Blog

  • Wimbledon 2026 results, bracket, schedule: Quarterfinals nearly set with top seeds still alive in men’s draw

    After Monday’s action at Wimbledon, the quarterfinals are almost set in both the men’s and women’s draws — with No. 2 seed Alexander Zverev and No. 13 seed Jiri Lehecka still needing to resolve their match after it got halted midway through the third set due to the late start.

    The rest of the quarterfinals bracket is set in the men’s draw, with No. 6 seed Taylor Fritz keeping the American dream alive thanks to a straight sets romp over No. 10 Alexander Bublik (7-6, 6-4, 6-4). Fritz will take on the winner of the Zverev-Lehecka match on Wednesday. The shocker of the tournament on the men’s side is British wild card entry Arthur Fery’s magical run to the quarterfinals, as he punched his ticket in a five-set thriller on Monday night on Centre Court.

    In the women’s draw, Monday’s action saw each of the four higher seeds advance. No. 9 seed Linda Noskova defeated No. 26 seed Madison Keys in straight sets (6-4, 7-6) to end the American’s run in London. With that result and No. 4 seed Jessica Pegula facing No. 7 seed Coco Gauff in the quarterfinals on Tuesday, the American contingent is guaranteed a player in the semifinals but can also only move one player into the semis.

    Tuesday’s action will be headlined by that Pegula-Gauff showdown, as well as No. 14 seed Naomi Osaka continuing her incredible run against No. 10 seed Karolina Muchova. On the men’s side, No. 1 seed Jannik Sinner will look to continue his title defense, while No. 7 seed Novak Djokovic will face No. 3 seed Felix Auger-Aliassime in a tantalizing showdown.

    Keep it locked here over the next two weeks for our complete coverage of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships.

    Where to watch the 2026 Wimbledon Championships

    • Dates: June 29 – July 12, 2026
    • Location: All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club — London
    • TV: ESPN, ABC | Stream: fubo (try for free)

    Gentlemen’s singles matches on Monday

    2. Alexander Zverev vs. 13. Jiri Lehecka — (6-4, 7-5, 3-3 Suspended)
    9. Flavio Cobolli def. 5. Alex de Minaur — (7-5, 7-6, 6-3)
    6. Taylor Fritz def. 10. Alexander Bublik — (7-6, 6-4, 6-4)
    Arthur Fery def Grigor Dimitrov — (7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6)

    Gentlemen’s singles matches on Tuesday

    1. Jannik Sinner vs. Jan Lennard Struff
    3. Felix Auger-Aliassime vs. 7. Novak Djokovic

    Ladies’ singles matches on Monday

    9. Linda Noskova def. 26. Madison Keys — (6-4, 7-6)
    12. Marta Kotyuk def. Ashlyn Krueger — (6-4, 6-4)
    13. Jasmine Paolini def. 29. Alexandra Eala — (6-4, 4-6, 6-3)
    25. Elise Mertens def. 21. Marie Bouzkova — (6-4, 6-4)

    Ladies’ singles matches on Tuesday

    4. Jessica Pegula vs. 7. Coco Gauff
    10. Karolina Muchova vs. 14. Naomi Osaka

     Updating Live
    (223)

     Pinned

    Britain’s Arthur Fery keeps dream run alive with five-set win over Grigor Dimitrov

    The men’s British contingent at Wimbledon this year was not expected to do much, particularly after the early withdrawal of Jack Draper. However, wild card entry Arthur Fery is headed to the quarterfinals, becoming the first wild card to make it there in the men’s draw since Nick Kyrgios in 2014 thanks to a dramatic five-set victory over veteran Grigor Dimitrov (7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6(7)).

    Fery’s incredible run looked like it might be coming to an end after Dimitrov rolled through the second and third sets, but buoyed by a raucous crowd on Centre Court, Fery was able to bounce back to take the fourth set and force a decider.

    Neither player could grab a true advantage in the fifth set, sending the match to a 10-point tiebreak. Fery was the first to get a mini-break, and things got tense in the middle of the tiebreak as both players squandered opportunities on their serve, with Fery eventually emerging two points clear of Dimitrov with a match point. Fery didn’t let the chance slip away and punched his ticket to a his first grand slam quarterfinal at home with a packed Centre Court crowd roaring with approval.

    Fery will move on to face No. 9 seed Flavio Cobolli in the quarterfinals, where he’ll try and ride the home crowd advantage once again to a shocking upset.

  • Kepler homers and drives in 4 runs to lead Diamondbacks to an 8-0 win over Padres

    SAN DIEGO (AP) Max Kepler homered and drove in four runs to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to an 8-0 win over the slumping San Diego Padres on Monday night.

    It was Kepler’s first home run since returning from an 80-game suspension after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance. Kepler was activated by the Diamondbacks on June 25.

    The Padres are in freefall, losing nine of their past 10 games and 28 of their last 43.

    The teams came into the game with identical 44-45 records. The win moved the Diamondbacks into second place in the NL West, while the Padres dropped to third place.

    Diamondbacks starter Brando Pfaadt (2-1) worked five innings, allowing four hits and striking out six.

    San Diego starter Walker Buehler (5-5) – whose 18th start of the season is tied for the most on the Padres – got hit hard in his second consecutive loss. He gave up seven runs and seven hits in five innings. In his previous start on July 1 at Wrigley Field versus the Cubs, Buehler allowed nine runs in four innings.

    Buehler is the first major league pitcher this season to give up 16 earned runs over two consecutive outings.

    With the Diamondbacks leading 3-0 in the third inning, Kepler hit a three-run homer to right field. He drove in a run in his previous at-bat with a single in the first.

    Arizona tacked on two more runs on solo homers. Geraldo Perdomo homered in the fourth off Buehler and Nolan Arenado in the sixth off Padres’ reliever Alek Jacob for an 8-0 Diamondbacks lead.

    Ryan Thompson pitched two innings of scoreless relief for the Diamondbacks.

    Diamondbacks RHP Zac Gallen (3-8, 6.36) takes the mound in the second game of the four-game set on Tuesday night. The Padres have not announced their starter.

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Larry Hartstein
    Larry HartsteinThe Maestro
    #5
    +731 (75%)
    Last 16 MLB ML
    San Diego-124
    Money Line
    Picked Jul 6 @ 9:13 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    LOSS
    The Padres ended a long skid Sunday night against the Dodgers, and I like them to build off that here. Walker Buehler was lit up at Wrigley Field last time out. But he owns a 3.13 ERA at home. This is Brandon Pfaadt’s second start since being recalled from the minors. He has a 5.40 ERA in the majors this season.

    Larry’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
    2 0 4 1 0 1 0 0 0 8 11 0

    44-46

    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 2
    • W: B. Pfaadt (2-1)L: W. Buehler (5-5)
    • HR: ARI – G. Perdomo (5), M. Kepler, N. Arenado (9)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 4 1 1 0 .267
    a- J. Barrosa PH-RF 1 0 0 0 .182
    G. Perdomo SS 4 2 2 1 .246
    C. Carroll RF 4 1 1 0 .265
    b- P. Smith PH-1B 1 0 0 0 .155
    G. Moreno C 4 1 2 0 .286
    L. Gurriel DH 4 1 1 1 .217
    M. Kepler LF 4 1 2 4 .174
    N. Arenado 3B 4 1 1 1 .240
    I. Vargas 1B-2B 4 0 0 0 .257
    T. Troy CF 4 0 1 0 .221
    • a-fouled out for Marte in the 9th
    • b-struck out for Carroll in the 9th
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    F. Tatis Jr. RF 3 0 0 0 .282
    J. Bowen RF 1 0 0 0 .114
    J. Cronenworth 2B 4 0 2 0 .179
    M. Machado 3B 4 0 1 0 .190
    G. Sheets 1B 4 0 1 0 .236
    T. France DH 3 0 1 0 .254
    a- L. Campusano PH 1 0 0 0 .281
    J. Merrill CF 4 0 2 0 .217
    S. Taylor LF 4 0 1 0 .326
    S. Song SS 4 0 0 0 .225
    R. Duran C 3 0 0 0 .132
    • a-grounded out for France in the 9th
    BATTING
    • 2B – C. Carroll (19)
    • 3B – K. Marte (3)
    • HR – G. Perdomo (6), M. Kepler, N. Arenado (10)
    • RBI – G. Perdomo (32), L. Gurriel (20), M. Kepler 4 (4), N. Arenado (37)
    • 2-Out RBI – G. Perdomo, M. Kepler
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – G. Moreno, N. Arenado 2 (2)
    BATTING
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – R. Duran
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – G. Perdomo (14)
    FIELDING
    • E – S. Taylor, W. Buehler
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    B. Pfaadt(W, 2-1) 5.0 4 0 0 6 4.84
    R. Thompson 2.0 2 0 0 4 3.06
    D. Jameson 2.0 2 0 0 1 3.77
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    W. Buehler(L, 5-5) 5.0 7 7 1 4 5.07
    A. Jacob 3.0 2 1 0 3 5.40
    R. Marinaccio 1.0 2 0 0 2 4.81
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – B. Pfaadt 72-54, R. Thompson 28-21, D. Jameson 27-19
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – B. Pfaadt 8-2, R. Thompson 2-2, D. Jameson 5-0
    • Batters Faced – B. Pfaadt 19, R. Thompson 8, D. Jameson 8
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – W. Buehler 93-57, A. Jacob 42-30, R. Marinaccio 23-15
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – W. Buehler 8-5, A. Jacob 3-3, R. Marinaccio 1-1
    • Batters Faced – W. Buehler 24, A. Jacob 11, R. Marinaccio 5
  • FIFA’s mismanagement of Folarin Balogun’s red card suspension mars USMNT’s big moment, and World Cup at large

    untitled-design-2026-07-06t143739-482.png

    Getty Images

    However unavoidable it might be, it is never a great thing when the discourse around sports revolves around the referees. This World Cup has moments of brilliance from the athletes that rightly draw our attention on a regular basis. But, by the time the U.S. men’s national team hit the road for their final training session before their World Cup round of 16 clash against Belgium on Monday, the dust seemed to have settled, and however unfair it may have seemed to some, and no matter the number of memes that had been spawned, star forward Folarin Balogun’s red card in Wednesday’s round of 32 win against Bosnia and Herzegovina meant he would miss the Belgium match. He had graciously accepted the punishment and the team had been preparing for life without him with a historic trip to the quarterfinals on the line.

    Then, an unprecedented decision was announced while the team rode the bus to training on Sunday morning. Days after it seemed like the process was complete, FIFA’s independent disciplinary committee instead put Balogun on probation for a year and granted him permission to take part in Monday’s game against Belgium, the rarely-used Article 27 of FIFA’s disciplinary code essentially giving the committee discretion to do as they chose. It was of great relief to the USMNT and a point of contention for Belgium, but it forced the question: How exactly did we get here?

    The road to red card drama

    Balogun’s red card, a studs-up challenge on Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Tarik Muharemovic, was already considered harsh because the USMNT forward had his back to the opponent and no idea he would be there at that exact time. The process from there, though, was not supposed to be up for debate. It was made clear post-match by members of FIFA’s and U.S. Soccer’s staff that there was no appeals process for a single-game ban, which Balogun was guaranteed to serve. An independent body always reviews such matters, though, and the only question they would have to answer is if Balogun deserved a multi-game ban. It was always unlikely that he would miss additional games if the U.S. team advanced because the independent committee usually makes that choice in the case of serious foul play, but the USMNT had the right to appeal to reduce the ban to a single game if Balogun’s suspension was extended. On Friday morning, U.S. Soccer confirmed what many knew to be the most likely scenario, Balogun would only be suspended for the Belgium game, but would be available again if the team advanced to their first quarterfinal in 24 years. Case closed.

    That’s when things got weird.

    It is why FIFA’s announcement on Sunday morning caught just about everyone by surprise. If the disciplinary committee’s work was complete, what prompted them to review the case again? The specifics are now shockingly murky, the exact opposite of what any disciplinary body should aim for to ensure as much belief in the system as possible. It is one thing to shroud the identity of the members of the committee in complete mystery, but the confusion around their well-documented processes is another thing entirely – especially now that FIFA is instead trying to deny what, or who, caused a sudden change in heart on the Balogun decision rather than explaining the rationale behind it.

    Within hours of Sunday’s breaking news, multiple reports suggested that members of the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump called FIFA president Gianni Infantino in the hopes of tipping the scales in Balogun’s favor. On Monday morning, Trump himself said he placed a phone call asking for a review.

    “I saw the play, and I’m a person that loves sports and that wasn’t a foul,” Trump said during a meandering answer on the topic without ever actually uttering Balogun’s name. “That wasn’t even an infraction, this referee, who is a little bit suspect if you check his past. He made a call that nobody could believe. He’s our best player [Balogun], or one of our best players. And he gave him a red card. I didn’t know what that meant. Yes, I asked for a review by FIFA.”

    Infantino, now a longtime member of Trump’s orbit, denied that the U.S. president had anything to do with the decision in the only statement FIFA has issued since lifting Balogun’s ban while evading any formal explanations on why the decision was made.

    “FIFA’s judicial bodies are independent,” Infantino’s statement read in part. “They operate autonomously, apply the FIFA Disciplinary Code, and decide cases based on the applicable regulations and the specific facts before them. Their independence is essential to the credibility and integrity of football, and this must always be respected. Yes, I regularly discuss matters related to the FIFA World Cup with the President of the United States, and on this matter, I did receive a call from President Donald Trump, just as I receive calls from heads of state, government officials, football stakeholders and business executives from around the world on many different issues. During our conversation, I explained that there was an ongoing legal process involving FIFA’s independent judicial bodies and that the case would be decided in due course by the competent bodies.”

    Whether or not Trump influenced the decision or not, the fact that he is taking a victory lap about it has brought an incredible delegitimization to the independent committee’s processes, which is even more glaring because the head of state admitted he has no clue what a red card is and later rejected the notion that you could be suspended for the next game for being sent off, one of the least controversial policies in the rules of the game.

    Things are so fraught that FIFA continues to make up the process as it goes along. On Wednesday evening, there was no appeals process to speak of. On Monday morning, though, FIFA entertained and then rejected an appeal from the Royal Belgian Football Association on the Balogun decision, another inane dash of bureaucracy thrown into the pre-game rigors of a World Cup knockout game that instead pulls us further and further away from what should be the main topic of conversation. One team will earn a coveted spot in the World Cup quarterfinals in Seattle on Monday evening, an impressive accomplishment for Belgium if they manage it and a downright historic one for the U.S. if they pull off the feat instead.

    Belgium have earned the right to be the favorites but the USMNT are right to like their chances against their round of 16 opponent, both because the World Cup co-hosts have played strongly at this tournament and will be at full strength but also because the Red Devils have stumbled at times en route to the last 16. This is a more inconsistent version of Belgium than the ones they have faced in the last decade or so, their golden generation almost entirely behind them. With or without Balogun, it has been  realistic to believe that the USMNT could very well pick up a game-changing win on Monday with the eyes of an adoring country fully fixed on them – and around 70,000 ready to cheer them on fervently at Seattle’s Lumen Field.

    Will the Balogun decision taint any USMNT win?

    Hours before kickoff, though, their performance, however good or bad it turns out to be, is already marred by FIFA’s mismanagement of the situation. It would be one thing if FIFA was transparent from the start about embarking on some sort of appeals process, or if U.S. Soccer had done the same because they were engaged in the procedure all along. More secrecy is rarely a good thing in judicious processes in sport or otherwise, and now it’s a stain now marking the remainder of the USMNT’s World Cup run, no matter how long it stretches. That will also be true for Balogun himself, who had rightfully earned his position as America’s new favorite athlete. With three goals so far for the USMNT, Balogun was in the midst of a dream first World Cup and instead has his face plastered atop articles and on TV screens as someone else’s confusing and controversial decisions impact his own ability to play without his say. If he has a standout performance on Monday, he will have to unfairly bear the weight of others’ choices rather than enjoying a well-earned career highlight.

    USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino, like his players, celebrated Balogun’s return but could not help but reflect on the strangeness of the position his team was placed in along the way.

    “Ultimately, we aren’t playing the victim,” Pochettino said on Sunday, “but we certainly aren’t the villains of this story, either.” The situation opens up a remarkable can of worms, though, so much so that other teams have rightly decided it is open season to try random appeals of their own. FIFA has no processes to review yellow card suspensions, but France have now asked FIFA to rescind Michael Olise’s booking in their round of 16 win over Paraguay on Saturday because if he gets another in Thursday’s quarterfinal against Morocco, he would miss the semifinals should they advance.

    It is a ridiculous request to make, but France are right to test the waters since it is FIFA who set the ridiculous tone first, not them. It is no wonder that Belgium head coach Rudi Garcia quipped that he “didn’t know that July 5 was equal to April 1 at FIFA,” the sport’s governing body ensuring a World Cup they would consider to be a rousing success would instead descend into sporting chaos, the one thing it is truly tasked with avoiding. FIFA is undoubtedly used to ensuring there will be jokes at their expense, but England’s Thomas Tuchel cracked a joke that Trump’s appreciation of their star striker Harry Kane could help grease the wheels on an appeal for Jarell Quansah’s red card in their dramatic 3-2 win over Mexico on Sunday, an unpleasant subplot after one of the great games of the World Cup thus far.

    There is simply no upside to how FIFA conducted itself over the last several days, again facing accusations that it is an organization that is swayed far too easily by outside political influences who are not only unqualified to chime in but are motivated simply by their own interests. Even with Balogun likely to play a big role in the USMNT’s clash with Belgium, there are really no winners in this situation.

    “I think that’s a big mistake by FIFA,” Norway head coach Staale Solbakken reflected after his team’s big win over Brazil on the opposite side of the country. “I think it’s not a great conclusion. He’s got the red card and the VAR concluded that it was a red card. He was sent off. That means you are suspended for one game. I think what’s really is bad about that situation can be that it will be over [the] United States now. Because if they beat Belgium, it will have [that] extra thing about it.

    “Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad decision that will hurt the World Cup. I feel also sorry for the United States, because if they win, that will always hang in the balance for it.”

     

     

  • USMNT Player Ratings: Everybody struggles as World Cup dream ends with nightmare display vs. Belgium

    untitled-design-2026-07-06t222328-680.png

    Getty Images

    But how did the players play? Check out our player ratings below:

    USMNT Player Ratings

    player headshot
    Matt Freese

    USA • GK • #24
    MINUTES90
    RATING4

    Amazing save in the opening seconds and then completely lost his focus on the third goal, slamming the door shut on any comeback. A nightmare that could cost him the starting job after the tournament.

    player headshot
    Alex Freeman

    USA • D • #16
    MINUTES90
    RATING4.5

    Did not look like himself. Had some good positioning to help in attack but his touch was off and so was his passing.

    player headshot
    Tim Ream

    USA • D • #13
    MINUTES90
    RATING3

    Having a 38-year-old center back finally caught up with this team, and it happened in a huge moment. Was absolutely bossed for most of the match, got destroyed on the second goal and somehow could not keep the third goal out.

    player headshot
    Chris Richards

    USA • D • #3
    MINUTES90
    RATING4.5

    Let down by his teammates but also was not at his best. He needed to chase too much, being caught up high.

    player headshot
    Antonee Robinson

    USA • D • #5
    MINUTES89
    RATING5

    Usually consistent, this was a day off. Nowhere near his normal level, sloppy touch and struggled to break down Belgium to deliver dangerous balls.

    player headshot
    Tyler Adams

    USA • M • #4
    MINUTES72
    RATING5

    Thought he did the little things decently, won a foul early and kept the team together. Little else. He just could not keep up with the Belgium midfield.

    player headshot
    Weston McKennie

    USA • M • #8
    MINUTES90
    RATING5

    At times, I almost forgot he played. That wasn’t because he was particularly bad, but Belgium just dominated. He dropped deep early to try and help, but the cohesion wasn’t there.

    player headshot
    Malik Tillman

    USA • M • #17
    MINUTE90
    RATING5

    Scored from a free kick with a good bit of fortune, but he’ll take it. Tried to show off his flair but it did not pan out. Hardly a game where he was able to show his best.

    player headshot
    Sergino Dest

    USA • D • #2
    MINUTES45
    RATING2

    Questionable focus, sloppy, just an absolute mess. Taken off at the half and played 45 minutes more than he should have. Just a liability.

    player headshot
    Christian Pulisic

    USA • M • #10
    MINUTES59
    RATING4

    Taken off in the second half with an apparent injury. Never once looked like a threat. Belgium frustrated him with pressure, and he lost possession 11 times in just 45 minutes.

    player headshot
    Folarin Balogun

    USA • F • #20
    MINUTES90
    RATING5

    Got the start after all the controversy but didn’t get the service he would have hoped. Had one solid chance inside the box but wasn’t quick enough to react.

    Subs

    player headshot
    Giovanni Reyna

    USA • M • #7
    MINUTES45
    RATING4

    Decent. Did more than Dest, and his passing was accurate. But it was hardly ever threatening. More of a performance you’d need when comfortably ahead.

    player headshot
    Sebastian Berhalter

    USA • M • #14
    MINUTES31
    RATING6

    Provided a spark off the bench. Love the energy he brings. Nearly rifled home a goal that would have given them a chance. One of the few postives.

    player headshot
    Ricardo Pepi

    USA • F • #9
    MINUTES18
    RATING5

    Feel for him with the Balogun saga. He probably thought he’d start. Short cameo where he touched the ball just seven times.

    player headshot
    Max Arfsten

    USA • M • #18
    MINUTES1
    RATINGNR

    Late sub to get him a World Cup appearance.

    player headshot
    Haji Wright

    USA • F • #19
    MINUTES1
    RATINGNR

    Subbed on in added time.

    Coach: Mauricio Pochettino

    player headshot
    Mauricio Pochettino

    USA • D
    RATING4

    Hard to fault him, but the cohesion and energy from the round of 32 was just not there. He said after the game that they just weren’t in the game and that it wasn’t their day, and now is the time to reflect on where things went wrong.

     

    conversation-loading

     

  • FIFA World Cup Scores

    FT
    T
    soccer team logoPortugal
    0
    soccer team logoSpain
    1
    Round of 16, AT&T Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoUnited States
    1
    soccer team logoBelgium
    4
    Round of 16, Lumen Field
  • Wimbledon 2026 Draw: Complete men’s and women’s fourth round matches and bracket

    wimbledon-sign-general-2026.jpg

    Getty Images

    The first week of Wimbledon has reached its conclusion. After 128 men and 128 women started the week with hopes of earning a grand slam title, the field has shrunk all the way down to 16 on both sides. Now, it’s time to see who can battle through the remaining field to take home the hardware.

    The top seeds are both still alive and mostly unscathed. Jannik Sinner battled in his opening round match to five sets but has since steadied the ship. Aryna Sabalenka has won her first three matches in straight sets, but her competition level is about to go up a notch.

    On the men’s side, there are 10 seeded players remaining and eight of them are paired together in the fourth round. On the women’s side, only two unseeded players have made it this far with great matchups expected to take place the rest of the way.

    Follow live coverage of the 2026 edition of the Wimbledon Championships, from the first round through the final with all the news, upsets and more you could ask for!

    Below you can find the complete draws for the singles competitions at Wimbledon.

    Gentlemen’s Singles draw/bracket

    1. Jannik Sinner vs. Shintaro Mochizuki
    Hubert Hurkacz vs. Jan Lennard Struff

    3. Felix Auger-Aliassime vs. 22. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
    7. Novak Djokovic vs. Roman Safiullin

    5. Alex de Minaur vs. 9. Flavio Cobolli
    Grigor Dimitrov vs. Arthur Fery

    6. Taylor Fritz vs. 10. Alexander Bublik
    2. Alexander Zverev vs. 13. Jiri Lehecka

    Ladies’ Singles draw/bracket

    1. Aryna Sabalenka vs. 14. Naomi Osaka
    10. Karolina Muchova vs. Barbora Krejcikova

    4. Jessica Pegula vs. 16. Iva Jovic
    7. Coco Gauff vs. 11. Belinda Bencic

    12. Marta Kostyuk vs. Ashlyn Krueger
    13. Jasmine Paolini vs. 29. Alexandra Eala

  • 2026 John Deere Classic leaderboard, grades: Chris Gotterup grabs third win of year with stellar closing 62

    gotterup.jpg

    Getty Images

    That’s not one, not two, but now three victories for Chris Gotterup in 2026 as the 26-year-old hunted down the leaders Sunday at the John Deere Classic for his third title of the season, tying Matt Fitzpatrick for most on the PGA Tour in that span. Gotterup did so by not only coming up clutch but posting the lowest round of the tournament, a 9-under 62 to finish 20 under, good enough for a one-stroke victory over Max Homa.

    Ben Kohles arrived at the 72nd hole tied with Gotterup at 20 under before disaster struck on his approach shot. Finding the water with his second, Kohles was unable to save par and ultimately dropped a pair on the 72nd hole to fall into a tie for third place.

    “I was kind of a little in between,” Kohles said. “I hit an 8-iron and thought 9 was going to be too short, and thought, ‘If I hit a full 8, it could have a chance of going over.’ So I was just trying to hit kind of a three-quarter punch shot. Yeah, just tugged it a little, and obviously ended up in the water.”

    For Gotterup, the victory at the John Deere Classic is particularly sweet. With his regular caddie sidelined due to the birth of a new child, the Oklahoma product called upon his brother to lug around the sticks at TPC Deere Run. Gotterup also picked up a win at the same tournament that gave him a sponsor exemption back in 2022, leading to Gotterup’s first top-five finish on the PGA Tour.

    Gotterup now has five career PGA Tour victories, and over the last year, he is tied with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler as each has picked up four wins in that span. Gotterup will now go on to defend his title at the Scottish Open, which begins on Thursday, ranked No. 6 in the FedEx Cup standings.

    Starting the day five strokes off the 54-hole pace set by Lucas Glover and Lee Hodges, Gotterup started hot. Even though he failed to take advantage of the par-5 2nd, he made his intentions clear by playing his front nine in 5 under. Three more birdies came flying onto his scorecard by the time he reached the 15th hole, where a par may have been the lift that ultimately pushed him past the rest.

    Able to avoid a square on his scorecard, Gotterup kept on going and penciled in one last birdie from 15 feet on No. 17 to reach the ultimate winning score of 20 under.

    From there, he waited with his brother on the driving range, remaining warm for a potential playoff with pursuers on the golf course. Homa missed his opportunity to tie on the last just before Kohles sent his second to a watery grave. Gotterup’s name was left all by itself on top of the leaderboard as he embraced his brother and his fifth PGA Tour title. Grade: A+

    Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2026 John Deere Classic.

    2. Max Homa (-19): He started the back nine six (!) strokes off the lead and inched his way within one thanks to four straight birdies across Nos. 12-15. Homa kept pace with another on the par-5 17th, but it proved that he needed one more for at least a shot at a playoff. He looked a lot more like the man who has claimed six PGA Tour titles throughout his career — the swing was in a better position, and the mentals looked the same. He’s always been dangerous when he’s at ease in between the ears, and if that continues, these quality results should, too.

    “Proud to stay patient and not force it,” Homa said. “Yesterday, my caddie, John, said I forced a few putts. Speed wasn’t as good today. I just let them go. Yeah, it was fun, but the game just feels good, so you feel like every hole you’re a swing away from making a birdie, so that’s nice.” Grade: A

    T3. Ben Kohles (-18): An eagle on the par-5 2nd announced his arrival as Kohles turned in 5 under and with a two-stroke lead in his back pocket. Already a winner on the Korn Ferry Tour this season, he looked well within himself until he did not. The swing got a tick faster, the pace on the greens got slightly off, and as such, he was caught from behind. Five times a winner on the Korn Ferry Tour and currently in line to earn his PGA Tour card through that circuit later this season, Kohles saw another one fall through his grasp. He is also up to No. 100 in the FedEx Cup standings. Grade: A-

    T15. Preston Stout (a) (-14): Stout is set to become the top-ranked amateur when the standings refresh this week, but first, he had to secure his first weekend tee times on the PGA Tour. In his fourth career start on Tour, Stout looked, well, stout. The NCAA individual champion changed his mindset, and the results followed suit. He looked well beyond his years from tee to green throughout the entire week, but ultimately, he was unable to hole enough putts to keep pace with the pack. Grade: A-

    T58. Jordan Spieth (-7): If there was a week that summed up Spieth’s season, it was this one. The three-time major champion had at least one six on the scorecard in the first two rounds and then put a pair of sevens on the scorecard in Rounds 3 and 4. The big numbers added up fast, aiding in the inconsistency that has handcuffed his ability to find the top 10 since last summer’s Memorial. If there was a positive to pick out amid a week where his lowest round was just 2 under, Spieth rolled the rock much more effectively than at the Travelers Championship. Grade: D

  • John Deere Classic Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR EARNINGS R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    USA
    -20 $1,584,000 66 68* 68 62 264
    2
    USA
    -19 $959,200 67* 66 68 64 265
    T3
    USA
    -18 $466,400 63 65* 69 69 266
    T3
    USA
    -18 $466,400 64 66* 67 69 266
    T3
    USA
    -18 $466,400 65* 67 66 68 266
    T6
    USA
    -17 $297,000 67* 70 66 64 267
    T6
    USA
    -17 $297,000 68 64* 66 69 267
    T6
    USA
    -17 $297,000 69* 65 65 68 267
    T9
    JPN
    -16 $239,800 67* 65 69 67 268
    T9
    USA
    -16 $239,800 64 70* 66 68 268
    T9
    USA
    -16 $239,800 63* 68 67 70 268
    T12
    ZAF
    -15 $187,000 68* 68 68 65 269
    T12
    USA
    -15 $187,000 66 66* 71 66 269
    T12
    USA
    -15 $187,000 69* 66 67 67 269
    T15
    TWN
    -14 $143,000 66* 72 66* 66 270
    T15
    DEU
    -14 $143,000 64 72* 68 66 270
    T15
    USA
    -14 $143,000 72* 66 65* 67 270
    T15
    USA
    -14 $143,000 70 69* 63* 68 270
    T15
    USA
    -14 $143,000 69 67* 65 69 270
    T15
    USA
    -14 66* 69 66 69 270
    T21
    USA
    -13 $100,056 67 68* 69 67 271
    T21
    USA
    -13 $100,056 69* 65 70 67 271
    T21
    CHN
    -13 $100,056 67 69* 68 67 271
    T21
    USA
    -13 $100,056 67 65* 71 68 271
    T21
    USA
    -13 $100,056 66 66* 70 69 271
    T26
    USA
    -12 $66,189 70 69* 69* 64 272
    T26
    USA
    -12 $66,189 67* 70 68* 67 272
    T26
    USA
    -12 $66,189 69* 69 66* 68 272
    T26
    SWE
    -12 $66,189 68* 66 69 69 272
    T26
    ZAF
    -12 $66,189 70* 69 64* 69 272
    T26
    ARG
    -12 $66,189 70 66* 67 69 272
    T26
    USA
    -12 $66,189 66 68* 68 70 272
    T33
    ENG
    -11 $49,133 67* 71 70* 65 273
    T33
    USA
    -11 $49,133 66 68* 72 67 273
    T33
    USA
    -11 $49,133 67* 72 67* 67 273
    T33
    USA
    -11 $49,133 69 66* 70 68 273
    T33
    ENG
    -11 $49,133 72* 67 66* 68 273
    T33
    USA
    -11 $49,133 73* 64 67* 69 273
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 76* 63 70* 65 274
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 67* 72 69* 66 274
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 69 69* 69* 67 274
    T39
    AUS
    -10 $36,520 72* 65 68 69 274
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 69 68* 67* 70 274
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 70* 67 66* 71 274
    T39
    USA
    -10 $36,520 66 69* 67 72 274
    T46
    CAN
    -9 $26,206 72 67* 70* 66 275
    T46
    USA
    -9 $26,206 66 71* 71* 67 275
    T46
    JPN
    -9 $26,206 70* 69 68* 68 275
    T46
    USA
    -9 $26,206 72* 67 68* 68 275
    T46
    KOR
    -9 $26,206 67 68* 69 71 275
    T51
    BEL
    -8 $21,359 72* 67 71* 66 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 71 68* 69* 68 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 73 66* 69* 68 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 68* 69 71* 68 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 67 68* 72 69 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 68 67* 71 70 276
    T51
    USA
    -8 $21,359 67* 68 67 74 276
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 70* 69 69* 69 277
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 71 67* 69* 70 277
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 66* 68 71 72 277
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 71* 66 69 71 277
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 70 68* 68* 71 277
    T58
    USA
    -7 $19,888 66 69* 70 72 277
    64
    USA
    -6 $19,272 70* 69 71* 68 278
    T65
    COL
    -5 $19,008 71 67* 73* 68 279
    T65
    USA
    -5 $19,008 65 72* 71* 71 279
    T67
    USA
    -4 $18,480 69* 70 72* 69 280
    T67
    PRI
    -4 $18,480 66* 71 72 71 280
    T67
    USA
    -4 $18,480 68* 68 73 71 280
    T67
    USA
    -4 $18,480 65 71* 71 73 280
    T71
    USA
    -3 $17,864 69* 70 72* 70 281
    T71
    CAN
    -3 $17,864 67 72* 70* 72 281
    T71
    KOR
    -3 $17,864 68 69* 68 76 281
    T74
    ARG
    -2 $17,336 72* 67 75* 68 282
    T74
    USA
    -2 $17,336 69* 68 76 69 282
    T74
    USA
    -2 $17,336 69* 70 74* 69 282
    77
    USA
    E $16,984 68* 70 72* 74 284
    78
    USA
    +2 $16,808 67* 69 74 76 286
    79
    USA
    +4 $16,632 68* 69 77* 74 288
    CUT
    USA
    -2 71* 69 140
    CUT
    JPN
    -2 70* 70 140
    CUT
    CAN
    -2 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 71* 69 140
    CUT
    CAN
    -2 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 68 72* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 72 68* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 68 72* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 70 70* 140
    CUT
    PHL
    -2 68 72* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 74* 66 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 71 69* 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 72* 68 140
    CUT
    USA
    -2 71* 69 140
    CUT
    USA
    -1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 70 71* 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 74* 67 141
    CUT
    JPN
    -1 68* 73 141
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 70 71* 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 69 72* 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 70 71* 141
    CUT
    USA
    -1 70* 71 141
    CUT
    CHN
    -1 67 74* 141
    CUT
    USA
    E 71 71* 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 73 69* 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    E 74* 68 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    E 71* 71 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    SCO
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    FRA
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 71* 71 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 70* 72 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 73* 142
    CUT
    USA
    E 75* 67 142
    CUT
    COL
    E 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +1 71 72* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72 71* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +1 68* 75 143
    CUT
    CAN
    +1 68 75* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +1 73* 70 143
    CUT
    NOR
    +1 69 74* 143
    CUT
    CAN
    +2 73 71* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +2 71* 73 144
    CUT
    CAN
    +2 73* 71 144
    CUT
    USA
    +2 74* 70 144
    CUT
    USA
    +2 72 72* 144
    CUT
    ARG
    +2 74 70* 144
    CUT
    ARG
    +2 73 71* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +2 74 70* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 73* 73 146
    CUT
    DNK
    +4 75* 71 146
    CUT
    KOR
    +4 74 72* 146
    CUT
    USA
    +5 72 75* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +5 70 77* 147
    CUT
    DEU
    +7 72* 77 149
    CUT
    ZAF
    +7 77* 72 149
    CUT
    USA
    +11 81 72* 153
    CUT
    USA
    +14 78* 78 156
    WD
    IRL
    77
    WD
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

    • DQ
    • WD
    • CUT
    • MDF
    • (a)
    • *
    • Watch Live On Pga Tour Live App
    • Disqualified
    • Withdrew
    • Missed Cut
    • Made Cut Did Not Finish
    • Amateur
    • Golfer Started Round On Back 9
    • Winner
    Search for tee times
    Powe r ed By

    Latest Stories

    Image thumbnail

    John Deere Classic grades: Gotterup’s 62 clinches third win of year

    Gotterup posted the lowest round of the tournament on Sunday to clinch a one-shot victory at TPC Deere Run
    Image thumbnail

    2026 John Deere Classic TV schedule, streaming coverage

    The PGA Tour rolls into the Quad Cities for the Fourth of July
    Image thumbnail

    Glover tied atop John Deere Classic leaderboard with plenty chasing

    By: STATS
    Glover registered his first bogey of the tournament on Moving Day with one eye on an unexpected victory
    Image thumbnail

    2026 Open Championship picks by model that nailed 17 majors

    SportsLine’s model simulated the British Open 2026 10,000 times and revealed surprising golf picks for Royal Birkdale
    Image thumbnail

    2026 John Deere Classic leaderboard: Homa, Gotterup chasing Glover

    Glover has darted out to the solo lead, with two of the field’s biggest names giving chase
    Image thumbnail
  • FIFA World Cup Scores

    FT
    T
    soccer team logoBrazil
    1
    soccer team logoNorway
    2
    Round of 16, MetLife Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoMexico
    2
    soccer team logoEngland
    3
    Round of 16, Estadio Azteca
  • Bauers homers off Rodríguez in 7th, Brewers come back to beat Diamondbacks 3-2

    PHOENIX (AP) Jake Bauers homered off Arizona All-Star Eduardo Rodríguez in the seventh inning and the Milwaukee Brewers defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 3-2 on Sunday.

    Bauers hit his team-leading 16th homer to right to chase Rodríguez (7-3). The lefty took a 1-0 lead into the seventh, but Andrew Vaughn led off with a single and Bauer’s blast came on Rodríguez’s 100th and final pitch of the game.

    Rodríguez, named to the All-Star Game for the first time in his 12-year career on Saturday, gave up six hits, walked none and struck out three. His ERA rose slightly to 2.25.

    Joey Ortiz’s single drove in a run later in the seventh against Kevin Ginkel to make it 3-1, and the Diamondbacks got that run back in their half when Gabriel Moreno beat the relay on a bases-loaded force play.

    Drew Rom (1-0), called up earlier Sunday to replace injured Brandon Woodruff, got one out in the sixth. Trevor Megill pitched the ninth for his 13th save.

    Geraldo Perdomo and Corbin Carroll hit back-to-back doubles for Arizona’s first run. Perdomo’s was the 100th double of his career.

    Brandon Sproat labored through four innings for the Brewers, throwing 92 pitches but giving up just the one run. He allowed five hits, walked three and struck out four.

    None of the Brewers starters in the series made it to the fifth inning. Kyle Harrison was knocked out in the third inning of Friday’s game and Woodruff left Saturday in the fourth with right shoulder inflammation.

    But Milwaukee relievers were outstanding, allowing just three runs (two earned) in 17 2/3 innings.

    Brewers LHP Shane Drohan (3-2, 3.12) starts Monday opposite Cardinals RHP Michael McGreevy (3-7, 3.12) in St. Louis.

    Diamondbacks RHP Brandon Pfaadt (1-1, 5.40) starts Monday in San Diego in the opener of a four-game series.

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
    Zack Cimini
    Zack Cimini

    Contrarian with Chutzpah

    Over 1.5+141
    Lourdes Gurriel • Bases • Player Prop
    Picked Jul 5 @ 3:20 pm, 0.5 unit on Caesars
    LOSS
    After a rocky first couple of months, Brandon Sprout had a solid month of June with a 3.46 ERA. His initial start against Arizona did not go well on April 29th, when he gave up a couple of home runs and lasted just 4 1/3. Lourdes Gurriel was one of four Diamondbacks that had multiple hits that game. Take Gurriel over on his combination prop line today.

    Zack’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E

    55-33

    0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 7 1
    1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 7 0
    • W: D. Rom (1-0)L: E. Rodriguez (7-3)S: T. Megill (13)
    • HR: MIL – J. Bauers (15)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    B. Turang 2B 4 0 1 0 .268
    J. Chourio LF 4 0 2 0 .297
    C. Yelich DH 3 0 0 0 .243
    A. Vaughn 1B 3 0 1 0 .328
    S. Frelick PR-RF 1 1 0 0 .242
    J. Bauers RF-1B 4 1 1 2 .266
    G. Mitchell CF 4 0 0 0 .264
    G. Sanchez C 3 1 1 0 .218
    D. Hamilton 3B 3 0 0 0 .234
    J. Ortiz SS 3 0 1 1 .210
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte DH 4 0 1 0 .267
    G. Perdomo SS 5 1 3 0 .243
    C. Carroll RF 4 0 1 1 .266
    G. Moreno C 3 0 0 1 .282
    L. Gurriel LF 2 0 0 0 .216
    a- M. Kepler PH-LF 1 0 0 0 .105
    I. Vargas 2B 3 0 0 0 .261
    T. Tawa 3B 2 0 0 0 .167
    P. Smith 1B 4 0 1 0 .157
    T. Troy CF 4 1 1 0 .220
    • a-struck out for Gurriel in the 7th
    BATTING
    • 2B – J. Chourio (15), G. Sanchez (5)
    • HR – J. Bauers (16)
    • SH – C. Yelich
    • RBI – J. Bauers 2 (54), J. Ortiz (20)
    • 2-Out RBI – J. Ortiz
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – C. Yelich, J. Bauers
    BATTING
    • 2B – G. Perdomo (13), C. Carroll (18)
    • SH – T. Tawa (3)
    • RBI – C. Carroll (45), G. Moreno (29)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Marte, G. Perdomo, M. Kepler, I. Vargas 3 (3)
    BASERUNNING
    • CS – J. Ortiz (4)
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – G. Perdomo (13), T. Tawa
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Turang-Ortiz)
    • E – A. Ashby
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    B. Sproat 4.0 5 1 3 4 5.13
    G. Anderson 1.2 0 0 0 0 3.20
    D. Rom(W, 1-0) 0.1 0 0 0 1 3.18
    A. Ashby(H, 5) 0.1 2 1 1 0 3.25
    A. Uribe(H, 13) 1.2 0 0 1 1 2.78
    T. Megill(S, 13) 1.0 0 0 1 0 3.09
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Rodriguez(L, 7-3) 6.0 5 2 0 3 2.25
    K. Ginkel 1.0 2 1 0 1 3.15
    T. Clarke 1.0 0 0 0 0 2.06
    D. Jameson 1.0 0 0 0 1 4.38
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – B. Sproat 92-55, G. Anderson 16-9, D. Rom 7-5, A. Ashby 16-8, A. Uribe 23-13, T. Megill 16-11
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – B. Sproat 7-3, G. Anderson 3-1, A. Ashby 1-1, A. Uribe 2-0, T. Megill 0-2
    • Batters Faced – B. Sproat 20, G. Anderson 5, D. Rom, A. Ashby 4, A. Uribe 5, T. Megill 4
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Rodriguez 102-59, K. Ginkel 12-9, T. Clarke 11-6, D. Jameson 11-8
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Rodriguez 8-7, K. Ginkel 1-0, T. Clarke 0-2, D. Jameson 0-1
    • Batters Faced – E. Rodriguez 23, K. Ginkel 4, T. Clarke 3, D. Jameson 3