Brazil's Bolsonaro discharged from hospital, placed under house arrest

SAO PAULO, March 27 (Reuters) - Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro was discharged from a hospital ‌on Friday and transferred to his home, where ‌he will spend at least three months under what authorities ​described as "humanitarian house arrest."

Reuters

Bolsonaro, 71, has been serving a 27-year prison sentence since November for plotting a coup after losing the 2022 election to current President Luiz ‌Inacio Lula da ⁠Silva.

Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes earlier this week granted Bolsonaro permission to ⁠serve house arrest for 90 days due to health concerns. The far-right former president will be reassessed after ​that period ​to determine whether the ​measure should be extended.

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Bolsonaro, ‌who led Brazil between 2019 and 2022, was admitted earlier this month to the intensive care unit of a hospital in Brasilia with an acute form of pneumonia and was treated with antibiotics.

"His progress ‌over the past two days ​has been what we expected - ​smooth, without any ​complications," his doctor, Brasil Caiado, told reporters.

Bolsonaro ‌has had a history of ​hospitalizations and ​surgeries since he was stabbed in the abdomen during a campaign event in 2018. Caiado said ​the former president ‌is set to return to hospital for ​shoulder surgery in late April.

(Reporting by Gabriel Araujo; ​Editing by Paul Simao)

Brazil's Bolsonaro discharged from hospital, placed under house arrest

SAO PAULO, March 27 (Reuters) - Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro was discharged from a hospital ‌on Friday and t...
TSA officers lose homes, can't pay medical bills, can't afford Easter baskets for their children

FIRST ON FOX— Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers are receiving their third paycheck of zero dollars on Friday amid theDHS shutdown— with President Donald Trump saying late Thursday he would sign an executive order to "immediately pay our TSA Agents in order to address this Emergency Situation" and "quickly stop the Democrat Chaos at the Airports," and as the Senate advanced a new, last-minute deal in the wee hours of Friday morning.

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The TSA on Thursday afternoon exclusively shared with Fox News Digital stories of officers stationed atvarious airportsacross the nation who have experienced personal hardship as a result of the shutdown, with names omitted for privacy reasons.

One officer at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Georgia had his dream of owning a home abruptly shattered — forcing him to make life-altering decisions.

Air Travelers Are Hacking Tsa Lines During Hours-long Major Airport Waits

His bank denied him a loan for a home in Georgia due to his current inability to makerent payments.

The officer now has to move nearly 1,000 miles to go live with family in New York.

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Here are other stories.

TSA agents at Airport

A TSA officer working at Tulsa International Airport in Oklahoma suffered adevastating house firelast week on top of the challenges of receiving no pay.

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As a result, she lost her home, her belongings, her car and a beloved pet.

She and her family now have to rebuild their lives without knowing exactly when she'll be paid.

Another TSA officer had uprooted her life to move to New York to work at Albany International Airport.

Now, due to the back-to-back shutdowns and her lack of steady pay, her credit score has dropped from 800 to 500.

To survive, shemoved into a camper,the agency reported. The electricity in the camper has since gone out — and she can't afford to have it fixed.

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At the beginning of the month,powerful stormsripped through Michigan, with tornadoes reducing some homes to rubble and causing widespread damage in the Great Lake State.

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Multiple TSA officers working at Detroit Metropolitan Airport were left with damaged homes and vehicles. Today, these officers cannot afford to fix them, the TSA told Fox News Digital.

A TSA agent working at Portland International Airport in Oregon is the sole caregiver for his mother. He also supports his brother.

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His mother has been diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer, andhis brotherhas suffered a severe leg infection — putting him out of work.

The TSA officer is responsible for these family members' medical expenses.

TSA agent at LaGuardia

A TSA agent at Bismarck Airport in North Dakota has worked there for nearly 10 years — enduring multiple government shutdowns.

She made the tough choice now of leaving the job she loves after realizing she can't even afford to buyEaster basketsfor her children this year.

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Since the start of this partial government shutdown, more than 480 TSA officers have been forced to quit their jobs.

"I can tell you right now that the reverberations that will be felt from this will be long-standing," TSA Deputy Administrator Adam Stahl told Fox News Digital this week.

"They will continue for days [even] after we get a re-appropriation and funding, particularly for the TSA."

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"We are already taking proactive measures to make sure that we're going to get our people paid as quickly as possible," he added.

Fox News Digital's Alex Miller and Preston Mizell contributed reporting.

Original article source:TSA officers lose homes, can't pay medical bills, can't afford Easter baskets for their children

TSA officers lose homes, can't pay medical bills, can't afford Easter baskets for their children

FIRST ON FOX— Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers are receiving their third paycheck of zero dollars on...
A year after Trump's DOGE cuts, workers whose lives were upended question what was saved

WASHINGTON (AP) — Thea Price anticipated changes under the second Trump administration, but she never expected her life to be thrown into such disarray.

Associated Press FILE - President Donald Trump's name is seen on the U.S. Institute of Peace building, Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) FILE - U.S. Institute of Peace employees hold an impromptu celebration on the steps of the U.S. Institute of Peace, May 19, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Gary Fields, file) FILE - The headquarters for the U.S. Institute of Peace near the National Mall are seen, June 10, 2025, in Washington. (Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File) FILE - Thea Price, top right, whose family is moving away from the Washington region and back to her hometown of Seattle after losing their jobs and relying on savings and food assistance programs like SNAP, poses for a photo on a playground with her husband Nikita and 10-month old boy Nikolai, in Arlington, Va., Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Nathan Ellgren, file)

Trump DOGE Aftershocks

Along with the 300 other employees of the United States Institute of Peace, Price was fired, rehired and then fired again as part of President Donald Trump's crusade to shrink the federal government,a chaotic effortthat cut tens of thousands of jobs and shrank or dismantled entire agencies.

One year later, many of those impacted are left wondering whether their pain was worth it.

"Nobody was prepared for the complete destruction," said Price, a former program operations manager. "And for what?"

The Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, led by then-Trump adviserElon Musk, instigated purges of federal agencies with the expressed mission of rooting outfraud, waste and abuse.

USIP, a congressionally funded independent nonprofit, became a symbol of the upheaval. DOGE staffers entered the USIP building early last year,setting off a battleover who controls the institute, which later saw Trumpplant his nameon its Washington headquarters.

The blow to its workers came on March 28, 2025, when they were fired, a decision a judge later reversed and then another one reinstated — whiplash that still weighs on the former staffers.

A year on, DOGE's toll on people's lives is clear —what was actually savedin the process of upending them is not.

Questions over how much DOGE has saved

Musk set a target of $2 trillion in savings. The DOGE website says it has saved about $215 billion through job cuts, contract and lease cancellations and asset sales, as well as grant rescissions.

More than 260,000 workers left federal service due to Trump administration initiatives in 2025, according to the Office of Management and Budget, including reductions in force, early retirement, deferred resignations and a hiring freeze.

"President Trump was given a clear mandate to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse from the federal government," said White House spokesperson Davis Ingle when asked how much was saved. "In just a year, he has made significant progress in making the federal government more efficient to better serve the American taxpayer."

Organizations that have examined elements of the DOGE operation, along with the Government Accountability Office, a congressional watchdog of how taxpayer dollars are spent, have not been able to pinpoint how much was saved, or lost, by the reform efforts. Many challenge the Republican administration's numbers.

Dominik Lett, a budget analyst at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, said there were basic mistakes on the DOGE pages tracking savings, leading him to believe the numbers were too high. He said Cato and other organizations have shied away from trying to arrive at a number because of the complexity of the moves.

"Who is getting fired matters. How they're getting fired, will there be lawsuits?" was among the questions Lett has. Even terminating leases and contracts wasn't as simple as it sounds.

In the end, he said, "we don't know how much DOGE has saved."

Cuts were big, deep and random, expert says

In her analysis of media reports and public sources, Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank, found that about 25,000 people who were fired were rehired because they were deemed to be essential.

"What DOGE did is it cut so big and so deep and so randomly that when the Cabinet secretaries came in, and Elon Musk was gone, they realized that they had to bring some of these people back," Kamarck said.

With that, Kamarck estimated the savings might hit between $100 billion and $200 billion, though final figures remain highly uncertain.

A GAO analysis found layoffs in the Education Department's civil rights division may have cost $38 million, with employees paid months after termination.

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The impacts of DOGE's work are the subject of ongoing litigation.More than a dozen lawsuitshave been filed against the Trump administration for DOGE's actions over the past year, which challenge everything from the cancellation of grants, mass firings and buyouts, to access to sensitive U.S. Treasury data and payment systems, to the closure of massive federally funded programs.

Musk, in an interview with conservative influencer Katie Miller, said last December that his efforts leading DOGEwere only "somewhat successful"and he would not do it again.

Whiplash at the US Institute of Peace

Created by Congress during the Reagan administration, USIP was meant to promote peace and prevent global conflict. At the time it was shuttered, the institute operated in more than two dozen conflict zones, including Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Employees watched as DOGE dismantled another organization, theU.S. Agency for International Development. Then, DOGE staffersshowed up multiple times at USIPand ultimately took over the headquarters. Most of the institute's board and the acting president were fired.

On the evening of March 28, 2025,termination notices began showing upin employees' personal emails. Within two hours, most of the 300-plus staffers were gone.

USIP leaders and employees sued, arguing it was independent of the executive branch. A federal judge ruled Trump had acted outside his authority, in a decision thatrestored controlof the institute and reinstated workers with backpay — though few returned as operations resumed gradually.

In June, anappeals court stayed that decision. And for the second time, the staff was fired.

The case is suspended now, awaiting a U.S. Supreme Court decision in another personnel-related case, which could expand the president's control over federal agencies that have long been considered independent of the executive branch.

Depending on that decision and what the appeals court does, the staff could be due back pay and benefits again, despite not having worked for months.

DOGE's aftershocks are still being felt

While the original iteration of DOGE has dissipated from the public view, its presence is still felt in parts of the government. High-ranking DOGE officials have been hired as permanent staffers in federal agencies, including at the Treasury Department.

For the people who worked at USIP, the past year has been a whirlwind.

Some have found jobs, but many have faced headwinds in a market flooded with skilled labor. Some meet regularly and update one another on job searches and the suspended court cases they still hope might revive their former employer.

Price came off maternity leave one day before she was fired. When she was fired for the second time, she and her husband, who had lost his job as a contractor at a museum when his project's funding was cut, lived on their reserves and applied for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which took months to be approved.

She was forced to use a food pantry when the government shutdown last yearstopped her SNAP payments. After filing dozens of job applications, her family left the capital region and moved to the Seattle area.

She now works for a nonprofit that focuses on affordable housing. It is meaningful, but she misses the institute, its mission and her team.

Liz Callihan, who worked in communications at USIP, has applied for 140 jobs since being fired. She often wonders why her former professional home, with a noble mission and a relatively small annual budget of $50 million, became a target of DOGE.

"I absolutely ask myself every day what all this was for," she said.

Associated Press writer Fatima Hussein contributed.

A year after Trump's DOGE cuts, workers whose lives were upended question what was saved

WASHINGTON (AP) — Thea Price anticipated changes under the second Trump administration, but she never expected her life t...
Analysis: 1 month into war, Iran is using insurgent tactics and holding the world economy hostage

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — One month intotheir war with Iran, the United States and Israel find themselves confronting an opponent that fights more like an insurgency than a nation — using increasingly limited resources to inflictmaximum pain.

Associated Press A fire and plume of smoke rise after, according to authorities. debris from an intercepted Iranian drone struck an oil facility in Fujairah, United Arab Emirates, Saturday, March 14, 2026.(AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) First responders inspect a residential building hit in an earlier U.S.-Israeli strike in Tehran, Friday, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) Rubble covers the furniture of a destroyed living room in a residential building hit in an earlier U.S.-Israeli strike in Tehran, Iran, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) People take cover in a bomb shelter as air raid sirens warn of incoming Iranian missile strikes in Bnei Brak, Israel, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg) Oil tankers and cargo ships line up in the Strait of Hormuz as seen from Khor Fakkan, United Arab Emirates, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

APTOPIX Emirates Iran US Israel

Despite being battered daily by airstrikes from two of the world's most sophisticated militaries, Iran has shown it can still torment its Gulf Arab neighbors and Israel with missiles and drones andmaintain a strangleholdon the world's economy, primarily through threats.

Tehran's ability to control the flow of traffic — and therefore the flow of oil — through theStrait of Hormuzis its biggest strategic advantage. And, in fact, it's a tactic that Iran's very own proxies have adopted for years under decades of its tutelage as the leader of the self-described "Axis of Resistance."

Meanwhile, Iran's economy, long ago cut off from the global markets because of sanctions, is broadly insulated from thepain it is now inflicting on others.

The chokehold on the strait is causing oil prices to skyrocket, stock markets to plunge, and the cost of many basic goods to rise,putting pressureon U.S. President Donald Trump that could lead him to escalate the conflict further.

While Iran has found some success with cutting off the strait, it has its own problems lurking at home that the U.S. and Israel may be able to exploit the longer the war goes on. But its theocracy's path to victory through insurgent-like tactics remains fairly simple — just survive.

"The Islamic Republic understands that it cannot defeat the United States militarily," wrote Shukriya Bradost, a Mideast security analyst. "Instead, its objective is both simpler and more strategic: Survive the war long enough to claim victory."

The Strait of Hormuz is a key challenge for the US

The Strait of Hormuz, thenarrow mouth of the Persian Gulfthrough which a fifth of all oil and natural gas once passed, now finds itself largely devoid of traffic. The Islamic Republic allows through only the shipments it wants and ata price it dictates. Even with nearly all of its navy destroyed, Iran can hold the waterway hostage through an arsenal of missiles and drones built up over decades.

Countries in Asia, the primary customers for oil that passes through the strait, are feeling the pinch most acutely — but the market for oil is global, so drivers in Europe and the U.S. are also seeing price hikes. And since oil is so fundamental to the world economy — its cost is baked into the manufacture and transport of many goods — it'snot just gasoline prices that are rising.

That's bad news for Trump, who was already struggling to show Americans he couldbring down the cost of livingahead of midterm elections in November.

Ending the standoff is not easy. One way would be to negotiate a ceasefire — and Trump saystalks are progressing, something Iran denies.

If that fails, the U.S. and Israel would either have to decide they have achieved enough and walk away from the war — or dramatically escalate the conflict to force the strait open. Trump has already ordered thousandsmore paratroopers and Marinesinto the region. And he has set a new deadline — already delayed twice — of 8 p.m. Eastern time April 6 for Iran to reopen the strait. Otherwise, he's threatened to begin bombing power plants in Iran.

"Trump's preference remains 'escalate to de-escalate,'" the risk advisory Eurasia Group said in an analysis Thursday. "The U.S. is moving more ships and ground troops into the region and will be better prepared to escalate in mid-April."

But Iran has shown itself resilient to the battering it has received thus far.

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Iran maintains its ability to cause havoc despite being hit hard

Trump on Thursday night said about 9% of Iran's missile arsenal remains. There was no way to independently verify that figure — but even if accurate, Tehran still has ways to wreak havoc.

With its aircraft broadly destroyed and its air defenses at their weakest, Iran still maintains a vast network of air and sea bases, many built up decades ago.

It also has more recently built underground bases, which along with missile launchers disguised as commercial trucks, allow it to hide its launch sites until the last minute. Keeping mobile launchers on the move can protect them from airstrikes.

That strategy, known as "shoot and scoot," is a mainstay of many insurgent groups, including Yemen's Houthi rebels. The Iran-backed group itself successfully disrupted international shipping, in the Red Sea. Shiite militias in Iraq, also backed by Iran, used similar tactics against U.S. troops there. Both have survived if not thrived while being repeatedly targeted.

Iran's geography and terrain — a mountainous nation about the size of America's largest state, Alaska — also give it the space and features to hide like an insurgent force.

But problems still lurk under the surface for Iran as well.

Iran faces an angry population and leadership questions

Both American and the Israeli leaders have said they hope Iran's people, whochallenged the country's theocracyin nationwide protests in January, would take over their government.

There have been no signs of any such uprising — and, for now, many Iranians aresheltering from airstrikes.

Iran's public also remembers the government'sbloody crackdownearlier this year that saw thousands killed and tens of thousands detained. The Revolutionary Guard's all-volunteer Basij force, which was key to that crackdown,remains activedespite repeatedly being targeted in the war, with social media videos showing their armed fighters roaming streets, blaring propaganda from loudspeakers.

In a sign that Iran is feeling the pressure on its forces, Guard official Rahim Nade-Ali said it has begun to recruit children as young as 12 for the Basij. He described it as responding to public demand — but it is also a way to fill out its ranks as its checkpoints come under attack.

Questions also remain about Iran's leadership. Mojtaba Khamenei hasn't been seen publicly since becomingIran's new supreme leader, with U.S. officials saying he's been wounded in the war. The Guard and other military units appear to be operating without any central command. And any ceasefire deal that doesn't give the Guard and hard-liners what they want could fracture the country's political leadership.

But Trump's military pressure might not be having the desired effect.

"Washington seems to believe that an overwhelming display of military power will force the Iranians to the negotiating table," the New York-based Soufan Center said in an analysis Friday. "But ... the U.S. can't expect to gain in peace what it was not able to take in war."

EDITOR'S NOTE —Jon Gambrell, news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press, has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the Mideast and the wider world since joining AP in 2006.

Analysis: 1 month into war, Iran is using insurgent tactics and holding the world economy hostage

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — One month intotheir war with Iran, the United States and Israel find themselves confro...
Tigers' top prospect Kevin McGonigle arrives with historic MLB debut

SAN DIEGO –Kevin McGoniglelooked like a veteran all day.

USA TODAY Sports

It was hisMLB debut.

TheDetroit Tigers' 21-year-old top prospect stepped to the plate five times Thursday, March 26, against the San Diego Padres, batting sixth and playing third base – and he came away with four hits, including a two-run double on the first pitch he saw from right-handerNick Pivettain the first inning.

"I was nervous," said McGonigle, who only got four hours of sleep the night before his first game. "It's weird. Right when I started my load to hit, it just went away. I felt great out there."

Detroit Tigers third baseman Kevin McGonigle (7) celebrates after hitting a double during the third inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park in San Diego on Thursday, March 26, 2026.

McGonigle teamed up with aceTarik Skubalto set the tone for the 2026 Tigers inan 8-2 win over the Padres, securing a 1-0 record. Both players are the early favorites for American League awards: McGonigle for Rookie of the Year, Skubal for his third straight Cy Young.

More importantly, the Tigers haveWorld Series championship aspirations.

They'll need McGonigle's help to get there.

He made an unforgettable first impression in Thursday's win, becoming the first Tigers player sinceBilly Beanon April 25, 1987, to record four hits in his MLB debut. They're the only two players in franchise history to do so.

"I mean, I guess I gotta start not sleeping before every game – because last night, I barely got any sleep," McGonigle said.

Inside the clubhouse, teammates reacted to McGonigle's historic performance.

"He's a pretty special player," Skubal said.

"I feel like he's not scared of anything," outfielderRiley Greenesaid.

ManagerA.J. Hinchsaw the same thing from the dugout.

"He can hit," Hinch said. "He won't be as nervous as that at-bat, and if that's the nervous version of him, we're in for a fun year. I like the fact that he was aggressive on his pitch. That set the tone for a really good day, for him and for us."

WELCOME TO THE SHOW:How Kevin McGonigle learned he made Tigers: 'Get to the point, man'

In the first inning, McGonigle pulled the first pitch he saw – an up-and-in cutter from Pivetta – into right field for a two-run double. In the third, he pulled Pivetta's up-and-in fastball off the right-field wall for a double. In the ninth inning, he pulled a middle-in sinker from left-handed relieverWandy Peraltafor a single.

McGonigle loves to hit all kinds of fastballs on the inner half of the plate.

He took advantage of three opportunities.

"It's just incredible, right?" Greene said. "When I had my debut, I couldn't feel my body and didn't really know what was happening. It looked like that was his 700th game out there. Four hits, it's pretty cool to see."

In the fifth inning, McGonigle tapped a changeup from right-handed relieverRon Marinacciofor a slow roller on the infield grass, but he hustled to beat the bare-handed throw for an infield single, registering an elite sprint speed of 30.2 feet per second.

Sneaky speed is another element of his game.

DON'T SLEEP ON DEFENSE:Kevin McGonigle becomes MLB-ready shortstop with pre-pitch consistency

The way McGonigle handled his second plate appearance shows the makings of an on-base machine, both now and in the future, as he battled back from down 0-2 in the count against Pivetta. He refused to chase an up-and-away fastball, fouled a bottom-of-the-zone curveball and refused to chase a curveball in the dirt – leading to a 2-2 count.

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He hit the ensuing up-and-in fastball for his second hit of the game.

"The same approach I have in two strikes is to go up there and battle," McGonigle said. "It's me versus him, and I got to keep that same mindset that I'm better than the guy out there on the mound. I fell down 0-2 and was able to battle back and get a barrel on the ball."

The hits kept coming.

He had four by the end of his first game.

"Is there some sort of record?" Skubal said, wondering about the historical context of McGonigle collecting four hits in his MLB debut. "It has to be, right?"

He is the 25th player to do it.

"Wow," Skubal said.

One player had five hits.

"Really?" Skubal said.

Here's the best stat from McGonigle's MLB debut: He became the 15th player in MLB history aged 21 or younger to reach base four times on Opening Day, doing it on the same day as Boston Red Sox outfielderRoman Anthony.

The other 13 players on the list:Eddie Collins,Rabbit Maranville,Jimmie Foxx,Dario Lodigiani,Eddie Yost,Mickey Mantle,Brooks Robinson,Joe Lahoud,Gary Carter,Roberto Alomar,Delino DeShields,Ken Griffey Jr.andJoe Mauer.

Nine of them are in the Hall of Fame.

"He's a special talent," Skubal said. "He doesn't need any help. He just needs to be Kevin. He's a really good baseball player, and he proved it today, but what I love about him is I don't think he's going to think about today tomorrow. That speaks to who he is as a human, just as a competitor. I'm excited that he's on our club."

[ MUST LISTEN:Make"Days of Roar"your go-to Tigers podcast, available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple,Spotify)]

McGonigle soaked up the moment with his family.

His parents and a few other family members made the trip to San Diego, traveling all the way from his hometown of Aldan, Pennsylvania, only 10 miles from downtown Philadelphia. Everyone arrived late Wednesday, less than 24 hours before his first game, but he still carved out a few minutes to spend time with them.

The next day, McGonigle met up with his family on the field after Thursday's game.

He gave his first-hit baseball to his parents.

"I'm just happy we won today," McGonigle said.

The moment didn't change him.

None of this has.

"If it changes, let me know," Hinch said. "It's been the same for 45 straight days in camp. Nothing seems to bother him or shake him outside of the competition. He's pretty competitive with himself. He's pretty competitive with the opponent. He considers it the same game he's always been playing, and you can tell by the way he controls his actions."

Contact Evan Petzold atepetzold@freepress.comor follow him@EvanPetzold.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press:Kevin McGonigle brings big bat for Detroit Tigers in Opening Day debut

Tigers' top prospect Kevin McGonigle arrives with historic MLB debut

SAN DIEGO –Kevin McGoniglelooked like a veteran all day. It was hisMLB debut. TheDetroit Tigers' 21-year-o...

 

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