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Diamondbacks’ Nolan Arenado: Pops homer in win
Arenado went 1-for-4 with a solo home run in Thursday’s 3-1 win over the Padres.
Arenado provided the last run of the game when he took Yuki Matsui deep in the sixth inning. This was Arenado’s third homer in his last nine games, though he’s also struck out 11 times in that span while batting .294 (10-for-34). Overall, the third baseman is batting .243 with a .718 OPS, 11 homers, 38 RBI, 40 runs scored, 16 doubles and three stolen bases over 87 contests.
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Diamondbacks’ Ryan Waldschmidt: Called up from Reno
The Diamondbacks recalled Waldschmidt from Triple-A Reno, Steve Gilbert of MLB.com reports.
Waldschmidt will make his return to the big leagues after being optioned on June 15. In his last 15 games in Triple-A, the 23-year-old slugged just .192/.250/.269 with no homers and just one RBI. With Jordan Lawlar (hamstring) on the 10-day IL and likely facing a 4-6 week absence, Waldschmidt will see a ton of action in center field. In order to make room on the active roster for Waldschmidt, Arizona DFA’d Pavin Smith.
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Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Converts 21st save
Sewald struck out two in a perfect inning to earn the save in Thursday’s 3-1 win over the Padres.
Sewald had allowed at least one baserunners in each of his previous seven outings, but he created no drama in converting his 21st save of the year. The veteran reliever has earned seven of those saves since the start of June, but he’s also allowed seven runs over 11.2 innings in that span. For the season, he has a 4.36 ERA, 0.91 WHIP and 37:8 K:BB across 33 innings.
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Diamondbacks’ Merrill Kelly: Spins quality start
Kelly (7-8) allowed one run on three hits and three walks while striking out six over seven innings to earn the win over the Padres on Thursday.
Kelly turned in a quality start in this outing, allowing just a solo home run to Manny Machado in the second inning. This was Kelly’s second win in a row, and he heads into the All-Star break having allowed just three runs over his last 12 innings. Overall, he’s still at a 5.38 ERA, 1.51 WHIP and 59:38 K:BB through 93.2 innings over 16 starts this season. He’s also given up 20 homers, putting him on pace to allow a career high in long balls — his worst campaign in that regard was 2019, when he gave up 29 homers.
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The 2026 World Cup has been too magnificent and too star-loaded to lose one of the supernovas that have turned this summer’s event into arguably the best in its 96-year history.
And, thankfully, it seems we will not.
But we did get a brief flash of uncertainty about Kylian Mbappé on Thursday, an ankle issue that delivered the only drama surrounding France’s 2-0 quarterfinal win over Morocco.
The end result was the expected outcome, and it came in a game that lacked the typical pizzazz that’s adorned every other French victory in their previous five wins across the past month. The scare came in the 77th minute, after Les Bleus had gone up by two scores, when Mbappé went to the ground. The sight was strange: With 75:30 showing on the game clock, arguably the best soccer player in the world raised his right arm, tucked down, gently rolled his back onto the grass and then asked to be subbed out.
Moments later, cameras caught Mbappé sitting with his right foot/ankle wrapped with an ice pack.
Uh-oh?
Not exactly.
But in that moment, the game’s score and France’s impending win became a secondary plot point to the health of a global superstar; this is not a position we’re accustomed to seeing Mbappé in. France has the deepest team in this World Cup, but still, its best player isn’t prone to depart the pitch in a pivotal match against a top-10 opponent. Remember just a few days ago, when Argentina pulled off an all-time escape against Egypt? For as great as France is — and it sure seems like the greatest in maybe the most loaded World Cup field ever — nothing is guaranteed this deep into the tournament. Mbappé subbing out against a Moroccan team that hadn’t lost in more than two years was head-turning, even if the injury didn’t look bad.
He calmly walked off and 20 minutes later France had repeated the 2022 World Cup semifinal outcome against Morocco: 2-0. Mbappé milled about the field for a few minutes postgame, embracing his teammates and acknowledging some of the Moroccans.
“I’m all good. I got a knock on the ankle, but it’s all good. JP [Mateta] was more able than me to play the last 15 minutes,” Mbappé said after the game, per ESPN.
There will probably be some speculation in the coming days — as France prepares to play the winner of Spain-Belgium in Tuesday’s semifinal in Dallas — about whether he’s going to be 100%. But Mbappé immediately shut down speculation when he was interviewed on the field postgame.
“I’m fine, I took a knock to the ankle but everything is OK,” he said.
In the mixed-zone availability after the match, Mbappé spoke for more than five minutes and took six questions without raising any additional alarm bells.
His coach, Didier Deschamps, also said Mbappé “had a bit of pain in his ankle” in his on-field postgame TV interview. But the expectation, less than five days out from the start of the semifinals, is he’ll be good to go.
Until we see him on the pitch Tuesday, is there at least a little bit of suspense here? Are we looking for any reason to doubt what’s clearly been the best team at this World Cup? If nothing else, Mbappé’s injury question brings an added element of drama to the tournament that’s been overloaded with stars and storylines and reliability all around.
We don’t know yet for sure what caused the ankle problem, but Noussair Mazraoui’s yellow-card foul on Mbappé in the 25th minute had to have played a part. (Mbappé, shockingly, missed the ensuing PK.)
With this World Cup on American soil, I think we’re all hoping to get the most out of this experience possible. That means the biggest stars continuing to do what they do. That means Mbappé on the pitch as much as possible, though I’d offer up another viewpoint on what happened here: Mbappé felt the game was in hand. He knows his teammates are more than good enough. Morocco didn’t have the legs, let alone the hearts to take it. Thursday’s affair was blatantly one-sided: France had a 22-5 shot edge on Morocco, including 8-1 that were properly targeted on goal. The expected goal totals were 3.05 to 0.14, a result so lopsided, the fact that 0.79 came from a penalty hardly seems to matter. They didn’t need their best to close this out.
Morocco has still never beaten France.
So, Mbappé got dinged up and wanted to allow for an additional sub. He could rest up and avoid any further potential to get hurt. Just get ready for Spain or Belgium. That seems like the smart play. By that point in the game Mbappé had reminded the world again, as he’s done every game, that he’s the most reliable goal-scorer and playmaker the beautiful game has.
After blowing two chances with misses and getting stoned on a penalty kick, Mbappé broke the 0-0 tie in the 60th minute with a flirtatious drive into the bottom right corner of the net. He had the ball on his foot, in some traffic, just inside the keeper’s box, for all of a second. A little daylight was all he needed to bend the ball past Issa Diop and curl it beyond the outstretched arms of Moroccan keeper Yassine Bounou.
Shy of flanking half the opposing team with bogeys on him all game long, there’s no keeping Mbappé from getting one of his shots to tickle twine. Mbappé now sits one goal behind Lionel Messi for most World Cup goals ever (21 to 20). (He’s done this in 20 games. A laughable one-goal-per-game average at the age of 27.)
Six minutes later, Mbappé set up teammate Ousmane Dembele for the game’s second goal, giving Mbappé 11 combined goals and assists, which leads all players in this World Cup.
And here is France in a third straight World Cup semifinal, joining Brazil and Germany as the only countries to do that. The team hasn’t lost a competitive match in a year’s time. It’s been the best watch of this World Cup and at the center of it is Mbappé, who’s crossed over into a superstar in the United States.
If anyone is beating France, they’re going to have to do it while neutralizing No. 10. The damndest thing about this team, though, is that they may not even need him fully healthy to win two more games and pull off one of the most dominant World Cup struts ever.



































































