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Up 93% in 2025, Palantir Stock Is Too Hot to Handle Here

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Palantir by Hiroshi-Mori-Stock via Shutterstock
Palantir by Hiroshi-Mori-Stock via Shutterstock

Palantir Technologies (PLTR) has been the top-performing S&P 500 Index ($SPX) stock over the past year. Shares of this AI software company have risen over 92% year-to-date. Moreover, shares have gained 490% in the past year. Palantir’s perceived leadership in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) platforms, its accelerating financial performance led by momentum in its commercial business, significant strategic contracts with the U.S. government, and focus on product innovation have led to a rally in PLTR stock.

Plus, Palantir’s remarkable stock surge has occurred even as the company continues to hold an excessively high valuation.

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The market’s willingness to overlook Palantir’s premium valuation is rooted in its strategic positioning within the burgeoning AI landscape. Investors remain confident in Palantir’s ability to turn advanced AI capabilities into real-world solutions for businesses and government clients. In short, this suggests that the market is heavily influenced by momentum in PLTR stock, driven by the compelling narrative surrounding AI.

Given the momentum, Palantir stock could still witness short-term gains. However, the substantial disconnect between PLTR’s current pricing and valuation introduces considerable risk.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

Palantir’s current valuation is strikingly high, far exceeding not only the broader industry averages, but also those of much larger, more established tech companies with substantially greater revenue streams.

To put this in perspective, Palantir’s price-sales (P/S) ratio has surged to an astonishing 115.23x. In contrast, peers in the AI and software space — such as Snowflake (SNOW), UiPath (PATH), and C3.ai (AI) — are trading at much lower forward P/S multiples of 19.68x, 4.6x, and 7.99x, respectively.

Even the biggest names in the tech space appear far more reasonably priced compared to Palantir. Alphabet (GOOGL), for example, trades at a P/S ratio of just 5.73x. Microsoft (MSFT) comes in at 14.74x, and even Nvidia (NVDA), with its dominant role in AI hardware, has a P/S of 26.96x — still a fraction of Palantir’s.

Gemini is getting ready to replace Google Assistant on Android

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Android users will soon be able to let Gemini control device features and apps with fewer privacy concerns. In an email seen by Android Police, Google recently notified Gemini users that it will start rolling out an update on July 7th that allows the AI bot to “use Phone, Messages, WhatsApp, and Utilities on your phone, whether your Gemini Apps Activity is on or off.”

Disabling the Gemini Apps activity setting stops conversations with the chatbot from being used to “provide, improve, develop, and personalize” Google products and AI models. It also currently prevents users from asking Gemini to perform tasks in connected apps, such as setting alarms, calling contacts, sending WhatsApp messages, and controlling media playback settings.

The vague wording of Google’s message initially raised some confusion around whether the change would give Gemini unrestricted access to private data or system functions. Google later clarified that Gemini’s app connections can still be disabled at any time, and that the update “is good for users.”

“They can now use Gemini to complete daily tasks on their mobile devices like send messages, initiate phone calls, and set timers while Gemini Apps Activity is turned off,” Google said in a statement to Android Authority. “With Gemini Apps Activity turned off, their Gemini chats are not being reviewed or used to improve our AI models.”

The incoming change means that people can use Gemini like a personal assistant for their device without contributing to Google’s AI training datasets, just in time for Gemini to actually replace Google Assistant on Android devices later this year. Turning Apps Activity off will also stop Gemini interactions from appearing in the activity log, though Google notes it will still save conversations for up to 72 hours for security purposes, regardless of whether the setting is disabled or not.

Championship fixtures: Wrexham begin season at Southampton

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Wrexham will begin their first Championship campaign in over 40 years away at former Premier League side Southampton.

After becoming the first-ever side in English football to achieve three consecutive promotions, Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenny’s Wrexham face a difficult start to life in the second tier with an away trip to Millwall and games against Sheffield Wednesday and West Bromwich Albion in their opening five games.

Birmingham City, who are co-owned by former NFL star Tom Brady, face Ipswich Town in the Championship curtain-raiser on Aug. 9. The League One champions then take on Blackburn Rovers, Oxford United, Leicester City and Stoke City in their first five games.

Wrexham host Birmingham on Oct. 4 in a fixture dubbed “The Hollywood derby.” The return fixture on April 11 at St. Andrew’s could potentially have promotion implications.

Elsewhere, newly promoted Charlton host Watford on the opening weekend while Sheffield United will look to bounce back from their playoff final disappointment against Bristol City under new manager Rubén Sellés.

The relegated Premier League sides — Southampton, Leicester and Ipswich — will all be targeting swift returns to the top flight. Leicester will be expected to start well as they take on Championship strugglers Oxford United and Preston North End in their first five before an intriguing clash with Frank Lampard’s Coventry City on Sept. 20.

Kieran McKenna’s Ipswich face a challenging start to their promotion push as they will play Birmingham, Southampton and Sheffield United in their first five fixtures.

Southampton start the new season under new manager, Will Still, 32, who will have to contend with trips to Ipswich and Watford after hosting Wrexham to start his first season in English football.

The first South Coast derby of the season between Southampton and Portsmouth takes place on Sept. 13 at St. Mary’s with the return fixture set for Jan. 24 at Fratton Park.

The first East Anglian derby is carded for Oct. 4 as Ipswich welcome rivals Norwich to Portman Road.

Brad Pitt’s L.A. Home Broken Into, Robbed

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Once upon a time in Hollywood, Brad Pitt‘s house was burglarized.

The Oscar winner’s home in Los Angeles’ Los Feliz neighborhood was broken into June 25, two law enforcement sources familiar with the incident told NBC News. The sources said three people who climbed over a fence and entered through a front window, though Pitt was not home at the time.

A Los Angeles Police Department spokesperson also confirmed to the outlet that a break-in occurred around 10:30 p.m. June 25 in Los Feliz, but did not identify who lived there or owned the property.

The suspects involved in the burglary ransacked the residence and took an unknown amount of miscellaneous property, per police. The value of the stolen items was not disclosed. 

E! News has reached out to the LAPD for more details but hasn’t heard back. Pitt’s rep declined to comment when contacted by E! News. 

News of the burglary comes as Pitt continues his international press tour for F1. The 61-year-old was in New York on June 16 for its world premiere, before attending a U.K. screening on June 23.

‘Starmer caves in’ and Wintour not ‘in Vogue’

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BBC "Starmer caves in to rebels on benefits" reads the headline on the front page of The Daily Telegraph.BBC

Both The Daily Telegraph and the Daily Mail run with “Starmer caves in” as the headline on their lead stories – reporting on the prime minister’s climbdown in the face of a major rebellion over welfare cuts. The Telegraph also reports that the UK is “in talks” with France to return migrants coming across the Channel in what it calls a “one in, one out” deal. A large photo of Dame Anna Wintour accompanies the news that she is “no longer in Vogue” as the Telegraph reports that the editor-in-chief of the magazine “is stepping back”.

"Starmer caves in to rebels on benefits" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Mail.

Alongside its coverage of welfare cuts, the Damily Mail also has a story it says is “a plot twist worthy of John le Carré”, claiming the new head of MI6 Blaise Metreweli is the grandaughter of “a Nazi spy chief”. In a statement, a Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesman told the paper: “Blaise Metreweli neither knew nor met her paternal grandfather.”

"'Massive concessions' on welfare bill win over key Labour rebels" reads the headline on the front page of the Guardian.

The Guardian quotes leading MPs who tell them “massive concessions” will be made by Sir Keir Starmer on the welfare bill. The “major U-turn” came during a “tense day of talks with Downing Street”. Also on its front page, a new NHS survey shows one in four young adults now have a common health condition and young women are “nearly three times more likely to report them than young men”.

"PM pledges protections for disabled to rescue bill" reads the headline on the front page of The Times.

The Times writes that the PM has pledged “protections for disabled to rescue bill” in a “move that will cost the Treasury £1.5bn”. The amendment “may require a tax hike”. The paper also reports that Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron are “working on a deal” on migrant returns that “could be announced as soon as next week”.

"Starmer yields to avert Labour 'civil war' over cuts to welfare" reads the headline on the front page of the Financial Times.

Starmer “yields to avert Labour ‘civil war’ over cuts to welfare” the Financial Times headlines today. The welfare cuts are the “biggest crisis of his first year in office”. Former Barclays boss Jes Staley is splashed in a large photo across the front, as he has “failed to overturn a decision by the Financial Conduct Authority that he had ‘recklessly’ misled the regulator on his ties to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.”

"Keir not faring too well" reads the headline on the front page of Metro.

“Keir not faring too well” writes Metro, as it reports on Starmer’s talks with Labour MPs over “crunch vote seen as test of his authority”. Nigel Farage “would have most seats if election was held tomorrow” it adds.

"New hope on Pips" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Mirror.

There’s “new hope on Pips” writes the Daily Mirror, saying the PM was “last night close to striking a deal with Labour rebels”. The Mirror also features a story on BBC racing commentator John Hunt, whose wife and two daughters were murdered last July. In an exclusive interview with the BBC, Mr Hunt said: “I speak to them every day, they’re always close.”

"How dare you suggest she is on her death bed!" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Express.

Former BBC presenter and journalist Dame Esther Rantzen’s daughter “blasts ‘repulsive’ fake images” of her mother’s battle with cancer. “How dare you suggest she is on her death bed!” reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Express.

"Killer back stalking Cheryl" reads the headline on the front page of The Sun.

“Killer back stalking Cheryl” says The Sun after Daniel Bannister turned up at the singer’s house “flouting a restraining order.”

"It's alive" reads the headline on the front page of the Daily Star.

“Boffins hope to create artificial human parts to tackle disease” writes the Daily Star. Meanwhile, “experts fear we could end up with hybrid creatures”. “It’s alive!” the Star headlines.

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House GOP advances bill 'gutting' government watchdog 

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House Republicans advanced legislation on Thursday that seeks to cut funding for the Government Accountability Office (GAO) by roughly 50 percent for fiscal 2026, prompting outcry from Democrats who say the move is counterproductive to GOP efforts to root out waste in government. 

The GOP-led House Appropriations Committee voted along party lines on Thursday to advance the legislation, with Democrats rising in sharp opposition to the plan. 

The annual legislative branch funding bill, one of 12 full-year appropriations bills the committee aims to greenlight before the August recess, includes funding for House of Representatives operations, the Library of Congress, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), U.S. Capitol Police, and other agencies. 

Compared with current levels, the bill calls for $5 billion for fiscal 2026, a 5 percent drop from current levels, when not accounting for Senate items. The total discretionary allocation rises to $6.7 billion, however, when considering those items.

“While we had to make a number of tough choices in this bill, we believe that as the legislative branch, it is our responsibility to lead by example and make responsible funding decreases where appropriate,” Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.), head of the subcommittee that crafted the plan, said in remarks on Thursday.

The largest proposed cut outlined by appropriators in the bill amounts to a nearly 49 percent decrease in funding for the GAO, allocating $415 million for the agency in the fiscal 2026 budget. Democrats have also criticized a provision in the plan that they say would block the agency from bringing civil actions against other agencies for not complying with the Impoundment Control Act of 1974.

“This is about the GAO having nearly 40 open investigations into whether the White House is illegally withholding money that we, as a committee, previously appropriate supporting the administration’s actions that contravene the rule of law means the committee compromises,” Rep. Adriano Espaillat (N.Y.), top Democrat on the legislative branch appropriations subcommittee, said at the start of the markup session.

“With this, 2,200 jobs will be lost. In addition, Congress will forgo tens of billions in cost savings that result from GAO work each year,” he continued.

The cuts come as GAO officials have made clear that they have a string of probes into the Trump administration’s efforts to freeze federal funds.

At the same time, Trump officials have raised scrutiny over the agency in recent months, with White House budget chief Russell Vought accusing the office of “improperly calling programmatic review impoundments” in a Senate hearing earlier this week. 

“We’re going through a programmatic review. We will look at our options under the law with regard to that funding. Each set of funding is different, as you know, and we will be continuing to evaluate that program,” he also said before the Senate Appropriations Committee on Tuesday.

Democrats have accused the Trump administration of undertaking a sweeping, illegal funding freeze, blocking hundreds of billions of dollars in federal dollars previously approved by Congress. 

During the committee markup on Thursday, Democrats also singled out a proposal to cut funding for the Library of Congress by 10 percent for fiscal 2026. 

At the same time, the plan calls for increases to the U.S. Capitol Police, the CBO, the Architect of the Capitol, with a boost for salaries and expenses for House officers and employees, committees operations, as well as an increase for the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights.

With the bill’s passage on Thursday, the House Appropriations Committee has passed almost half of its annual funding bills for fiscal 2026. The House also passed its first fiscal 2026 appropriations bill, which lays out the party’s vision for the Department of Veterans’ Affairs full-year funding, earlier this week.

Stocks See Support Ahead of Fed Chair Powell Testimony

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Wall street sign in New York City with American flags and New York Stock Exchange in background by kasto80 via iStock
Wall street sign in New York City with American flags and New York Stock Exchange in background by kasto80 via iStock

The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) today is up +0.25%, the Dow Jones Industrials Index ($DOWI) (DIA) is down -0.09%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) is up +0.58%.  September E-mini S&P futures (ESU25) are up +0.21%, and September E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQU25) are up +0.56%.

Stock indexes today are mostly higher, with the S&P 500 posting a 4-month high and the Nasdaq 100 posting a new all-time high.  Stocks are awaiting the second day of testimony from Fed Chair Powell about the economy.  Reduced geopolitical risks in the Middle East have boosted market sentiment and prompted a risk-on for asset markets as the ceasefire between Israel and Iran appears to be holding.

US MBA mortgage applications rose +1.1% in the week ended June 20, with the purchase mortgage sub-index down -0.4% and the refinancing mortgage sub-index up +3.0%. The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage rose +4 bp to 6.88% from 6.84% in the prior week.

Late Tuesday evening, Kansas City Fed President Schmid stated that the current “wait and see” monetary policy posture is appropriate, as the Fed should wait to see how tariffs and other policies impact the economy before adjusting interest rates.

The markets this week will watch to see if the ceasefire holds between Israel and Iran. Also, any new tariff news or trade deals will be scrutinized.  Later today, Mr. Powell will testify before the Senate Banking Committee on monetary policy.  Also, US Mar new home sales are expected to fall -6.7% m/m to 693,000.  On Thursday, Q1 GDP is expected to be unrevised at -0.2% (q/q annualized).  Also, weekly initial unemployment claims are expected to be unchanged at 245,000. Friday brings May personal spending (expected +0.1% m/m) and May personal income (expected +0.3% m/m). Also on Friday, the May core PCE price index, the Fed’s preferred price gauge, is expected to rise by +0.1% m/m and +2.6% y/y.  Finally, Friday’s June University of Michigan US consumer sentiment index is expected to be revised lower by -0.2 points to 60.3.

The markets are discounting the chances at 21% for a -25 bp rate cut at the July 29-30 FOMC meeting.

Overseas stock markets today are mixed.  The Euro Stoxx 50 is down -0.39%.  China’s Shanghai Composite rallied to a 6-1/4 month high and closed up +1.04%.  Japan’s Nikkei Stock 225 closed up +0.39%.

Interest Rates

September 10-year T-notes (ZNU25) today are down -6 ticks.  The 10-year T-note yield is up +2.4 bp to 4.318%.  Sep T-notes fell from a 1-1/2 month high today and are moving lower, and the 10-year T-note yield rebounded from a 1-1/2 month low of 4.275%.  T-notes are under pressure today on negative carryover from weakness in European government bonds.  Also, hawkish comments from Kansas City Fed President Schmid undercut T-notes when he said the Fed should wait to see how tariffs and other policies impact the economy before adjusting interest rates.  Supply pressures are negative for T-notes ahead of the Treasury’s $28 billion auction of 2-year floating rate notes and the $70 billion auction of 5-year T-notes later today.

Google is rolling out its AI-powered ‘Ask Photos’ search again – and it has a speed boost

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After quietly pausing the rollout of Google Photos’ AI-powered “Ask Photos” search tool, Google is now expanding access once again and making some improvements to the feature.

Google’s Gemini AI models power Ask Photos so that you can ask complex questions to help you find photos. But earlier this month, a member of the Google Photos team said on X that the feature “isn’t where it needs to be, in terms of latency, quality and UX.”

In a blog post published Thursday, Google said that it has “heard your feedback” that the feature should “return more photos faster for simple searches, like ‘beach’ or ‘dogs.’” Now, “you’ll now see results right away while Gemini models continue to work in the background to find the most relevant photos or information for more complex queries,” according to Google.

The company adds that the feature is now “opening up beyond early access” and is beginning to roll out to more “eligible users” in the US.

Inside A’s shortstop Jacob Wilson’s path to MLB stardom

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Warning: What you’re about to read is Jacob Wilson‘s opinion. He is a professional baseball player — a very good one — and not a medical expert, but there are some things he is convinced are true, and this is one of them.

The 23-year-old Wilson, the Athletics’ wunderkind shortstop, is wise enough to understand that the sort of success he has found on the baseball field — a .347 batting average and a near-certain invitation to the All-Star Game coming — comes from a multitude of areas. He is the son of a longtime big leaguer, so certainly genetics helped, and he works relentlessly at his craft, which goes a long way. But the special sauce that built the American League Rookie of the Year favorite, he believes, included a secret ingredient.

Fortnite.

“Kids are going to love this one. Parents are going to hate me,” Wilson said. “I am a big believer in video games. It’s fast decision-making strategy. I think that gets me ready for the game, because when you’re in the box, you have to process a lot. So there’s some days where I’ll wake up and I’ll play video games and then I’ll go to the field, and I’ll have a good day. Some days I won’t play and don’t see the ball well. I think it really helps me train kind of the decision-making that I have to make six, seven hours later at the baseball field.”

Yes, one of the best hitters in the major leagues, a contact maven who strikes out with the infrequency of Tony Gwynn, swears that he’s as good as he is at a kid’s game because of his aptitude at another kid’s game. After Wilson wakes up, he deploys to his living room and parks in a chair. On the table in front of him sit a PC and a controller. He logs in to Fortnite — the 8-year-old game still played by millions every day — hops on the Battle Bus and systematically disposes of those with the misfortune of sharing a map with him.

“If we play a game with me and him and guys we know and you kill him once, you’re like, ‘That’s a good day,'” A’s infielder Max Muncy said. “You could play 50 rounds. Just once is good.”

Muncy has known of Wilson’s Fortnite exploits since they were teammates at Thousand Oaks (California) High, where Wilson’s father, former Pittsburgh shortstop Jack Wilson, coached. Back then, Jack actually questioned whether the game was interfering with Jacob’s baseball growth — though he understood his son’s reasoning. Over his 12-year big league career, Jack earned a reputation as one of the best pingpong players in the major leagues. It was pure reaction, not unlike hitting, and he complemented his pregame work in the batting cage with the brain training found in a paddle and hollow ball.

He saw the same opportunity in video games for his son — with a caveat.

“I do believe in the hand-eye coordination that video games give — as long as you do your homework,” Jack said. “Kids, if you’re reading, do your homework.”

The Wilsons are not alone in their belief that unconventional methods off the field can lead to success on it. Studies back up the suggestion that video games can be beneficial for brain activity. And considering the recognition being lavished on Jacob Wilson — he is more than a quarter-million votes ahead of Kansas City star Bobby Witt Jr. in All-Star balloting to be the American League’s starting shortstop — the benefits can be pronounced.

Of course, dropping into Anarchy Acres does not a big league hitter make. The story of Wilson’s ascent actually starts in his backyard, where he spent countless hours figuring out how to thrive in a game that simply isn’t built for hitters like him anymore.


Heaven for the Wilson family is a regulation-sized turfed infield with a FungoMan ground ball machine, a fence covered with famous retired numbers and stadium logos, a full dugout on the third-base side — and a grill stationed in center field in case someone gets hungry. The backyard of the family’s home is a testament to form and function, and it’s where Jacob learned how to be — and how not to be — like his father.

“It was a place built for guys who just love the grind of wanting to get better every day,” Jack said.

Jack’s bat was never as adept as his glove, and to last a dozen years in the big leagues, he needed countless reps to keep his fielding at a level that, according to Baseball-Reference, produced the fifth-most defensive wins above replacement this century, behind only Andrelton Simmons, Yadier Molina, Adrian Beltre and Kevin Kiermaier.

“You know that idea about being able to write a letter to your former self on what would you tell yourself now?” Jack said. “I get to do that with Jake. And I said, ‘You know, this is the way I hit. I don’t want you to hit like this.’ Because there were so many things I wish I could have done differently. If I were to build a perfect hitter, what would I do?”

He started with Miguel Cabrera. Wilson always admired how tall he stood in the batter’s box before sinking into his legs. Then it was Mike Trout. The simplicity of his swing has always been a marvel, but in particular Wilson appreciated the speed at which he loads his hands, allowing Trout to be on time even for 100 mph fastballs. The final lesson was Albert Pujols’ bat path, which was so flat and stayed in the zone for so long that it allowed him to sting the ball from foul pole to foul pole while maintaining strikeout numbers that were well below league average.

To hone that Voltron of a swing, a teenage Wilson would grip a custom wood bat with a 1½-inch barrel — an inch less than a standard big league barrel — and face his dad, who stood 45 feet away and ripped 85 mph fastballs and sliders using a tennis ball. If he didn’t catch the ball on the meat of the barrel, it would spin sideways, forcing him to learn to maneuver his bat with special dexterity.

The skinny bat made a regulation-sized model feel twice as big. When he took regular batting practice, Jacob always started by peppering the right side of the field on his first dozen swings. Even though Jacob was bigger than his father — at 6-foot-3, he is a comparatively imposing presence — Jack didn’t want him to fall into the trap of always trying to pull the ball. While that approach works for some hitters, Cabrera, Trout and Pujols embraced and embodied an all-fields approach.

By Wilson’s junior year in high school, the work started to pay off. Wilson didn’t strike out once all season. He didn’t punch out during his COVID-shortened senior season, either, then continued that trend at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, where his sophomore year he whiffed seven times in 275 plate appearances and his junior season had five punchouts in 217 times at the plate. Twice, he received a plaque from the NCAA for being the toughest hitter to strike out in college baseball.

The A’s took Wilson with the sixth pick in the loaded 2023 draft. Last year, he hit .433/.473/.668 with just 15 strikeouts in 226 plate appearances across three minor league levels and, just a year and 10 days after being drafted, he debuted in the big leagues.

In a world of launch angle and exit velocity, Wilson arrived in the majors wanting to be more like Luis Arráez and Nico Hoerner, contact artists nonpareil who value batting average and are allergic to strikeouts.

“I just take strikeouts so personally,” Wilson said. “It’s the one thing in this game that makes me more mad than anything. So I’ll go up there and I’ll swing at a pitch that’s maybe a couple inches off and take a base hit to right. So I think batting average definitely is a stat that should be seen and should matter for most hitters.”

Wilson’s swing is kinetic, with a wide-open stance that closes as he moves his legs and flaps his arms — a little Chicken Dance, a little Cabrera-Trout-Pujols. While he hasn’t always been this twitchy — “I’ve got to keep my muscles moving a little bit,” Wilson said — it works for him. He keeps the knob of the bat in the direction of the ball longer than most hitters, reminding himself to “stay inside the baseball,” a lesson preached ad nauseam by Jack. Aiming to strike the inside of the ball, Jacob said, keeps him from rolling over it. He lives by the old axiom “good hitters get jammed” and doesn’t shy away from flipping a duck snort between the infield and outfield.

The approach has served him well. After starting the year in the No. 9 hole, Wilson has hit first or second every game since May 7. Only Arráez has a lower strikeout rate than Wilson’s 6.8% — and Wilson has nine home runs compared with Arráez’s one. Of all the strikeout-averse hitters in the game, the one with a line most comparable to Wilson’s.347/.388/.487 is Cleveland third baseman Jose Ramirez, who is primed to play in his seventh All-Star Game this season.

“It’s not even his hits,” said Nick Kurtz, the A’s first baseman and fellow rookie. “I’ve seen multiple times where there’s a sinker up and in that was going to hit him, and he hit it to second base. Sometimes they’re a hit, sometimes they’re not. Every time, though, I’m like, ‘How the hell did he do that?’ Being able to touch it, not break your bat and go the other way with it? I’m at a loss for words.”


On April 5 at 11:13 p.m., Jack Wilson’s phone dinged. He had texted his son to congratulate him on a good team win by the A’s. Jacob didn’t want to hear it. He was mad. He had gone 1-for-4 with a two-run double, but that wasn’t good enough.

“I’m not a .250 hitter,” Jacob texted.

Jack laughed. He batted .265 in his career. It was enough to earn him more than $40 million playing. His son wants to be better — not because he’s greedy but because he’s capable of it.

“That’s a good thought process,” Jack said. “Because when I was a rookie and I got a hit, I was pumped. I always tell him, ‘Man, hitting is freaking hard.’ It’s just not going to be every day where your swing is on point and you match up. It’s just the way it is. So this has been a real learning experience. And it will be for a long time. The more he learns now, the better off he is in the future and hopefully spends a long time as an Athletic.”

The A’s are counting on their star shortstop as a linchpin of their impressive offensive core. Wilson is the fulcrum, Kurtz the powerhouse with a propensity for late-inning heroics. Designated hitter Brent Rooker and outfielder Lawrence Butler are both sluggers locked up to long-term deals. First baseman Tyler Soderstrom and catcher Shea Langeliers provide additional home run thump. Denzel Clarke is going to win multiple Gold Gloves in center field. If they can build a pitching staff to match, the team scheduled to move to Las Vegas for the 2028 season will be among the most exciting in baseball.

And it all starts with the kid who is definitely not a .250 hitter and definitely does take strikeouts personally.

“I mean, I’ve studied his swing,” Muncy said. “There’s things that he does so well that other guys don’t do that leads to that. And I think one of the things is probably just his mentality. He has always thought he could put it in play. I don’t think there’s ever been a guy where he is like, ‘I can’t put it in play.’ When you have that supplemental edge — I can put it in play no matter what — that helps.”

Every edge helps, be it bat-to-ball skills, burgeoning power or the ability to no-scope someone from 300 meters. Wilson has no plans to abandon his Fortnite reps. It’s part of his training now, and even if it doesn’t work for everyone, he sees Victory Royales leading to victories for the A’s.

“Everybody has their own approach and everybody’s here for a reason,” Wilson said. “This is the big leagues. Everybody is the best in the world at what they do.”

Love Island USA’s Hannah Teases Future Plans With Charlie and Pepe

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‘Love Island’ Hannah Details “Sick Joke” Elimination, What’s Next With Charlie & Pepe

Hannah Fields would like to steal Pepe Garcia for another chat.

While the Love Island USA contestant formed connections with both Pepe, 27, and Charlie Georgiou, also 27, during her time in the villa, she’s only hoping to take things further with one of them following her shocking elimination during the June 22 episode.

“I have a really good connection with Pepe and we talked a lot about the outside world,” Hannah, 23, told E! News in an exclusive interview. “Only time will tell. Whatever’s meant for me will be, so I have no expectations.”

Hannah was coupled with Charlie until viewers voted to separate them during a June 15 recoupling, leading him to depart from the Peacock series. And though she was visibly heartbroken by his early exit, her subsequent pairing with bombshell Pepe made her rethink her bond with the U.K. native.

“I just don’t know if there’s still a romantic connection, especially after the connection I had with Pepe,” she shared. “I don’t know what he’s open to.”