Blog

  • USMNT’s final World Cup experiment vs. Germany offers clues at how they will approach opener vs. Paraguay

    usmnt-16.jpg

    Getty Images

    CHICAGO – Between the last World Cup and the one that starts in a matter of days, the U.S. men’s national team have truly tested the power of positive thinking, and 11 days into a pre-tournament training camp defined by good vibes, they seemed ready to undergo another batch of trials and tribulations. Two minutes after a sold-out Soldier Field crowd gave them as much encouragement as they possibly could, Germany’s Kai Havertz had a free header and the visitors were up a goal before everyone could even settle into their positions.

    “I was upset, of course,” head coach Mauricio Pochettino said as he remembered the less-than-ideal start to Saturday’s 2-1 loss to Germany. “But after that, I said it’s lucky because I think it’s good for us to see the reaction of the team. The reaction was amazing, was really positive and that is why it’s good that some things [that are] not so good happened to see the reaction to create the atmosphere that we can deal with these types of situations that we can find in the future and during the competition, the World Cup.”

    The scoreline was a fair reflection of a game in which Germany were the better side – their 12 shots totalled 1.47 expected goals, while the USMNT came up with 16 shots that amounted to 0.99 expected goals. It means they enter the World Cup with a losing record to European sides, which maybe does not bode well for their group stage finale against Turkiye on June 26. It is hard not to see their outing against Germany as a sign of progress, with their World Cup opener against Paraguay just six days away at SoFi Stadium in the Los Angeles suburbs.

    Between Saturday’s outing, the 3-2 win over Senegal a week earlier, and Pochettino’s historic tendencies as a coach, the USMNT seem to have decided that their greatest defense is a strong offense. It did not quite pan out against Germany – the early goal was an example of making things a little too easy for the opposition – but there is credence to the idea, especially with defender Chris Richards still battling back from an ankle injury. The U.S. did not hesitate to create chances and got back into the game before the hydration break in the 23rd minute and did not waver in their resolve even after the visitors scored a second in the 57th minute through Leroy Sane.

    “Sometimes when you get punched in the mouth, you got to stand back up and punch back,” captain Tim Ream said. “Just all the conversations, the work, the messaging from the staff. We all always talk about things are going to happen. Mistakes are going to happen. Sometimes things don’t go the way you want them to. It’s about the next play. What do you do next? How do you respond next? That’s a big message that Mauricio and his staff have hammered home over the past almost two years. It was just a matter of we don’t have a choice. If we don’t respond. If we don’t punch back, the game’s going to get out of hand.”

    It helped that an example of a game that went out of hand was not a distant memory – March’s 5-2 defeat to Belgium started well, the USMNT actually taking the lead and entering the halftime break level, before things unraveled quickly in the second half. A full embrace of the attack was hard to miss, just as it was against Senegal. Antonee Robinson, the USMNT’s goalscorer on Saturday, fully embraced the attack-minded skillset outside backs frequently boast, down to his exuberant celebration. Pochettino joked afterwards that the cramps he suffered midway through the second half might have been the result of his overexertion.

    “I think all the energy was in his shot and that goal because after, cramps,” Pochettino said in jest. “Maybe we spend too much energy. We were so excited in the presentation of the players before the game. They were sometimes overexcited and we know very well that you drain the energy in these moments but I think it’s a great opportunity and to live that experience for sure helps in the first game of the World Cup.”

    Robinson downplayed the issue despite the fact that he limped off the field, though the team is not certain about the specifics just yet.

    “Not 100% sure but it feels fine now,” Robinson said. “More just really didn’t feel like I could continue so I just needed to get off the pitch and try to get it right.”

    The real embrace of the all-out attack, though, came in Pochettino’s selection of Malik Tillman in the midfield. Tyler Adams remains the go-to pick at the base of midfield, the only true defensive midfielder in the squad, while the multitalented Weston McKennie was more advanced. Tillman, another player with plenty of range, was their go-between and much like Robinson, though, his standout quality is his attack-focused tendencies. Pochettino cited October’s UEFA Champions League game between Tillman’s Bayer Leverkusen and his former club PSV as an example of why he selected the player for a best-of-both-worlds role.

    “It was him in front [of] the back four,” he recalled. “He’s a player that can because his physical condition, his technical condition, his capacity to go in different spaces, go higher, I think he’s a player that can play in every space on the pitch. Today, I am happy with him. He finished a little bit tired because it’s normal. He suffered a little bit in the last few months, didn’t play too much, didn’t compete but now I think he’s doing well and I am happy with his performance and in the evolution after not to play too much in the last few months in his club, in Leverkusen.”

    Tillman, deeply introverted in off-pitch settings but fully in his element on the field, made a noticeable difference and remains as well-positioned as any to be a secret key as the USMNT target an impressive World Cup run.

    “It’s good because we get another attack-minded player on the field.” Adams said. “I think that he helps us break lines, find solutions. Him and Weston had a good balance there as well. There’s probably some things that we need to tune up a little bit defensively to not get as exposed but when you play against Germany, where they overload the midfield, it’s always difficult against teams like that. They have so many guys that can play in those pockets so I think he did really well.”

    The game marked one final experiment of the Pochettino era, a batch of 26 games building up to the World Cup that have been defined by tinkering – sometimes simply for the sake of it. Saturday’s team, though, looked as close to a World Cup starting lineup as he might have been able to envision considering Richards’ injury specifically. After 18 months of wondering what exactly Pochettino’s version of the U.S. team might look like, we seem to finally have our answer. The team has trended much like a group project that was assigned well in advance but was only completed right before the deadline, which is perfectly fine for an assignment in which the destination matters much, much more than the journey.

    As Pochettino put it shortly before the team began their trip to their World Cup base of Irvine, Calif., “We are going to go [into] a decisive week.”

  • 2026 French Open results, winner: Mirra Andreeva captures first grand slam title in straight sets

    andreeva.jpg

    Getty Images

    The 2026 French Open has been defined by surprises, but after two weeks filled with shocking upsets, the women’s final on Saturday was dominated by the favorite. No. 8 seed Mirra Andreeva outclassed Maja Chwalinska on Court Philippe-Chartrier, cruising to a straight set victory (6-3, 6-2) to capture the first grand slam title of her young career.

    Both players seemed to feel the weight of the moment early in the match, as there was sloppy tennis on both sides and multiple early breaks with the wind whipping around Roland-Garros. But it was the 19-year-old who settled in first and asserted her dominance. Andreeva was able to dictate points and consistently put Chwalinska on the run, dominating points with her combination of power and movement to overwhelm her opponent.

    Chwalinska put up a game effort early, but just did not have the gears to keep up with Andreeva over the course of the match. The Parisian crowd tried to urge her on and will the match into another thriller, but Andreeva was simply too good on this day and steamrolled the Polish 24-year-old in the second set en route to the title.

    Andreeva produced 25 winners to 26 unforced errors, playing a high quality of tennis that demanded Chwalinska produce her best to match it. Chwalinska, meanwhile, only managed 10 winners to 29 unforced errors, which is decidedly not the formula for pulling off a major upset. After the slow start, the young Russian was solid on serve and then consistently prodded at her Polish counterpart’s serve and asked questions that Chwalinksa simply didn’t have the answers to.

    For the match, Andreeva won an incredible 34-of-54 points on the Chwalinska serve, and fittingly ended things by breaking Chwalinksa at love in the final game of the match to seal her victory.

    Andreeva’s win continues an incredible run of parity in women’s tennis over the past two years, as she’s the sixth consecutive different winner in a grand slam event. The 19-year-old is the 12th teenage women’s winner at Roland-Garros, and fully confirmed herself as one of the sports rising stars with her first grand slam title.

  • 2026 Memorial Tournament leaderboard: Live updates, analysis and highlights from Round 4 at Muirfield Village

    Leaders at the 2026 Memorial Tournament will begin their final days at 7:30 a.m. ET with some needing to play as many as 31 holes before sunset Sunday at Muirfield Village Golf Club. A weather-shortened third round will continue early in the morning with the final round of the Memorial expected to go off between noon and 1 p.m.

    As the sun rises, J.T. Poston and Ryan Gerard hold the lead, though they are only one shot up on Sam Burns with all needing to play more than a round and a half before the day is out. Keegan Bradley, Wyndham Clark, Tommy Fleetwood, J.J. Spaun, Justin Rose and Xander Schauffele are all somewhat within earshot, while Rory McIlroy will aim to complete another top 10, though he “only” has 20 holes left to move into position.

    Watch the final day of the 2026 Memorial Tournament live from 2:30 p.m to 6 p.m. on CBSSports.com and the CBS Sports App. Watch the simulcast from 2:30-6 p.m. on CBS and Paramount+Keep it locked here for live scores, statistics, analysis and highlights.

  • the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR THRU TODAY R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    T1
    USA
    -10 10 -1 70 65 135
    T1
    USA
    -10 10 -2 67 69 136
    3
    USA
    -7 10 -1 69 69 138
    4
    ENG
    -6 10 -2 67 73 140
    T5
    USA
    -4 16 -4 67 77 144
    T5
    USA
    -4 15 -4 71 73 144
    T5
    USA
    -4 15 -4 71 73 144
    T5
    USA
    -4 11 -2 67 75 142
    T9
    ENG
    -3 F -4 69 76 68 213
    T9
    USA
    -3 F -4 73 72 68 213
    T9
    SWE
    -3 16 -4 71 74 145
    T9
    USA
    -3 11 E 72 69 141
    T13
    USA
    -2 14 -2 70 74 144
    T13
    IRL
    -2 14 -1 70 73 143
    T13
    USA
    -2 11 E 72 70 142
    T16
    NOR
    -1 17 -2 75 70 145
    T16
    ENG
    -1 14 -1 73 71 144
    T16
    ENG
    -1 12 E 72 71 143
    T16
    USA
    -1 11 +1 70 72 142
    T20
    USA
    E F -3 71 76 69 216
    T20
    NIR
    E F -1 71 74 71 216
    T20
    USA
    E 16 -1 74 71 145
    T20
    USA
    E 16 E 72 72 144
    T20
    ENG
    E 12 +1 73 70 143
    T25
    KOR
    +1 F -3 72 76 69 217
    T25
    KOR
    +1 F E 73 72 72 217
    T27
    SWE
    +2 F -3 71 78 69 218
    T27
    USA
    +2 F -2 74 74 70 218
    T27
    USA
    +2 F -1 73 74 71 218
    T27
    NZL
    +2 F -1 70 77 71 218
    T27
    USA
    +2 F E 75 71 72 218
    T27
    AUS
    +2 F E 72 74 72 218
    T33
    USA
    +3 F -1 72 76 71 219
    T33
    CAN
    +3 F +1 68 78 73 219
    T33
    ENG
    +3 F +1 75 71 73 219
    T36
    USA
    +5 F E 74 75 72 221
    T36
    AUT
    +5 F E 74 75 72 221
    T36
    CAN
    +5 14 +5 71 73 144
    T39
    USA
    +6 F +1 73 76 73 222
    T39
    USA
    +6 F +2 73 75 74 222
    T39
    CAN
    +6 F +2 73 75 74 222
    T39
    USA
    +6 F +2 74 74 74 222
    T39
    USA
    +6 F +4 72 74 76 222
    T39
    USA
    +6 17 +5 76 69 145
    T45
    COL
    +7 F +3 73 75 75 223
    T45
    USA
    +7 F +3 76 72 75 223
    T45
    USA
    +7 F +4 73 74 76 223
    T45
    JPN
    +7 F +6 72 73 78 223
    T49
    USA
    +8 F +3 75 74 75 224
    T49
    USA
    +8 F +3 77 72 75 224
    T51
    USA
    +9 F +5 76 72 77 225
    T51
    JPN
    +9 F +6 71 76 78 225
    53
    CAN
    +12 F +7 74 75 79 228
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 76 74 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 81 69 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 76 74 150
    CUT
    AUS
    +6 F 74 76 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 71 79 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 74 76 150
    CUT
    USA
    +6 F 71 79 150
    CUT
    SCO
    +7 F 77 74 151
    CUT
    USA
    +7 F 74 77 151
    CUT
    DNK
    +8 F 74 78 152
    CUT
    USA
    +8 F 75 77 152
    CUT
    AUS
    +8 F 74 78 152
    CUT
    USA
    +9 F 72 81 153
    CUT
    USA
    +9 F 73 80 153
    CUT
    USA
    +10 F 78 76 154
    CUT
    USA
    +11 F 79 76 155
    CUT
    VEN
    +12 F 80 76 156
    CUT
    USA
    +15 F 83 76 159
    CUT
    USA
    +17 F 79 82 161
    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
  • Golden Knights beat Hurricanes 5-4 in 2OT in Game 3 after blowing 4-goal lead

    LAS VEGAS (AP) A four-goal lead in what has been a wacky, compelling and highly entertaining Stanley Cup Final nearly wasn’t enough for the Vegas Golden Knights on Saturday night.

    A four-goal, third-period rally by the Carolina Hurricanes nearly made NHL history and in process sent shockwaves through T-Mobile Arena.

    And this game ended in a way perhaps befitting all the craziness, a shot from Vegas defenseman Shea Theodore off the skate of Brandon Bussi – the backup goalie put in the game in the third period after not playing for two months – that went into the net at 5:38 of double overtime to give the Golden Knights a 5-4 victory over Carolina.

    “I have experienced a lot of games in playoffs,” Golden Knights coach John Tortorella said. “I haven’t experienced one like this.”

    Almost overlooked was the four-point night by Vegas’ Mitch Marner, who also produced the fastest hat trick in Cup Final history.

    The Golden Knights took a 2-1 series lead. The teams take two days off before meeting in Game 4 on Tuesday night in Las Vegas. Teams with a 2-1 series lead went on to win the Cup 46 of 57 times, or 80.7%.

    Carolina had been 6-0 in overtime this postseason. The Hurricanes were trying to become the first team to win after trailing by at least four goals in the third period, but now clubs in that situation are 0-109.

    “We just left our foot off the gas,” Theodore said on the ABC broadcast. “I think we have to be sharper in the third, but I liked the resiliency out of our group. I liked the way we started that second overtime, and I felt like we were more on our toes.”

    This was the 10th time the first three games of a Cup Final were decided by a point. The last time was in 2016 between Pittsburgh and San Jose.

    The Golden Knights seemed to have it in hand after scoring four times in the second, including a natural hat trick by Marner.

    But Jordan Martinook, Taylor Hall and Jordan Staal scored goals for the Hurricanes. Their goals, occurring 39 seconds apart, are the fastest three in a Cup Final game.

    Andrei Svechnikov jammed in a puck on a six-on-four power play with 1:42 left to force overtime.

    “I love that we feel like we can come back from anything, but you can’t put yourself in a hole like we did,” Martinook said. “The second period, for them to come out like that and take total control of the game, it’s something that can’t happen, especially this time.”

    Marner’s scoring outburst came over a 6:10 stretch of the second period, and he had four points in the period. He had the secondary assist on Tomas Hertl’s goal midway through the period.

    The last time a player had four points in a period of the Cup final was in 1919 when Frank Foyston of the Seattle Metropolitans pulled off that feat.

    Marner nearly added to the total in the third period, but failed to capitalize on a breakaway and a penalty shot. Those missed chances came back to bite the Golden Knights.

    The Hurricanes made the comeback after changing goalies to open the third, going with Bussi, who made 18 saves. Frederik Andersen had given up those four goals on 16 shots.

    Carolina also rallied without forward and former Golden Knight William Carrier, who had an upper-body injury in the second period.

    Vegas’ Carter Hart stopped 29 shots.

    Vegas twice thought it took the lead early in the second period, but the Hurricanes successfully challenged both goals to keep the game scoreless.

    The Golden Knights received a major boost when defenseman Brayden McNabb took the ice. He took a puck in the face in the first period Thursday night at Carolina and didn’t return to the game. McNabb, who had on a cage to protect his face, is Vegas’ best defensive defenseman. He was on the first defensive pair with Theodore.

    AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

    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
    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    +197.5 (80%)
    Last 5 NHL Player Props
    Over 0.5+300
    Mark Jankowski • Points • Player Prop
    Picked Jun 6 @ 5:41 pm, 0.5 unit on BetMGM
    LOSS
    This is so crazily priced on Mark Jankowski, let’s go ahead and throw a bit down. The Hurricanes’ winger did find the net in Game 2 but only has five points in these playoffs so I’m certainly not pre-spending my winnings or anything. But all we need is a secondary assist and Carolina has scored four times in both games.

    Matt’s Pick

    1 2 3 OT 2OT T
    0 0 4 0 0 4

    2-1

    0 4 0 0 1 5
    STARS OF THE GAME
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    S. Aho LW 0 2 0 0
    J. Blake RW 0 1 -1 2
    W. Carrier LW 0 0 -1 0
    J. Chatfield D 0 0 1 3
    N. Ehlers LW 0 0 1 2
    S. Gostisbehere D 0 0 -1 1
    T. Hall LW 1 0 0 3
    M. Jankowski C 0 0 -1 2
    S. Jarvis C 0 1 1 1
    J. Martinook LW 1 0 0 3
    K. Miller D 0 0 0 1
    A. Nikishin D 0 0 -2 3
    E. Robinson LW 0 1 0 1
    J. Slavin D 0 1 0 0
    J. Staal C 1 1 1 5
    L. Stankoven C 0 1 -1 0
    A. Svechnikov RW 1 0 -2 3
    S. Walker D 0 0 0 3
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    R. Andersson D 0 0 -1 4
    I. Barbashev LW 0 0 -1 1
    D. Coghlan D 0 0 -1 1
    P. Dorofeyev RW 0 0 0 1
    N. Dowd C 0 0 -1 1
    J. Eichel C 0 1 -1 1
    N. Hanifin D 0 0 -1 0
    T. Hertl C 1 1 1 2
    B. Howden C 0 1 2 3
    W. Karlsson C 0 1 3 2
    K. Kolesar RW 0 0 -1 0
    J. Lauzon D 0 0 -1 0
    M. Marner RW 3 1 3 10
    B. McNabb D 0 2 3 1
    C. Sissons C 0 0 0 1
    C. Smith LW 0 0 -1 1
    M. Stone RW 0 0 -1 3
    S. Theodore D 1 1 3 3
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    F. Andersen 16 4 12 0.750 40:00
    B. Bussi 19 1 18 0.947 45:26
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    C. Hart 33 4 29 0.879 85:38
  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    4 10 0
    Tigers26-39
    0 2 0
    Comerica Park, Detroit, MI
    • W: B. Miller  (2-0)
    • L: K. Montero  (2-4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    B. Miller SEA P6.0 IP, 1 H, 9 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    D. Canzone SEA DH3-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals26-39
    3 8 0
    Twins30-36
    2 4 1
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: M. Strahm  (3-1)
    • L: E. Orze  (2-2)
    • S: A. Lange  (3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. Ryan MIN P6.0 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    L. Avila KC P5.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 3 SO, 3 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Reds31-32
    5 9 1
    6 12 1
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: G. Soriano  (3-0)
    • L: S. Moll  (1-4)
    • S: R. O’Brien  (16)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    G. Soriano STL P1.0 IP, 1 H
    player headshot
    M. McLain CIN SS1-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants26-39
    2 5 1
    Cubs34-31
    3 8 0
    Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: R. Rolison  (5-1)
    • L: S. Hentges  (1-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    B. Brown CHC P5.1 IP, 1 H, 5 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    P. Crow-Armstrong CHC CF4-5, 2 R, 2 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Orioles31-34
    4 6 0
    6 12 0
    Rogers Centre, Toronto, ON
    • W: S. Miles  (3-1)
    • L: K. Bradish  (3-7)
    • S: L. Varland  (10)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    S. Miles TOR P4.1 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 5 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    E. Clement TOR 2B2-4, 3 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 10 0
    3 5 0
    Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
    • W: S. Burke  (3-3)
    • L: A. Painter  (1-7)
    • S: G. Taylor  (2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    G. Taylor CHW P1.0 IP, 3 SO
    player headshot
    S. Burke CHW P4.1 IP, 3 H, 3 ER, 7 SO, 5 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    2 6 1
    Astros30-36
    13 14 0
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: T. Imai  (3-3)
    • L: K. Morris  (0-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Imai HOU P5.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 8 SO, 3 BB
    player headshot
    L. Wade HOU 1B3-5, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Pirates34-31
    3 8 1
    Braves44-21
    6 9 0
    Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
    • W: S. Strider  (4-1)
    • L: B. Ashcraft  (5-3)
    • S: R. Iglesias  (13)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    S. Strider ATL P5.0 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 3 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    R. Iglesias ATL P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rays37-24
    3 5 1
    Marlins30-35
    4 10 1
    loanDepot park, Miami, FL
    • W: J. King  (3-1)
    • L: S. McClanahan  (6-3)
    • S: T. Zuber  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    L. Bachar MIA P3.0 IP, 3 SO
    player headshot
    J. Sanoja MIA 3B3-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 8 1
    1 2 0
    Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
    • W: Z. Littell  (6-4)
    • L: E. Rodriguez  (5-2)
    • S: B. Lord  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    Z. Littell WAS P5.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 4 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    B. Lord WAS P2.0 IP, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 9 0
    Rangers31-33
    0 3 2
    Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX
    • W: T. Bibee  (1-7)
    • L: J. Leiter  (3-5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Bibee CLE P8.0 IP, 3 H, 3 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    J. Ramirez CLE 3B1-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Brewers39-23
    7 13 1
    Rockies24-41
    1 5 1
    Coors Field, Denver, CO
  • Nationals get homers from Mead and Crews, hold Diamondbacks to 2 hits in 6-1 victory

    PHOENIX (AP) Curtis Mead launched a two-run homer in the first inning, Dylan Crews also went deep and the Washington Nationals held the Arizona Diamondbacks to two hits Saturday in a 6-1 victory.

    Nasim Nuñez drove in two runs and Crews scored twice for the Nationals (33-32), who improved to 21-12 away from home. Only the NL East-leading Atlanta Braves have more road wins, with 23.

    Washington starter Zack Littell (6-4) pitched five effective innings. He didn’t allow a hit until the fifth, when Pavin Smith led off with a single. Smith scored on LuJames Groover’s single, the first major league hit and RBI for the Arizona first baseman playing in his second career game.

    Littell walked one and struck out four. Brad Lord worked two innings for his first big league save. A trio of Nationals relievers combined for four hitless innings.

    Arizona left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez (5-2), looking for his 100th career win, got off to a bad start when James Wood singled leading off the game and Mead followed with his ninth homer, a drive to left-center.

    Rodríguez settled in after that, giving up just two hits over the next five innings, until Crews led off the seventh with his second homer of the season. After Jacob Young tripled one out later, Rodríguez was relieved by Juan Morillo, and Nuñez’s squeeze bunt brought home Young to make it 4-1.

    Nuñez also singled home a run in the ninth and stole his 23rd base of the season; he entered Saturday tied for the MLB lead with Cleveland’s José Ramírez and Kansas City’s Bobby Witt Jr.

    Rodríguez was charged with four runs over 6 1/3 innings. He gave up six hits, walked one and struck out five in losing for the first time since April 26.

    Washington RHP Cade Cavalli (3-3, 3.62 ERA) opposes RHP Michael Soroka (7-3, 3.49) in Sunday’s series finale.

    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
    Micah Roberts
    Micah RobertsFormer Vegas Bookmaker
    +1 (50%)
    Last 22 MLB
    Over 9-110
    Over / Under
    Picked Jun 6 @ 2:07 pm, 1 unit on BetMGM
    LOSS
    I don’t know what happened to the Diamondbacks bats on Friday night when they scored only 1 run against the Nationals, but the Nats made up for it by scoring 14 runs. They’re the best over team in baseball, going 40-21-3, which is 65.6% of their games going over. I expect a better product on the field from the Diamondbacks today, and they should both combine to score over 10 runs. The Nationals average 10.73 runs per game by themselves. The total is 9 today. Just the over.

    Micah’s Pick

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

    33-32

    2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 6 8 1
    0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0
    • W: Z. Littell (6-4)L: E. Rodriguez (5-2)S: B. Lord (1)
    • HR: WAS – C. Mead (9), D. Crews (2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    J. Wood DH 4 1 1 0 .267
    C. Mead 3B 4 1 1 2 .247
    A. Chaparro 1B 2 0 0 0 .174
    a- L. Garcia PH-1B 1 0 0 0 .262
    C. Abrams SS 4 0 0 0 .286
    D. Crews RF 4 2 2 1 .211
    D. Lile LF 3 1 1 0 .257
    J. Young CF 4 1 1 0 .235
    N. Nunez 2B 3 0 1 2 .199
    K. Ruiz C 3 0 1 1 .274
    • a-grounded out for Chaparro in the 8th
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 4 0 0 0 .250
    C. Carroll RF 3 0 0 0 .284
    G. Moreno C 3 0 0 0 .248
    N. Arenado 3B 4 0 0 0 .255
    P. Smith DH 2 1 1 0 .125
    a- I. Vargas PH-DH 1 0 0 0 .282
    R. Waldschmidt CF 3 0 0 0 .280
    G. Perdomo SS 3 0 0 0 .232
    L. Groover 1B 3 0 1 1 .143
    T. Troy LF 2 0 0 0 .289
    • a-flied out for Smith in the 7th
    BATTING
    • 2B – K. Ruiz (13)
    • 3B – J. Young
    • HR – C. Mead (9), D. Crews (2)
    • SH – N. Nunez (6)
    • RBI – C. Mead 2 (28), D. Crews (6), N. Nunez 2 (18), K. Ruiz (27)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – J. Wood, C. Mead
    BATTING
    • RBI – L. Groover
    • 2-Out RBI – L. Groover
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Marte
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – N. Nunez (23)
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Nunez-Chaparro)
    • E – J. Young
    FIELDING
    • DP – 2 (Groover-Perdomo; Marte-Perdomo-Groover)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    Z. Littell(W, 6-4) 5.0 2 1 1 4 4.76
    O. Ribalta(H, 3) 1.0 0 0 1 0 1.56
    M. Parker(H, 4) 1.0 0 0 0 0 5.23
    B. Lord(S, 1) 2.0 0 0 0 1 2.45
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Rodriguez(L, 5-2) 6.1 6 4 1 5 2.52
    J. Morillo 0.2 0 0 1 1 2.45
    J. Loaisiga 1.0 0 0 1 1 3.00
    D. Jameson 1.0 2 2 2 1 18.00
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – Z. Littell 64-42, O. Ribalta 11-7, M. Parker 15-12, B. Lord 24-16
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – Z. Littell 7-3, O. Ribalta 1-1, M. Parker 0-3, B. Lord 4-1
    • Batters Faced – Z. Littell 19, O. Ribalta 3, M. Parker 3, B. Lord 6
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Rodriguez 92-57, J. Morillo 10-5, J. Loaisiga 17-12, D. Jameson 26-15
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Rodriguez 7-5, J. Morillo 1-0, J. Loaisiga 1-0, D. Jameson 3-0
    • Batters Faced – E. Rodriguez 25, J. Morillo 3, J. Loaisiga 3, D. Jameson 7
  • French Open Semifinals

    2026 Roland Garros – Finals
    PolandM. Chwalinska
    FINAL
    M. Andreeva8
    Women’s Singles
    1 2
    • PolandM. Chwalinska
    3 2
    • M. Andreeva

    8

    6 6

    Competitors Info

    Maja Chwalinska Mirra Andreeva
    Country Poland
    Birth Date October 11, 2001 April 29, 2007
    Age 24 19
    Birth Place Dabrowa Gornicza
    Height
    Weight
    Plays Left Right

    Tournament Info

    Event Roland Garros
    Venue Stade Roland Garros
    Series WTA
    Surface Clay
    Prize money $61,723,000
    Previous winner Coco Gauff

    Match Details

    • Stade Roland Garros, Paris, France

    • Finals

    ADVERTISEMENT
  • Bonner helps the short-handed Mercury beat the Fire 78-72

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) DeWanna Bonner scored a season-high 19 points, Natasha Mack added 16 points and the short-handed Phoenix Mercury beat the Portland Fire 78-72 on Friday night.

    Phoenix (4-8) was without usual starters Alyssa Thomas (left calf) and Kahleah Copper (left hip) due to injuries.

    Bonner sank a 3-pointer from the corner with the shot clock winding down to give Phoenix a 64-62 lead. Jovana Nogic made the Mercury’s final field goal with 2:46 remaining for a 68-67 lead and they never trailed again.

    Five Phoenix players combined to make 10 of 12 free throws in the final three minutes, with Bonner going 4 for 4. The Mercury finished 19 of 22 from the line.

    Noemie Brochant and Monique Akoa Makani each added 11 points for Phoenix. Nogic had a team-high six assists.

    Sarah Ashlee Barker led Portland (6-6) with 15 points and seven rebounds. Karlie Samuelson made her first four 3-pointers and finished with 13 points. Teja Oblak added 11 points. The Fire were undone by 20 turnovers.

    Mercury: At Golen State on Tuesday night.

    Fire: At Los Angeles 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 4-8

    21 17 17 23 78

    Fire 6-6

    16 18 17 21 72
    TOP SCORERS
    24
    D. Bonner G 19PTS 5REB 5AST
    3
    S. Barker G 15PTS 7REB 3AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    D. Bonner 19 5 5 1
    N. Mack 16 4 2 2
    M. Akoa Makani 11 4 2 3
    N. Brochant 11 2 2 1
    J. Nogic 9 2 6 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    L. Held 8 1 3 2
    S. Carter 2 3 0 3
    V. Ayayi 2 2 0 0
    M. Suarez 0 0 1 4
    K. Linskens 0 1 0 1
    Total 78 24 21 19
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    S. Barker 15 7 3 3
    M. Gustafson 7 2 0 0
    C. Leite 7 2 4 4
    B. Carleton 6 4 2 1
    E. Engstler 3 5 1 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    K. Samuelson 13 3 1 1
    T. Oblak 11 1 4 2
    L. Geiselsoder 5 3 3 5
    F. Buhner 5 4 0 0
    N. Puoch 0 1 0 1
    Total 72 32 18 19
  • How good can they be? Projecting the best- and worst-case outcomes for rookie QBs in 2026

    fernando-mendoza.jpg

    Getty Images

    Quarterback projections are usually wrong for one simple reason: We spend too much time talking about the quarterback and not enough time talking about everything around him.

    Every spring, evaluators obsess over arm strength, athleticism, release mechanics and highlight-reel throws. Then September arrives, and we’re reminded that rookie quarterbacks don’t enter the NFL in a vacuum. They enter ecosystems. Some inherit stable organizations, proven play-callers and ascending offensive lines. Others walk into rebuilding projects where every dropback feels like an exercise in survival.

    The data back that up.

    To see which factors actually mattered most, I ran a model using college and rookie quarterback data from 2015-2025. The goal wasn’t to predict the future; quarterback evaluation is too messy for that. The goal was to identify the traits and circumstances that best correlate with early NFL success.

    Five variables consistently emerged: collegiate starts, time to throw, pressure rate, screen-game dependency and first-down rate. Collegiate starts matter because experience matters. Time to throw and pressure rate help reveal whether a quarterback has a feel for the pocket or is creating some of his own problems. Screen rate and first-down rate help separate easy production from meaningful production.

    Put them together, and you get a pretty good sense of how a quarterback is likely to respond when the picture changes after the snap and he has to solve the problem himself.

    One of the clearest themes in the data was something that sounds obvious until you see it appear over and over again: Quarterbacks drafted first often inherit the hardest jobs. Quarterbacks selected near the top of the draft historically take more sacks and are asked to shoulder more responsibility than quarterbacks selected later. The reason isn’t complicated. The worst teams pick first. Draft capital buys opportunity, but it often comes attached to weaker rosters, shakier protection and coaching staffs under pressure to win immediately.

    That’s important because these five quarterbacks enter the league under dramatically different circumstances.

    Fernando Mendoza was the No. 1 overall pick and is expected to become the face of the Raiders franchise. Carson Beck landed in Arizona, where the Cardinals invested significant resources in rebuilding the offense around him. Drew Allar joins one of the league’s most stable organizations. Cade Klubnik enters a Jets team still searching for answers. Ty Simpson walks into perhaps the ideal developmental situation behind Matthew Stafford and Sean McVay.

    Their talent levels are different. Their developmental timelines are different. And their environments are very different. Which raises a simple question:

    What does the best-, worst- and most likely version of each rookie season look like?

    One theme kept showing up in the data. First-down rate emerged as the strongest predictor. Experience mattered. Pocket management mattered. But once these quarterbacks reached the NFL, the biggest variable often became the environment around them. Put differently, talent helps get quarterbacks drafted. Environment often determines how quickly they develop.

    How reliable is this model?

    Before projecting rookie numbers for the 2026 quarterback class, I wanted to know whether the model was actually identifying signal or simply fitting noise.

    To test that, I removed Cam WardJaxson Dart and Tyler Shough — the 2025 rookie quarterbacks who played significant snaps in their first NFL seasons — from the training data. I then reran the model to see how its estimates compared to the real-world results: the actual numbers Ward, Dart and Shough produced as rookies.

    The results were encouraging.

    Testing the model without the 2025 rookie QBs

    QB COMPLETION % (PREDICTED / ACTUAL) PASS YARDS (PREDICTED / ACTUAL) PASS TDS (PREDICTED / ACTUAL) INTS (PREDICTED / ACTUAL) SACKS (PREDICTED / ACTUAL)
    Cam Ward 61.8% / 59.8% 3,437 / 3,169 16.5 / 15 12 / 7 43 / 55
    Jaxson Dart 63.2% / 63.7% 2,667 / 2,272 14.5 / 15 9 / 5 34 / 35
    Tyler Shough 60.9% / 61.7% 2,914 / 2,756 15.2 / 14 11 / 12 39 / 42

    The model appears to do a good job identifying realistic ranges of outcomes and the factors most likely to push a quarterback toward the high or low end of those ranges.

    So let’s get to it.

    Fernando Mendoza: The burden of being No. 1

    player headshot
    Fernando Mendoza

    LV • QB • #15
    Heisman Trophy winner who led Indiana to a 16–0 record and CFP National Championship

    View Profile

    If this were based solely on college performance, Fernando Mendoza would be the easy favorite — and it’s not hard to understand why. His 37.6% first-down rate ranked in the 91st percentile despite facing pressure on more than 32% of his dropbacks. Unlike many modern quarterbacks, he wasn’t propped up by a screen-heavy offense. Just 23.1% of his throws came behind the line of scrimmage.

    That’s why Mendoza enters the NFL with arguably the cleanest analytical profile in the class. The problem is that he landed behind one of the weakest offensive lines in the league.

    Las Vegas ranked near the bottom of the league in pass protection in 2024 and somehow got worse in 2025. Sack rate ballooned from 7.3% to 11.1%, the worst mark among the teams discussed here. Pressure rate climbed from 35.8% to 40.5%, while the running game remained one of the least efficient units in football.

    That’s a problem because Mendoza wins from the pocket. He’s not going to erase protection issues with athleticism (though he’s certainly not a bad athlete). His game is built on anticipation, timing and a willingness to stand in against pressure.

    Klint Kubiak’s offense can manufacture opportunities through motion and play-action. But even the best scheme eventually requires functional protection. That’s what makes Mendoza such a difficult projection. The most NFL-ready quarterback landed in the least QB-friendly environment.

    And unlike Beck, Allar, Klubnik or Simpson, he probably won’t have the luxury of sitting and learning. If Mendoza is going to succeed early, he’ll likely have to do it while overcoming many of the same structural issues that have made life difficult for young passers before him.

    Range of outcomes for Fernando Mendoza’s rookie season

    STAT WORST CASE MEDIAN CASE BEST CASE
    Completion % 58.6% 61.4% 65.2%
    Yards/Attempt 6.0 6.6 7.6
    Passing yards 2,780 3,360 3,920
    Passing touchdowns 13 17 21
    Interceptions 17 14 10
    Sacks taken 54 48 37
    Passer rating 72.4 82.1 91.8
    Rush yards 120 165 210

    The numbers tell the story. Mendoza may have the strongest analytical profile in the class, but his most likely outcome lands much closer to the middle of the distribution than the ceiling. That’s not a reflection of talent. It’s a reflection of where he landed. The model repeatedly penalized quarterbacks entering poor pass-protection situations, and no rookie faces a steeper challenge than Mendoza.

    That said, this projection is also one of the most sensitive to environmental changes. The Raiders spent the offseason trying to address the offensive line, signing one of the top free agents available in Tyler Linderbaum and drafting Trey Zuhn III, who brings versatility across the interior. If those additions help stabilize the protection and Las Vegas moves closer to league average up front, Mendoza’s outlook changes considerably. More than any rookie quarterback, his projection may depend on whether everything around him improves as much as he does.

    Fernando Mendoza watch: Predicting when Raiders will start No. 1 overall pick; QB’s Rookie of the Year odds
    Garrett Podell
    Fernando Mendoza watch: Predicting when Raiders will start No. 1 overall pick; QB's Rookie of the Year odds

    Carson Beck: The safest QB in the class?

    player headshot
    Carson Beck

    ARI • QB • #19
    2025: Led ACC in passer efficiency rating (157.0), completion percentage (72.4%) and completions (338)

    View Profile

    If you’re looking for the safest quarterback in this class, it just might be Carson Beck. The question is whether “safe” also means limited. The numbers explain why the model liked him so much: He started 43 games, got the ball out faster than anyone in this class and moved the chains at an elite level. His 38.6% first-down rate ranked in the 95th percentile among draft-eligible quarterbacks from 2015-2026.

    He played efficient football, protected the ball and consistently kept his offense on schedule. But he also entered the NFL after playing behind one of the cleanest pockets of any quarterback in the data. Beck’s profile has always been built around avoiding pressure rather than overcoming it, and the challenge for Arizona isn’t helping him play faster — it’s determining how much of his collegiate success carries over when things aren’t quite so clean.

    The biggest change since his time at Georgia is that Beck isn’t entering the NFL carrying the expectations that come with being a top-five pick. And that means Arizona can afford to be patient.

    That’s important because Beck faced pressure on just 19.1% of his collegiate dropbacks, the lowest figure among these quarterbacks, and more than 32% of his throws came on screens. The problem is that Arizona’s offensive line regressed dramatically in 2025. Sack rate jumped from 5.2% in 2024 to 8.3%, while pressure rate allowed climbed from 29.4% to 39.3%.

    The good news for Beck is that the Cardinals spent much of the offseason trying to fix it. They selected Jeremiyah Love third overall, drafted interior offensive lineman Chase Bisontis in Round 2 and signed veterans Isaac SeumaloElijah Wilkinson and Matt Pryor. Those moves directly address several of the weaknesses that surfaced during a disappointing 2025 season.

    And then there’s the new coach. Mike LaFleur comes from the Shanahan-McVay tree, where quarterbacks are often given answers before the snap and asked to make quick decisions after it. That’s exactly how Beck won at Georgia.

    Range of outcomes for Carson Beck’s rookie season

    STAT WORST CASE MEDIAN CASE BEST CASE
    Completion % 59.2% 63.7% 66.8%
    Yards/attempt 6.2 6.9 7.5
    Passing yards 2,980 3,520 4,050
    Passing touchdowns 12 18 23
    Interceptions 15 12 9
    Sacks taken 46 39 31
    Passer rating 74.8 85.8 95.2
    Rush yards 85 120 165

    Beck’s projection looks exactly like what you’d expect from arguably the safest quarterback in the class. The model consistently rewarded his experience, quick processing and ability to stay on schedule. Even if the ceiling isn’t what it is for Mendoza – or even Allar (more on that in a second), Beck may have the highest floor.