Santa Cruz Sentinel

Earthquake­s strike 10-year stadium name deal with PayPal

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The San Jose Earthquake­s have struck a naming-rights deal with Silicon Valley brand PayPal in a movethatco­uldelevate­the Major League Soccer team’s profile in the Bay Area and beyond.

The Quakes announced Monday they have a 10-year agreement with the digital pioneer to rename their stadium PayPal Park that also will increase touchless payment this season.

“It is going to be a total game-changer as far as how the sport is perceived in this market and how our stadium is perceived on a national level,” said Jared Shawlee, the Earthquake­s chief operating officer.

The team had gone three years without a namingrigh­ts deal after original sponsor Avaya withdrew from its $20-million, 10year agreement because of bankruptcy issues.

The Quakes declined to release the financial terms of the PayPal deal but Shawlee said it falls within the top half of MLS namingrigh­ts agreements. He also said it is an increase from the Avaya terms.

Shawlee said the Quakes wanted to strike a partnershi­p with PayPal once it was on the hunt for a new naming-rights deal for their 18,000-seat stadium that opened in 2015. PayPal is located about two miles from the stadium. ORGANIZATI­ONS TO TEST CONCUSSION SUBSTITUTE­S >> U.S. Soccer, Major League Soccer and the National Women’s Soccer League are joining a trial program that will allow teams two additional substitute­s for suspected concussion­s in each match.

The Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board, which sets the rules for the game, approved the trial for concussion substitute­s last

December. It is expected to run through August 2022.

Starting this season, teams can make two substituti­ons for suspected concussion­s. That’s in addition to the five substituti­ons already allowed because of the coronaviru­s. Normally teams are allowed three total substituti­ons.

Men’s college basketball

UNC NAMES HUBERT DAVIS AS ROY WILLIAMS’ SUCCESSOR >> North Carolina promoted assistant Hubert Davis to replace Roy Williams as the Tar Heels’ new head coach, the university announced Monday. Davis, 50, will be formally introduced during a news conference today.

Davis has been an assistant to Williams for the past nine years in Chapel Hill. Williams, 70, announced his retirement last Thursday after winning three national championsh­ips in 18 years as the Tar Heels’ head coach.

NFL JETS TRADE DARNOLD TO PANTHERS FOR 3 DRAFT PICKS >>

Sam Darnold was the face of a hopeful franchise, a promising playmaker who might just be

the New York Jets’ quarterbac­k for at least the next decade.

It took only three years for that dream to fizzle and fade into disappoint­ment.

Darnold was traded to the Carolina Panthers, ending months of speculatio­n and a stint in New York that was marked by a few flashes of brilliance, inconsiste­nt play and unfortunat­e injuries.

New York announced it acquired a sixth-round pick in this year’s draft and second- and fourth-round picks in the 2022 draft.

MLB NATIONALS, BRAVES TO MAKE UP POSTPONED GAME IN DOUBLEHEAD­ER >>

The Nationals and Atlanta Braves will make up their game that was postponed Monday because of Washington’s coronaviru­s outbreak as part of a doublehead­er on Wednesday.

Major League Baseball announced the change Monday while Washington’s players were working out at Nationals Park.

Four players on the Nationals have tested positive for COVID-19 and seven more have been placed under quarantine after contact tracing determined they potentiall­y were exposed. BLUE JAYS SPOIL RANGERS HOME OPENER BEFORE LARGEST MLB CROWD >> Steven Matz struck out nine in his Toronto debut, Marcus Semien and Cavan Biggio hit back-to-back homers and the Blue Jays won 6-2 in the home opener for the Texas Rangers on Monday before the largest MLB crowd since the pandemic.

Toronto, 3-1 for the first time since 2015, went ahead 4-0 in the second after Biggio’s solo homer followed a two-out, two-run shot by Semien off Texas starter Mike Foltynewic­z (0-1).

The Rangers announced a sellout crowd of 38,283.

Hockey DEATH OF ‘MIRACLE ON ICE’ STANDOUT PAVELICH RULED SUICIDE >>

Last month’s death of “Miracle on Ice” Olympic hockey standout Mark Pavelich was ruled a suicide, a Minnesota medical examiner said Monday.

The Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office in Anoka County said in a news release that the 63-year-old Pavelich died of asphyxia. His body was found March 3 at the Eagle’s Healing Nest in Sauk Centre, Minnesota.

Pavelich was undergoing treatment at the home as part of a civil commitment for assaulting his neighbor in Cook County, Minnesota, in August 2019. Pavelich thought the man had spiked his beer.

He was charged with felony assault but Judge Michael Cuzzo found he was incompeten­t to stand trial because he was mentally ill and dangerous. The judge said psychologi­sts found that Pavelich was suffering from delusions and paranoia. Experts also diagnosed him with a mild neurocogni­tive disorder due to traumatic brain injury, likely related to repeated head injuries.

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