Blog

  • 2026 Scottish Open leaderboard: Tom Kim fires stellar bogey-free 64 to claim first win in three years

    Tom Kim captured his fourth PGA Tour victory on Sunday with a sensational final-round 64 to run away with the 2026 Scottish Open crown at 17 under. Kim burst on the scene at age 20, winning three times in his first two professional seasons, but he has largely been an afterthought amid a rough past couple of years.

    Despite now being a five-year veteran, the 24-year-old is still incredibly young, and he reminded everyone of his prodigious talents at The Renaissance Club on Sunday, matching the low round of the day to win by two over Min Woo Lee.

    With the victory, Kim becomes the fifth international-born player to win four times on the PGA Tour before the age of 25, per Justin Ray, joining an illustrious group that includes Rory McIlroy, Sergio Garcia, Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama. Kim hinted at a return to form at Shinnecock Hills last month when he finished third at the U.S. Open, and his comfort playing links golf was on display once again this week in Scotland.

    Kim had to play 29 holes on Sunday after getting just seven holes in on Saturday due to fog delays. He came out in the morning and clawed his way to within one shot of the leaders at 11 under heading into the final round. The trio leading after Round 3 concluded early Sunday morning — Lee, Matt Fitzpatrick and Robert MacIntyre — played together in the final grouping and could not keep pace with Kim in the group ahead.

    The shots of the day for Kim, who scored only one bogey across his final 51 holes, came on the 10th and 16th in his fourth round; both are long par 4s that play straight back into the wind. He found himself with just over 200 yards in each time and hit a pair of beautiful 4 irons — a towering fade on the 10th and a low draw on the 16th — to set up rare birdies.

    Along with some phenomenal long iron shots on the back nine, Kim was nails with the putter to maintain a bogey-free scorecard. He had a handful of knee-knockers coming down the stretch but saw his putter form hold up to pour them all in the cup, including one final 4-footer on the 18th to secure the victory with Lee two strokes behind in the 18th fairway.

    Even while he’s been out of top form, Kim has always played well in Scotland with four top 20s in his four starts coming into this week. Now, he adds a Scottish Open title to his résumé and reminds the PGA Tour that he is an extremely dangerous player when at his best. Grade: A+

    2026 Scottish Open grades

    2. Min Woo Lee (-15): Lee couldn’t reel in Kim on the back nine, but a Sunday 67 in the final grouping is nothing to sneeze at. Lee was sensational with his iron play in the second and third rounds but couldn’t find as many greens as he needed in the final round to keep pace with Kim. Still, he put his short game skills on full display to keep his round on track and maintain pressure on Kim all the way to the end. Even though he’s still looking for his first win of the season (and second overall), this has easily been Lee’s most complete season as a PGA Tour player, even if he’s cooled off of late. After three rough showings in his last three events, he found his game again in Scotland, and despite coming up short of a second Scottish Open crown, Lee has to feel extremely confident about his game heading into next week’s Open Championship. Grade: A-

    T3. Matt Fitzpatrick (-13): As well as he played on the front nine Saturday in the toughest conditions of the week, Fitzpatrick will be disappointed he didn’t put forth a better effort on Sunday. He failed to ever gather any real momentum in the final round, as three bogeys disrupted any attempts at a real charge at Kim’s lead. Even with a disappointing Sunday to fall short of a fourth win in 2026, Fitzpatrick continues to play the best golf of his career and will head to Royal Birkdale as one of the favorites. Grade: B+

    T3. Robert MacIntyre (-13): Much like Fitzpatrick, MacIntyre would’ve had much higher hopes for his final round performance after grabbing a share of the lead in his home open once again. The Scot stumbled early in his final round, which rendered his late charge moot when it came to contending for the title. MacIntyre did give the home fans something to cheer about with an eagle on the 12th hole, and he can take solace in his game appearing to be on the upswing after some early season struggles. Grade: B+

    T7. Rory McIlroy (-12): A 64 on Sunday from McIlroy only added to the frustration from how he handled Saturday evening’s conditions. If he had not ejected in the fog over his first eight holes before play was suspended, he would’ve been right in the mix on Sunday evening. McIlroy did at least avoid a similar fate to what we saw at the U.S. Open, where he followed up a poor third round with a lackluster effort on Sunday, and he heads to Royal Birkdale feeling like he’s in good enough form to win a second Open Championship and a seventh major title overall. Grade: B

    T11. Chris Gotterup (-10): The defending champion ran out of steam in the final round after beginning the day tied with Kim, one behind the leaders. He birdied the first hole of the final round but went 15 straight holes without putting another circle on the card with three bogeys in between to end his hopes of back-to-back wins both in Scotland and on the PGA Tour after his win at the John Deere Classic last week. The question entering The Open is whether Sunday was an indication that Gotterup perhaps ran out of gas after two straight weeks playing in contention or just a blip on the radar for a player who is otherwise in elite form once again. Grade: B

    T13. Viktor Hovland (-9): Hovland posted a 64 before McIlroy and Kim to give the leaders an idea of what was out there on Sunday afternoon. This was his first start since winning at the Travelers, and while he wasn’t quite as sharp as what we saw from him in Connecticut, it was another week of solid play for the Norwegian, who is rounding back into the form that made him one of the game’s elite not that long ago. Grade: B

    T13. Tommy Fleetwood (-9): Fleetwood continues to play quality golf, but cannot find that gear to really get into contention. That magic we saw from Fleetwood late last season has been absent so far in 2026, and he’s running out of time to recapture that form and return to the conversation of the best in the world. Grade: B

    T13. Wyndham Clark (-9): Clark entered the final round two off the lead and figured to be a serious threat given everything we’ve seen from him over the past two months. Unfortunately for the two-time U.S. Open champ, he had similar struggles to Gotterup, stalling out on Sunday afternoon with a frustrating 71 that kept him from threatening for a third win this season. Grade: B

    T36. Jon Rahm (-4): This week was a rare chance for Rahm to stack himself up next to the PGA Tour’s best in a non-major setting, and the Spaniard fell a bit flat. Rahm had to grind on Friday to shoot 65 just to make the cut on the number, and once he got to the weekend, he didn’t make any noise. It seemed like he might’ve turned the corner at the PGA Championship, but there’s still some juice lacking from Rahm that once made him one of golf’s apex predators. Grade: C-

    MC. Scottie Scheffler: Scheffler was down at Royal Birkdale getting a head start on Open Championship prep while the action was taking place on Sunday at The Renaissance Club after seeing his 78-tournament cut streak snapped. In a year when we in the media have perhaps been premature in sounding alarm bells about Scheffler for not winning and instead only stacking up runner-up finishes, this week’s showing in Scotland was perhaps the first real concerning result of 2026. Grade: F

    Updates
    (35)

    @GOLFonCBS via Twitter
    Jul. 12, 2026, 3:28 pm EDT

    @GOLFonCBS via Twitter
    Jul. 12, 2026, 3:26 pm EDT

    @PGATOUR via Twitter
    Jul. 12, 2026, 3:23 pm EDT

  • Genesis Scottish Open Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR EARNINGS R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    KOR
    -17 $1,575,000 65* 66 68 64 263
    2
    AUS
    -15 $985,500 66* 66 66 67 265
    T3
    JPN
    -13 $431,888 67* 66 67 67 267
    T3
    USA
    -13 $431,888 68 68* 64 67 267
    T3
    ENG
    -13 $431,888 67 65* 66 69 267
    T3
    SCO
    -13 $431,888 67* 66 65 69 267
    T7
    NIR
    -12 $270,675 65* 66 73 64 268
    T7
    USA
    -12 $270,675 66 68* 65 69 268
    T9
    FRA
    -11 $223,200 69 64* 70 66 269
    T9
    KOR
    -11 $223,200 70 67* 66 66 269
    T11
    USA
    -10 $189,675 67 68* 65 70 270
    T11
    USA
    -10 $189,675 68* 65 66 71 270
    T13
    NOR
    -9 $153,450 68* 70 69 64 271
    T13
    USA
    -9 $153,450 68 67* 68 68 271
    T13
    ENG
    -9 $153,450 67 70* 66 68 271
    T13
    USA
    -9 $153,450 67* 67 66 71 271
    T17
    ITA
    -8 $123,750 68 69* 67 68 272
    T17
    NLD
    -8 $123,750 67* 66 70 69 272
    T17
    ENG
    -8 $123,750 70* 66 67 69 272
    T17
    ESP
    -8 $123,750 72 66* 65 69 272
    T21
    AUS
    -7 $97,650 70* 66 70 67 273
    T21
    ZAF
    -7 $97,650 68* 68 68 69 273
    T21
    DEU
    -7 $97,650 68* 69 67 69 273
    T21
    ENG
    -7 $97,650 68 63* 72 70 273
    T21
    ENG
    -7 $97,650 67 67* 67 72 273
    T26
    CAN
    -6 $78,750 70 67* 69 68 274
    T26
    DNK
    -6 $78,750 68* 66 70 70 274
    T26
    USA
    -6 $78,750 68 67* 68 71 274
    T26
    ENG
    -6 $78,750 68 67* 67 72 274
    T30
    ENG
    -5 $65,363 68* 68 69 70 275
    T30
    NZL
    -5 $65,363 71* 65 69 70 275
    T30
    USA
    -5 $65,363 70 66* 69 70 275
    T30
    NIR
    -5 $65,363 67* 71 67 70 275
    T30
    AUS
    -5 $65,363 70* 64 68 73 275
    T30
    USA
    -5 $65,363 71 67* 64 73 275
    T36
    ZAF
    -4 $49,978 68 70* 71 67 276
    T36
    USA
    -4 $49,978 70 68* 70 68 276
    T36
    DNK
    -4 $49,978 65 73* 70 68 276
    T36
    USA
    -4 $49,978 69* 69 69 69 276
    T36
    COL
    -4 $49,978 68* 70 69 69 276
    T36
    ESP
    -4 $49,978 73 65* 68 70 276
    T36
    FIN
    -4 $49,978 66 69* 69 72 276
    T36
    DNK
    -4 $49,978 68 68* 65 75 276
    T44
    USA
    -3 $37,455 66 72* 71 68 277
    T44
    USA
    -3 $37,455 70 66* 70 71 277
    T44
    NLD
    -3 $37,455 70 65* 70 72 277
    T44
    SCO
    -3 $37,455 67 69* 69 72 277
    T44
    SWE
    -3 $37,455 69* 68 68 72 277
    T44
    USA
    -3 $37,455 68* 70 67 72 277
    T50
    ENG
    -2 $31,455 69 68* 70 71 278
    T50
    USA
    -2 $31,455 69 67* 69 73 278
    T52
    ESP
    -1 $27,231 70* 68 73 68 279
    T52
    USA
    -1 $27,231 67* 71 71 70 279
    T52
    CAN
    -1 $27,231 67* 70 71 71 279
    T52
    USA
    -1 $27,231 71* 65 70 73 279
    T52
    DEU
    -1 $27,231 69* 64 72 74 279
    T52
    SWE
    -1 $27,231 70 68* 67 74 279
    T52
    CAN
    -1 $27,231 68* 65 69 77 279
    T59
    ZAF
    E $24,570 69* 69 69 73 280
    T59
    ITA
    E $24,570 68* 67 70 75 280
    T61
    ZAF
    +1 $22,680 70 66* 75 70 281
    T61
    JPN
    +1 $22,680 71 67* 73 70 281
    T61
    USA
    +1 $22,680 66 71* 73 71 281
    T61
    FRA
    +1 $22,680 72 66* 72 71 281
    T61
    USA
    +1 $22,680 70* 67 69 75 281
    T66
    AUS
    +2 $19,710 69* 69 75 69 282
    T66
    USA
    +2 $19,710 70* 67 74 71 282
    68
    ESP
    +3 $19,440 69* 69 72 73 283
    69
    USA
    +4 $19,260 68 70* 75 71 284
    70
    USA
    +6 $19,080 71* 67 79 69 286
    71
    SCO
    +8 $18,900 69* 69 76 74 288
    CUT
    ESP
    -1 75 64* 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 71* 68 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    AUT
    -1 70 69* 139
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 68 71* 139
    CUT
    FRA
    -1 69* 70 139
    CUT
    SWE
    -1 68 71* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 67* 72 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 67 72* 139
    CUT
    SCO
    -1 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 65* 74 139
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 70 69* 139
    CUT
    USA
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    DNK
    E 71 69* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 71 69* 140
    CUT
    ENG
    E 73* 67 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 72* 68 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 68 72* 140
    CUT
    ZAF
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    SWE
    E 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 72* 68 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 68 72* 140
    CUT
    SCO
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 66* 74 140
    CUT
    IRL
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    ZAF
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    DNK
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    ESP
    E 66 74* 140
    CUT
    POL
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    +1 73* 68 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 74 67* 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    FRA
    +1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 71 70* 141
    CUT
    ITA
    +1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    ESP
    +1 68 73* 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    +2 72* 70 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    +2 70 72* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 72 70* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    +2 69* 73 142
    CUT
    USA
    +3 68* 75 143
    CUT
    JPN
    +3 71 72* 143
    CUT
    KOR
    +3 72 71* 143
    CUT
    AUT
    +3 65* 78 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 69* 74 143
    CUT
    NOR
    +3 71* 72 143
    CUT
    ESP
    +3 71 72* 143
    CUT
    CHN
    +3 68 75* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 71* 72 143
    CUT
    USA
    +4 70 74* 144
    CUT
    CHN
    +4 73 71* 144
    CUT
    IRL
    +4 74* 70 144
    CUT
    ZAF
    +4 71 73* 144
    CUT
    SWE
    +4 69* 75 144
    CUT
    KOR
    +4 71 73* 144
    CUT
    KOR
    +5 72 73* 145
    CUT
    SCO
    +5 75 70* 145
    CUT
    TWN
    +5 75* 70 145
    CUT
    PRT
    +5 72* 73 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 74 71* 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 69 76* 145
    CUT
    ARE
    +6 76* 70 146
    CUT
    ENG
    +6 75 71* 146
    CUT
    JPN
    +6 71 75* 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +6 70* 76 146
    CUT
    USA
    +6 74 72* 146
    CUT
    USA
    +6 72 74* 146
    CUT
    NZL
    +6 75 71* 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +6 73* 73 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +7 73* 74 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 70 77* 147
    CUT
    ZAF
    +7 71 76* 147
    CUT
    ZAF
    +8 72 76* 148
    CUT
    FRA
    +8 73 75* 148
    CUT
    DEU
    +8 69 79* 148
    CUT
    KOR
    +9 75* 74 149
    CUT
    USA
    +9 73 76* 149
    CUT
    KOR
    +10 72* 78 150
    CUT
    DEU
    +13 85* 68 153
    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
  • Wimbledon 2026: Jannik Sinner beats Alexander Zverev, Linda Noskova edges Karolina Muchova for singles titles

    Jannik Sinner can now lay claim to being a five-time grand slam champion following Sunday’s victory over Alexander Zverev (6-7, 7-6, 6-3, 6-4) in the men’s singles final at the 2026 edition of Wimbledon. The No. 1 seed dropped a first-set tiebreaker against the reigning French Open winner before taking a crucial second-set tiebreaker and the final two sets to win his second straight title at the All-England Club.

    Sinner now has 100 major match wins in his career.

    Despite struggling at times with his forehand in London, he hit twice as many winners on that shot as Zverev in the final and eventually applied pressure near the finish line.

    The two power hitters on serve slugged it out in the first two sets before Sinner earned the first break of the match at 5-3 in the third, benefiting from a couple of balls that Zverev launched beyond the baseline during rallies. He got another at 4-3 in the fourth set with a forehand winner that clipped the net and pushed past Zverev.

    Sinner has won 10 straight against Zverev, who improved to 11-4 all-time against one of his top adversaries on tour. After holding serve throughout the match, Sinner extended his streak of consecutive service wins to 84 against the German. That included the final game, which featured a 23-shot rally before Sinner earned the championship point with a title-winning forehand.


    Linda Noskova claimed the 2026 Wimbledon women’s singles championship on Saturday. The 21-year-old fended off fellow countrywoman Karolina Muchova in a three-set thriller between the Czech stars on Centre Court (6-2, 5-7, 6-3) to capture her first grand slam title. Noskova is the 10th consecutive different women’s champion at Wimbledon, and the youngest women’s winner in England since Petra Kvitova in 2011.

    Noskova dominated the first 15 games of the match and had multiple championship points up 5-2 in the second set against Muchova’s serve, but the weight of the moment seemed to finally catch up to the 21-year-old. Noskova squandered five total championship points in the second set, watching as Muchova rattled off five consecutive games to take the set, leaving the young player visibly rattled and searching for answers, plugging her ears as she went to the chair and throwing a towel over her head.

    She managed those nerves in the first game of the third set to hold her serve, and appeared to settle down from there and return to the big hitting that put Muchova on the back foot early in the match. A quick break in the second game of the third set put Noskova up for good, and she would hold serve out from there to avoid any further drama late in the set, putting away the match in the ninth game to become the seventh consecutive different grand slam winner in women’s tennis.

    Neither woman had won a grand slam coming into Saturday, though it was Muchova’s second final appearance, guaranteeing a seventh consecutive different grand slam winner in women’s tennis. The 29-year-old has now come up just short at each Wimbledon appearance as she has advanced to the semifinals in all four tries. Muchova battled past a pair of stars in Naomi Osaka and Coco Gauff to reach Saturday’s final.

    Noskova had a previous best run of a quarterfinal appearance at the 2024 Australian Open before prevailing on Saturday. She had to defeat four other seeded players to reach this point in the tournament: Sorana Cirstea (17), Madison Keys (26), Elise Mertens (25) and Marta Kostyuk (12) before toppling a fifth in the final against Muchova (10).

    Updates
    (512)

     Pinned

    Jannik Sinner repeats as Wimbledon champion, halts Alexander Zverev’s hot streak

    Jannik Sinner’s signature Italian strut finally surfaced after two breaks of serve down the stretch of Sunday’s decisive 6-7, 7-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Alexander Zverev in the Wimbledon final. The world’s top player saved his best for an opportune time and now, has another grand slam at the All-England Club under his belt.

    Not known for his stamina, it was pivotal for Sinner to end the battle with Zverev in the fourth set since he was 0-9 career in matches that exceeded the 3:50 time on court. By the time Sinner broke Zverev at 4-3 in the fourth, the match had eclipsed 3.5 hours.

    Sinner held serve throughout the match with relentless precision and poise. The closest Sinner came to dropping a game on serve came in the fourth set while leading 2-1. Zverev was ahead 30-0 before four consecutive mistakes, including a disputed line call from the chair umpire, nullified the threat.

    Zverev was trying to make history, hoping to become the first player on the men’s side to win his first career major, then his second in consecutive grand slams.

  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Brewers59-37
    5 8 1
    Pirates50-47
    14 15 0
    PNC Park, Pittsburgh, PA
    • W: P. Skenes  (8-8)
    • L: R. Gasser  (2-4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    P. Skenes PIT P5.1 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 7 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    H. Davis PIT C2-4, 3 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals38-59
    2 9 1
    Orioles46-51
    8 12 2
    Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Baltimore, MD
    • W: G. Wolfram  (2-2)
    • L: M. Strahm  (3-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    L. Taveras BAL CF2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    player headshot
    S. Baz BAL P4.2 IP, 7 H, 1 ER, 9 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Yankees54-42
    5 8 1
    3 6 0
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: R. Yarbrough  (2-0)
    • L: A. Alvarez  (2-3)
    • S: P. Blackburn  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Cavalli WAS P6.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 5 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    P. Blackburn NYY P2.0 IP, 2 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Red Sox46-48
    3 4 0
    Mets40-57
    2 6 2
    Citi Field, Flushing, NY
    • W: A. Chapman  (1-3)
    • L: B. Raley  (4-4)
    • S: G. Whitlock  (2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    Z. Thornton NYM P7.0 IP, 2 H, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    B. Bello BOS P4.1 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 5 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Cubs54-42
    8 9 0
    Reds43-52
    4 9 0
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: M. Boyd  (5-1)
    • L: C. Petty  (1-2)
    • S: J. Webb  (5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    M. Boyd CHC P6.1 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 3 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    A. Bregman CHC 3B3-5, 2 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 11 0
    Marlins52-45
    2 8 1
    loanDepot park, Miami, FL
    • W: J. Cantillo  (8-4)
    • L: T. Phillips  (2-4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. Cantillo CLE P5.0 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 9 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    B. Rocchio CLE SS2-5, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 9 1
    Tigers44-52
    0 2 1
    Comerica Park, Detroit, MI
    • W: Z. Wheeler  (10-1)
    • L: T. Skubal  (5-5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    Z. Wheeler PHI P6.0 IP, 2 H, 10 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    J. Realmuto PHI C2-3, 2 R, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    8 9 0
    Rays56-38
    2 4 2
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: J. Ferrer  (2-1)
    • L: I. Seymour  (6-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Roycroft TB P3.0 IP, 3 SO
    player headshot
    J. Crawford SEA SS3-4, 1 R, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    1 6 1
    9 9 2
    Rate Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: N. Schultz  (3-6)
    • L: J. Ginn  (7-6)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    N. Schultz CHW P5.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 4 SO
    player headshot
    B. Montgomery CHW RF2-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Angels38-59
    2 7 0
    Twins48-49
    4 6 0
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: T. Bradley  (9-3)
    • L: J. Soriano  (8-6)
    • S: A. Morris  (3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Bradley MIN P7.0 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    A. Morris MIN P2.0 IP, 1 H, 2 SO, 1 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Braves55-40
    4 8 0
    3 4 2
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: T. Kinley  (5-3)
    • L: J. Romero  (1-3)
    • S: R. Iglesias  (19)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    R. Iglesias ATL P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    player headshot
    J. Ritchie ATL P4.1 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 2 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Astros47-51
    5 8 1
    Rangers49-47
    6 11 0
    Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX
    • W: J. Latz  (2-1)
    • L: J. Hader  (3-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    M. Gore TEX P4.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 4 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    J. Latz TEX P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rockies39-59
    1 4 1
    Giants41-55
    3 8 0
    Oracle Park, San Francisco, CA
    • W: E. Miller  (2-0)
    • L: A. Senzatela  (9-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. McDonald SF P7.0 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 4 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    E. Miller SF P1.1 IP, 1 H, 2 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 5 0
    Dodgers61-36
    3 3 2
    Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
    • W: R. Thompson  (4-2)
    • L: E. Henriquez  (4-1)
    • S: P. Sewald  (22)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. Sheehan LAD P5.1 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 7 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    P. Sewald ARI P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    4 9 1
    Padres48-48
    5 7 0
    Petco Park, San Diego, CA
    • W: A. Morejon  (7-2)
    • L: J. Hoffman  (5-6)
    • S: M. Miller  (25)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    K. Gausman TOR P6.0 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 8 SO, 3 BB
    player headshot
    M. Miller SD P1.0 IP, 1 SO
  • Diamondbacks overcome Ohtani’s 22nd homer, beat sloppy Dodgers 5-3 for 3-game sweep

    LOS ANGELES (AP) Ildemaro Vargas had two hits, including a go-ahead single in the sixth inning, and the Arizona Diamondbacks overcame Shohei Ohtani’s 22nd home run in a 5-3 victory over the sloppy Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday that finished a three-game sweep heading into the All-Star break.

    Ohtani went 2 for 4 and is batting .293 with 22 homers and 58 RBIs while going 8-2 with a 1.79 ERA and 95 strikeouts in 85 2/3 innings over 14 starts. The four-time MVP is skipping Tuesday’s All-Star Game to have his left knee drained to relieve continued irritation.

    Nolan Arenado scored a run and had an RBI as the Diamondbacks extended their winning streak to four games in their first road sweep of the Dodgers since Sept. 4-6, 2017.

    Ohtani hit his ninth leadoff homer this season, connecting on the first pitch from rookie Mitch Bratt, who started because Zac Gallen went on the injured list with elbow inflammation.

    Two-time defending champion Los Angeles heads into the break a major league-best 61-36. Tommy Edman had a two-run, third-inning single that built a 3-0 lead for Los Angeles, which had a passed ball and two more errors and has nine errors over five games.

    Arizona is 49-47, 11 1/2 games back of the Dodgers.

    Arenado’s RBI double and Ryan Waldschmidt’s sacrifice fly cut Arizona’s deficit to 3-2 in the fifth after center fielder Andy Pages dropped Tim Tawa’s fly ball at the wall while on the run for an error.

    Geraldo Perdomo walked leading off the sixth, then took second on Eliezer Alfonzo’s passed ball and third on Corbin Carroll’s flyout. ourdes Gurriel Jr. grounded to third baseman Max Muncy, whose throw home hit Perdomo in the back and bounced away for an error.

    Vargas followed with a single off Edgardo Henriquez (4-1).

    Tawa homered in the ninth off Evan Phillips, his second of the series and third this season.

    Ryan Thompson (4-2) got three straight outs and Paul Sewald pitched a perfect ninth for his 22nd save in 23 chances.

    Diamondbacks: Open a three-game home series against St. Louis on Friday.

    Dodgers: Head to Yankee Stadium for a three-game series starting Friday.

    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
    No picks available yet for this matchup.
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
    0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 5 5 0

    61-36

    1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 2
    • W: R. Thompson (4-2)L: E. Henriquez (4-1)S: P. Sewald (22)
    • HR: ARI – T. Tawa (2), LAD – S. Ohtani (21)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte DH 4 0 0 0 .256
    G. Perdomo SS 3 1 0 0 .241
    C. Carroll RF 4 0 0 0 .252
    G. Moreno C 3 1 1 0 .301
    L. Gurriel LF 4 0 0 0 .211
    J. Barrosa CF 0 0 0 0 .186
    I. Vargas 2B 4 1 2 1 .258
    N. Arenado 3B 4 1 1 1 .243
    T. Tawa 1B 4 1 1 1 .214
    R. Waldschmidt CF-LF 2 0 0 1 .250
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    S. Ohtani DH 4 2 2 1 .293
    A. Pages CF 2 1 0 0 .270
    F. Freeman 1B 4 0 0 0 .290
    M. Betts SS 4 0 0 0 .235
    T. Edman 2B 4 0 1 2 .343
    K. Tucker RF 4 0 0 0 .244
    T. Hernandez LF 3 0 0 0 .243
    M. Muncy 3B 2 0 0 0 .259
    E. Alfonzo C 2 0 0 0 .000
    a- D. Rushing PH-C 0 0 0 0 .254
    • a-walked for Alfonzo in the 7th
    BATTING
    • 2B – I. Vargas (13), N. Arenado (17)
    • HR – T. Tawa (3)
    • SF – R. Waldschmidt
    • RBI – I. Vargas (47), N. Arenado (40), T. Tawa (15), R. Waldschmidt (9)
    • 2-Out RBI – T. Tawa
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Marte, G. Perdomo, N. Arenado 2 (2)
    BATTING
    • 2B – S. Ohtani (16)
    • HR – S. Ohtani (22)
    • RBI – S. Ohtani (58), T. Edman 2 (11)
    • 2-Out RBI – T. Edman 2 (2)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Tucker, E. Alfonzo
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – R. Waldschmidt (6)
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Tawa-Perdomo)
    FIELDING
    • Outfield Assist – K. Tucker
    • E – A. Pages, M. Muncy (8)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    M. Bratt 3.0 3 3 3 0 6.00
    T. Clarke 1.1 0 0 0 2 2.59
    R. Thompson(W, 4-2) 1.0 0 0 0 1 2.88
    K. Ginkel(H, 8) 0.2 0 0 0 0 2.84
    J. Loaisiga(H, 7) 1.0 0 0 1 2 2.17
    J. Morillo(H, 10) 1.0 0 0 1 0 2.89
    P. Sewald(S, 22) 1.0 0 0 0 1 4.24
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Sheehan 5.1 3 1 1 7 4.70
    E. Henriquez(L, 4-1) (BS, 1) 0.2 1 1 1 0 2.52
    B. Stewart 1.0 0 0 1 1 2.79
    T. Scott 1.0 0 0 0 1 2.56
    E. Phillips 1.0 1 1 0 0 6.00
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – M. Bratt 58-29, T. Clarke 20-14, R. Thompson 11-9, K. Ginkel 3-3, J. Loaisiga 23-14, J. Morillo 12-6, P. Sewald 12-9
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – M. Bratt 5-5, T. Clarke 1-1, R. Thompson 1-0, K. Ginkel 0-1, J. Loaisiga 0-1, J. Morillo 2-0, P. Sewald 1-0
    • Batters Faced – M. Bratt 15, T. Clarke 4, R. Thompson 3, K. Ginkel 2, J. Loaisiga 4, J. Morillo 3, P. Sewald 3
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Sheehan 101-68, E. Henriquez 15-8, B. Stewart 16-9, T. Scott 10-6, E. Phillips 19-12
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Sheehan 3-5, E. Henriquez 2-0, B. Stewart 1-1, T. Scott 1-0, E. Phillips 1-3
    • Batters Faced – E. Sheehan 21, E. Henriquez 4, B. Stewart 4, T. Scott 3, E. Phillips 4
  • Aces beat Mercury 106-58 to match the third-biggest win in WNBA history

    LAS VEGAS (AP) A’ja Wilson had 21 points and 15 rebounds in just 25 minutes as the Las Vegas Aces routed the Phoenix Mercury 106-58 on Saturday night in one of the worst blowouts in WNBA history.

    Las Vegas led by 54 points in the fourth quarter before matching the third-largest win in league history. The record is 59 points by Minnesota against Indiana in 2017, when the Lynx went on a 37-0 run. In this one the Aces never had a run longer than nine points.

    Wilson, the four-time MVP, had a double-double by halftime and Justine Pissott finished with 19 points in her first WNBA game. Signed off the Indiana development roster on Friday, the second-round draft out of Vanderbilt shot 7 for 8 with five 3-pointers while playing the whole fourth quarter.

    Chelesa Gray and Cheyenne Parker-Tyus both added 15 points for the Aces (17-6), who had 30 assists, 11 by Gray. NaLyssa Smith added 14 points.

    Monique Akoa Makani led Phoenix (8-16) with 13 points and Lexi Held had 11. DeWanna Bonner, who became the third player in league history to surpass 8,000 points, was held to two. The Mercury beat the Aces by 30 in the season opener.

    The Aces lost 111-58 to Minnesota last year in the second-biggest margin in league history. Las Vegas then won the next 16 games to close the regular season and went on to win its third WNBA title in four seasons.

    Las Vegas scored the first nine points of the game and led 29-9 after the first quarter. Wilson had nine points, the Aces hit 5 3-pointers and the Mercury were 3-of-17 shooting with five turnovers.

    The onslaught continued in the second quarter, with the Aces leading by as many as 37 points before taking a 57-22 advantage into the break. The largest lead in the third quarter was 45 and the Aces led 79-36 entering the fourth quarter.

    Mercury: At Minnesota on Tuesday.

    Aces: Host Indiana on Sunday,

    AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

    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.

    1 2 3 4 T

    Mercury 8-16

    9 13 14 22 58

    Aces 17-6

    29 28 22 27 106
    TOP SCORERS
    8
    M. Akoa Makani G 13PTS 1REB 1AST
    22
    A. Wilson C 21PTS 15REB 3AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    M. Akoa Makani 13 1 1 3
    K. Copper 9 4 0 3
    A. Thomas 7 6 1 1
    V. Ayayi 5 7 1 2
    D. Bonner 2 4 3 1
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    L. Held 11 3 2 2
    N. Brochant 6 1 1 2
    M. Suarez 5 0 2 0
    S. Whitcomb 0 3 3 2
    Total 58 29 14 16
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    A. Wilson 21 15 3 2
    C. Gray 15 1 12 2
    N. Smith 14 3 0 1
    J. Young 8 2 6 0
    S. Talbot 4 7 1 0
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    J. Pissott 17 2 2 1
    C. Parker-Tyus 15 7 0 2
    J. Loyd 9 1 3 4
    K. Bell 3 3 4 1
    B. Turner 0 6
  • Wimbledon 2026 results: Linda Noskova tops Karolina Muchova to win women’s title in three-set thriller

    Linda Noskova is the 2026 Wimbledon women’s singles champion. The 21-year-old fended off fellow countrywoman Karolina Muchova in a three-set thriller between the Czech stars on Centre Court (6-2, 5-7, 6-3) to capture her first grand slam title. Noskova is the 10th consecutive different women’s champion at Wimbledon, and the youngest women’s winner in England since Petra Kvitova in 2011.

    Noskova dominated the first 15 games of the match and had multiple championship points up 5-2 in the second set against the Muchova serve, but the weight of the moment seemed to finally catch up to the 21-year-old. Noskova squandered five total championship points in the second set, watching as Muchova rattled off five consecutive games to take the set, leaving the young player visibly rattled and searching for answers, plugging her ears as she went to the chair and throwing a towel over her head.

    She managed those nerves in the first game of the third set to hold her serve, and appeared to settle down from there and return to the big hitting that put Muchova on the back foot early in the match. A quick break in the second game of the third set put Noskova up for good, and she would hold serve out from there to avoid any further drama late in the set, putting away the match in the ninth game to become the seventh consecutive different grand slam winner in women’s tennis.

    Neither woman had won a grand slam coming into Saturday, though it was Muchova’s second final appearance, guaranteeing a seventh consecutive different grand slam winner in women’s tennis. The 29-year-old has now come up just short at each Wimbledon appearance as she has advanced to the semifinals in all four tries. Muchova battled past a pair of stars in Naomi Osaka and Coco Gauff to reach Saturday’s final.

    Noskova had a previous best run of a quarterfinal appearance at the 2024 Australian Open before prevailing Saturday. She had to defeat four other seeded players to reach this point in the tournament in Sorana Cirstea (17), Madison Keys (26), Elise Mertens (25) and Marta Kostyuk (12) before toppling a fifth in the final against Muchova (10).

    Keep it locked here over the final rounds of action 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)
     Updating Live
    (466)

     Pinned

    Linda Noskova wins 2026 Wimbledon women’s singles title

    It may have taken a bit to reach the peak, but Linda Noskova earned the Wimbledon singles title in dramatic fashion on Saturday with a three-set victory over countrywoman Karolina Muchova (6-2, 5-7, 6-3).

    Noskova had five championship points in the second set, which she led 5-2, but failed to hold serve twice, ultimately losing 5-7 as all the momentum appeared to swing into Muchova’s favor.

    Noskova managed to break Muchova’s serve in the opening game of the third set and held for her first grand slam title at just 21 years old. She is the 10th straight different women’s champion at Wimbledon and the youngest women’s champion since Petra Kvitova in 2011.

    That parity at Wimbledon has extended to the entire women’s grand slam schedule; Noskova is the seventh consecutive different grand slam winner in women’s tennis.

  • 2026 Scottish Open leaderboard: Matt Fitzpatrick surges, Rory McIlroy stumbles as fog causes Round 3 delays

    After pristine weather was enjoyed over the first two days of the 2026 Scottish Open, the field was greeted by cool temperatures and thick fog on Saturday for the third round at The Renaissance Club. However, only a handful of early groups teed off in the morning before play was suspended for 2 hours and 23 minutes due to fog, pushing tee times well back into the evening.

    The final pairings teed off after 6 p.m. local time and only made it to 7:55 p.m. before the horn blew for the second time, ending play ftween those fog delays, there was a flurry of activity on the leaderboard, as Moving Day lived up to its name even though the leaders did not finish the front nine.

    The marquee pairing of the afternoon was Rory McIlroy and Matt Fitzpatrick, who went in opposite directions as the two European Ryder Cup stars handled the long delay and challenging conditions quite differently.

    McIlroy began the day as the strong favorite after grabbing a share of the lead at 9 under through 36 holes, but he made three bogeys in his first eight holes to fall back to 6 under for the tournament, which is currently tied for 25th. His ball-striking on Saturday was not at his normal level as McIlroy most notably came up 20 yards short with a gap wedge on the short par-3 5th to lead to his second bogey of the day.

    McIlroy’s slow start dropped him five shots off the lead, which is shared by Fitzpatrick and Michael Thorbjornsen. While the two-time Masters champion struggled, Fitzpatrick got off to a flying start with four birdies in his first seven holes to reach 12 under and grab the solo lead.

    Fitzpatrick did give one back on the 8th just before the horn sounded to halt play due to the thickening fog, but he has put himself in prime position to snatch his fourth victory of the season and move ever-closer to the PGA Tour Player of the Year crown.

    Those two will return alongside the rest of the Saturday afternoon wave for an early Sunday morning restart to the third round. They will then turn around and go back out for the final round on what figures to be another extremely long day of golf with an incredibly bunched leaderboard.

    With The Open Championship looming next week, everyone will be motivated to complete the final round on Sunday to avoid a Monday finish that would delay players’ preparations at Royal Birkdale, but the weather will dictate how much golf can be played on Sunday.

    Leaders

    1. Matt Fitzpatrick [thru 8], Michael Thorbjornsen [thru 13] (-11): Fitzpatrick had his game in full flow early in the round, showing off his links prowess with some clever play in challenging visual conditions. While many players struggled with the pace on the greens, which slowed up even more as moisture rolled in along with the fog, Fitzpatrick was nails on the greens to make four early birdies. Thorbjornsen likewise adjusted well to the changing conditions, making five birdies in his first 13 holes to get into contention once again. Thorbjornsen has knocked on the door a few times in his young career but is still searching for that first PGA Tour victory and will hope to follow Chris Gotterup’s breakthrough victory last year with one of his own in Scotland.

    Contenders

    T3. Chris Gotterup [thru 10], Wyndham Clark [thru 15], Min Woo Lee [thru 8], Johnny Keefer [F], Kevin Roy [thru 16], Jordan Smith [thru 7] (-10)
    T9. Robert MacIntyre [thru 9], Tom Kim [thru 7], Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen [F] (-9)
    T16. Tommy Fleetwood [F], Si Woo Kim [F], Tyrrell Hatton [F], Patrick Reed [thru 16] and five others (-7)

    Speaking of Gotterup, he’s right back in the thick of the action at the Scottish Open after a solid front nine before the fog delay. He appears comfortable in any conditions at The Renaissance Club and continues to prove that, despite being from New Jersey, he’s right at home playing in the home of golf. U.S. Open champion Clark is likewise showing no signs of slowing down as he has put himself in contention once again. He’ll have just 21 holes to play on Sunday and will hope a lighter workload can be to his benefit. Lee, another past champion from 2021, is once again thriving on the links but will have 28 holes of golf ahead of him on Sunday.

    Hometown favorite and 2024 champ MacIntyre is hanging around at 9 under, two shots off the lead, but if he can get any putts to drop on Sunday, he’ll send roars cascading across North Berwick. Tom Kim isn’t a past winner but has a pair of top-6 finishes in four starts at the Scottish Open, and while he’s still looking for his first birdie of the third round, he should figure into the conversation all day on Sunday.

    Lurking four shots back are a few intriguing names, including Englishmen Fleetwood and Hatton. They, alongside Si Woo Kim, completed their third rounds after going out early and will hope for continued tough conditions for the leaders early Sunday morning to keep them in the mix. Patrick Reed is also part of that group at 7 under with two holes left in his third round to try and claw a bit closer to the lead.

    Updated 2026 Scottish Open odds, picks

    Odds via FanDuel

    • Matt Fitzpatrick (13/5)
    • Chris Gotterup (24/5)
    • Min Woo Lee (7-1)
    • Michael Thorbjornsen (15/2)
    • Wyndham Clark (12-1)
    • Robert MacIntyre (12-1)
    • Jordan Smith (13-1)
    • Tom Kim (16-1)
    • Rory McIlroy (25-1)

    Weather is going to dictate a lot on Sunday, but if the forecast holds and the sun peeks out early in the morning as expected, the players with the most holes left should have an advantage on a course that’s been gettable all week. That shows in the odds, as those who have finished their third rounds are much lower than those with more holes to play. Gotterup edging out Fitzpatrick on Sunday is my official pick, but Clark at 12-1 is an intriguing value given his form coming in.

  • Genesis Scottish Open Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR THRU TODAY R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    T1
    USA
    -11 13 -5 66 68* 134
    T1
    ENG
    -11 8 -3 67 65* 132
    T3
    USA
    -10 F -6 68 68* 64 200
    T3
    USA
    -10 16 -5 67 68* 135
    T3
    USA
    -10 15 -4 67* 67 134
    T3
    USA
    -10 10 -3 68* 65 133
    T3
    AUS
    -10 8 -2 66* 66 132
    T3
    ENG
    -10 7 -1 68 63* 131
    T9
    DNK
    -9 F -5 68 68* 65 201
    T9
    SCO
    -9 9 -2 67* 66 133
    T9
    KOR
    -9 7 E 65* 66 131
    T12
    USA
    -8 F -6 71 67* 64 202
    T12
    ENG
    -8 F -3 68 67* 67 202
    T12
    AUS
    -8 12 -2 70* 64 134
    T12
    JPN
    -8 11 -1 67* 66 133
    T16
    ESP
    -7 F -5 72 66* 65 203
    T16
    ENG
    -7 F -4 67 70* 66 203
    T16
    KOR
    -7 F -4 70 67* 66 203
    T16
    ENG
    -7 F -3 70* 66 67 203
    T16
    USA
    -7 16 -2 68 67* 135
    T16
    USA
    -7 15 -2 68 67* 135
    T16
    ENG
    -7 12 -1 67 67* 134
    T16
    CAN
    -7 11 E 68* 65 133
    T16
    DEU
    -7 8 E 69* 64 133
    T25
    DEU
    -6 F -3 68* 69 67 204
    T25
    ITA
    -6 F -3 68 69* 67 204
    T25
    ZAF
    -6 F -2 68* 68 68 204
    T25
    FIN
    -6 F -1 66 69* 69 204
    T25
    FRA
    -6 10 +1 69 64* 133
    T25
    NLD
    -6 9 +1 67* 66 133
    T25
    NIR
    -6 8 +3 65* 66 131
    T32
    USA
    -5 F -3 68* 70 67 205
    T32
    SWE
    -5 F -3 70 68* 67 205
    T32
    NIR
    -5 F -3 67* 71 67 205
    T32
    SWE
    -5 F -2 69* 68 68 205
    T32
    USA
    -5 F -1 70 66* 69 205
    T32
    NZL
    -5 F -1 71* 65 69 205
    T32
    USA
    -5 F -1 69 67* 69 205
    T32
    SCO
    -5 F -1 67 69* 69 205
    T32
    ENG
    -5 F -1 68* 68 69 205
    T32
    ITA
    -5 15 E 68* 67 135
    T32
    NLD
    -5 15 E 70 65* 135
    T32
    DNK
    -5 13 +1 68* 66 134
    T44
    ESP
    -4 F -2 73 65* 68 206
    T44
    CAN
    -4 F -1 70 67* 69 206
    T44
    USA
    -4 F -1 70* 67 69 206
    T44
    USA
    -4 F E 71* 65 70 206
    T44
    AUS
    -4 F E 70* 66 70 206
    T44
    USA
    -4 F E 70 66* 70 206
    T50
    NOR
    -3 F -1 68* 70 69 207
    T50
    COL
    -3 F -1 68* 70 69 207
    T50
    ZAF
    -3 F -1 69* 69 69 207
    T50
    USA
    -3 F -1 69* 69 69 207
    T50
    ENG
    -3 F E 69 68* 70 207
    T55
    DNK
    -2 F E 65 73* 70 208
    T55
    USA
    -2 F E 70 68* 70 208
    T55
    CAN
    -2 F +1 67* 70 71 208
    T58
    USA
    -1 F +1 66 72* 71 209
    T58
    ZAF
    -1 F +1 68 70* 71 209
    T58
    USA
    -1 F +1 67* 71 71 209
    T61
    FRA
    E F +2 72 66* 72 210
    T61
    ESP
    E F +2 69* 69 72 210
    T61
    USA
    E F +3 66 71* 73 210
    T64
    JPN
    +1 F +3 71 67* 73 211
    T64
    ESP
    +1 F +3 70* 68 73 211
    T64
    USA
    +1 F +4 70* 67 74 211
    T64
    ZAF
    +1 F +5 70 66* 75 211
    T68
    AUS
    +3 F +5 69* 69 75 213
    T68
    USA
    +3 F +5 68 70* 75 213
    70
    SCO
    +4 F +6 69* 69 76 214
    71
    USA
    +7 F +9 71* 67 79 217
    CUT
    ESP
    -1 F 75 64* 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 F 71* 68 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 F 71 68* 139
    CUT
    AUT
    -1 F 70 69* 139
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 F 68 71* 139
    CUT
    FRA
    -1 F 69* 70 139
    CUT
    SWE
    -1 F 68 71* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 F 67* 72 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 F 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 F 67 72* 139
    CUT
    SCO
    -1 F 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 F 65* 74 139
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 F 70 69* 139
    CUT
    USA
    E F 71* 69 140
    CUT
    DNK
    E F 71 69* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 71 69* 140
    CUT
    ENG
    E F 73* 67 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 72* 68 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 68 72* 140
    CUT
    ZAF
    E F 71* 69 140
    CUT
    SWE
    E F 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 72* 68 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 68 72* 140
    CUT
    SCO
    E F 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E F 66* 74 140
    CUT
    IRL
    E F 71* 69 140
    CUT
    ZAF
    E F 70 70* 140
    CUT
    DNK
    E F 70 70* 140
    CUT
    ESP
    E F 66 74* 140
    CUT
    POL
    E F 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    +1 F 73* 68 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 F 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 F 74 67* 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 F 71* 70 141
    CUT
    FRA
    +1 F 71* 70 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 F 71 70* 141
    CUT
    ITA
    +1 F 72* 69 141
    CUT
    ESP
    +1 F 68 73* 141
    CUT
    ENG
    +1 F 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    +2 F 72* 70 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 F 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    +2 F 70 72* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 F 72 70* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 F 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ZAF
    +2 F 69* 73 142
    CUT
    USA
    +3 F 68* 75 143
    CUT
    JPN
    +3 F 71 72* 143
    CUT
    KOR
    +3 F 72 71* 143
    CUT
    AUT
    +3 F 65* 78 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 F 69* 74 143
    CUT
    NOR
    +3 F 71* 72 143
    CUT
    ESP
    +3 F 71 72* 143
    CUT
    CHN
    +3 F 68 75* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 F 71* 72 143
    CUT
    USA
    +4 F 70 74* 144
    CUT
    CHN
    +4 F 73 71* 144
    CUT
    IRL
    +4 F 74* 70 144
    CUT
    ZAF
    +4 F 71 73* 144
    CUT
    SWE
    +4 F 69* 75 144
    CUT
    KOR
    +4 F 71 73* 144
    CUT
    KOR
    +5 F 72 73* 145
    CUT
    SCO
    +5 F 75 70* 145
    CUT
    TWN
    +5 F 75* 70 145
    CUT
    PRT
    +5 F 72* 73 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 F 74 71* 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 F 69 76* 145
    CUT
    ARE
    +6 F 76* 70 146
    CUT
    ENG
    +6 F 75 71* 146
    CUT
    JPN
    +6 F 71 75* 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +6 F 70* 76 146
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 74 72* 146
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 72 74* 146
    CUT
    NZL
    +6 F 75 71* 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +6 F 73* 73 146
    CUT
    FRA
    +7 F 73* 74 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 F 70 77* 147
    CUT
    ZAF
    +7 F 71 76* 147
    CUT
    ZAF
    +8 F 72 76* 148
    CUT
    FRA
    +8 F 73 75* 148
    CUT
    DEU
    +8 F 69 79* 148
    CUT
    KOR
    +9 F 75* 74 149
    CUT
    USA
    +9 F 73 76* 149
    CUT
    KOR
    +10 F 72* 78 150
    CUT
    DEU
    +13 F 85* 68 153
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.
  • Alvarez’s 112th-minute goal helps lift Argentina past Switzerland 3-1 and into World Cup semifinals

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Julián Alvarez sent defending champion Argentina back to the World Cup semifinals with a long-range strike in the 112th minute against Switzerland, while another goal by Lautaro Martínez with seconds left in extra time only served to make the 3-1 victory look a whole lot easier than it was Saturday night.

    Alexis Mac Allister also scored off a corner kick from Lionel Messi, helping La Albiceleste gut out another down-to-the-wire thriller and advance to play England on Wednesday in Atlanta. The Three Lions beat Norway 2-1 earlier in the day.

    “We’re among the best four,” Alvarez said, “so we’re meeting our objectives, and we knew it wasn’t going to be easy. The whole match was hard, and we would have loved to have the win earlier, but we tried to get the win however we could.

    “The opponent was really good but we fought until the end, and finally the goals came.”

    Messi’s nine-game World Cup scoring streak ended, but his pursuit of a second World Cup title continues. With Argentina and England joining France and Spain in the semifinals, it’s the first time the top four teams in the FIFA rankings have all advanced that far.

    The game swung in the second half on a call sure to rile up critics who believe Argentina has been favored by officials.

    The Swiss had just tied the game on Dan Ndoye’s goal in the 67th minute when Leandro Paredes was shown a yellow card for a tackle on Breel Embolo. But video showed the Swiss player falling before the Argentina midfielder made contact with him, and since Embolo received a yellow card earlier in the match, he was sent off and Switzerland was left to defend with 10 players.

    It was the second time a yellow card has been overturned using the “mistaken identity” protocol at the World Cup. The rule allows the video assistant referee to intervene when an incorrect player is shown a yellow or red card.

    “I just don’t understand how VAR can make that kind of decision,” Swiss defender Nico Elvedi said.

    Argentina, which is riding a 12-match World Cup unbeaten streak, had looked quite beatable in the knockout rounds. Lionel Scaloni’s squad needed extra time to squeak past tiny Cape Verde before rallying from a 2-0 deficit in the final 11 minutes of regulation to beat Egypt and earn a date with Switzerland at the home of the Kansas City Chiefs.

    The Swiss, meanwhile, were playing their first World Cup quarterfinal since 1954. They still have never made a semifinal, nor have they beaten Argentina in eight meetings – three of those in the tournament that matters the most.

    Argentina has made its base for the past month in Kansas City, training at the home of MLS club Sporting Kansas City while winning over thousands of new fans. And on Saturday night, they filled Arrowhead Stadium for the second time this tournament, hoping to see Messi make more magic after his hat trick against Algeria in the same building a few weeks ago.

    It was brutally hot and humid throughout the day, but the temperatures began to fall with the setting sun, producing a picturesque setting for the 100th match of an expanded World Cup, and the final match of the quarterfinal round.

    The defensive-minded Swiss had only conceded three goals in five games, and they dominated the ball in the opening minutes. But leave it to Messi, whose eight goals in the tournament are tied for the most with France’s Kylian Mbappé, to send a jolt through a heavily pro-Argentina crowd that included Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

    He helped to earn an early corner kick with some nifty footwork, then delivered the ball that Mac Allister turned into a 1-0 lead.

    For most of the match, the Swiss struggled to break down an Argentina back line that had conceded two goals apiece in its last two games. And it didn’t help their cause that they were playing without Johan Manzabi, one of their best goal-scorers, who remained out with a knee injury after missing their round of 16 penalty shootout win over Colombia.

    But after forcing Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez into making a couple of tough second-half saves, the Swiss broke through when Ricardo Rodriguez slipped a tidy pass to Ndoye and he easily found the back of the net.

    Whatever momentum the equalizer gave the Swiss disappeared with Embolo’s red card a few minutes later.

    Argentina turned up the pressure with Mac Allister missing wide with a header in the 89th minute, and Messi creating an opportunity in front of the goal that he sent just wide in the second minute of stoppage time, leaving the game tied into extra time.

    Just as they have all tournament, La Albiceleste found a way to keep their quest for back-to-back championships alive.

    “We knew this could happen,” Argentina midfielder Thiago Almada said. “They have top players, very good position, they were trying to find people inside. We knew how to hold up and we made it through.”

    See more of AP’s World Cup coverage here

    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.