Blog

  • Dbacks Ref and Notes

    • Diamondbacks’ Jose Fernandez: Snags fifth steal

      Fernandez went 1-for-3 with one RBI and one stolen base in Sunday’s 8-6 win over the Rockies.

      Fernandez started all three games of this weekend series against the Rockies, going 4-for-12 with two RBI and two steals. Two of those starts came against right-handed pitchers, though Ketel Marte serving as designated hitter Saturday before resting Sunday likely factored into Fernandez’s usage in the field. Through 127 plate appearances this year, Fernandez is hitting .275 with a .693 OPS, three home runs, five steals, 14 RBI and 20 runs scored. He’ll play regularly against left-handed pitchers, but it doesn’t look like he’ll be strictly platooned when his hitting is good.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: Gets on base four times

      Moreno went 3-for-4 with a walk, a stolen base and two runs scored in Sunday’s 8-6 win over the Rockies.

      Moreno logged his third multi-hit effort in a row, a span that also includes his two steals this season. His bat looks to be coming around — prior to this hot stretch, he went 0-for-16 over a six-game span. The catcher is hitting .253 with a .677 OPS, one home run, 12 RBI, 11 runs scored and seven doubles across 92 plate appearances this season.

    • Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Secures 10th save

      Sewald walked one and struck out none in a scoreless and hitless inning to earn the save in Sunday’s 8-6 win over Rockies.

      Sewald took his first blown save of the season Wednesday versus the Rangers, and he didn’t pitch for three days after that. He bounced back well Sunday, throwing 11 of 16 pitches for strikes to pick up his 10th save in 11 chances this year. Aside from Wednesday, Sewald has mostly taken care of business when closing, but his struggles have been more prevalent when in non-save situations. He’s at a 4.41 ERA, 0.92 WHIP and 19:6 K:BB across 16.1 innings this season, and he’s allowed three home runs.

    • Diamondbacks’ Michael Soroka: Strikes out eight in win

      Soroka (6-2) allowed two runs on six hits and two walks while striking out eight over 5.2 innings to earn the win over the Rockies on Sunday.

      Soroka escaped a Coors Field start without allowing a homer, and the eight strikeouts were his most in any of his last six outings. He’s now allowed two runs or less in seven of his nine starts this season, including in each of his last three, though he came up an out short of a quality start. For the season, he has a 3.49 ERA, 1.33 WHIP and 55:14 K:BB through 49 innings. Soroka is projected to make his next start at home in a rematch with the Rockies.

    • Diamondbacks’ Lourdes Gurriel: Clouts first homer in win

      Gurriel went 2-for-5 with a home run and two RBI in Sunday’s 8-6 win over Colorado.

      Gurriel had a run-producing single in the third inning and then belted a solo home run in the fifth. It was the first homer of the season for Gurriel, who’s had a slow start since being activated off the 60-day injured list in April; however, the bat has showed recent life. He’s knocked in at least one run in four of his last five games and is 6-for-20 with three extra-base hits and five RBI during that span.

  • Two Steppin’ into Supers: No. 19/19 Softball slides into the Austin Super Regional

    Arizona State set to make its 11th all-time NCAA Super Regional appearance, first since 2022

    Two Steppin’ into Supers: No. 19/19 Softball slides into the Austin Super Regional

    Brooklyn Ulrich (left) prepares to slam her foot down on home plate to end Arizona State’s 9-1 win over Texas A&M in College Station on Sunday, May 17, 2026.

    by Chris Brown contributing 

    COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The No. 19/19 Sun Devil Softball program popped the bubble of excitement inside Davis Diamond prior to Sunday afternoon’s NCAA Bryan-College Station Regional championship game as Arizona State did not need the ‘if necessary’ game after knocking out the No. 15 overall seed for the NCAA Tournament Texas A&M Aggies, 9-1, to advance to next weekend’s NCAA Super Regional round.

    Rolling with ground ball specialist Meika Lauppe to begin Sunday’s contest, the junior right-hander set the tone by retiring the top of Texas A&M’s lineup in order, before capping the top of the first with a swinging strikeout by Mya Perez.

    Tanya Windle took the momentum from Lauppe into the bottom of the first as the senior designated player singled the third pitch of her first-inning plate appearance into centerfield. Two batters later, Arizona State was already in the run column when Samantha Swan, a Georgetown, Texas native, singled a 2-2 pitch back into center field to bring home Windle from third. The one-run lead was extended two batters later when Katie Chester was credited with a sacrifice fly as Kaylee Pond, who squeezed in a double between Windle and Swan’s singles, scored from third.

    Despite the Aggies (38-19) stringing together three consecutive two-out singles to cut their deficit to one during the top of the second, the Sun Devils answered right back with a three-run, four-hit bottom of the second with Swan delivering another run-scoring hit, this time a one-out double to score Tiare Ho-Ching from second.

    Looking to capitalize on three consecutive left-handed Aggie batters to begin the third, left-handed pitcher Aissa Silva was brought in from the bullpen. However, after back-to-back walks to begin the frame and momentum beginning to tilt, the Big 12 Softball Tournament Most Valuable Player Kenzie Brown took over in the pitching circle.

    Brown (17-6) immediately struck out Perez on four pitches, before retiring Micaela Wark, who hit a two-run home run off Brown during Saturday’s contest, and Ariel Kowalewski, who hit a grand slam during Texas A&M’s Friday afternoon game against UConn, to strand the pair of Aggie base runners.

    Brown and Kate Munnerlyn traded scoreless third and fourth innings as Arizona State took a 5-1 lead into the bottom of the fifth.

    It took the Sun Devils just 12 pitches from two different Texas A&M pitchers to seal the outcome:

    Chester reached first on a throwing error to begin the inning.

    Yazzy Avila singled on the first pitch of her at bat.

    Yannixa Acuña pushed a 2-2 pitch through the left side of the diamond for a single.

    With the bases loaded and no outs, Texas A&M opted to bring in its third different pitcher of the game, Sydney Lessentine.

    After watching the first two pitches go outside of the strike zone, first-year Sun Devil and Mesai, Ariz., native Brooklyn Ulrich turned on the third pitch and sent it over the center field fence for her ninth home run on the season and bring an end to the NCAA Bryan-College Station Regional.

    GAME NOTES

    • Kaylee Pond’s double during the first inning marked the 100th double of the season for the Sun Devils, the first time an Arizona State team has reached the 100-double plateau in a season since hitting a single-season program record 107 throughout the 2008 campaign.
    • Arizona State’s Meika Lauppe and Kenzie Brown combined to strikeout Texas A&M’s Mya Perez twice during the game’s first three innings, snapping a streak of 95 consecutive games played without striking out multiple times in a single game.
      • It’s the first time Perez has struck out multiple times in a game since March 1, 2025, when Texas Tech’s NiJaree Canady did so twice.
    • Brooklyn Ulrich’s game-ending grand slam was the first game-ending home run for Arizona State to mercy rule an opponent since Feb. 7, 2026, when Samantha Swan hit a game-ending, two-run home run in the bottom of the sixth to lift the Sun Devils to an 8-0 win over Northwestern in Tempe.
    • With the win, Arizona State is now 7-0 all-time against Texas A&M during the NCAA Tournament.
      • In fact, the Sun Devils are now 17-1 against the Aggies over their last 18 matchups dating back to a neutral site game in San Jose Calif., on March 18, 1989.
    • By advancing out of the Bryan-College Station Regional, Arizona State becomes the 13th consecutive Big 12 Softball Tournament champion to reach a NCAA Super Regional.
      • Every Big 12 Softball Tournament champion – when the tournament has either been held (the league did ot hold a tournament from 2011 to 2016 or 2020; or the regular season champion with the tournament was canceled (Oklahoma, 2019) – has advanced to a NCAA Super Regional since 2007.
    • Sunday’s result also marked the first road NCAA Regional win for Arizona State since 2010, when the Sun Devils swept through the Amherst Regional hosted by UMass.

    UP NEXT

    Arizona State (44-16) will now travel to Austin, Texas to play No. 6/3 Texas (45-10) in a three-game NCAA Super Regional series that is slated to begin at 6 p.m. MST on Friday, May 22.

    AUSTIN SUPER REGIONAL SCHEDULE

    • Friday, May 22 | 6 p.m. MST | ESPN2
    • Saturday, May 23 | 4 p.m. MST | ESPN
    • Sunday, May 24 | TBD | TBD

    FOLLOW US

    For the latest information on the team, follow @SunDevilSoftball on XFacebook and Instagram. General athletic news can also be found at @TheSunDevils on XInstagram and Facebook.

  • Mitchell scores 26 and the Cavaliers rout the Pistons 125-94 in Game 7 to reach the East finals

    DETROIT (AP) Donovan Mitchell scored 26 points, Jarrett Allen and Sam Merrill each added 23 and the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Detroit Pistons 125-94 on Sunday night in Game 7 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals.

    The fourth-seeded Cavaliers ousted the East’s top seed and will face the third-seeded New York Knicks. Game 1 of that series tips off Tuesday in New York.

    Evan Mobley had 21 points and 12 rebounds for the Cavaliers, who advanced to the conference finals for the first time since 2018 and the ninth time in team history. It’s their deepest run since LeBron James’ final season with the franchise.

    “We didn’t just come here just to win a goal,” Mitchell said about making the conference finals for the first time in his career.

    “Even last year. when we lost to Indiana, we had our goals set on getting to the (NBA) Finals. We’re just one step closer. It’s been almost a decade of running into the same issue. … As a team, we can breathe a little bit, but the same token, we can only breathe for about 12 hours, and then get right back to it.”

    Daniss Jenkins scored 17 points, and Cade Cunningham and Duncan Robinson each finished with 13 for the Pistons, who fell one win shy of their first conference finals appearance since 2008 after forcing the deciding game with a Game 6 victory Friday night.

    “That game sucked,” said Cunningham, who was held 16 points under his playoff average. “Being back home, wanted to get this win in front of our fans. It reminded me of last year, losing on home court. It’s not a great feeling.”

    The Cavs dictated the pace from the opening tip and never allowed the Pistons to gain traction, then blew open a convincing Game 7 performance when Mitchell scored 15 in the third quarter.

    Detroit was outscored in the paint 58-34 and made only 35.3% of its field goal attempts, compared to Cleveland’s 50.6%

    “When we play with force, it’s really a key. Like, force on both ends with our talent, we’re really hard to beat,” Cleveland coach Kenny Atkinson said. “The question we got to answer, we talked about it a lot, is we can’t have force letdowns like Game 6, where we were not the forceful team. But tonight we were, that was a whole difference, our force on both ends.”

    Cleveland capitalized on cold shooting by the Pistons in the opening quarter, turning missed shots into transition baskets while building an early advantage. The Cavs led 31-22 going to the second, and after Detroit had the first two baskets, Cleveland quickly seized control with a 24-9 run. The Pistons’ offensive struggles only deepened and the Cavs continued to shoot efficiently as they built a commanding 64-47 lead into halftime.

    The Cavs kept rolling in the second half and led by as much as 35 points. The closest the Pistons were able to get in the half was within 17 in the third quarter.

    “We knew that start was monumental, the start that they knew that we were here, and that we were going to give them some problems,” Atkinson said. “The beginning of the game, that was key, and then coming out of halftime was the same message: ‘We got to win this first five minutes to put them on their on their heels.’”

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/nba

    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

    View all 9 picks

    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Prop Bet Guy
    Prop Bet GuyDoug
    #3
    +1141 (71%)
    Last 28 NBA Player Props
    Over 11.5-122
    Jarrett Allen • Points • Player Prop
    Picked May 17 @ 7:25 pm, 1 unit on DraftKings
    WIN
    DraftKings. Jarrett Allen has cleared this points line in four of the last five games. Noticeably, he’s been able to capitalize on the Pistons hedging a bit harder on pick and rolls and dribble drives – he’s received 20 paint touches and 15 offensive rebounds combined over his last two games. He’s been solid this series, and doesn’t run much risk of being played off the court for smaller lineups.

    Prop’s Pick

    Zack Cimini
    Zack CiminiContrarian with Chutzpah
    +400 (65%)
    Last 17 NBA Player Props
    Over 3.5+121
    Dean Wade • Points • Player Prop
    Picked May 17 @ 7:06 pm, 1 unit on DraftKings
    WIN
    Game seven we know is all about the star players raising their play for their respective teams. One role player that has seen his production drop to season lows is Dean Wade of the Cavaliers. The prop market recognized this and still he has went under his points prop in four straight games. He even went scoreless in games four and five. This has had nothing to do with Wade shooting poorly, but just not shooting at all. After just three shots in three games, look for Wade to get a few extra looks tonight. Take his over.

    Zack’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 T

    4 Cavaliers 4-3

    31 33 35 26 125

    1 Pistons 3-4

    22 25 26 21 94
    TOP SCORERS
    D. Mitchell SG 26PTS 7REB 8AST
    D. Jenkins PG 17PTS 3REB 5AST
  • Man of the Hours: Aaron Rai’s unseen work pays off as Englishman outshines stars at PGA Championship

    aaron-rai-flag-pga-g.jpg

    Getty Images

    NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Aaron Rai has been around late on Sundays at major championships before; you just haven’t seen him. That’s not because television broadcasts ignored him or your interests were focused elsewhere but rather because Rai was not present on the golf course. Rather, he was working in the practice area, showing off his greatest skill, unbeknownst to anyone else.

    Working on his putting on the back end of the ninth green that doubled as the practice putting area at the 2025 U.S. Open, Rai studied short-range putts as his father watched the final groups pass through. While players on the course faced two hours that could alter the trajectory of their golfing lives, Rai went about his business in the far corner away from the action — out of sight and out of mind. His week ended with a respectable T33 finish hours earlier.

    Rai operated similarly at the 2026 Masters. Rory McIlroy raced through the walkway from the 9th green to the 10th tee in the final pairing at Augusta National. Eyes were fixated on the eventual back-to-back champion as he started his second nine charge to another green jacket. Rai was behind the scenes surveying putts.

    Hours that may otherwise have been seen as meaningless in the grand scheme of a tournament week were actually quite meaningful. They personified a tale as old as time: to be great, you must love the work.

    “Rarely do you feel like people work way harder than you. … I feel like I’ve played a pretty good amount of time, and Aaron is always there,” Xander Schauffele said. “He’s always in the gym. He’s always on the range.

    “At the Scottish [Open], I’m staying right on site there. I thought it was fun for Austin [Kaiser] and I to go putt. Aaron is finishing up his little putting session at 9 p.m. and going to the gym at 9:45 p.m. This was three years ago. I think that’s what it’s about to be a major champion. You put the work in when nobody’s looking.”

    Sunday at the 2026 PGA Championship, eyes were darting in every different direction around Aronimink Golf Club. One of the most jam-packed leaderboards in major championship history brought a loaded list of potential outcomes for everyone to pontificate about the night prior.

    Could a final pairing consisting of two players who have combined for zero wins on the PGA Tour fend off a ferocious chasing pack? Could McIlroy possibly take the second leg of a season-long grand slam into the U.S. Open? Could Jon Rahm grab the third leg of his career slam? Would Scottie Scheffler rise up the leaderboard once again on a Sunday?

    The stars lined up one after another — Rahm, McIlroy, Schauffele, Ludvig Åberg, Cameron Smith, Justin Thomas, Patrick Reed — yet none of them were able to work their way to the top. Instead, it was a 31-year-old Englishman with one PGA Tour win to his name who saw decades of hard work pay off.

    “My dad was with me every day, practice-wise, and he really instilled the importance of work and dedication and trying to consistently build just good, strong habits around the game,” Rai said. “My mom worked extremely hard away from golf. She worked a couple of jobs at one time, at a point in time, and she did a lot of work around the house. My sister took a massive role as well at a young age. She had a job from the age of 14, 15.

    “So, there was a lot of consistent messaging of hard work, and that was generally the environment that was there at the house. And that was at the golf course as well. So, I think it’s been something I’ve just grown up with, and I guess as I’ve got older, something that I’ve really valued and tried to continue to move forward with.”

    Rai made his own work difficult across the first eight holes of his final round. On a day that saw Kurt Kitayama turn at 5-under 30 in the morning wave and Smith turn in 32 just before him, Rai was on the wrong side of par on the side of the golf course, which played easier all championship long.

    His fortunes flipped, however, with an eagle on the par-5 9th. Rai was the lone player inside the top 20 to pencil two circles onto his scorecard on that hole. One of the shortest drivers on the PGA Tour flew into the mix courtesy of the big bird.

    Then, Rai did not miss a single shot over the final two hours of his PGA Championship. Statistics detail a couple of missed greens in regulation, but tidy up-and-downs relieved any stress. As the stars were trying to push hole by hole off their plates, Rai asked for seconds.

    He located the back pin from the front greenside bunker on the drivable par-4 13th, something neither accomplished by Smith nor Thomas, two players often regarded as two of the best around the greens. He went fairway wood, fairway wood into the long par-4 15th, a move some thought peculiar given his lack of pop off the tee. He held the fairway on the par-5 16th to set up a towering left-to-right 5 iron that gave him a crucial birdie with Rahm running behind.

    And then the moment finally came.

    As Rai stalked his birdie attempt from 68 feet on the par-3 17th, murmurs continued to vibrate from the grandstand on the other side of the water. His caddie asked those around the green to quiet down as his man stepped over his putt. The Englishman had done this countless times before. Hours spent on the putting green leading to this moment.

    Rai took his blade back just as a soda can cracked. He never noticed. What happened next was impossible to miss.

    It was a delayed reaction from Rai after a putt that not even he seemed to believe had dropped. A couple shakes of the fist, a high five from his bag man and knuckles and a slap on the back from his playing partner all ensued. Cheers flooded the green and continued as he marched up to the last green with the Wanamaker Trophy in hand.

    To most, Rai realized a dream in a span of 10 holes played in 6-under fashion amid the most exacting PGA Championship conditions in recent memory. That’s missing the point.

    It would be missing the long hours spent practicing when no one was looking, the work ethic instilled by his upbringing, the sacrifice, the sweat and the tears required to become a major champion. It would be missing all that was unseen that ultimately made Rai the man to be seen at Aronimink Golf Club.

  •  PGA Championship Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR EARNINGS R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    ENGLAND
    -9 $3,690,000.00 70* 69 67 65 271
    T2
    UNITED STATES
    -6 $1,804,000.00 67 69* 68 70 274
    T2
    SPAIN
    -6 $1,804,000.00 69* 70 67 68 274
    T4
    UNITED STATES
    -5 $843,867.00 69 69* 72 65 275
    T4
    SWEDEN
    -5 $843,867.00 72* 66 68 69 275
    T4
    GERMANY
    -5 $843,867.00 69* 72 65 69 275
    T7
    NORTHERN IRELAND
    -4 $637,050.00 74* 67 66 69 276
    T7
    AUSTRALIA
    -4 $637,050.00 69* 71 68 68 276
    T7
    UNITED STATES
    -4 $637,050.00 68* 73 66 69 276
    T10
    UNITED STATES
    -3 $496,708.00 72 65* 71 69 277
    T10
    UNITED STATES
    -3 $496,708.00 70 69* 75 63 277
    T10
    UNITED STATES
    -3 $496,708.00 68* 72 67 70 277
    T10
    ENGLAND
    -3 $496,708.00 70 73* 65 69 277
    T14
    ENGLAND
    -2 $364,763.00 70 72* 71 65 278
    T14
    UNITED STATES
    -2 $364,763.00 71 70* 67 70 278
    T14
    UNITED STATES
    -2 $364,763.00 67 71* 71 69 278
    T14
    UNITED STATES
    -2 $364,763.00 68 69* 71 70 278
    T18
    UNITED STATES
    -1 $229,129.00 69* 72 70 68 279
    T18
    SPAIN
    -1 $229,129.00 71* 67 71 70 279
    T18
    GERMANY
    -1 $229,129.00 67 70* 73 69 279
    T18
    AUSTRALIA
    -1 $229,129.00 67* 70 71 71 279
    T18
    UNITED STATES
    -1 $229,129.00 69 67* 71 72 279
    T18
    CHILE
    -1 $229,129.00 69* 73 66 71 279
    T18
    IRELAND
    -1 $229,129.00 74 69* 67 69 279
    T18
    UNITED STATES
    -1 $229,129.00 71 67* 71 70 279
    T26
    UNITED STATES
    E $125,523.00 71 67* 72 70 280
    T26
    SWEDEN
    E $125,523.00 71 73* 70 66 280
    T26
    UNITED STATES
    E $125,523.00 70* 72 67 71 280
    T26
    JAPAN
    E $125,523.00 70 67* 71 72 280
    T26
    NEW ZEALAND
    E $125,523.00 71* 69 70 70 280
    T26
    UNITED STATES
    E $125,523.00 69 72* 67 72 280
    T26
    CANADA
    E $125,523.00 69* 72 65 74 280
    T26
    UNITED STATES
    E $125,523.00 72* 70 68 70 280
    T26
    UNITED STATES
    E $125,523.00 69 70* 71 70 280
    T35
    SOUTH AFRICA
    +1 $78,806.00 67* 70 73 71 281
    T35
    CHINA
    +1 $78,806.00 71* 69 71 70 281
    T35
    SOUTH AFRICA
    +1 $78,806.00 72* 72 70 67 281
    T35
    UNITED STATES
    +1 $78,806.00 70* 69 74 68 281
    T35
    NEW ZEALAND
    +1 $78,806.00 70 70* 72 69 281
    T35
    UNITED STATES
    +1 $78,806.00 74 70* 69 68 281
    T35
    SOUTH KOREA
    +1 $78,806.00 71* 67 72 71 281
    T35
    JAPAN
    +1 $78,806.00 67 73* 73 68 281
    T35
    GERMANY
    +1 $78,806.00 67* 75 66 73 281
    T44
    UNITED STATES
    +2 $50,348.00 72* 70 68 72 282
    T44
    VENEZUELA
    +2 $50,348.00 73 71* 69 69 282
    T44
    IRELAND
    +2 $50,348.00 68 76* 70 68 282
    T44
    UNITED STATES
    +2 $50,348.00 71* 71 70 70 282
    T44
    UNITED STATES
    +2 $50,348.00 69 73* 70 70 282
    T44
    NORWAY
    +2 $50,348.00 71 72* 65 74 282
    T44
    UNITED STATES
    +2 $50,348.00 73 70* 65 74 282
    T44
    DENMARK
    +2 $50,348.00 69 75* 66 72 282
    T44
    UNITED STATES
    +2 $50,348.00 73 70* 67 72 282
    T44
    CANADA
    +2 $50,348.00 72* 72 67 71 282
    T44
    ENGLAND
    +2 $50,348.00 71* 71 72 68 282
    T55
    UNITED STATES
    +3 $34,186.00 69 72* 74 68 283
    T55
    UNITED STATES
    +3 $34,186.00 69* 71 70 73 283
    T55
    UNITED STATES
    +3 $34,186.00 69* 72 68 74 283
    T55
    SWEDEN
    +3 $34,186.00 71* 71 67 74 283
    T55
    CANADA
    +3 $34,186.00 68 73* 72 70 283
    T60
    UNITED STATES
    +4 $29,218.00 70* 73 66 75 284
    T60
    UNITED STATES
    +4 $29,218.00 70* 71 68 75 284
    T60
    UNITED STATES
    +4 $29,218.00 68* 73 72 71 284
    T60
    PHILIPPINES
    +4 $29,218.00 70 70* 71 73 284
    T60
    FINLAND
    +4 $29,218.00 73* 70 71 70 284
    T65
    AUSTRALIA
    +6 $26,900.00 69* 70 75 72 286
    T65
    UNITED STATES
    +6 $26,900.00 73* 69 71 73 286
    T65
    DENMARK
    +6 $26,900.00 72* 71 71 72 286
    T65
    UNITED STATES
    +6 $26,900.00 69* 73 71 73 286
    T65
    SOUTH AFRICA
    +6 $26,900.00 70* 72 78 66 286
    T70
    JAPAN
    +7 $25,070.00 71 71* 70 75 287
    T70
    ENGLAND
    +7 $25,070.00 71 73* 74 69 287
    T70
    UNITED STATES
    +7 $25,070.00 69 72* 73 73 287
    T70
    UNITED STATES
    +7 $25,070.00 74* 70 70 73 287
    T70
    ENGLAND
    +7 $25,070.00 73 71* 70 73 287
    T75
    ENGLAND
    +8 $24,193.00 68 75* 70 75 288
    T75
    ENGLAND
    +8 $24,193.00 72 70* 72 74 288
    T75
    AUSTRALIA
    +8 $24,193.00 72* 72 73 71 288
    T75
    DENMARK
    +8 $24,193.00 72* 72 71 73 288
    79
    UNITED STATES
    +9 $23,970.00 72 72* 69 76 289
    80
    UNITED STATES
    +10 $23,930.00 74 67* 77 72 290
    81
    UNITED STATES
    +11 $23,910.00 72 72* 69 78 291
    82
    UNITED STATES
    +18 $23,900.00 72* 72 82 72 298
    CUT
    BELGIUM
    +5 72 73* 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 72 73* 145
    CUT
    SOUTH KOREA
    +5 73* 72 145
    CUT
    ENGLAND
    +5 72 73* 145
    CUT
    SOUTH AFRICA
    +5 69 76* 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 71* 74 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 71 74* 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 71 74* 145
    CUT
    ENGLAND
    +5 72 73* 145
    CUT
    SCOTLAND
    +5 70 75* 145
    CUT
    JAPAN
    +5 73 72* 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 70* 75 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +5 75* 70 145
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 75 71* 146
    CUT
    SPAIN
    +6 72* 74 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 71* 75 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 75* 71 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 73 73* 146
    CUT
    AUSTRIA
    +6 73* 73 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 76* 70 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 72 74* 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 70 76* 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 74 72* 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 73 73* 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 72* 74 146
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +6 74* 72 146
    CUT
    NORWAY
    +6 74 72* 146
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    UNITED STATES
    +6 74 72* 146
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    ENGLAND
    +6 72* 74 146
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    NORTHERN IRELAND
    +7 74 73* 147
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    +7 72* 75 147
    CUT
    AUSTRALIA
    +7 74* 73 147
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    +7 77* 70 147
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    ENGLAND
    +7 72 75* 147
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    +7 74 73* 147
    CUT
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    +7 76* 71 147
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +8 74* 74 148
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +8 75* 73 148
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +8 76* 72 148
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +8 73* 75 148
    CUT
    AUSTRALIA
    +8 72 76* 148
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +8 74 74* 148
    CUT
    AUSTRIA
    +8 72 76* 148
    CUT
    ARGENTINA
    +8 76* 72 148
    CUT
    SOUTH KOREA
    +9 72 77* 149
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +9 75* 74 149
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +9 76 73* 149
    CUT
    COLOMBIA
    +10 75 75* 150
    CUT
    UNITED STATES
    +10 77 73* 150
    CUT
    CANADA
    +10 75 75* 150
    CUT
    SOUTH AFRICA
    +10 75* 75 150
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    UNITED STATES
    +11 78* 73 151
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    +11 75* 76 151
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    +11 77 74* 151
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    +11 77 74* 151
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    +12 74* 78 152
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    +12 75* 77 152
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    FRANCE
    +12 75 77* 152
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    +12 75* 77 152
    CUT
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    +14 76 78* 154
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    +14 80 74* 154
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    +14 77* 77 154
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    +15 76 79* 155
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    +15 79* 76 155
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    +15 75 80* 155
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    +15 75* 80 155
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    +16 81 75* 156
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    +16 78* 78 156
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    +18 77 81* 158
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    +21 81* 80 161
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    +22 79* 83 162
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

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  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins21-26
    3 11 1
    Rays30-15
    6 7 0
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: D. Rasmussen  (4-1)
    • L: E. Perez  (2-6)
    • S: B. Baker  (12)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Orioles21-26
    7 11 0
    3 9 1
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: A. Nunez  (2-0)
    • L: R. Lovelady  (2-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Red Sox19-27
    1 9 0
    Braves32-15
    8 8 0
    Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
    • W: G. Holmes  (3-1)
    • L: B. Bello  (2-5)
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 8 0
    Pirates24-23
    0 5 0
    PNC Park, Pittsburgh, PA
    • W: Z. Wheeler  (3-0)
    • L: P. Skenes  (6-3)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Reds24-23
    3 11 0
    10 12 0
    Progressive Field, Cleveland, OH
    • W: G. Williams  (6-3)
    • L: B. Singer  (2-4)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Yankees28-19
    6 6 0
    Mets20-26
    7 11 1
    Citi Field, Flushing, NY
    • W: D. Williams  (3-1)
    • L: T. Hill  (0-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    4 7 0
    Tigers20-27
    1 6 1
    Comerica Park, Detroit, MI
    • W: K. Gausman  (3-3)
    • L: J. Flaherty  (0-5)
    • S: T. Rogers  (1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Cubs29-18
    8 9 1
    9 12 1
    Rate Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: T. Davis  (2-1)
    • L: R. Rolison  (3-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Brewers26-18
    4 10 1
    Twins21-26
    5 6 0
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: B. Ober  (5-2)
    • L: G. Anderson  (1-2)
    • S: L. Garcia  (2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rangers22-24
    8 7 0
    Astros19-29
    0 5 0
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: N. Eovaldi  (5-4)
    • L: P. Lambert  (2-4)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals20-27
    2 9 0
    0 5 1
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: S. Kolek  (2-0)
    • L: A. Pallante  (4-4)
    • S: L. Erceg  (11)
    FINAL
    R H E
    8 12 1
    Rockies18-29
    6 9 3
    Coors Field, Denver, CO
    • W: M. Soroka  (6-2)
    • L: M. Lorenzen  (2-6)
    • S: P. Sewald  (10)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants20-27
    10 12 0
    1 5 3
    Sutter Health Park, West Sacramento, California
    • W: A. Houser  (2-4)
    • L: J. Springs  (3-4)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Dodgers29-18
    10 11 0
    Angels16-31
    1 5 0
    Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, CA
    • W: R. Sasaki  (2-3)
    • L: G. Rodriguez  (0-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Padres28-18
    8 10 2
    3 1 0
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    • W: L. Giolito  (1-0)
    • L: G. Kirby  (5-3)

    Our

  • Corbin Carroll hits 2 homers, drives in 3 as the Diamondbacks beat the Rockies 8-6

    DENVER (AP) Corbin Carroll homered twice and drove in three runs and the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Colorado Rockies 8-6 on Sunday in the rubber game of the three-game series.

    Nolan Arenado and Lourdes Gurriel Jr. hit RBI singles for a 2-0 lead in the third after Carroll and Geraldo Perdomo got things started – after rain delay of one hour and 45 minutes – with back-to-back walks off Michael Lorenzen with two outs.

    Carroll hit his sixth home run following a two-out RBI single by Ildemaro Vargas for a 5-0 lead in the fourth. Carroll then hit a solo shot in the sixth to make it 8-2.

    Michael Soroka (6-2) struck out eight and gave up two runs on six hits and two walks in 5 2/3 innings. Paul Sewald issued a two-out walk in the ninth before finishing off his 10th save in 11 opportunities

    The Rockies didn’t have a hit off Soroka until TJ Rumfield, Troy Johnston and Willi Castro had three straight two-out doubles to cut it to 5-2 in the fourth.

    Gurriel answered in the fifth with his first homer this season and Gabriel Moreno scored on Jose Fernandez’s single to make it 7-2. Moreno had three hits and scored twice.

    Jake McCarthy and Kyle Karros had RBI singles and Castro and Brett Sullivan added sacrifice flies in a four-run eighth off Brandon Pfaadt that cut it to 8-6.

    Pfaadt got one out and was charged with four runs.

    Lorenzen (2-6) gave up seven runs – six earned – on nine hits and three walks in 4 2/3 innings.

    Rockies LHP Jose Quintana (1-2, 3.97 ERA) starts Monday against the visiting Rangers, who counter with LHP MacKenzie Gore (3-3, 4.50).

    Diamondbacks RHP Zac Gallen (1-4, 5.02) starts Monday in Phoenix opposite Giants LHP Robbie Ray (3-5, 3.04).

    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
    Zack Cimini
    Zack CiminiContrarian with Chutzpah
    +79.5 (50%)
    Last 14 MLB Player Props
    Over 1.5-110
    Lourdes Gurriel • Bases • Player Prop
    Picked May 17 @ 1:36 pm, 1 unit on Caesars
    WIN
    The Arizona Diamondbacks have taken a cautious approach with Lourdes Gurriel Jr returning from injury. Arizona’s last series against Texas was the first that Gurriel Jr played in each game. Now he has went over his combination line in both games against the Colorado Rockies. Love the opportunity for Gurriel Jr. to record a hit in an entire series for the first time this year. Take his combination props and total bases over.

    Zack’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
    0 0 2 3 2 1 0 0 0 8 12 1

    18-29

    0 0 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 6 9 3
    • W: M. Soroka (6-2)L: M. Lorenzen (2-6)S: P. Sewald (10)
    • HR: ARI – L. Gurriel, C. Carroll 2 (5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    •  

      5.2 IP, 2 ER, 2 BB, 8 SO, 98 P

    •  

      2-4, 3 R, 3 RBI, 2 HR, BB, 2 SO

    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    I. Vargas 2B 5 1 1 1 .333
    C. Carroll RF 4 3 2 3 .278
    G. Perdomo SS 4 1 2 0 .226
    N. Arenado 3B 4 0 1 1 .273
    L. Gurriel LF 5 1 2 2 .228
    J. Barrosa CF 0 0 0 0 .192
    A. Del Castillo DH 5 0 0 0 .185
    G. Moreno C 4 2 3 0 .253
    J. Fernandez 1B 3 0 1 1 .275
    R. Waldschmidt CF-LF 4 0 0 0 .241
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    E. Julien 2B 5 0 0 0 .227
    M. Moniak LF 4 0 0 0 .298
    H. Goodman DH 4 1 1 0 .253
    T. Rumfield 1B 3 2 1 0 .275
    T. Johnston RF 4 2 2 1 .321
    W. Castro SS 3 0 1 2 .236
    J. McCarthy CF 4 1 2 1 .300
    K. Karros 3B 4 0 2 1 .231
    B. Sullivan C 3 0 0 1 .203
    BATTING
    • 2B – G. Perdomo (7)
    • HR – C. Carroll 2 (7), L. Gurriel
    • SH – J. Fernandez
    • RBI – I. Vargas (31), C. Carroll 3 (24), N. Arenado (21), L. Gurriel 2 (9), J. Fernandez (14)
    • 2-Out RBI – I. Vargas, C. Carroll 2 (2), N. Arenado, L. Gurriel, J. Fernandez
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – N. Arenado, L. Gurriel, A. Del Castillo, R. Waldschmidt
    BATTING
    • 2B – T. Rumfield (8), T. Johnston (13), W. Castro (6)
    • SF – W. Castro, B. Sullivan
    • RBI – T. Johnston (21), W. Castro 2 (15), J. McCarthy (18), K. Karros (11), B. Sullivan (8)
    • 2-Out RBI – T. Johnston, W. Castro
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – H. Goodman, J. McCarthy, K. Karros
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – G. Moreno (2), J. Fernandez (5)
    • CS – N. Arenado
    FIELDING
    • E – R. Waldschmidt
    FIELDING
    • E – E. Julien (4), W. Castro (3), B. Sullivan (2)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    M. Soroka(W, 6-2) 5.2 6 2 2 8 3.49
    R. Thompson 0.1 0 0 0 0 3.00
    J. Morillo 1.0 0 0 0 0 1.83
    B. Pfaadt 0.1 2 4 1 0 6.34
    T. Clarke(H, 9) 0.2 1 0 0 0 2.18
    P. Sewald(S, 10) 1.0 0 0 1 0 4.41
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    M. Lorenzen(L, 2-6) 4.2 9 6 3 5 7.03
    B. Castano 2.1 2 1 1 3 3.86
    S. Halvorsen 1.0 1 0 0 2 1.50
    V. Vodnik 1.0 0 0 0 1 6.50
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – M. Soroka 98-67, R. Thompson 3-1, J. Morillo 4-4, B. Pfaadt 16-7, T. Clarke 7-4, P. Sewald 16-11
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – M. Soroka 3-4, R. Thompson 1-0, J. Morillo 2-0, B. Pfaadt 1-0, T. Clarke 1-0, P. Sewald 0-2
    • Batters Faced – M. Soroka 25, R. Thompson, J. Morillo 3, B. Pfaadt 5, T. Clarke 3, P. Sewald 4
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – M. Lorenzen 101-59, B. Castano 45-31, S. Halvorsen 14-10, V. Vodnik 11-7
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – M. Lorenzen 7-5, B. Castano 3-3, S. Halvorsen 1-0, V. Vodnik 1-0
    • Batters Faced – M. Lorenzen 26, B. Castano 10, S. Halvorsen 4, V. Vodnik 3
  • Dbacks recap and news

    • Diamondbacks’ Eduardo Rodriguez: Tagged with first loss

      Rodriguez (4-1) took the loss Saturday, giving up three runs on nine hits over 5.1 innings as the Diamondbacks fell 4-2 to the Rockies. He struck out six without walking a batter.

      The veteran southpaw didn’t pitch poorly, especially considering the game was at Coors Field, but Colorado ambushed Rodriguez for three runs in the first two frames and Arizona was never able to climb out of that hole. Rodriguez was lifted after 91 pitches (68 strikes), and he’ll take a 2.53 ERA, 1.26 WHIP and 39:22 K:BB through 53.1 innings into his next outing, which is set to come at home next week in a rematch with the Rockies.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: Day off Saturday

      Moreno isn’t in the lineup for Saturday’s game against the Rockies.

      Moreno will get a chance to catch his breath after going 2-for-5 with three RBI and a run scored during a win in Friday’s series opener. James McCann will handle catching duties and bat eighth.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: Plates three runs Friday

      Moreno went 2-for-5 with a double, three RBI and a run scored in Friday’s win over the Rockies.

      Moreno kicked things off with a two-run single in the top of the first inning and later added an RBI double in the seventh. This was Moreno’s second consecutive game with multiple hits, and he’s beginning to show signs of ending his slump. Moreno has hit just .179 with a .522 OPS, a homer, seven RBI and 13 strikeouts across 39 at-bats this month.

    • Diamondbacks’ Merrill Kelly: Tosses complete game

      Kelly (3-3) tossed a complete game in Friday’s win over the Rockies, allowing one run on four hits while striking out three without a walk over nine innings.

      Kelly needed 100 pitches to record 27 outs Friday, and while he didn’t overpower hitters, he looked in control all game long. He had outstanding run support, as the Diamondbacks erupted for six runs in the first inning and never looked back. Kelly has won his last two starts, posting a 9:3 K:BB while allowing two runs across 16 innings in that stretch. Kelly will try to extend his run of good results in his next start, scheduled for next week at home against the Giants.

  • Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano results: ‘Rowdy’ secures quick submission win in return to MMA

    Rousey followed the method that defined her entire career as a superstar in Strikeforce and UFC, finding an arm and taking it home in a heartbeat.

    Rousey came out, secured a takedown and quickly ended up in mount. Rousey then threw a few punches before locking in an armbar and forcing Carano to tap out at the 17-second mark of Round 1.

    Carano was fighting for the first time since her TKO loss to Cris Cyborg in 2009, while Rousey was fighting for the first time in a decade after back-to-back knockout losses to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes. As expected, the more complete fighter was able to pick up the win.

    The submission marked Rousey’s ninth career victory in less than one minute.

    “Gina is the person who brought me into MMA and the only person who could have brought me back into MMA,” Rousey said after the fight. “… You changed my world and we changed the world. I mean, I was hoping to come out as unscathed as possible because I didn’t really want to hurt her. Luckily, it was just beautiful martial arts, that’s what I think that efficiency is.”

    Rousey shut down the idea of coming back for another fight after her victory.

    “There’s no way I could have ended it better than this,” Rousey said. “I want to have some more babies, and I’ve got to get cooking.”

    Carano seemed less interested in calling it a career, saying she wished she’d been matched against a striker, rather than a former Olympic medalist in judo.

    “I wanted that to last longer,” Carano said. “I felt like I was so ready, I felt so good … I wanted to hit her. Getting in the cage was a victory.”

    CBS Sports was with you throughout the night with live updates, results and round-by-round scoring of MVP MMA 1 from Los Angeles below.

    Rousey vs. Carano fight card, results

    • Ronda Rousey def. Gina Carano via first-round submission (armbar)
    • Mike Perry def. Nate Diaz via second-round TKO (corner stoppage)
    • Francis Ngannou def. Philipe Lins via first-round knockout (punch)
    • Salahdine Parnasse def. Kenneth Cross via first-round TKO (punches)
    • Robelis Despaigne def. Junior dos Santos via first-round knockout (punches)
  • 2026 PGA Championship picks, odds: Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm among nine who can catch leader Alex Smalley

    rory-mcilroy-jon-rahm-pga-g.jpg

    Getty Images

    NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — If it felt like one big game of hot potato on Saturday at the 2026 PGA Championship, that’s because it was exactly that. Moving Day consisted of movement from every corner of Aronimink Golf Course, but ultimately, not where it mattered most as 36-hole leader Alex Smalley went from sharing the advantage to owning it outright after an impressive 2-under 68 moved him to 6 under for the the championship and two strokes clear of Ludvig Åberg, Matti Schmid, Nick Taylor, Aaron Rai and Jon Rahm, not to mention a whole lot of other players not far behind.

    “I obviously dreamed of this as a kid, and it’s funny, it’s the Wanamaker Trophy, and when I was in college, I stayed in the Wanamaker dorm for three years,” Smalley said. “So, my parents and I have been joking that maybe this would be a tournament that I would win just because of that kind of fact. That’s just kind of something that we’ve joked about even before I made it out here.

    “It would be pretty cool to actually pull it out tomorrow.”

    The lead bounced around with the roars from the Philadelphia faithful. Each new echo brought news that a birdie was made, while every groan sent a message that an opportunity was missed. Leaderboard watching did players no favors, as a glance up at the bright white lights would read one name in one moment and another just mere seconds later.

    In total, 13 different players held the lead at one point on Saturday. It ranged from Chris Kirk, who had an opportunity to shoot 62 before a four-putt double bogey on the last, to Rory McIlroy, who has climbed back from the depths of despair with rounds of 67-66 his last two days.

    McIlroy’s march back to the first page of the leaderboard started from four strokes on the other side of par. If he were to summit the long walk up the 18th hole at this Donald Ross design, he would be the first since Jordan Spieth in 2015 to take the season slam into the third major championship of the year. Already having six major championships and the career grand slam makes him eternal already, but add another, and the legend will only grow.

    “If I had to play the last three holes at 1 under instead of 1 over, I would have got to 5 [under],” McIlroy said. “And I sort of thought if I could go out today and get to that, it would make the leaders shoot under par to either be with me or ahead of me. So, I didn’t get there. I made, I guess, a couple of mistakes the last three holes. I feel like I still did enough to think I have a chance going into tomorrow.”

    Someone hoping to follow in McIlroy’s career grand slam footsteps is Rahm, who was one of those 13 players to top the leaderboard in Round 3. He strutted up the last with the lead in hand before a three-putt from 31 feet saw him fall out of the logjam at the top. If the Spaniard ultimately reigns supreme, it would make three straight major championships — Spieth this week, Scottie Scheffler at the U.S. Open and Rahm at The Open — where the grand slam is in play.

    Speaking of Scheffler … is he too far back? The deficit reads five after Smalley’s clutch birdie on the 18th hole late Saturday evening gave the smooth-swinging right-hander even more space to operate. While the margin is crucial for Scheffler, the number of players in between him and the top is equally important, as he sits in a tie for 23rd at 1 under.

    A player familiar with winning this tournament and doing so with a birdie on the last, Xander Schauffele remains firmly in this conversation as he matched McIlroy’s 66 earlier in the day to stand alongside the Masters champion at 3 under. He gains confidence by the swing, and he understands that, although he may have a late tee time, that may not mean he will be the last man standing.

    “Just the way the course plays,” Schauffele said. “I mean, someone early goes and shoots something 6, 7 under, they might just have a chance to win the whole thing, depending on how windy it gets out there.”

    Those are just a handful of players who could possibly win the PGA Championship on Sunday. There are a handful more, and even that may not be doing it justice. Regardless, it’s time to trim down the list, and although 54 holes may not have brought a definitive answer, these next 18 most certainly will.

    Who can catch the leader and win the Wanamaker?

    Odds via DraftKings

    T2. Jon Rahm (-4)

    Rahm is the favorite on the odds board as an inexperienced Smalley (who has never won on the PGA Tour) and three others at 4 under do not hold a candle to his résumé. The Spaniard had the putter rolling on the front nine on Saturday before it wobbled a bit coming home. Still, he hit 15 greens in regulation and should a similar diet materialize on Sunday, he will be a difficult man to beat. Rahm has that look in his eye, but there have been some late hiccups in recent big moments like last year’s PGA Championship, where he failed to birdie key holes before the Green Mile. Let’s see if the experience pays off. Odds: 9/2

    T2. Ludvig Åberg (-4)

    The best player from tee to green this week has been none other than Åberg. The Swedish superstar has the ball on a string, but unfortunately, it has wavered off line one too many times on the greens to get him any closer to the lead. The robotic right-hander’s talent is undeniable. The suggestions that he could win multiple major championships are as real as day. The results, however, have not been as Sunday struggles have been the headline of his 2026 season. But that can change quickly in a big way if he keeps his wits about himself and slows things down when the heat rises in the final round. Odds: 6-1

    T7. Rory McIlroy (-3)

    McIlroy now has 25 major rounds of 66 or lower in his career, falling only behind Tiger Woods (28) in that achievement. McIlroy may need something similar on Sunday, as a round that low would ensure that Smalley would have to break par in order to fend off the man who sat outside the top 100 following Thursday’s play. He continues to play aggressively off the tee, missing in the correct spots, but the scary sight for others is how he has putted his last 36 holes. There will be key 8-foot looks at some point Sunday, and on greens that everyone looks uncomfortable on, McIlroy looks at ease. Odds: 15/2

    T7. Xander Schauffele (-3)

    Schauffele is a cockroach in the best way imaginable. When everything gets blown up and bogeys are being made and clubs are being thrown, Schauffele slithers his way into contending for another major championship. At the onset of the week, the 2024 PGA champion was lacking a bit of confidence, but he has talked himself up, and his game has responded. He looked like the Schauffele of two years ago on the greens as he made seven key putts from the 5-15 foot range in Round 3. If more of those par looks are for birdie instead on Sunday, he could become the latest multiple-time PGA winner. Odds: 13-1

    T23. Scottie Scheffler (-1)

    Scheffler missed six putts from inside 10 feet in Round 3 with most of those coming closer to 5 feet. As such, the world No. 1 has dug himself a hole, as anything under par on Saturday when the field scoring average was perfectly par at 70.00 would have been enough to make him the threat to Smalley. Instead, he is just one among them. Scheffler is driving it well, which has opened up his iron play to occasionally shine, but he will have to balance patience and aggression in the final round like a tight-rope act. Odds: 17-1

    T7. Patrick Reed (-3)

    Reed genuinely loves this type of golf. No Trackman data, no mechanical overload — just stick a peg in the ground, find a feel and try to get the ball in the hole as fast as possible. Reed was cycling through a few swing feels early in the week, and he has since settled on a potential winner as he eyes his second major win. The American has hit only 18 fairways this week and is still ranked inside the top five in approach play. If Reed were to win, one would have to imagine it would be because the driver gave the rest of his game a chance to shine. Odds: 19-1

    T11. Chris Gotterup (-2)

    Gotterup touched the lead with a birdie on the par-5 9th and then slowly went in the wrong direction on the back nine. He missed the fairway on No. 10, leading to bogey, missed the green long and left on No. 11, leading to bogey, and missed another green on No. 17, leading to … you guessed it … bogey. He missed a number of scoring chances in between the squares, but he kept his composure like a champion. After hitting seven greens on the front nine, Gotterup hit just two on the back. The iron play will need to remain steady if he is to threaten. Odds: 38-1

    T11. Justin Rose (-2)

    Rose was the pace setter with nine holes to go at Augusta National, and now, he is in the middle of the pack with 18 holes to go at the PGA Championship. His six birdies on Saturday all came from inside 12 feet, showing just how dialed in his new McLaren irons were. Those clubs were easy to blame for a sluggish couple of weeks, but Rose was adamant that it was his swing and not his equipment that was out of whack. After hitting seven fairways the first two days, he split 10 in Round 3. He will need to do that again. Odds: 40-1

    T11. Joaquin Niemann (-2)

    There is a lot of potential that could be fulfilled on this leaderboard, and Niemann certainly falls in that camp. A player who was labeled as the best in the world this time last year by those on LIV Golf, the Chilean’s form has since fallen off, but his talent remains the same. He has been striking it beautifully all week and has the firepower to play chase, as noted by his back-to-back 3s on Nos. 15-16 to play himself into this championship Sunday. Odds: 51-1