LOS ANGELES -- A San Francisco Giants fan who suffered brain damage in a beating in a Dodger Stadium parking lot won his negligence lawsuit Wednesday, with a jury agreeing that the Dodgers didnt provide adequate security and were partly to blame for the attack. Bryan Stows father said his son probably wouldnt understand the details of the settlement that will give him about $14 million from the Dodgers, "but Bryan will know that he got some help today." "Hes not going to be 100 per cent, maybe for a long time, maybe never. What he gets is going to help him through now, and thats what he needs," Dave Stow said. The jury delivered its verdict in a Los Angeles courtroom after weeks of testimony about the assault after the opening day game in 2011 between the rival teams. Stow, 45, was left with disabling brain damage and became a symbol of violence at sporting events. He was in the courtroom for part of the trial, his wheelchair positioned front and centre so jurors could see the ghastly scars on his head where his skull was temporarily removed during efforts to save his life. Experts testified that the former Northern California paramedic Stow will never work again and has suffered repeated strokes and seizures. They said he will require around-the-clock care. Lawyers for Stow claimed the team and former owner Frank McCourt failed to provide adequate security. In split decisions, jurors found that the Dodgers were negligent but absolved McCourt. In civil cases, only nine of 12 jurors must agree on the verdict. The Dodgers "did have a (security) plan but somewhere along the line that plan broke. And it needed to be fixed," juror Carlos Munoz said after the verdict. "Hopefully we helped to fix it. ... If youre going to own a stadium, do it right." Jurors determined that Stow suffered about $18 million in damages in the form of lost earnings, medical expenses and pain and mental suffering. The Dodgers must pay $13.9 million of that because while finding the team negligent, jurors assigned it only a portion of the responsibility for Stows harm. Stows attackers shared the rest of the responsibility for Stows harm, jurors determined. However, they werent sued and so cannot be required to pay a share of the damages. Stows parents pronounced themselves satisfied with the jurys award even though it is less than half of what they had sought. "Well make it work for him," said Stows mother, Ann Stow. The defence had argued that security was stronger than ever at an opening day contest and contended that Stow was partially to blame because he was drunk. But jurors were unanimous in deciding that Stows own negligence wasnt a substantial factor in causing his harm. Stows mother said she held her husbands hand as the court read that part of the verdict form. "I was so ecstatic because we know our son and we know that the picture the defence was trying to portray was not Bryan at all," Ann Stow said. They said they had not spoken to their son, who did not attend the hearing, but did talk to his sisters and expected they would talk to him. In San Francisco, Giants manager Bruce Bochy said he was happy for the family that there was finally a verdict. "What happened shouldnt have happened. We have to keep that in mind. But also for the fans coming to the ballpark, you need the proper security," he said. "It shouldnt be a situation where youre afraid to go to a game or you cant enjoy yourself." Dodgers fans Louie Sanchez and Marvin Norwood pleaded guilty to the attack in criminal court after a lengthy preliminary hearing in which witnesses said security guards were absent from the parking lot where Stow was attacked. The complicated civil case even threw jurors at one point, who announced last week that they were deadlocked. The judge ordered them to resume deliberations. "They struggled through it," Dana Fox, an attorney for the Dodgers, said after the verdict. "Remember, after four days they had not found liability on the part of the defendants. That is quite telling, I think, in and of itself." In the wake of the attack, the Dodgers and Los Angeles police increased their security at games, including adding more patrols and undercover officers wearing rival team jerseys. Robin Lopez Bucks Jersey . The time off didnt slow them down. Tyler Zeller scored a season-high 18 points and grabbed a career-best 15 rebounds, Kyrie Irving added 14 points and the Cavaliers pushed their winning streak to five games Tuesday night with a 114-85 victory over the skidding Philadelphia 76ers. Ersan Ilyasova Bucks Jersey . He was 26. Edwards, the Supercup Championship leader, was in the passenger seat as an instructor for a private training session at Queensland Raceway at Willowbank, outside Brisbane, Porsche Motorsport said. https://www.bucksrookiesshop.com/Luke-Maye-City-Edition-Jersey/ . In five games last month, Billings led all scorers with 11 goals, 27 assists and 38 points as the Rock posted a 2-3 record. Thon Maker Bucks Jersey . "This isnt really the week you want to lose Chris Greaves," fellow lineman Glenn January said Wednesday after practice. Greaves is expected to miss several weeks after suffering a knee injury in last weeks 36-28 win over the Ottawa Redblacks. Pau Gasol Bucks Jersey . The teams all-time leading scorer, DeRo has won everything there is to win in MLS.BOSTON – The rumour mill is swirling in these parts as the hometown Red Sox spiral out of the American League playoff picture. The focus is on ace left-hander Jon Lester, whos been a standout on two world champion pitching staffs (Boston in 2007 and 2013). According to a report in CSNNE.com, the Blue Jays are among as many as eight teams pursuing Lester. The report suggests the Blue Jays have been the "most aggressive" in their interest. What is true and what isnt is often disputed at this time of year. Lester has an expiring contract, about to test the free agent waters for the first time in his career, and the 30-year-old is expected to command an annual salary well above $20-million. He would be a perfect fit in Toronto. Hed also be a perfect fit with 28 other big league teams. Dont expect general manager Alex Anthopoulos to part with either of his star pitching prospects, Marcus Stroman and Aaron Sanchez, who are now with the Blue Jays and each contributing significantly to the clubs pennant drive. Closer Casey Janssen, the longest tenured Blue Jay, didnt comment specifically on the Lester rumours but indicated the clubhouse is watching developments intently. "Need to? I dont know if need to is the right word but I think a lot of people in this locker room would like to," said Janssen of acquiring a significant asset. "Its been a while since weve made the playoffs. Its been a while since weve been relevant. Weve worked so hard to get to where we are and if theres a guy out there that can get us to the next level well embrace him like crazy and try and ride the wave with him. "Hopefully the front office is doing something, continuing to try to improve this team and make this thing a special season for us." Infielder Danny Valencia, acquired from the Royals on Monday for pitcher Liam Hendriks and catcher Erik Kratz, arrived in time for Tuesdays game at Fenway Park but wasnt in the starting lineup. As for the Red Sox, Lester is scheduled to start Wednesdays series finale. Manager John Farrell indicated right-hander Brandon Workman would take Lesters place in the event hes traded or that a deal is imminent. A chat with Kevin Seitzer The Blue Jays entered Tuesdays action where theyve been all season: the top 10 in the games major offensive categories. Toronto ranks first in home runs (129), ninth in walks (349), fourth in batting average (.263), third in on-base percentage (.331) and third in slugging percentage (.430). TSN.ca sat down with hitting coach Kevin Seitzer to discuss the season, the degree to which Blue Jays hitters have bought into his approach and the nature of todays strike zone. You can listen to the audio here. Below is the transcript: TSN.ca: Kevin, the teams won eight of 11 games coming out of the All-Star Break and it seems the bats have come around after a bit of a lull through June and the early part of July. What are some of the keys youve seen in the last couple of weeks? SEITZER: Well, I really started focusing, emphasizing big time more, getting back in the middle of the field because I really felt guys were … especially when Brett (Lawrie) went down it started, then Lindy goes down, then Eddie goes down and guys were really trying to step up and carry the weight and do too much and we got away from the things that we were doing to get us hot when we were smoking hot in May and it was getting back in to the middle of the field. If you focus on having good at-bats and the way I put it to the guys and continued to emphasize over the course of the last couple of weeks was weve got to focus on singling teams to death, just base hit, base hit, base hit, single teams to death and let the damage unfold and if were focused on singling teams to death well find ourselves in better counts, well still end up squaring up balls more consistently that can go the other way or to the pull side and thats when the at-bats got better. Thats what allows you to be more disciplined at the plate. These guys have got to stay aggressive, theyre going to swing at bad pitches, theyre going to get fooled but if you really have a plan and an approach thats really emphatically back through the middle of the field youre going to end up giving yourself a better chance to be consistent and thats what weve been doing and its been great because some of the guys whove come up from Triple-A are really having great at-bats right now and theyre contributing and thats what we need. Its been a good roll. The break couldnt have been more timely for the offence. TSN.ca: How long did it take you to push that message through or to have that message be received as well as it has been? I think you recognize that when you were hired, you were hired by a club that had developed a reputation and I think had earned a reputation as a free swinging team. SEITZER: That was my whole plan coming in was to, I dont want to take away power, I want to enhance power, I want to enhance run production, increase on-base percentage, generate more runs because thats the bottom line to winning ballgames from an offensive standpoint, youve got to score more runs than the other side and the more runs you can get day in and day out the better chance you give your club to win. Im as big a fan of home runs as anybody and I just felt like it was more that they were geared toward hitting the ball hard. It wasnt so much that they were, you know, Im just going to go up there and swing hard and just try and hit it hard, they were really just trying to have good at-bats and hit the ball hard but really they work on the middle of the field, they practice that way but then when you get in the game thats where you have to apply it and that was kind of the last little hump to get these guys over to where, okay, Ive got a shift on, Im going to work on hitting the ball the other way everyday in batting practice, maybe Ill have some confidence to try it in a game, boom it happens, they get an RBI, we get a rally going, we keep a rally going and then it just kind of fuels the fire. It hasnt hurt our home runs at all. When we left Oakland, we got swept out in Oakland, when we went to L.A. I had a long meeting with the guys and I just kind of went through the unfolding of the season and the ups and downs and keys that I saw that guys were doing consisteently when we were good and then keys that we needed to make adjustments now that were not doing.dddddddddddd It was very well received. Basically what I do is I go in I just spill my guts, just pour my heart out to them. Its something Im very passionate about, very convicted about it and when guys do the adjustment and they start to see the results from it thats when its really fun, very rewarding from my side. TSN.ca: Is Jose Bautista perhaps the prime and best example of how to beat the shift, Kevin? By that I mean, there were times when he would take the ball up the middle or the other way earlier this season and weve actually seen defences adjust. SEITZER: You take your hat off to him because hes primarily a pull guy, a home run guy, he gets paid to drive in runs and I take my hat off to him because hes putting the team first and thats the commitment that he made when I started, when I met him, when I started talking to him in spring training. He goes, whatever I need to do in order to help this team win, thats what Im focused on. Im seeing it. Im seeing it everyday but when the guys went down I saw him try to do a little bit more to try to pick up the slack and hes one Ive been trying to stay on to take your base hits, take your base hits and let the damage unfold. Thats when his hands start working again because when he gets big, tries to do too much, not only is he not hitting home runs, which he wants to do, but hes not even having good at-bats. When his hands start working, that guys got as quick a hands as anybody in baseball and thats when its fun because he can catch some balls out front without even trying and hit them out. TSN.ca: Weve talked at times over the course of the season about strike zones and home plate umpires and if youve had issues with a strike zone, youre probably one of 30 hitting coaches at some point this year that has. What is it you want your hitters to do, how is it you want your hitters to react when those situations arise? SEITZER: These guys dont want to hear it because its, oh back in the day it was way different, but I can attest to back in the day the strike zone was much bigger than it is right now. I tell them the same things that I always tried to do as a hitter is dont change the zone. If you start expanding the zone because you think it might get called or it does get called, youre going to get yourself out anyway. You can get yourself out or you can let the umpire get you out but if you dont expand and you stay consistent and you handle the umpires in a professional manner youll have more success than what youll think. Thats the biggest thing. Home plate umpires are human. Theyre not going to be perfect and were not going to be perfect. There are times when guys are looking on one side of the plate, really locked in on it and then they get a pitch on the other side and their brain says that wasnt even close and then you go back in and look and you go, well, it wasnt that far off. It may not have been a strike but it was close to the edge of the plate, which if it was a ball off it was a strike when I played. That was something that you just understood. You didnt swing at it until you had two strikes. With two strikes you tried to protect that but not expand even more and thats the hardest part from a hitting standpoint, when you start feeling that youre trying to cover 20 inches, 22 inches, its impossible. With the pitching were facing you cant do it. Youve got to continue to hold on to your strike zone, dont deviate from it, hunt your pitch and let the results be what they are. TSN.ca: You work long hours, you prepare everyday but how does your job change when the team is doing as well as it was in May to how it was performing in June? SEITZER: You have to continue to stay the course. You have to be consistent with the message. Especially being my first year, you have to let these guys personalities unfold and sometimes they dont want to hear a certain message at a certain time and you have to know when you can give them something, when you need to let them go a little bit and then work youre way in to bringing them back to where they need to be. You cant get frustrated, you cant get mad, you cant panic. They cant sense anything different than the way I was when things were going good. I may just not be walking around with as big a smile on my face but as far as our message, the preparation, the meetings, every advanced meeting Ill have a little point from the last series of things that I liked, of things that Id like to see adjustment-wise, here are some things going in that this pitching staff will do compared to the past, the advanced video that theyre going to be watching is going to see us being vulnerable at x and so we have to counter that by locking in on whatever it is. Theres always a little different that I might said and sometimes, you know, you may come out of a good series when you sweep somebody, stay right there, dont change a thing, whatever it is. The consistency is the biggest thing you have to show these guys on a daily basis whether youre going good or bad because thats what my expectation is out of them is not get too high, too low so I have to lead by example. TSN.ca: Adding up to 100, how would you break down your job? Coach, teacher, psychologist, how do you break those facets down? SEITZER: Coach and teacher are kind of the same thing. Its probably 60-percent coach, teacher and 40-percent psychologist and some days it may be 80-percent psychologist depending on what were going through. Its amazing the things that I learned through my career how hitters, and I was one of them, will search for mechanical adjustments as soon as things start to go awry you start to tweak mechanics. Its my head, its my stance, its my set up, its my hands, I need to raise them, I need to lower them, I need to move them back, move them in and what I found through my last few years of playing is the brain will totally dictate what position, what consistency in your swing youll have. When things start to go awry I go right to the brain and not to the mechanics. There may be a mechanical adjustment or two but its always the brain thats the underlying culprit when things start to go awry and youve got to go fix that first. TSN.ca: Kevin, thanks very much for this, appreciate it. SEITZER: All right, youre welcome. ' ' '