A total of 12 ATM cash deposits, beginning in October 2018, were flagged by her bank to the FBI in a "suspicious activity report" in November 2019.

Ms Noel and her colleague Michael Thomas were fired after being accused of falsifying records to claim theychecked on Epsteinduring the night before his suicide on Aug 10 that year.

CCTV footagerevealed the pair did not check on Epstein for eight hours, despite his cell being just 15 feet from the guards' desk.

Criminal charges against them were later dropped.

Tova Noel worksheet

The bank transactions are among several new disclosuresin the Epstein filesthat raise questions about the paedophile's death.

It can also be revealed that Ms Noel searched the internet for the sex offender just minutes before he was found dead.

The officer Googled "latest on Epstein in jail" at 5:42am and then again at 5:52am. Less than 40 minutes later, at 6.30am, Mr Thomas found the disgraced financier dead in his cell.

The FBI highlighted the internet search in its 66-page forensic examination of Ms Noel and Mr Thomas's bureau of prisons desktop computers. It was the only search highlighted.

Google search Epstein

Ms Noel later denied having made this search during her sworn statement to the DoJ in 2021.

"I don't remember doing that," she claimed, suggesting that an article about Epstein could have appeared automatically in her browser instead. When shown the search record, she insisted it was inaccurate.

Ms Noel was not asked under oath about the payments raised in the "suspicious activity report".

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At 7.49pm on Aug 9, 2019, Epstein returned to his unit from a visit to his attorney and was escorted to his cell by Ms Noel and another officer.

Footage showed the officers did not carry out the 10pm count but still signed a slip falsely claiming it had been done.

The 2023 DoJ inspector general report later identified Ms Noel as themysterious orange shapespotted in a blurry surveillance video near Epstein's cell around 10:40pm on the night he died.

Credit: Department of Justice

It said the footage showed "a CO [correctional officer], believed to be Tova Noel, carried linen or inmate clothing" up to Epstein's tier, adding this was the "last time any CO [correctional officer] approached the only entrance to the SHU tier".

In a sworn statement Ms Noel told investigators that she last saw Epstein alive "somewhere around after 10".

She also said she "never gave out linen" because it had been issued by the earlier shift. She testified she did not know why Epstein had extra linen in his cell. The other guard was asleep between 10pm and midnight.

Epstein's cell after he was found dead

Other documents released by the DoJ include FBI notes of an interview with an unnamed inmate who claimed guards at the Metropolitan Correctional Center discussed covering up Epstein's death on the morning he died.

A five-page handwritten report records the inmate saying he woke on Aug 10, 2019 to commotion in the "special housing unit" where Epstein was held to hear officers shouting "Breathe! Breathe!" at about 6.30am.

He said that while breakfast was being served he heard someone say, "you killed that dude", adding that the whole wing heard the exchange.

Jeffrey Epstein

According to the notes, a female guard replied: "If he is dead we're going to cover it up and he's going to have an alibi – my officers."

Later, the inmate reported that other prisoners allegedly said: "Miss Noel killed Jeffrey."

When asked under oath whether she had any part in Epstein's death, Ms Noel replied: "No."

Try full access to The Telegraph free today. Unlock their award-winning website and essential news app, plus useful tools and expert guides for your money, health and holidays.

Epstein prison guard made ‘suspicious’ cash deposits before financier’s death

The last prison guard to see Jeffrey Epstein alive made suspicious cash deposits in the 12 months before his death, US De...
Mi Hyang Lee wins Blue Bay for first LPGA victory in 8 years

South Korea's Mi Hyang Lee overcame a pair of double bogeys on the front nine and recorded a birdie on the final hole to seize a one-stroke win at the Blue Bay LPGA on Sunday at Hainan Island, China.

Field Level Media

Lee, 32, won her third LPGA title and first since capturing the 2017 Women's Scottish Open after firing a 1-over-par 73 on Sunday to finish with an 11-under 277 at the Jian Lake Blue Bay Golf Course.

She finished one stroke better than China's Weiwei Zhang (69 on Sunday), who failed to hold the lead after a bogey on the 17th hole.

"Still kind of a little bit shake my hands," Lee said of her nerves. "First hole make birdie, but like two double front nine and then finish 4-over so was almost give up, but my caddie just kept telling me keep fighting, fighting. I really fought by myself, just didn't give up, and then I just got to make a lot of birdies, so I think amazing. Feels amazing, yes."

Lee became only the second South Korean to win the Blue Bay LPGA, joining 2015 champion Sei Young Kim

Auston Kim (71) made three birdies over the final five holes to reside in a third-place tie with Aditi Ashok (72) of India.

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"I'm proud of the three birdies that I made coming in, but it really (stinks) to play that well Thursday (67), Friday (68), and not get it done. Really frustrating," Kim said. "I hope moving forward I won't make the same mistakes that I did this week and play better."

Lee saw her three-stroke lead evaporate following double bogeys on the fifth and ninth holes before making birdies on the 10th and 13th holes.

She took advantage of Zhang's misstep on the 17th hole by hitting the pin on her third shot at the par-5 18th hole. She tapped in from 2 feet out to win the tournament.

"I just keep watching the scoreboard. I think that's why this -- that give me a lot of confidence," Lee said. "I just keep making one more birdie, two more birdie, and so it was -- yeah, just keep watching it, the scoreboard. I knew Weiwei and Rio (Takeda of Japan) play well, too."

Takeda (73), the defending champion, tied for fifth with South Koreans Hye-Jin Choi (74) and A Lim Kim (73) and China's Yu Liu (74).

--Field Level Media

Mi Hyang Lee wins Blue Bay for first LPGA victory in 8 years

South Korea's Mi Hyang Lee overcame a pair of double bogeys on the front nine and recorded a birdie on the final h...
Op-Ed: One way Washington can lower health care costs

Washingtonians are struggling to afford already high health care costs, and those costs keep climbing. Sadly, I've seen this firsthand in my rheumatology practice, where patients are faced with expensive, complex drugs to manage their symptoms.

The Center Square Photo: DC Studio / Freepik

In 2019 alone, spending jumped 6.2% to$47.9 billion. Employers, families, and taxpayers are all feeling the strain. Something must change.

One little-known federal program, the 340B Drug Pricing Program, is quietly making things worse. Created by Congress in 1992, 340B allows qualifying hospitals and clinics to buy prescription drugs at steep discounts, typically 25–50%, with the expectation that the savings would help vulnerable patients.

While there are some good players in the system, too many hospital systems are using 340B to turn massive profits by buying drugs at 340B discounted prices and then charging patients and health plans the full price. It would be one thing if those profits were being spent directly on our most vulnerable patients, as the program intends. But instead, too many of them are using the funds elsewhere, footing patients with the bill.

Meanwhile, patients and employers pay the price. In 2022, Washington 340B hospitals devoted just1.52%of their operating expenses to charity care, while continuing to pursue patients with four- and five-figure medical bills. When31%of Washingtonians carry medical debt, it's indefensible that 340B hospitals charge7% higher pricesthan comparable non-340B hospitals.

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A major driver of this growth is the explosion of contract pharmacies - pharmacies that partner with hospitals to dispense 340B drugs and share in the profits. These arrangements often have little to do with helping vulnerable communities.25%of Washington's 340B contract pharmacies aren't even in the state, and48%serve higher-income areas. Hospitals are expanding their revenue reach, not access to care.

As hospitals bring in billions in 340B revenue, they use those dollars to buy up small, private practices. This consolidation squeezes out independent practices, reducing competition and limiting patient choice. As care migrates from physician offices to hospital outpatient departments, costs soar. Patients and employers ultimately foot the bill while access to affordable, community-based care disappears. This particularly impacts rural and underserved communities.

Yet instead of reining in this runaway program, some state legislators want to expand it by codifying unlimited contract pharmacy use with no guardrails or transparency. That would only make costs worse for patients, employers, and taxpayers.

Almost80% of Washington residentssupport ending 340B abuse. Legislators should listen. Patients deserve transparency and a 340B program that fulfills its promise to help people, not pad profits. It's time to reform 340B and restore it to its original purpose.

Amish J. Dave, MD, MPH, is a rheumatologist based in Seattle and Bainbridge Island, Wash. and a board member of theCoalition of State Rheumatology Organizations.

Op-Ed: One way Washington can lower health care costs

Washingtonians are struggling to afford already high health care costs, and those costs keep climbing. Sadly, I've se...
Daughter of UFC legend Frank Mir wins NCAA wrestling championship

Bella Mir has added to her family's collection of championships.

USA TODAY Sports

Her dad Frank was twice the heavyweight champion of the UFC while helping the sport skyrocket in popularity during his 16-year career. He still holds the record for most submission victories in UFC's heavyweight division with eight.

And now Bella is writing her own history. On Saturday night inthe first-ever NCAA Tournament for women's collegiate wrestling, second-seeded Mir – wrestling for Division III North Central – upset No. 1 Reese Larramendy of Iowa with a 5-0 victory in the championship bout of the 145-pound weight class in Coralville, Iowa.

Mir built a 5-0 lead on Larramendy before delivering what would be the first-ever pin in an NCAA women's wrestling final. Mir was in control for much of the match and built that advantage up just 40 seconds into the bout against her former teammate – who handed Mir her only loss of the regular season — with a clinical takedown. Less than three minutes into the match, Mir pulled off a superb reversal of a takedown attempt by Larramendy to put on her back and secure the pin.

It ended a 35-match unbeaten streak for Larramendy.

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The 22-year-old who started her collegiate career at Iowa before transferring to North Central – located in Naperville, Illinois – didn't have a point scored against her at the NCAA championships. She won her opener 11-0, and then took 10-0 victories in the quarterfinals and semifinals.

North Central finished in third place in the overall team standings at the NCAA championships. Division II McKendree won the team title narrowly over second-place Iowa, which is the only Division I school from a Power 4 conference currently sponsoring women's wrestling at the varsity level.

Mir is viewed by many to be the next great women's mixed martial arts fighter in UFC. She's already a two-time world champion in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and owns a 4-0 record as a professional MMA fighter.

Bella was 5 years old when Frank won his second UFC title. Ever since then,she told ESPNin a recent interview, she's wanted one of her own.

"There's been really special people that have stood out in the history of the UFC and the sport," UFC president Dana White told ESPN. "And I truly believe that Bella will be one of those too."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bella Mir, daughter of UFC legend Frank Mir, wins NCAA wrestling title

Daughter of UFC legend Frank Mir wins NCAA wrestling championship

Bella Mir has added to her family's collection of championships. Her dad Frank was twice the heavyweight c...
Trump's 'roaring' economy meets a rough start to 2026: What the latest numbers show

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumppromised that 2026 would be a bumper year for economic growth, but instead it has kicked off withjob losses, risinggasoline pricesand more uncertainty about America's future.

Associated Press A thick plume of smoke rises from an oil storage facility hit by a U.S.-Israeli strike late Saturday in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Prices are displayed electronically at a QuikTrip convenience store, Wednesday, March 4, 2026, in Greenwood Village, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski) The New York Stock Exchange is seen in New York, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) FILE - Construction workers install a lumber roof at a new home build Tuesday, April 1, 2025, in Laveen, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File) Flames rise from an oil storage facility south of the capital Tehran as strikes hit the city during the U.S.–Israel military campaign, Iran, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Iran US Israel

In hisState of the Union addressless than two weeks ago, the Republican president confidently told the country: "The roaring economy is roaring like never before." The latest batch of data on jobs, pump prices and the stock market suggests that Trump's roar has started to sound far more like a whimper.

There is a gap between the boom that Trump has predicted and the volatile results he has produced — one that could set the tone in this year's midterm elections as he tries to defend his party's majorities in the House and Senate. With Trump'stariffs drama ongoing, thewar in Iranhas suddenly created inflationary concerns regarding oil and natural gas. To the White House, it is still early in the year and stronger growth is coming.

No signs of a jobs boom

"WOW! The Golden Age of America is upon us!!!" Trump posted on social media Feb. 11 after the monthly jobs report showed gains of 130,000 jobs in January.

Since then, the job market has evaporated in worrisome ways.

Friday's employment report showed job losses of 92,000 in February. The January and December figures were revised downward, with December swinging to a loss of 17,000 jobs. Monthly data can be rocky, but a trend has emerged that shows an enduring weakness. Without the health care sector, the economy would have shed roughly 202,000 jobs since Trump became president in January 2025. Still, his administration notes that construction job gains outside of the housing sector point to future hiring growth.

Trump often brags that jobs are going to people born in the United States, rather than to immigrants. But the latest report punctured some of that argument.

The unemployment rate for people born in the U.S. has climbed over the past 12 months to 4.7% from 4.4%. This means a greater share of the people who Trump said would get jobs because of his immigration crackdown are, in fact, searching for work.

Prices at the pump are going up

"Slashing energy costs is among the most important actions we can take to bring down prices for American consumers," Trump said in a February speech in Texas just before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran. "Because when you cut the cost of energy, you really cut -- you just cut the cost of everything."

The president has repeatedly told Americans that keeping gas costs low would be key to defeating inflation. He has talked up the decline, citing figures that were far below the national average to assure the public that driving was getting cheaper.

But thestrikes against Iranthat began Feb. 28 have, for the moment, crushed that narrative. Prices at the pump have jumped 19% over the past month to a national average of $3.45, according to AAA. The investment bank Goldman Sachs warned in an analyst note that, if higher oil prices persist, inflation could rise from its 2.4% reading in January to 3% by the end of the year.

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The administration is banking on plans to contain any energy price increases, essentially betting that either the conflict will end shortly or the administration can succeed in getting more tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.

"The president has been clear about short term disruptions due to Operation Epic Fury even as U.S. and allied forces make stunning progress against the Iranian terrorist regime," said White House deputy press secretary Kush Desai. "The long run trend, however, has been clear: President Trump's economic agenda continues to unleash robust private sector job, investment, and economic growth that's driving America's resurgence."

Stocks are off their highs

"You know, we set the all-time record in history with the Dow going to 50,000," Trump said Thursday at the White House.

This frequently repeated talking point has grown stale. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, one of Trump's preferred measures of success, has dropped 5% over the past month. Stocks are up during his presidency, just as they were previously when Democrat Joe Biden was president. The recent decline could be reversed if the war with Iran ends and companies see solid profits over the next year and beyond. The recent dip, however, should be a warning sign as the administration has stressed the importance of more people investing in the stock market through vehicles such as "Trump accounts" for children.

The stock market has become a barometer of how people feel about the economy, with stock investors tending to have more confidence and those without money in the markets being more pessimistic.

Joanna Hsu, the director of the University of Michigan's surveys of consumers, noted that in February a "sizable" increase in sentiment among people owning stocks "was fully offset by a decline among consumers without stock holdings."

Productivity is up, but workers aren't benefiting

Trump can point to a win in that the economy has become more productive — generating more value for each hour of work. That is a positive sign for long-term growth in the U.S. and a reflection of its strong tech sector.

Business sector labor productivity climbed 2.8% in the fourth quarter of last year, the Labor Department reported Thursday. But the challenge is that the gains might not be spread to workers in the form of higher pay as labor's share of income last year fell to the lowest level on record, noted Mike Konczal, senior director of policy and research at the Economic Security Project, a nonprofit aligned with liberal economic issues.

Economy grew at a faster pace under Biden

"Under the Biden administration, America was plagued by the nightmare of stagflation, meaning low growth and high inflation — a recipe for misery, failure and decline," Trump said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January.

The scoreboard tells a far different story, one that makes Biden's track record in 2024 look better than Trump's performance last year. The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8% pace during Biden's last year, compared with 2.2% under Trump in 2025.

As for inflation, the primary measure used by the Federal Reserve is the personal consumption expenditures price index. It was 2.6% in both 2024 and 2025.

Trump has staked his economic argument on doing better than Biden. But while he has avoided the inflation spikes that haunted Biden's presidency, he has not delivered stronger growth or more hiring.

Trump’s ‘roaring’ economy meets a rough start to 2026: What the latest numbers show

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumppromised that 2026 would be a bumper year for economic growth, but instead it has ...
How two painful sports stories underscore girls' unique injury risks

This article discusses suicidal ideation. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

USA TODAY Sports

Anna Baker wanted validation.

It's how she was programmed. In a way, it was how she survived.

"I was always kind of the awkward duckling," Baker says. "Like friendly with everybody, but didn't have a friend group, didn't have close friends."

But she had gymnastics, which she started at 4 or 5.

"When I think of my childhood," she says, "all that I wanted, all that I thought kind of existed was the world of gymnastics. I thought that would be what my future would be guided by."

Today, at 26, years removed from a series of injuries that forced her out of her sport, she still feels some of the pain. She trained or competed almost every day, with minimal breaks for an offseason.

"Your first love cuts the deepest," she tells USA TODAY Sports. "And I think that for a lot of kids that is a sport, at least for a lot of kids that I grew up with, and it really is like a unique heartbreak and has an effect that has stuck with me for a really long time."

Anna Baker, shown as a young girl, says all she ever wanted to be was a gymnast.

Baker was not alone, as a teenager in this age of manic kids sports, and as a girl, who has a unique injury risk over a boy.

"Girls are at higher risk for overuse injuries in youth sports, period," says Neeru Jayanthi, a sports medicine physician at the forefront of research on early sports specialization. "And probably serious overuse injuries as well, too."

Jayanthi, the director of Emory Sports Medicine Research and Education in Atlanta, has a patient, Neva Talari, 14, an elite tennis player who came to him a little less than a year ago after back pain revealed stress fractures in her back.

"We went on a two-year spree without almost a break for her and she was actually taking off well with the results so she was motivated and we were motivated," says her father, Suneel Talari. "We were thinking we should not hold back when the track is looking good."

Still, Jayanthi has indicated Neva has a chance to make it back. Baker never could after her experience with specializing in gymnastics sent her down a slippery slope that is becoming more and more familiar as research continues on young female athletes.

Jayanthi says we need to accept girls' greater injury risks, which will help us reduce them. USA TODAY Sports spoke with him, as well as Suneel Talari and Baker, about how their experiences with overuse injuries can help athletes and their parents.

YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE:Preorder Coach Steve's upcoming book for young athletes and their parents

What's at risk for female athletes with overuse injuries?

Overuse injuriescan be defined as gradual onset injuries that result from cumulative microtrauma to bone, muscle, and/or tendon as a function of repetitive stress with insufficient recovery.

They comprise more than half of the injuries to young athletes, medical research has found.

However, in a 2024 study of injured athletes aged 10 to 23, Jayanthi and his associates found the odds of sustaining an overuse injury as compared with an acute injury (such as an ankle sprain or concussion) was almost 50% higher in female than male athletes.

Such data isn't widely known among youth sports parents.

Neva Talari, who plays out of Vander Meer Academy in Hilton Head, South Carolina, once played tennis every day, and for four and a half hours on Monday through Thursday, and then even more (five to seven matches) on weekend in travel tournaments.

Talari, 14, started noticing back pain last May. After resting for two weeks, she tried to play again and her pain got so bad she had to forfeit a match after the first set. She hasn't played competitively since then.

"It's a bad lesson for me," says Suneel Talari, 43. "I never got injured despite playing a physical contact sport. I was thinking like you have to be extremely unlucky to get an injury because somebody like me never trained, never had a coach, never knew about injury management, could go on to play college soccer for a big school in India, and then never get injured."

Anna Baker is an only child who grew up in Maine. Her mother, Michele LaBotz, is a sports medicine physician, who, like all of us, also was figuring out how to manage her budding athlete's career.

What happened next blindsided them.

"Just as a preface, when we talk about, kind of best practice in terms of developing athleticism, particularly young children, gymnastics is an amazing sport and activity that way," LeBotz told USA TODAY Sports in an interview. "When you think about all the sport options that are out there for kids, it's the one that most closely replicates free play as you've kind of gone through the literature, in terms of pediatric development for both mental and physical development. Particularly, huge recreational gymnastic programs are fabulous in terms of developing general athleticism.

"And so I'm not in any way, shape or form throwing gymnastics under the bus. This has just been our experience with the specialization process."

COACH STEVE:When should kid athletes specialize in a sport? It can be deeply personal

Sports specialization drives increased injury risks, especially for girls

Sports specialization, according to medical experts, is the intentional and focused participation in a single sport for a majority of the year that restricts opportunities for other sports and activities.

It's directed by a pull toward a singular activity for which your child demonstrates ability and passion, which raises the potential of them getting hurt.

LaBotz says girls face an increased risk of overuse injuries, in part, because they have a higher prevalence ofREDs, or a syndrome of impaired physiological and/or psychological functioning due to inadequate energy intake in relation to exercise energy expenditure.

Girls also generally possess less strength and less muscle mass than boys, while their bone density is lower, leading to increased risk of stress fractures.

Her daughter developed them in both her feet and elbows.

"They were honestly really validating," Anna Baker says. "I think growing up as athletes, we very much look for physical wins. It needs to be something that you can see, whether it's like a scoreboard or a new skill or a performance. When I would get those injuries and I would just keep training on them, that is when I felt probably the best about myself, being like, 'Look, here's the proof that I'm working really hard, and here's the proof that I'm really strong.' "

She developed mysterious hip pain at 14. It was eventually revealed to beavascular necrosis(AVN), which occurs when the ball and socket in the hip loses its blood supply and the bone starts to die.

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She had an initial surgery for AVN at Boston Children's Hospital, but her hip continued to collapse. Her second surgery at Duke University took a fibula out of her lower leg and placed it in her hip for stability.

Her career was over, underscoring the ultimate risk of an overuse injury:Attrition from a sport.

If you choose to specialize in a sport, work backward from your goal

Jayanthi says the risks for overuse injuries are higher for girls who do individual technical sports, such as swim, dive, dance, tennis and gymnastics.

But he doesn't discourage girls from specializing in sports. If you do, though, he says you need to monitor yourself through vulnerable periods and understand your goals.

For one, are you setting your sights on making a high school team or a college one?

"I recognize that getting on (at) a high school, in some communities, is not easy at all," Jayanthi says. "We are forced to do it. So figure out when you want to peak in your training. You need to peak at 14 or 15, which means that if you backtrack it four or five years, you actually have to start doing some intensity in training about four years prior to that to get to that point. If you do it, put the best environment around you.

"At the end of the year, each season, doneuromuscular training, and look at your competition/training ratio, and try to get some free play in there, and build the resilience."

If the goal is college, he says, "just recognize that, 'Hey, look, let's not push this girl out of it. Let's just let her get through a little more maturity, and then go all in (at) 13, 14 or something like that, when their skeletons mature."

And scale back dramatically when you get hurt. Jayanthi prescribed complete rest to Neva Talari for a number of weeks to heal her stress fractures in her back. She then implemented a 12-week transition plan. The first week, her father says, she played only an hour a day, adding a half hour per week without serves until the fifth or sixth week.

"It took 12 weeks for us to slowly take off," her father says. "My goal for her is to definitely play in a really top school, like something like Stanford because she's academically also very good. And she is like a 7.1 UTR (Universal Tennis Rating) now, despite not playing for lost 8 months.

"And for us to get into something like Stanford along those lines, she needs to be close to 10 UTR at a minimum, on the lower end. So my challenge there is I do not have liberty and luxury to have her play two different sports on two different days and then give only two days a week for tennis and expect her to get to 10 UTR when she is 17."

Realize the importance of rest, and 'free play'

Suneel Talari speaks with a tinge of caution. He knows he can't afford for Neva to suffer the injury again, when her chances at a full recovery will be greatly reduced, if not extinguished, like Anna Baker's were a decade or so ago.

Anna Baker has studied film and worked in the industry. She hopes to get back into it.

"I don't remember the last time I watched gymnastics," Baker says. "There's still like so many feelings and emotions and like a deep sadness of missing something."

She wound up getting a hip replacement at around 20, but the hip got infected and she went intosepticshock.

"I don't really remember much, I was in and out of consciousness," she says, "but they pretty much told my parents to plan for me to not make it through the night. And at the time it was COVID and I was an adult so I was in a cardiac ICU and they were not allowed there. So my parents were sitting at home alone, just getting phone calls and updates on what was going on."

Baker has since struggled with pain medication abuse and suicidal ideation. She had an extended stay in a psychiatric unit.

She finds solace today with Pilates, which she says, through movements and muscle activation, replicate many similarities of gymnastics.

Her experience with Pilates is in the spirit of what we can do with our young athletes if they decide to specialize.

"Do something that involves motor development outside of your sport," Jayanthi says. "So if it's not free play, then play another sport. If it's not playing another sport, then get in an injury prevention, strength-training program. Not the type that just add more [load] and try to make you faster, ones that actually focus on strength and developing your body."

Monitor your child's adolescent growth spurt, when athletes are more susceptible to overuse injuries, and minimize high competition-to-training ratios.

We are considered low-risk or "load tolerant" athletes if our competition to training ratio is less than 1:3. We become a moderate risk when the ratio increases to 1:1 and high-risk when it's greater than 1-1.

Find the spirit of yourself

Suneel Talari has trimmed the tennis schedule for his younger daughter, Rhea, 11, to two tournaments a month.

Rhea is adopting a training workload adjusted from five days a week, four hours per day, to four days a week.

He observes his daughters' states after they have been playing for a few hours. Are they fatigued? Are they dragging?

"My goal as a parent is I want to see my kids be happy," he says. "I want them to be happy in the sport we chose right now. I'm always looking for that happiness aspect."

The aspect, though, can be broadened within us if we find it outside of our sport. It's something with which Baker struggled.

The gymnasts with whom she trained had a better handle on that part of their lives.

"When they were injured, they were like, 'Oh, I can hang out with my friends more. At least I get to go to this school activity (or) hockey game. When I got injured and was out for a significant period of time, I didn't have any real peers to do it with, not being involved in anything other than gymnastics.

"I would tell younger girls you don't have to prove your commitment to your sport by dropping everything else. You don't have to say no to everything else to prove that that is important to you."

And, she says, learn to give yourself breaks.

"Physical and mental breaks that are focused on recharging your body and your mind," she says. "Whether that's napping or a certain meal, a certain stretch, just figuring out how to have a good conversation within your mind, and then bringing it to others when necessary."

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly.For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him atsborelli@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why female athletes are at greater overuse injury risk than boys

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