Guatemalan coach Leiva gunned down before team’s game

“During lunch break, people dressed as security guards asked for the coach and made him leave the restaurant to kill him”

Julio Ariz Leiva, head coach of Guatemalan club Deportivo San Pedro, was gunned down on Sunday before his team’s league match.

The 47-year-old was attacked at a restaurant in Huehuetenango, just hours before San Pedro was set to face Democracia in a match in the Primera División, the second-tier of Guatemalan soccer.

According to Dr. Estuardo González, president of San Pedro, a group of men dressed as local police interrupted a team lunch on Sunday and asked to speak with Leiva.

“During lunch break, people dressed as security forces asked for the coach and made him leave the restaurant to kill him,” González told radio station La Red Deportiva.

As far as a motive for the murder, González added: “Only God knows what the reason was.”

González also warned about the danger of playing matches in the municipality of Huehuetenango, where the U.S. State Department has issued a travel advisory.

“We as a board of directors emphasize that these municipalities are dangerous for soccer,” González said.

The match between San Pedro and Democracia was quickly postponed after news of Leiva’s death.

The National Football Federation of Guatemala (FEDEFUT) released a statement on Sunday condemning the violent act that took the life of the longtime player and coach.

“FEDEFUT repudiates and strongly condemns the violence that has put our entire soccer family into mourning,” the statement said.

Leiva played for more than a decade in the top flight of Guatemalan soccer, representing Marquense, Xelajú, Petapa, Zacapa and Heredia, among others.

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Watch: SoCal captain immortalizes rare orca encounter with selfie

Several killer whales from Mexico and points south were spotted off Los Angeles County on Monday, attracting crowds of whale watchers.

Several orcas from Mexico were spotted off Los Angeles County on Monday, attracting crowds of whale watchers.

The Eastern Tropical Pacific killer whales (ETPs) were hunting dolphins but became extremely boat friendly at times, riding wakes and interacting with passengers.

One prominent captain, Ryan Lawler of Newport Coastal Adventure and Pacific Offshore Expeditions, capitalized on a rare opportunity to capture a video selfie with one of the mammals. (Footage posted below.)

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Alisa Schulman-Janiger of the California Killer Whale Project was with Lawler and said about a dozen orcas were present, traveling in sub-groups. They included two small calves.

“They mugged every boat,” Schulman-Janiger said, referring to the friendly behavior. (Video below shows mugging behavior.)

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Passengers watched the ETPs ram and kill a large bottlenose dolphin, an adult common dolphin, and a common dolphin calf.

The sighting initial sighting was logged at 8:30 a.m. in the Catalina Channel, seven miles off San Pedro, by Catalina Express Capt. Mike Jackson.

News quickly spread and vessel operators hurried to locate the gregarious mammals.

ETP orcas, which are fairly common in the Sea of Cortez and elsewhere in Mexico, rarely visit Southern California. But when they do it becomes a major event for marine mammal enthusiasts.

Schulman-Janiger said the ETPs were last spotted Monday evening seven miles off Lunada Bay, at the southern edge of Santa Monica Bay.

Watch: Angler smacked in ‘kisser’ by airborne barracuda

The accompanying footage shows why anglers should not stand too close to other anglers as they’re hauling barracuda over the rails.

The accompanying footage shows why anglers should not stand too close to other anglers as they’re hauling barracuda over the rails.

Phil Friedman, a well-known figure in the Southern California angling community, was capturing video with his phone earlier this week as his son, Patrick, announced that he was about to bounce a barracuda onto the deck.

As viewers can see, the barracuda is flung directly into the face – and camera lens – of the elder Friedman.

“Is this any way to treat your father?” Phil joked in the video description, which shows the episode in regular and slow motion. The video title: “Phil Friedman gets a barracuda right to the kisser.”

RELATED: Kayak angler reacts to fast approaching tiger shark

Barracuda boast extremely sharp teeth and sport a thick coat of slime. Phil was not injured, but told For The Win Outdoors that he spent several minutes in the galley trying to remove slime from his phone.

His sons, Patrick and Philip Jr., founded Bass Bros Fishing and frequently post about their adventures via Instagram and YouTube.