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  • Courtney Williams scores 30, Olivia Miles has 19 and the Lynx ease past the Mercury 111-77

    PHOENIX (AP) Courtney Williams scored 30 points on 13-of-20 shooting, Olivia Miles had 19 points and nine assists, and the Minnesota Lynx eased past the Phoenix Mercury 111-77 on Monday night.

    Minnesota jumped out to a 35-22 lead after the first quarter, began the second on an 11-4 run and ended the half with 67 points. It was the third-most points in any half of a road game in WNBA history.

    Williams made eight of her 10 shots in the first half for 19 points to help Minnesota build a 67-40 lead after shooting 75% from the field (27 of 36). Miles had 13 points and five assists by halftime and Natasha Howard added 11 points on 5-of-6 shooting.

    Minnesota led 88-56 after three.

    Antonia Delaere scored 13 points off the bench, Anastasiia Olairi Kosu added 12 and Howard finished with 11 for Minnesota (7-2). Miles has scored in double figures in all nine games to start the season, tying the longest streak in franchise history by a rookie with Seimone Augustus and Tonya Edwards

    Kahleah Copper led Phoenix (2-8) with 18 points. Noemie Brochant added 11 and Monique Akoa Makani 10. Natasha Mack had 11 rebounds.

    Phoenix was 23 of 27 at the free-throw line and 22 of 64 (34%) from the floor.

    Minnesota begins a three-game homestand on Thursday against Golden State.

    Phoenix starts a four-game trip at Seattle on Wednesday.

    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

    Lynx 7-2

    35 32 21 23 111

    Mercury 2-8

    22 18 16 21 77
    TOP SCORERS
    10
    C. Williams G 30PTS 5REB 2AST
    2
    K. Copper G 18PTS 2REB 1AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    C. Williams 30 5 2 2
    O. Miles 19 4 9 4
    N. Howard 11 4 3 1
    N. Coffey 8 6 2 1
    K. McBride 7 0 5 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    A. Delaere 13 2 6 2
    A. Olairi Kosu 12 6 0 2
    T. McCowan 6 6 0 6
    M. Caldwell 5 2 0 2
    Total 111 35 27 22
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    K. Copper 18 2 1 1
    N. Brochant 11 2 0 0
    M. Akoa Makani 10 0 5 2
    A. Thomas 6 3 5 1
    N. Mack 4 11 1 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    J. Nogic 8 1 0 1
    K. Linskens 7 3 0 2
    S. Carter 6 0 2 0
    D. Bonner 2 1 0 0
    V. Ayayi 0 1 4 2
    Total 77 24 18 12
  • 2026 French Open results: Madison Keys’ loss ends hopes of American women’s winner at Roland-Garros

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    Getty Images

    Madison Keys entered fourth round action at Roland-Garros as the last American woman standing in the singles draw at the 2026 French Open, but a disastrous third set against Diana Shnaider (6-3, 3-6, 6-0) ended her dreams of capturing a second career grand slam title.

    Keys struggled with her serve to start the match, getting broken in her first three service games to lose the first set. She settled in and flipped the script in the second set, rattling off six consecutive service game wins to force a decisive third set where she seemingly grabbed the momentum of the match. However, the service issues reared their ugly head as she lost the final set at love as the wheels came off in a disappointing performance to end her visit to Roland-Garros.

    In a year where the favorites have been dropping like flies early in both draws, the 2026 French Open became a serious opportunity for players to pick up a rare grand slam title. The women’s draw saw four-time French Open winner Iga Swiatek, 2-seed Elena Rybakina and last year’s champion Coco Gauff all lose before the quarters — and top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka still has to face Naomi Osaka.

    That kind of chaos should have opened the door for one of the other top American women to possibly follow Gauff’s win last year with another victory in Paris. Instead, despite entering the tournament with seven seeded players, there isn’t a single American flag left in the bracket as the quarterfinals arrive.

    Jessica Pegula, fresh off two grand slam semifinal appearances, got bounced in the first round. Hailey Baptiste suffered a leg injury that forced her retirement in the second round. Frenchwoman Diane Parry knocked out both Ann Li and Amanda Anisimova in succession, while Iva Jovic joined Gauff and Anismimova in a third-round exit. That left Keys as the last hope, but she caught the service struggle bug that plagued a number of Americans over the past week at the worst time and will join them at home watching what has turned into one of the most wide open draws in recent memory.

    Aside from Sabalenka and Osaka, no one else remaining in the women’s draw has a grand slam title to their name — or even a grand slam final appearance. That means someone is going to post a career-best finish this week, and we could very well crown a first-time grand slam champion. Unfortunately for the large American contingent that arrived in Paris just over a week ago, none of them will be the ones to capitalize on the opportunity.

  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers23-38
    10 14 1
    Rays36-21
    9 8 0
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: T. Holton  (1-4)
    • L: G. Jax  (1-4)
    • S: W. Vest  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    D. Dingler DET C4-5, 4 R, 2 HR, 4 RBI
    player headshot
    R. Greene DET DH3-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins27-34
    7 10 1
    3 7 0
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: S. Alcantara  (4-4)
    • L: R. Lovelady  (2-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    S. Alcantara MIA P7.0 IP, 7 H, 3 ER, 5 SO
    player headshot
    C. Cavalli WAS P5.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 6 SO, 3 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals23-37
    9 13 0
    Reds30-29
    2 6 1
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: L. Avila  (1-2)
    • L: L. Richardson  (0-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    L. Avila KC P5.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 5 SO, 4 BB
    player headshot
    L. Thomas KC RF3-5, 2 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 11 0
    Twins28-33
    9 10 1
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: J. Ryan  (4-3)
    • L: D. Sandlin  (1-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
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    J. Ryan MIN P6.0 IP, 8 H, 4 ER, 9 SO
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    M. Vargas CHW 3B3-5, 2 R, 2 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants23-37
    2 5 1
    Brewers36-21
    16 18 0
    American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
    • W: C. Patrick  (3-2)
    • L: L. Roupp  (5-6)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    B. Turang MIL 2B2-2, 2 R, 2 RBI
    player headshot
    C. Patrick MIL P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rangers29-31
    2 8 1
    1 5 1
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: J. deGrom  (4-4)
    • L: M. McGreevy  (3-5)
    • S: J. Latz  (8)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
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    J. deGrom TEX P5.0 IP, 4 H, 8 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    J. Latz TEX P1.0 IP, 2 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rockies23-38
    9 10 4
    Angels23-38
    8 10 1
    Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, CA
    • W: A. Senzatela  (5-0)
    • L: K. Yates  (0-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. McCarthy COL CF2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    player headshot
    J. Siri LAA LF1-5, 1 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Dodgers38-22
    1 6 0
    4 5 0
    Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
    • W: T. Clarke  (2-1)
    • L: E. Sheehan  (3-2)
    • S: P. Sewald  (15)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. Rodriguez ARI P6.0 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 3 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    E. Sheehan LAD P6.1 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 3 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Mets26-33
    2 2 0
    3 4 0
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    • W: G. Speier  (1-2)
    • L: A. Minter  (0-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. Hancock SEA P6.0 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 7 SO
    player headshot
    S. Manaea NYM P5.0 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 4 SO, 1 BB
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  • Marte and Arenado hit clutch homers to lift the Diamondbacks over the Dodgers 4-1

    PHOENIX (AP) Ketel Marte launched a two-run homer, Nolan Arenado and rookie Tommy Troy hit solo shots and the Arizona Diamondbacks rallied for a 4-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday night.

    The Dodgers lost for just the fourth time in 18 games. Shohei Ohtani had a three-hit night and has 10 hits over his last five games.

    Arenado gave the D-backs a 2-1 lead in the seventh inning, hammering his eighth homer of the season to left-center. Marte tacked on his two-out, no-doubt homer in the eighth to give Arizona some welcome insurance.

    It was Marte’s 10th longball of the year. Paul Sewald worked the ninth for his 15th save in 16 opportunities after Taylor Clarke (2-1) pitched a scoreless seventh for the win.

    Eduardo Rodríguez contined his stellar season for Arizona with six innings of one-run ball. The lefty gave up five hits and a walk, striking out three, and has a 2.24 ERA through 12 starts.

    Dodgers right-hander Emmet Sheehan (3-2) allowed two runs and three hits over 6 1/3 innings, striking out three. It was his third quality start in his last four outings, though it ended in rough fashion.

    The 26-year-old gave up a double to Corbin Carroll in the first inning before retiring his next 15 batters. The streak ended in the sixth when Troy hit his first big league homer to left field, tying it 1-all. Arenado followed with his homer in the seventh, sending Dodgers manager Dave Roberts to the bullpen.

    Ohtani doubled leading off the third and scored on Freddie Freeman’s groundout to give the Dodgers a 1-0 lead.

    It was the D-backs’ first win this season over the Dodgers, who swept a three-game series in Los Angeles to start the year.

    The Diamondbacks send RHP Michael Soroka (7-2, 3.25 ERA) to the mound Tuesday night while the Dodgers counter with LHP Eric Lauer (2-5, 5.95).

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/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
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    Prop Bet Guy
    Prop Bet GuyDoug
    #2
    +587 (88%)
    Last 8 MLB Player Props
    Under 16.5-113
    Emmet Sheehan • Outs Recorded • Player Prop
    Picked Jun 1 @ 9:51 am, 1 unit on Caesars
    LOSS
    Caesar’s. Emmet Sheehan has remained under this outs line in 5/10 starts this season. However, he’s struggled on the road, where he’s pitched to a 6.52 ERA, staying under this outs line in 3/4 outings. He’ll face the Diamondbacks lineup that’s in the top ten of pitches per plate per plate appearance against right handed pitching. Arizona should also start five lefty hitters today, which is Sheehan’s worse split (.869 OPS allowed).

    Prop’s Pick

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

    38-22

    0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 0
    0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 X 4 5 0
    • W: T. Clarke (2-1)L: E. Sheehan (3-2)S: P. Sewald (15)
    • HR: ARI – T. Troy (1), K. Marte (10), N. Arenado (8)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    S. Ohtani DH 4 1 3 0 .289
    A. Pages CF 4 0 1 0 .293
    F. Freeman 1B 4 0 0 1 .266
    M. Betts SS 4 0 1 0 .196
    K. Tucker RF 3 0 0 0 .238
    W. Smith C 4 0 0 0 .250
    M. Muncy 3B 3 0 0 0 .253
    M. Rojas 2B 2 0 1 0 .261
    a- A. Freeland PH-2B 1 0 0 0 .234
    A. Call LF 3 0 0 0 .290
    • a-struck out for Rojas in the 7th
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 4 1 1 2 .262
    C. Carroll RF 4 0 1 0 .286
    G. Perdomo SS 3 0 0 0 .221
    N. Arenado 3B 3 1 1 1 .270
    P. Smith DH 2 0 0 0 .125
    a- J. Fernandez PH-DH 1 0 0 0 .256
    G. Moreno C 3 0 0 0 .258
    I. Vargas 1B 3 0 0 0 .291
    J. Barrosa CF 3 0 0 0 .170
    T. Troy LF 3 2 2 1 .318
    R. Waldschmidt LF 0 0 0 0 .284
    • a-struck out for Smith in the 7th
    BATTING
    • 2B – S. Ohtani (13), A. Pages (14)
    • RBI – F. Freeman (30)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Tucker, A. Call 2 (2)
    BATTING
    • 2B – C. Carroll (14)
    • HR – K. Marte (10), N. Arenado (8), T. Troy
    • RBI – K. Marte 2 (35), N. Arenado (28), T. Troy
    • 2-Out RBI – K. Marte 2 (2)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – N. Arenado
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Vargas-Perdomo)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Sheehan(L, 3-2) 6.1 3 2 0 3 4.50
    A. Vesia 0.2 0 0 0 1 2.21
    J. Dreyer 1.0 2 2 0 0 2.78
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Rodriguez 6.0 5 1 1 3 2.24
    T. Clarke(W, 2-1) 1.0 0 0 0 2 1.80
    B. Garcia(H, 5) 1.0 1 0 0 0 0.75
    P. Sewald(S, 15) 1.0 0 0 0 0 3.63
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Sheehan 92-58, A. Vesia 9-7, J. Dreyer 12-11
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Sheehan 5-7, A. Vesia 1-0, J. Dreyer 2-0
    • Batters Faced – E. Sheehan 22, A. Vesia 2, J. Dreyer 5
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Rodriguez 96-62, T. Clarke 10-8, B. Garcia 9-6, P. Sewald 13-9
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Rodriguez 8-5, T. Clarke 0-1, B. Garcia 2-1, P. Sewald 2-1
    • Batters Faced – E. Rodriguez 24, T. Clarke 3, B. Garcia 3, P. Sewald 3
  • Knicks vs. Spurs predictions: NBA Finals expert picks as Victor Wembanyama leads the favorites

    wemby-kat-imagn.png

    Imagn Images

    The 2026 NBA Finals have arrived, and it’s the San Antonio Spurs vs. the New York Knicks for the Larry O’Brien Trophy. The Knicks, thanks to an impressive 11-game postseason winning streak, are in their first Finals since 1999. The team they faced that year? The Spurs, who won their first of five titles 27 years ago.

    Victor Wembanyama has led San Antonio back to the Finals for the first time since 2014 as the franchise tries to capture a sixth championship. The Spurs took down the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals on Saturday night, and they’ll host Game 1 of the Finals on Wednesday night. The Knicks, meanwhile, haven’t played since last Monday and have played just four times since May 11.

    With Wemby and home-court advantage, the Spurs are favored in this series (-205 at FanDuel). But who are our experts picking to win it all? We’re making our picks below.

    2026 NBA Finals: Knicks vs. Spurs predictions

    player headshot

    Brad Botkin

    player headshot

    John Gonzalez

    player headshot

    Jack Maloney

    player headshot

    Sam Quinn

    player headshot

    Cameron Salerno

    Botkin: Spurs in 7. This is going to be a great series. The Knicks absolutely belong in the league’s upper crust with San Antonio and OKC. They are uniquely equipped to combat Victor Wembanyama on both ends, with a brick of a defender in OG Anunoby who can get low leverage and fight Wemby off his spots, and Mitchell Robinson (assuming he plays) as a physical seven-footer who will challenge Wemby to finish at the rim and also force him to work his butt off to grab rebounds. Offensively, Karl-Anthony Towns can pull Wemby out of the paint if that’s the matchup, but Josh Hart will likely be the guy Wemby takes to start so he can ignore him and roam as a paint protector as the Spurs did with Alex Caruso. If Wemby takes Hart and the Knicks make them pay by making open 3s, then Wemby has to come out of the paint or switch to covering Towns. If Hart isn’t making his 3s, the Knicks have options to bench Hart and play five out.

    The Spurs are loaded with physical wings who can shoot. So are the Knicks. The Spurs force you into a ton of jump shots with Wemby as a back-line protector. The Knicks are a great shooting team. The Spurs win with depth. The Knicks are just as deep. Jalen Brunson can pull up for 3 comfortably if Wemby is dropping to cut off penetration. It sounds like I’d be picking the Knicks, right?

    Wrong. I won’t be surprised if they win. But in the end, I’m going with the same rationale that led me to pick San Antonio to win it all at the start of the playoffs. Wembanyama is the biggest difference-maker in the game today. The Knicks can shoot, yes, but they also do a lot of damage in the paint, and Wemby basically shuts that option off. The Spurs will win in 7. It will be a war.

    Gonzalez: Spurs in 6. Adam Silver has to be thrilled about this matchup. Victor Wembanyama and a young, ascendant Spurs team that’s well ahead of schedule against the New York Knicks, with that fan base and that arena, in a rematch of the 1999 Finals. Should make for blockbuster ratings. The Knicks are on an epic 11-game winning streak featuring easily the largest point differential in NBA history over that span (regular season or playoffs), and they’ve once again had plenty of time to rest between series. They’ll be fresh and confident. But for as well as they’ve played, they haven’t faced the kind of competition they’re up against next. Rolling the Hawks, Sixers and Cavs is altogether different from facing down Wemby and San Antonio’s big, athletic guards and wings. The Knicks also won’t have home-court advantage this time around, as they did for the last three series. All that adds up to another title for the Spurs and a new disappointment for the Bing Bong crowd.

    Maloney: Spurs in 7. The Knicks have been a buzzsaw in the playoffs. They haven’t lost since April 23, they have the best offensive rating (123.3), defensive rating (103.5) and net rating (plus-19.8) among playoff teams and their consecutive sweeps of the Sixers and Cavaliers have earned them a significant amount of rest. Beating teams as thoroughly as they have in the playoffs — they have four 30-point wins and 11 of their 12 victories have been by double digits — means something regardless of the level of competition.

    However, the Knicks haven’t played a team as good as the Spurs, particularly on the defensive end. During the regular season, the Hawks were 10th in the league in defensive rating, the Cavaliers were 15th and the Sixers were 17th. The Spurs, with Victor Wembanyama leading the way, were third, and they rank second in postseason defensive rating (104.4).

    Wembanyama’s presence changes how teams have to play on offense. He eliminates easy baskets in the paint, where the Knicks have been dominant in the postseason. The Knicks lead all playoff teams in shots per game in the restricted area (29.6) and are shooting 68.1% when they get there. They’re also first among playoff teams in points in the paint per game (53.3) and fifth in free-throw rate (0.307). They won’t have that level of success against the Spurs, and this series may come down to whether the Knicks can continue to shoot as well from 3-point range as they have in the first three rounds (40%).

    The Knicks have so much offensive talent and depth, and have been so connected on both ends of the floor that they might just keep rolling, regardless of the Spurs’ defensive prowess. But Mitchell Robinson’s status is up in the air, the Spurs have home-court advantage and betting against Wembanyama just feels foolish at this point

    Quinn: Knicks in 7. Over an 82-game season, the Spurs are probably better than the Knicks. All things considered, though, this is a nightmare matchup for San Antonio. There might not be a better pair of defenders to throw at Victor Wembanyama in all of basketball than OG Anunoby and Mitchell Robinson. One long, mobile wing who doesn’t sacrifice strength. One ultra-physical big to wear him down across seven games (again, assuming Robinson can play). Speaking of getting worn down, when the Finals begin, the Knicks will have played four games in 24 days. The Spurs are coming off of a seven-game war with Oklahoma City. De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper are already playing at less than 100%. The longer this series goes, the better for New York.

    San Antonio hasn’t faced a true five-out opponent yet. The first battleground of this series will be Josh Hart’s shooting. The Spurs will no doubt start things off with Wembanyama guarding Hart and daring him to shoot. They did that against the Thunder and Alex Caruso made half of his 3s. Josh Hart has made over 43% of his wide-open 3s this season. If he misses, the Knicks can go to the look that swung Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, with Landry Shamet in his place. Wembanyama is perhaps the greatest rim-protector in NBA history. Get him in space, and he’s mortal. Jalen Brunson is a more comfortable pull-up 3-point shooter than Shai GIlgeous-Alexander. The Knicks have the weapons to drag him away from the basket. If Wembanyama is guarding Hart, the Spurs have no obvious defender for Karl-Anthony Towns. If Wembanyama is on Towns, then Towns pulls him completely away from the rim.

    The Knicks won the season series here, 2-1. More importantly, they went +16 in the Wembanyama minutes. No team has vexed the Spurs quite like the Knicks this season. San Antonio has grown over the course of the season. This series will be close. But who do you trust at the end of close games: the team built around players in their early 20s, or the team with Jalen Brunson? This could go either way. I’m leaning toward the Knicks.

    Salerno: Spurs in 7. I’m very tempted to take the Knicks here for a few reasons, but the most important one is the rest factor. The Knicks have cruised through the last two rounds of the playoffs and will face a Spurs team coming off a hard-fought seven-game series against the reigning champs. Still, after picking against San Antonio in the West semifinals and conference finals, I will go with the Spurs. The way San Antonio defended Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was impressive. The key to this series for San Antonio is defending Jalen Brunson. If the Spurs can do that effectively, they will be the final team standing.

  • Ole Miss 5 ASU 4 Final 10 ASU eliminated Boxscore

     

    ARIZONA ST.(39-20-0)

    OLE MISS(38-21-0)

    4 BOTTOM 10TH  ESPN+ 5

     

     

    00:00/00:00

     

    TOP SEED UCLA ELIMINATED BY SAINT MARY’S EXTRA-INNINGS WALK-OFF | FULL FINISH
    VIDEO

    Top seed UCLA ELIMINATED by Saint Mary’s extra-innings walk-off | FULL FINISH

    2026 DI Baseball Championship (Men’s College World Series) – Regionals

    BSO
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E
    1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 7 0
    0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 5 7 1
    Arizona St.
    Ole Miss
    BATTER POS AB R H RBI BB SO AVG OBP
    55 Dean Toigo RF 5 1 2 3 0 0 .321 .392
    6 Nu’u Contrades 2B 2 0 0 0 3 1 .366 .422
    23 Dominic Longo CF 4 0 0 0 0 2 .246 .344
    25 Dominic Smaldino 1B 4 0 0 0 1 2 .329 .380
    24 Austen Roellig 3B 5 0 1 0 0 2 .313 .397
    4 Matt Polk DH 5 0 1 0 0 1 .333 .363
    17 Ky McGary LF 5 1 2 0 0 1 .297 .422
    9 Brody Briggs C 4 1 1 0 1 1 .238 .374
    10 PJ Moutzouridis SS 3 1 0 0 2 1 .286 .388
    Total 37 4 7 3 7 11

    H:

    • Toigo 1 (20)

    RBI:

    • Toigo 3 (59)
    PITCHER POS IP H R ER BB SO BF ERA
    31 Colin Linder P 2.0 4 3 3 3 2 14 5.4
    20 Derek Schaefer P 0.2 1 1 1 1 1 4 5.9
    38 Sean Fitzpatrick P 1.1 1 1 1 2 2 7 3.1
    15 Alex Overbay P 3.1 1 0 0 3 5 13 5.8
    22 Eli Buxton P 2.1 0 0 0 1 3 8 9.9
    Total 9.2 7 5 5 10 13 46
    • Schaefer 14 (9 strikes)
    • Linder 56 (27 strikes)
    • Fitzpatrick 31 (17 strikes)
    • Overbay 58 (32 strikes)
    • Buxton 37 (21 strikes)

     

  • Bats stay hot as Baseball advances to Lincoln Regional final, knocking off host Nebraska

    Dominic Smaldino hit two home runs, including a grand slam, to help the Sun Devils take the victory and move on to Sunday evening’s game.

    Bats stay hot as Baseball advances to Lincoln Regional final, knocking off host Nebraska

    Dominic Smaldino hit two home runs, including a grand slam, to help the Sun Devils take the victory and move on to Sunday evening’s game.

    LINCOLN, Neb. – No. 22 Sun Devil Baseball kept the bats hot while staving off a frantic rally as it advanced to the final of the Lincoln Regional, knocking off host and No. 13 national seed Nebraska in an 11-8 elimination game victory on Sunday afternoon at Haymarket Park. 

    Colby Guy gave the Sun Devils (39-20) his longest outing since 2024, going 6.0 innings in the start and allowing just one run on four hits as he absolutely stymied the Nebraska (43-17) offense with seven strikeouts and no walks. Derek Schaefer earned his ninth save of the season

    Dominic Smaldino homered twice, including a massive grand slam in the sixth inning that gave ASU an 11-1 lead – of which ASU would need every bit of after the Huskers would rally to bring the tying run to the plate in the ninth. 

    Nu’u Contrades recorded his fourth home run of the regional and Dominic Longo also recorded a two-run shot as the Sun Devils were able to overcome the emotional ejection of standout Landon Hairston in the fourth inning with eight other players combining for the team’s 13 hits. 

    With the victory, the Sun Devils advanced to a NCAA Regional final for the first time since 2016. The Sun Devils will take on the regionals’ No. 2 seed Ole Miss after dropping a 14-inning heartbreaker to the Rebels on Friday night. The Sun Devils will need to defeat Ole Miss twice to advance to the Super Regional round.  

    Turning point
    The Sun Devils were gifted the turning point in Sunday afternoon’s game in the third inning. After the Huskers tied the game at 1-1 with a solo shot in the top of the third, ASU looked to have hit into an inning-ending double play in the bottom of the inning. Instead, the Nebraska second baseman sailed the throw to second and everyone was safe while ASU plated the go-ahead run in the process. Not content, a Dominic Smaldino sac fly made it 3-1 before Dominic Longo opened the game up with a tower blast over the berm in left field, a two-run shot that made it 5-1. 

    Big moment
    Emotions were running high in the fourth inning following a Landon Hairston ejection that electrified the home Husker crowd and could have proved to be a pivotal turning point in the contest. There was a palpable buzz with ASU’s star player escorted from the stadium, a long trip that delayed the start of the fifth inning. Colby Guy was absolutely unaffected by the drama, working around a one-out single to quietly retire the Husker side of the order after the theatrics and keeping the game 5-1. 

    Ky McGary, called into action in left field in Hairston’s stead, got a huge sixth inning rally started with his one-out double and ASU loaded the bases on Contrades’ intentional walk. Toigo recorded a soft dribbler to the first baseman, avoided the tag running down the line and Nebraska was too slow in getting the out at home on the fielder’s choice as ASU made it 7-1 and then Smaldino immediately blew the game open with ASU’s third grand slam of the weekend and 12th of the season – another opposite field shot that made it a 11-1 game. 

    Final straw
    As has been the case throughout the season, nothing was going to come easy in the latter innings. The Sun Devils would need every bit of those 10 runs as Nebraska mounted a furious rally down the stretch, starting with answering the ASU five-spot with five runs of its own in the top of the seventh to get back within 11-6. After a scoreless eighth and a strikeout to start the top of the ninth, the Huskers continued the rally and found gaps across the park and the defense, scoring a run and loading the bases with one out to get within one swing of tying things. Derek Schaefer entered and the Sun Devils made the wise choice to take a much-needed out in foul territory, allowing the sac fly in the process to get to two outs and an 11-8 game. With the tying run still at the plate, Schaefer got a lineout to right to escape and earn his ninth save of the season in the process. 

    The big number
    6.0 –
     Colby Guy struck out a season-high seven batters in his start, pitching six innings for the first time this season. It was Guy’s longest outing since April 20, 2024 while he was at UNC Asheville (8 innings). Guy has started just two games for the Sun Devils this season before delivering the heroic outing to save the majority of the ASU bullpen in Saturday’s win-or-go-home outing. Guy did not walk any batters and allowed just one run on four hits.

  • Dbacks recap and news

    • Diamondbacks’ Merrill Kelly: Win streak ends with no-decision

      Kelly allowed two runs on eight hits, two walks and a hit batsman while striking out two over 5.1 innings in a no-decision Sunday versus the Mariners.

      Kelly’s strong pitching continued, but he wasn’t able to earn a fifth straight win. He’s allowed just nine runs over his last five starts spanning 34.1 innings with a 19:7 K:BB. The veteran right-hander is now at a 5.06 ERA, 1.46 WHIP and 33:22 K:BB through 53.1 innings across nine starts this season. Kelly is projected for a home start versus the Nationals in his next outing.

    • Diamondbacks’ Tommy Troy: Resting Sunday

      Troy is out of the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Mariners.

      Troy will hit the bench for the series finale while the Diamondbacks go with Tim Tawa in left field. The 24-year-old rookie had started in each of Arizona’s last six games, going 5-for-19 with two doubles and a 3:4 BB:K while scoring five runs.

    • Diamondbacks’ Adrian Del Castillo: Taking seat Sunday

      Del Castillo is out of the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Mariners.

      The Diamondbacks are giving Ketel Marte a day off from playing second base but keeping his bat in the lineup at designated hitter, so Del Castillo will be the odd man out of the starting nine as a result. Del Castillo had served as Arizona’s designated hitter for the past five games, going 4-for-14 with a home run, two walks, three RBI and an additional run during that stretch. The 26-year-old could soon be at risk of losing hold of his strong-side platoon role, however; Pavin Smith (elbow) is in the midst of a rehab assignment and could take over as the Diamondbacks’ primary DH if he’s activated from the 60-day injured list during the upcoming week.

  • 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge leaderboard, grades: Russell Henley rallies late, wins playoff over Eric Cole

    From out of nowhere to the winner’s circle, Russell Henley raced through the finish line Sunday at Colonial Country Club to capture his sixth career victory on the PGA Tour. Henley finished the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge at 12 under thanks to birdies on his final three holes in regulation, defeating 54-hole leader Eric Cole on the first playoff hole courtesy of another birdie to claim the trophy in Fort Worth, Texas.

    Henley found himself three strokes behind Cole when he stepped onto the 16th tee, and only then did he make his move. He converted birdie bids from 16 feet on No. 16, 16 feet on No. 17 and 18 feet on the par-4 finisher, which he played in 2 under in regulation throughout the course of the tournament.

    In the playoff, Henley once again found the fairway, once again found the green in regulation and once again converted his opportunity, only this time, it was to seal the deal and claim the crown.

    With the win, Henley jumps all the way up to No. 11 in the FedEx Cup standings. For just the second time in his PGA Tour career, Henley can say that he has won in back-to-back seasons, coupling this with his win at the 2025 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Henley has not accomplished such a feat since his rookie and sophomore campaigns back in 2013-14. He has captured three wins in the last four seasons as well.

    After firing a 7-under 63 on Saturday to position himself atop the leaderboard with 18 holes to play, Cole (and the rest of the field) experienced a difficult scoring day at Colonial as birdies proved few and far between. Henley looked like the man up to the challenge early as he opened his final round with an eagle and a birdie to pull within one stroke of Cole.

    The Horrible Horseshoe did him in as he followed up his start with three straight bogeys on Nos. 3-5. Henley exchanged a bogey on No. 9 for a birdie on No. 11 before biding his time.

    During this time, Cole maintained his lead at 12 under, while a run was made by reigning champion Ben Griffin. He turned in 5-under 30 and posted the clubhouse lead at 11 under, where Henley stood as he walked up the final hole.

    Henley’s birdie conversion on the par-4 finisher not only knocked out Griffin but set a date for extra holes with Cole, where on the first playoff hole, Henley picked up where he left off and, in doing so, completed a dramatic come-from-behind victory.
    Grade: A+

    Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge.

    2. Eric Cole (-12): It was almost a fairytale type story for Cole, who has played everywhere around the U.S., from the minor league circuits to the big leagues. Cole put on a great show this weekend and steadied the ship after a bad double bogey on the par-4 9th with a birdie on the par-5 11th to return to 12 under. He parred in from there, missing scoring chances on Nos. 17-18, which he ultimately needed. Grade: A

    T3. Ben Griffin (-11):  He was not at the forefront of minds for most of the week, but a Sunday surge put Griffin in a position to create history and join Ben Hogan as the only other player to successfully defend a title at Colonial. The three-time PGA Tour winner turned in 5 under and arrived at the par-5 11th with a chance to continue his momentum, but instead, slipped and carded his lone bogey of the afternoon. He bounced back with a 25-foot birdie bid on his penultimate hole, which was ultimately not enough. After a sluggish start to his year, Griffin is in gear for this summer with four top 15s in his last five tournaments. Grade: A

    T6. J.J. Spaun (-10): The reigning U.S. Open champion had more than his fair share of chances to take control of this tournament. He sandwiched two bogeys around the turn after a fast start saw him put three birdies on his scorecard across his first eight holes and touch the lead. Spaun’s putter proved to be the main culprit as he missed three putts from inside 8 feet on his back nine alone, leaving him a couple of strokes off the eventual winning number. His game remains in sturdy shape following his win in San Antonio, and once the putter turns around slightly, a second win in 2026 will come with it. Grade: A-

    T13. Justin Thomas (-8): It was a frustrating week for Thomas as he was simply brilliant from tee to green but could not find his stroke on the greens. Even with his new Scotty Cameron in the bag, which he has been wielding effectively in recent tournaments, Thomas’ week was upended by one too many scoring chances falling by the wayside. He played the par 5s in even par for the week, exchanging two birdies for two bogeys while manhandling the rest of the golf course. That is now four straight top-25 finishes for Thomas in his return from offseason back surgery. Grade: B+

    T17. Ludvig Åberg (-6): Got his tournament to 8 under with a birdie on his first hole on Sunday, but then the slow bleed began. Åberg was the name in this field at the onset of the week as he faced an ideal opportunity to get off the schneid and reenter the winner’s circle for the first time in over a year. His new putter was cooperating early and often, but during a week where missed greens in regulation became, well, regular, his short game was too unreliable to make a final-round run. The result marks another quality one amid a string of contention runs. Grade: C+

    MC. Rickie Fowler (–): After opening with a 70 on Thursday, Fowler looked to have found his stride Friday morning as he made four birdies in his first six holes to climb into red figures. Only then did he start going in the wrong direction as the former Players Championship winner closed with a 7-over 42, effectively ending his chances of grabbing his first win in a few years. The early exit may seem like a surprise given Fowler’s form this season, but it marks the third in his last seven tournaments. Grade: F

    Updates
    (42)

  • Charles Schwab Challenge Scores

    PLAYOFFS
    Hole 18 18 18 18 18
    Par 4 4 4 4 4
    USA
    Russell Henley 3
    USA
    Eric Cole 4
    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR EARNINGS R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    USA
    -12 $1,782,000 66* 66 69 67 271
    2
    USA
    -12 $1,079,100 67* 68 63 70 272
    T3
    USA
    -11 $524,700 68 68* 68 65 269
    T3
    USA
    -11 $524,700 65* 67 69 68 269
    T3
    USA
    -11 $524,700 66 67* 67 69 269
    T6
    USA
    -10 $322,988 65 69* 69 67 270
    T6
    USA
    -10 $322,988 67* 66 69 68 270
    T6
    COL
    -10 $322,988 66* 71 65 68 270
    T6
    USA
    -10 $322,988 64 68* 68 70 270
    T10
    USA
    -9 $249,975 68 69* 69 65 271
    T10
    CAN
    -9 $249,975 66* 67 69 69 271
    T10
    USA
    -9 $249,975 64* 67 68 72 271
    T13
    ENG
    -8 $193,875 65* 65 74 68 272
    T13
    USA
    -8 $193,875 69* 67 67 69 272
    T13
    JPN
    -8 $193,875 66* 65 70 71 272
    16
    USA
    -7 $170,775 66 65* 71 71 273
    T17
    PHL
    -6 $141,075 68 69* 71 66 274
    T17
    USA
    -6 $141,075 70 67* 69 68 274
    T17
    USA
    -6 $141,075 64* 70 70 70 274
    T17
    CAN
    -6 $141,075 70 63* 71 70 274
    T17
    SWE
    -6 $141,075 66 68* 69 71 274
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 66* 71 71 67 275
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 66* 66 74 69 275
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 71 66* 69 69 275
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 67* 68 70 70 275
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 71 67* 68 69 275
    T22
    USA
    -5 $92,400 65* 66 72 72 275
    T28
    USA
    -4 $69,300 70 68* 70 68 276
    T28
    JPN
    -4 $69,300 69 66* 71 70 276
    T28
    USA
    -4 $69,300 67 65* 71 73 276
    T28
    USA
    -4 $69,300 65 69* 69 73 276
    T32
    ZAF
    -3 $59,070 69 65* 75 68 277
    T32
    USA
    -3 $59,070 71* 67 72 67 277
    T32
    ZAF
    -3 $59,070 68* 68 67 74 277
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 69 67* 73 69 278
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 65* 69 73 71 278
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 67 70* 70 71 278
    T35
    TWN
    -2 $47,237 65 70* 72 71 278
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 69* 67 70 72 278
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 64* 71 70 73 278
    T35
    USA
    -2 $47,237 71 67* 67 73 278
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 68* 69 74 68 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 69 66* 75 69 279
    T42
    ARG
    -1 $29,766 70 66* 73 70 279
    T42
    FRA
    -1 $29,766 69* 67 72 71 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 65* 69 74 71 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 68* 69 71 71 279
    T42
    DNK
    -1 $29,766 65 69* 73 72 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 68* 68 71 72 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 68* 70 69 72 279
    T42
    SCO
    -1 $29,766 68* 68 70 73 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 65* 71 70 73 279
    T42
    USA
    -1 $29,766 68 68* 69 74 279
    T54
    IRL
    E $22,968 69* 69 74 68 280
    T54
    USA
    E $22,968 65 70* 77 68 280
    T54
    JPN
    E $22,968 69* 69 73 69 280
    T54
    USA
    E $22,968 70* 68 71 71 280
    T54
    USA
    E $22,968 69 65* 73 73 280
    T54
    KOR
    E $22,968 64* 72 70 74 280
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 68* 69 74 70 281
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 69 69* 73 70 281
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 70* 67 73 71 281
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 64* 71 75 71 281
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 67 70* 71 73 281
    T60
    USA
    +1 $21,780 69 68* 71 73 281
    66
    JPN
    +2 $21,087 66 68* 79 69 282
    T67
    DNK
    +3 $20,691 69* 67 80 67 283
    T67
    USA
    +3 $20,691 69 69* 70 75 283
    T67
    USA
    +3 $20,691 68 69* 70 76 283
    70
    ZAF
    +4 $20,295 65* 72 74 73 284
    T71
    USA
    +5 $19,899 68 67* 79 71 285
    T71
    USA
    +5 $19,899 70* 68 75 72 285
    T71
    USA
    +5 $19,899 66 71* 73 75 285
    T74
    USA
    +6 $19,404 67 70* 73 76 286
    T74
    USA
    +6 $19,404 66 71* 70 79 286
    CUT
    FRA
    -1 71* 68 139
    CUT
    NOR
    -1 69* 70 139
    CUT
    COL
    -1 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 67* 72 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 69 70* 139
    CUT
    CAN
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 68* 71 139
    CUT
    COL
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 71 69* 140
    CUT
    SWE
    E 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    AUS
    E 72 68* 140
    CUT
    CAN
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    BEL
    E 66* 74 140
    CUT
    CHN
    +1 73* 68 141
    CUT
    JPN
    +1 67* 74 141
    CUT
    ZAF
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    CHN
    +1 69 72* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72 69* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 71* 71 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 71 71* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 68 74* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 68* 74 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70 72* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 69* 73 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ARG
    +2 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +3 70 73* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 71 72* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 71* 72 143
    CUT
    USA
    +4 74 70* 144
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 69 75* 144
    CUT
    DNK
    +4 70* 74 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 76 68* 144
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 70 74* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +5 74* 71 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 70 75* 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 73* 72 145
    CUT
    KOR
    +6 70* 76 146
    CUT
    SWE
    +7 73 74* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 73* 74 147
    CUT
    AUS
    +8 79* 69 148
    CUT
    ENG
    +8 73 75* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +9 73 76* 149
    CUT
    USA
    +10 72 78* 150
    WD
    DEU
    75
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

    • DQ
    • WD
    • CUT
    • MDF
    • (a)
    • *
    • Watch Live On Pga Tour Live App
    • Disqualified
    • Withdrew
    • Missed Cut
    • Made Cut Did Not Finish
    • Amateur
    • Golfer Started Round On Back 9
    • Winner