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  • Natasha Mack scores career-high 16 and the Mercury beat the Storm 72-68 to snap 7-game skid

    SEATTLE (AP) Natasha Mack scored a career-high 16 points to go with 10 rebounds, Kahleah Copper also had 16 points, and the Phoenix Mercury beat the Seattle Storm 72-68 on Wednesday night to snap a seven-game losing streak.

    Awa Fam scored 18 points and Natisha Hiedeman added 15 for Seattle (3-8), which has lost four straight games.

    Copper put the Mercury ahead 61-59 with 5:37 remaining and they did not trail again.

    DeWanna Bonner made a jumper, fast-break layup and free throw to extend Phoenix’s lead to 68-61 with 2:39 left.

    Seattle got within one possession twice in the final 20 seconds, but Copper went 4 for 4 at the free-throw line to seal it.

    Monique Akoa Makani added 12 points, and Bonner scored five of her 10 points in the final four minutes for Phoenix (3-8), which secured its first victory since beating Chicago on May 15.

    Phoenix led 36-33 at halftime despite shooting just 35% from the field, including 2 of 13 from 3-point range. The Mercury went 10 of 13 from the stripe, while Seattle did not attempt a free throw.

    Hiedeman scored 10 of the Storm’s 22 points in the third to help them take a 55-52 lead entering the fourth.

    The teams combined to go 12 of 55 from 3-point range.

    Phoenix: Plays at Portland on Friday.

    Seattle: Travels to play Minnesota on Saturday.

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

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    1 2 3 4 T

    Mercury 3-8

    21 15 16 20 72

    Storm 3-8

    15 18 22 13 68
    TOP SCORERS
    2
    K. Copper G 16PTS 6REB 1AST
    11
    A. Fam C 18PTS 6REB 2AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    K. Copper 16 6 1 2
    N. Mack 16 10 2 1
    M. Akoa Makani 12 6 2 3
    A. Thomas 9 9 5 2
    N. Brochant 4 4 1 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    D. Bonner 10 2 1 2
    J. Nogic 4 2 2 1
    V. Ayayi 1 3 1 1
    L. Held 0 2 2 1
    Total 72 44 17 15
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    A. Fam 18 6 2 3
    N. Hiedeman 15 4 4 2
    F. Johnson 9 4 5 2
    J. Horston 5 5 1 1
    S. Dolson 0 2 1 3
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    Z. Cooke 9 1 0 1
    J. Melbourne 5 4 2 3
    M. Holmes 4 6 1 2
    K. Samuelson 3 2 1 1
    Total 68 34 17 18
  • French Open News

    Zverev vying for fourth grand slam final appearance

    Second-seeded Alexander Zverev has the lowest time on court this tournament, winning every set he’s played except one during the third round against Quentin Halys. Zverev made quick work of Rafael Jodar on Tuesday, a masterful outing that showcased his entire repertoire.

    Up next for Zverev is his quest for his first career grand slam is Jakub Mensik, who assured there would be no teen sensations in the semifinals after disposing of hard-hitting Brazilian Joao Fonseca in straight sets during the quarters. It was easily his most impressive showing thus far on clay this season and revealed there’s another legitimate threat capable of being a first-time French Open champion.

    Before running into quick trouble against Mensik, Fonseca was coming off wins against Novak Djokovic and Casper Ruud. Mensik answered every drop shot with cross-court precision and played well on serve.

    It was a much-needed coasting of sorts prior to a long-lasting final game for Mensik, who was coming off a pair five-set wins in the tournament and overcame a 6-0 loss to Alex de Minaur in the first set of the third round to prevail in four. During that match with de Minaur, Mensik struggled with cramps and dehydration.

    He’s now two wins away from etching his name in history on clay.

    Men’s semifinals (Friday)

    • (2) Alexander Zverev vs. (26) Jakub Mensik
    • (10) Flavio Cobolli vs. Matteo Arnaldi

    Shnaider stuns Sabalenka, Chwalinska prevails

    World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka made 57 unforced errors in the final set during Wednesday’s shocking 6-3, 5-7, 0-6 loss to Russian Diana Shnaider, her second quarterfinals setback in her last three trips to the Paris grand slam. Sabalenka led 4-1 and was two points away from moving on at 5-3 in the second set before unraveling.

    This is 25th-seeded Shnaider’s first trip to a semifinal at a major in her career.

    “I feel like I had very decent opportunities in the second set, I screwed up, and then she stepped in and she played great,” Sabalenka said. “I feel like mentally I couldn’t really recover after the second set. That was the biggest mistake from me. Mentally I got into a very deep, deep, dark hole and I just couldn’t get back mentally on track.”

    In the other quarterfinals match, unseeded Maja Chwalinska took out No. 22 Anna Kalinskaya 7-6, 6-3. She’ll play Shnaider up next while 19-year-old phenom Mirra Andreeva, the highest seed left in the women’s bracket at No. 8, battles Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk. Andreeva has looked dominate throughout the tournament only dropping one set.

    Andreeva, who’s appearing in her second French Open semifinal, took out Sorana Cirstea 6-0, 6-3 with ease on Tuesday. Her backhand’s already a world-class weapon, but Andreeva’s all-court game suggests she’s ready to reach her first final.

    “Well, for me it doesn’t matter who I play,” Andreeva said after she was asked about the matchup of Kostyuk. “I really try to play against the ball that is coming at me. Usually it doesn’t matter to me who I’m playing against, so I’m trying to really focus on the game and on the game plan that I have to use on the court.”

    Women’s semifinals (Thursday)

    • (25) Diana Shnaider vs. Maja Chwalinska
    • (8) Mirra Andreeva vs. (15) Marta Kostyuk

     

     

  • Jalen Brunson scores 30 and Knicks finish on 11-0 run, steal Game 1 from Spurs with 105-95 win

    SAN ANTONIO (AP) The New York Knicks’ winning streak lives on, and they struck first in the NBA Finals.

    Jalen Brunson scored 30 points, Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 18 points and 12 rebounds, and the Knicks erased a 14-point second-half deficit to beat the San Antonio Spurs 105-95 in Game 1 of the finals on Wednesday night.

    OG Anunoby had 17 points for New York – which has won 12 consecutive playoff games, the seventh team to have such a streak in NBA history, and is the third to do it in a single season. Brunson scored 13 points in the fourth, only six fewer than San Antonio managed as a team in that quarter, and sealed it with a spinning jumper while falling to the court with 38 seconds left.

    “He’s a gamer, man,” Knicks coach Mike Brown said. “In the biggest moments, he shows up. That’s what MVPs are supposed to do.”

    And the Knicks, who finished on an 11-0 run, made a little more history. They became the first team to beat San Antonio in a Game 1 of the title series – the Spurs were 6-0 in those – and this is also the first time the Spurs have trailed a finals before the finish.

    As far as single-season playoff winning streaks – Golden State won 15 straight games in the 2017 postseason on its way to the title. San Antonio won 12 straight in 1999 on its way to the title. And now New York has won 12 in a row, with its title status to be determined.

    “I think we know what we have to do,” Brunson said. “I think we’re a pretty together group.”

    Victor Wembanyama had 26 points and 12 rebounds for the Spurs, but he shot 6 for 21 from the field in his finals debut. Stephon Castle scored 17, while Julian Champagnie and Dylan Harper each had 16 for San Antonio.

    “I was bad tonight,” Wembanyama said. “It’s not more complicated than that.”

    Game 2 is Friday in San Antonio.

    Former San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich was at the game, as he’s been for every finals game in Spurs history, albeit watching from a suite and not stomping the San Antonio sideline. The Spurs legends – David Robinson, Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Bruce Bowen and more – were there, too.

    So were Knicks great Patrick Ewing and the world’s most recognizable New York fans: Spike Lee, Tracy Morgan, Ben Stiller, Fat Joe, Timothée Chalamet and more. Plenty of non-celeb Knicks fans made the trip as well; Tommy Sherlock, a auto sales manager from Brooklyn, said it cost less for two Game 1 tickets in San Antonio, with hotel and airfare, than Game 3 tickets in New York would have set him back.

    “First-class air, too,” Sherlock said. “By a lot.”

    The Knicks led 14-7 early, the Spurs answered with a 20-13 run to go up by 10, the Knicks rallied and the second quarter saw six lead changes before San Antonio took a 55-48 lead into the break.

    San Antonio pushed the lead to 14 midway through the third quarter before the Knicks stormed back, finishing the period on a 22-9 run and sending the game into the fourth tied at 76.

    New York’s lead was eight midway through the final period. Wembanyama made a pair of free throws with 2:16 left to put San Antonio up 95-94, but Brunson made a corner 3 on the next possession to put the Knicks on top for good.

    “I think we let that one go,” Wembanyama said.

    San Antonio’s run of never trailing the finals had some close calls over the years. The Spurs were tied twice with New Jersey in 2003 finals, tied with Detroit twice in 2005, tied with Miami three times in 2013 – they lost that series in seven games, so they only trailed when it was over – and then were tied with the Heat once more in 2014.

    It’s only 1-0. But the Knicks are only three wins away from their first title in 53 years, and they just took home-court advantage away from San Antonio.

    “We have a long way to go,” Brunson said.

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/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 13 picks

    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
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    Adam Thompson
    Adam ThompsonThe ATM
    +469.5 (60%)
    Last 53 NBA Player Props
    Over 6.5-106
    Jalen Brunson • Assists • Player Prop
    Picked Jun 3 @ 1:40 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    LOSS
    Knicks score-first PG Jalen Brunson has registered at least six assists in eight of the Knicks’ last 10 games. He overall trended higher than that all season (6.8), and trended even higher against the Spurs, with 7, 8 and 8 assists. I think Josh Hart is going to have issues against Stephon Castle; Hart’s potential assists go to Brunson.

    Adam’s Pick

    Adam Thompson
    Adam ThompsonThe ATM
    +469.5 (60%)
    Last 53 NBA Player Props
    Over 11.5-114
    Victor Wembanyama • Rebounds • Player Prop
    Picked Jun 3 @ 1:32 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    WIN
    Victor Wembanyama hasn’t had 12 rebounds in five straight games. Prior to that, though, he’d had at least 14 in seven of nine. I’ll lean on that latter trend. He had 13 rebounds in two of three regular-season meetings with Karl-Anthony Towns and the Knicks. He had 24 and 15 boards in Game 1 of the last two series.

    Adam’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 T

    3 Knicks 1-0

    19 29 28 29 105

    2 Spurs 0-1

    27 28 21 19 95
    TOP SCORERS
    J. Brunson PG 30PTS 3REB 2AST
    V. Wembanyama C 26PTS 12REB 2AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    J. Brunson 30 3 2 2
    K. Towns 18 12 4 4
    O. Anunoby 17 3 0 0
    M. Bridges 9 3 3 3
    J. Hart 3 15 6 4
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    L. Shamet 13 1 0 4
    J. Alvarado 7 4 1 3
    M. McBride 6 1 4 1
    M. Robinson 2 6 0 1
    J. Clarkson 0 1 0 1
    T. Kolek
    A. Hukporti
    J. Sochan
    P. Dadiet
    M. Diawara
    T. Jemison
    K. McCullar Jr.
    D. Jones
    Total 105 49 20 23
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    V. Wembanyama 26 12 2 2
    S. Castle 17 8 3 3
    J. Champagnie 16 10 1 2
    D. Vassell 9 9 3 1
    D. Fox 7 4 5 5
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    D. Harper 16 8 1 2
    K. Johnson 3 0 0 3
    C. Bryant 1 0 0 1
    H. Barnes 0 2 1 1
    L. Kornet 0 1 0 3
    B. Biyombo
    K. Olynyk
    M. Plumlee
    J. McLaughlin
    L. Waters III
    H. Ingram
    E. Miller
    Total 95 54 16 23
  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins29-34
    4 10 1
    1 3 1
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: M. Meyer  (6-0)
    • L: C. Beeter  (1-1)
    • S: P. Fairbanks  (7)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    M. Meyer MIA P7.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 7 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    P. Fairbanks MIA P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers25-38
    7 13 0
    Rays36-23
    2 4 0
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: T. Melton  (2-0)
    • L: N. Martinez  (5-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Melton DET P8.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    D. Dingler DET DH2-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    8 12 0
    Twins29-34
    0 5 3
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: E. Fedde  (1-5)
    • L: T. Bradley  (5-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. Fedde CHW P5.0 IP, 2 H, 2 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    A. Benintendi CHW DH2-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Mets27-35
    7 14 0
    1 6 2
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    • W: F. Peralta  (4-4)
    • L: G. Kirby  (5-5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    F. Peralta NYM P6.0 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    J. Crawford SEA SS3-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Padres32-28
    2 6 0
    3 8 0
    Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
    • W: C. Sanchez  (7-2)
    • L: J. Adam  (2-1)
    • S: J. Duran  (14)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Sanchez PHI P7.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 8 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    W. Buehler SD P6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Orioles29-33
    1 9 0
    Red Sox26-34
    8 15 0
    Fenway Park, Boston, MA
    • W: P. Tolle  (3-2)
    • L: C. Bassitt  (4-4)
    • S: R. Watson  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    P. Tolle BOS P6.0 IP, 7 H, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    R. Watson BOS P3.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 9 0
    Yankees36-25
    4 5 0
    Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
    • W: G. Williams  (9-3)
    • L: G. Cole  (1-1)
    • S: C. Smith  (21)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    G. Williams CLE P5.1 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 6 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    J. Ramirez CLE 3B3-4, 3 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals24-38
    5 9 0
    Reds31-30
    2 8 1
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: D. Lynch  (2-0)
    • L: T. Santillan  (1-3)
    • S: A. Lange  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Burns CIN P6.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 9 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    S. Kolek KC P7.0 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 8 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    3 8 1
    Braves42-20
    7 9 0
    Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
    • W: G. Holmes  (4-2)
    • L: P. Corbin  (2-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    G. Holmes ATL P6.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 4 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    O. Albies ATL 2B2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants24-38
    1 8 0
    Brewers37-22
    0 3 0
    American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
    • W: L. Webb  (3-4)
    • L: R. Gasser  (0-2)
    • S: K. Winn  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    L. Webb SF P7.0 IP, 1 H, 4 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    K. Winn SF P1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rangers30-32
    3 6 1
    5 11 1
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: A. Pallante  (6-4)
    • L: M. Gore  (4-5)
    • S: R. O’Brien  (15)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    A. Pallante STL P5.2 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    R. O’Brien STL P1.0 IP, 1 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 10 0
    Cubs32-30
    4 9 0
    Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: H. Harris  (3-0)
    • L: E. Roberts  (0-1)
    • S: J. Sterner  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    H. Harris ATH P1.0 IP, 2 SO
    player headshot
    J. Sterner ATH P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Pirates33-29
    9 12 2
    Astros28-35
    11 14 0
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: A. Blubaugh  (3-2)
    • L: G. Soto  (4-1)
    • S: J. Hader  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    I. Paredes HOU 3B2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    player headshot
    N. Gonzales PIT 3B2-5, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rockies24-39
    4 7 1
    Angels24-39
    11 16 0
    Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, CA
    • W: W. Urena  (3-4)
    • L: M. Lorenzen  (2-8)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    W. Urena LAA P6.0 IP, 3 H, 3 ER, 7 SO, 3 BB
    player headshot
    V. Grissom LAA 1B2-5, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Dodgers40-22
    7 16 1
    0 2 1
    Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
    • W: S. Ohtani  (6-2)
    • L: Z. Gallen  (3-5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    S. Ohtani LAD DH3-4, 1 R6.0 IP, 2 H, 6 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    K. Tucker LAD RF3-5, 1 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI

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  • Shohei Ohtani dominates in 6 scoreless innings, Dodgers rout Diamondbacks 7-0

    PHOENIX (AP) Shohei Ohtani threw six scoreless innings, Kyle Tucker hit a two-run homer into the Chase Field pool and the Los Angeles Dodgers routed the Arizona Diamondbacks 7-0 on Wednesday night.

    Ohtani (6-2) allowed two hits and struck out six while lowering his major league-best ERA to 0.74. He’s allowed one earned run in 24 innings during a four-game winning streak.

    Ohtani also hit three singles and reached base five times, scoring a run.

    Tucker hit his homer off Zac Gallen (3-5) in the second inning. Freddie Freeman added a two-run single in the third. Max Muncy followed with a run-scoring single and Alex Freeman’s two-run single in the seventh put the Dodgers up 7-0.

    Los Angeles had 16 hits to win for the 16th time in 19 games.

    Arizona had two hits in its fifth loss in six games since winning five straight.

    Ohtani was frustrated with his command against Colorado despite winning his last start, dropping a few expletives that were picked up by the on-field mic.

    The four-time MVP had a few control issues against the Diamondbacks as well.

    Ohtani sailed his first warmup pitch into a group of photographers at the backstop – he of course apologized – and almost hit three different batters in the first three innings.

    The right-hander was nearly unhittable when he did keep it around the plate.

    Ohtani didn’t allow a hit until Gabriel Moreno’s double over first base with two outs in the fourth inning and induced an inning-ending double play after Geraldo Perdomo’s single in the sixth.

    Ohtani threw 89 pitches and was lifted following the Dodgers’ long top half of the seventh inning.

    Gallen allowed five runs – four earned – on nine hits in five innings.

    Dodgers LHP Justin Wrobleski (7-2, 2.87 ERA) faces Diamondbacks RHP Ryne Nelson (2-4, 4.82) in Thursday’s series finale.

    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.

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

    40-22

    0 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 7 16 1
    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1
    • W: S. Ohtani (6-2)L: Z. Gallen (3-5)S: (0)
    • HR: LAD – K. Tucker (4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    S. Ohtani DH 4 1 3 0 .301
    A. Pages CF 5 1 1 0 .291
    F. Freeman 1B 6 1 2 2 .276
    M. Betts SS 5 1 0 0 .189
    M. Rojas SS 0 0 0 0 .261
    K. Tucker RF 5 1 3 2 .243
    M. Muncy 3B 5 1 2 1 .251
    S. Espinal 3B 0 0 0 0 .209
    W. Smith C 4 1 1 0 .250
    A. Call LF 4 0 1 0 .288
    A. Freeland 2B 4 0 3 2 .254
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    G. Perdomo SS 4 0 1 0 .225
    C. Carroll RF 4 0 0 0 .284
    G. Moreno C 4 0 1 0 .260
    N. Arenado 3B 4 0 0 0 .263
    P. Smith DH 3 0 0 0 .083
    R. Waldschmidt CF 3 0 0 0 .280
    I. Vargas 2B 3 0 0 0 .286
    J. Fernandez 1B 2 0 0 0 .255
    T. Troy LF 2 0 0 0 .286
    BATTING
    • 2B – A. Pages (15), M. Muncy (7)
    • HR – K. Tucker (5)
    • RBI – F. Freeman 2 (34), K. Tucker 2 (29), M. Muncy (22), A. Freeland 2 (12)
    • 2-Out RBI – A. Freeland 2 (2)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – S. Ohtani, F. Freeman 4 (4), M. Muncy
    BATTING
    • 2B – G. Moreno (9)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – N. Arenado 2 (2)
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – A. Freeland
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Freeland-Betts-Freeman)
    • E – S. Espinal
    FIELDING
    • DP – 2 (Perdomo-Vargas-Fernandez; Perdomo-Fernandez)
    • E – G. Perdomo (4)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    S. Ohtani(W, 6-2) 6.0 2 0 1 6 0.74
    J. Hernandez 2.0 0 0 1 3 1.13
    J. Dreyer 1.0 0 0 0 0 2.66
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    Z. Gallen(L, 3-5) 5.0 9 4 2 1 5.32
    T. Clarke 1.0 1 0 1 1 1.73
    B. Pfaadt 1.0 3 2 2 1 5.92
    R. Thompson 1.2 3 0 0 2 2.53
    J. Loaisiga 0.1 0 0 0 1 3.13
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – S. Ohtani 89-58, J. Hernandez 31-17, J. Dreyer 13-8
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – S. Ohtani 10-1, J. Hernandez 3-0, J. Dreyer 3-1
    • Batters Faced – S. Ohtani 20, J. Hernandez 7, J. Dreyer 4
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – Z. Gallen 90-59, T. Clarke 21-9, B. Pfaadt 37-17, R. Thompson 36-25, J. Loaisiga 5-3
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – Z. Gallen 11-5, B. Pfaadt 2-0, R. Thompson 1-0
    • Batters Faced – Z. Gallen 25, T. Clarke 5, B. Pfaadt 9, R. Thompson 8, J. Loaisiga
  • Myles Garrett gives the Rams a better shot at winning the Super Bowl, but was he worth the cost

    myles-garrett.jpg

    Getty Images

    The easy way to look at the Myles Garrett trade is to say the Rams added the best defensive player in football and instantly became the favorite to win Super Bowl LX.

    Garrett is still one of the rare defenders who changes the pre-snap math for every offense he lines up against. He’s coming off a record-setting 23-sack season, just won NFL Defensive Player of the Year and gives the Rams the type of game-wrecking edge presence that comes along every couple of decades.

    But that’s also the easy part of the conversation. The more interesting question isn’t whether Garrett makes the Rams better — he does. The question is whether the Rams would have been better off keeping Jared Verse, preserving future draft capital and using those resources to build a more complete version of this same roster.

    That’s where things become less straightforward.

    The Rams didn’t just trade for Garrett in a vacuum. They traded Verse, the 2024 Defensive Rookie of the Year, along with a 2027 first-round pick, a 2028 second-round pick and a 2029 third-round pick. That’s the kind of move that only makes sense if an organization believes its current championship window is more valuable than future flexibility.

    Given that we’re talking about the latest version of the “F them picks” Rams … yeah, of course that’s what they believe.

    General manager Les Snead’s philosophy has never really been about ignoring the draft. It’s about being willing to exchange future uncertainty for present certainty when the championship window is open (see the trades for Matthew Stafford and Jalen Ramsey, moves that led directly to a Lombardi Trophy).

    Most teams talk themselves out of such decisions because of the cost. The Rams have repeatedly talked themselves into them. Sometimes that’s left them with less depth and fewer resources down the road, but it also produced a Lombardi Trophy and multiple seasons during which they entered the year with a legitimate chance to win another one.

    When you view the Garrett trade through that lens, it feels less like a departure from the Rams’ philosophy and more like its logical conclusion. So the question isn’t whether Garrett is better than Verse. The question is whether the difference between those two players is worth everything else the Rams surrendered to acquire him.

    The opportunity cost

    While it’s fun to just anoint the Rams as Super Bowl champions and go on with our days, the real challenge is that every blockbuster trade should be evaluated against the alternatives.

    History is full of deals that made teams better without making them champions. Khalil Mack transformed the BearsTyreek Hill took the Dolphins offense to another level. Christian McCaffrey helped push the 49ers to a Super Bowl. All three trades worked. None ultimately produced a Super Bowl.

    The lesson: the player usually delivers … but the championship usually doesn’t follow. That’s what makes the Garrett trade so compelling. The Rams weren’t choosing between Garrett and doing nothing. They were choosing Garrett over every other possible use of those resources.

    Which brings me to A.J. Brown, who landed in New England for less draft capital than the Rams surrendered for Garrett. It’s also worth noting that this wasn’t purely a hypothetical alternative. The Rams were repeatedly connected to Brown throughout the offseason and, according to multiple reports, were at one point further down the road on a potential deal than New England. Ultimately, the Patriots emerged as the destination, aided by Brown’s relationship with Mike Vrabel and Los Angeles’ decision to move in a different direction.

    Pairing Brown with Puka Nacua would have given Sean McVay two No. 1 wide receivers and one of the most dangerous receiving tandems in football. And while depth still would have been a concern — if the team moved on from Adams had they landed Brown (as reports suggested), that would have left Jordan WhittingtonKonata Mumpfield and rookie C.J. Daniels competing for significant snaps — the Rams may not have viewed that as a problem.

    No team currently has more tight ends on its roster than Los Angeles. After drafting Terrance Ferguson a year ago, the Rams doubled down this spring by selecting Max Klare, adding another athletic pass-catching option to a room that still includes Tyler Higbee.

    One possible interpretation of the Rams’ offseason is that McVay is becoming less interested in stockpiling traditional wide receivers and more interested in creating matchup problems through versatility. If Ferguson and Klare become meaningful pieces of the passing game, the need for another expensive receiver becomes easier to justify passing on.

    That’s also where the draft enters the conversation. Selecting either Makai Lemon or Omar Cooper Jr. would have given McVay another young, cost-controlled playmaker regardless of whether Brown or Adams occupied the top of the depth chart. On the other side of the ball, pass rusher Rueben Bain Jr. could have been paired with Verse to create a long-term pass-rushing foundation.

    None of those players individually matches Garrett’s impact. But Garrett wasn’t competing against one player. He was competing against everything else the Rams could have done with those resources.

    Ranking NFL’s greatest trades of all-time: Here’s where Myles Garrett to Rams fits on list
    Bryan DeArdo
    Ranking NFL's greatest trades of all-time: Here's where Myles Garrett to Rams fits on list

    How much better is Garrett than Verse?

    This is where the conversation becomes tougher to evaluate. The counterargument to keeping Verse is obvious and a good one: Garrett is better. The question is how much better.

    While Garrett remains the gold standard for NFL pass rushers, Verse may already be closer than the trade compensation suggests. Over the past two seasons, Garrett led the NFL with 167 pressures while Verse was third with 157. Garrett finished with 101 hurries and Verse had 108.

    In other words, the Rams didn’t trade a developmental player or even a promising young pass rusher. They traded one of the most productive edge rushers in the NFL.

    The separation, however, shows up when those pressures become game-changing plays. Garrett recorded 37 sacks over that stretch, the most in the league. Verse had 12. Garrett led the league with 55 tackles for loss. Verse had 22.

    So while the gap in disruptive plays is smaller than many people realize, the gap in finishing ability quickly becomes a chasm.

    One of the biggest surprises in the metrics supports both sides of the argument. As a rookie in 2024, Verse drew double teams at nearly the same rate as Garrett, per ESPN. Offenses quickly started treating Verse like one of the league’s premier pass-rushing threats.

    That’s impressive and surprising. And it shows the Rams weren’t trading a player who might someday command elite attention — they were trading a player who already did. The difference then?

    Last season, Garrett saw double teams on more than half of his pass-rush opportunities while continuing to lead the league in sacks and pressures. Plenty of pass rushers can dominate when offenses don’t game-plan around them. Very few produce at an elite level when entire protection schemes are built to stop them.

    That’s the strongest football argument for the trade. The Rams aren’t paying for pressures. They’re paying for sacks, game-changing plays and the certainty that comes with knowing exactly what Garrett is. They’re evaluating who gives them the best chance to win the Super Bowl in 2026, not who might be the better player in 2029.

    If that’s the question, Garrett is almost always the answer. He changes protections, forces quarterbacks to play faster (or face the consequences) and commands constant double teams, creating cleaner opportunities for Kobie TurnerBraden Fiske and Byron Young. He makes the secondary better because quarterbacks simply have less time to find answers. In that sense, Garrett doesn’t just replace Verse’s production, he changes the way offenses have to play the Rams.

    Why Stafford still matters more

    As significant as Garrett is, the most important variable on the roster remains Stafford. That’s true of virtually every championship team not named the 2000 Ravens.

    Garrett can make the defense terrifying, create shorter fields and be the difference between winning and losing on a critical third down in January. But what he can’t do is compensate for a quarterback who isn’t playing at a championship level.

    Put another way: the Rams made this move because they believe Stafford still has another Super Bowl run in him. If they’re right, Garrett may be the final piece who pushes them over the top. If they’re wrong, everything changes — and likely very quickly.

    The Rams have elite players at quarterback, wide receiver, edge rusher, cornerback and on the defensive line. They have one of the best offensive coaches in football. They also have a roster construction model that leaves less margin for error than teams built primarily through the draft. That’s the uncomfortable reality facing any star-driven roster, though a reality Snead and McVay have shown they’ll happily embrace.

    How this trade will get judged

    The optimistic comparison is the 1994 49ers. That team was loaded before adding Deion Sanders. Steve Young was in his prime. Jerry Rice was still Jerry Rice. San Francisco wasn’t trying to become a contender. It already was one. The goal was to add the final piece. That’s what the Rams are hoping Garrett does.

    They’re not asking him to drag a mediocre team into relevance. They’re asking him to push a Super Bowl-caliber roster over the top. That distinction matters, and it’s why this trade feels more defensible than many of the blockbuster moves that have fallen short over the years. Mack arrived in Chicago with the expectation he could help elevate a talented but incomplete roster. Hill was supposed to unlock another level for Miami. Christian McCaffrey helped turn San Francisco into a perennial contender. All three players delivered. The teams just never achieved the outcome that ultimately justified the price.

    The Rams are one of the few franchises that can point to Stafford and Ramsey and say their all-in approach actually produced a championship. Whether that’s because Snead is better than most at identifying the right stars, McVay is better than most at maximizing them, or some combination of both, it helps explain why Los Angeles was willing to make another massive bet on elite talent.

    Still, the alternative version of this team is difficult to ignore. Imagine the Rams with Verse still on the edge, Brown lining up alongside Nacua and future picks still intact. Imagine Verse paired with Bain. Imagine McVay adding Lemon or Cooper to a receiver room that could use another long-term answer.

    None of those versions has Garrett, but all of them might have been deeper, younger and more sustainable. That’s the debate.

    The Rams chose the highest-ceiling individual player over the broader roster-building choice. They chose the future Pro Football Hall of Famer over the younger player and the possibility of adding multiple premium pieces elsewhere.

    And, yeah, I get it. If you believe Stafford can win another Super Bowl right now, you don’t build for 2029. You build for February. You add the player who can ruin a playoff game by himself and worry about the future later. Essentially, Snead is keeping the main thing the main thing.

    But understanding the move is not the same as concluding it was unequivocally worth the cost. Garrett makes the Rams scarier — a lot scarier. It’s not hard to argue that he makes them the best team in the NFC. He might be the difference between losing another conference championship game and playing for a Lombardi Trophy.

    What Garrett doesn’t do is eliminate the question of what else the Rams could have become. Yes, Los Angeles paid a hefty price to upgrade from an elite young pass rusher to the best pass rusher in football. And the question isn’t whether Garrett is better than Verse – the question is whether the difference between those two players is worth everything else they gave up.

    If Garrett helps deliver another Super Bowl to the Rams, nobody will care about the picks, the cap implications, or anything else. But that’s always been the gamble with blockbuster trades. They aren’t judged against the player acquired, they’re judged against everything that was sacrificed to get him. The difference, at least in Los Angeles, is that Snead has earned enough credibility that what feels reckless elsewhere often feels almost inevitable with the Rams.

    The 2026 season will determine whether this becomes another Stafford trade or a reminder that even the right player isn’t always the right trade.

  • Hertl’s late goal lifts Golden Knights past Hurricanes 5-4 to open Stanley Cup Final

    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) It took just one shot and 25 seconds worth of game action for the Vegas Golden Knights to find themselves in hole in the Stanley Cup Final.

    And by midway through the opening period, they were down two goals against a fast-skating Carolina Hurricanes team teeming with energy from a buzzing home crowd.

    No matter. And no panic. Not with these tested Golden Knights.

    Tomas Hertl took a backhand pass from Colton Sisson and beat Frederik Andersen from the slot with 3:24 left in the third period, lifting the Golden Knights past the Carolina Hurricanes 5-4 in Tuesday night’s opener of the Stanley Cup Final.

    “I’ve said it all through the playoffs: it’s a find-a-way league,” Vegas coach John Tortorella said. “We found a way tonight.”

    Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is Thursday in Raleigh, with Vegas already having taken home-ice away from the Hurricanes as it chases a second Cup title in four seasons.

    “Momentum swings happen quickly,” Tortorella said. “We want to keep the momentum on our side, so there’s no question we’re looking to get two.”

    Hertl’s finish off Sisson’s feed from the right faceoff circle broke a 4-4 tie and pushed the Golden Knights ahead in an entertaining back-and-forth start on the sport’s biggest stage. It marked Vegas’ seventh straight win of the playoffs, starting with the last two games of the six-game second-round series against Anaheim and then the shocking four-game sweep of the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche.

    That series included Vegas erasing a 3-0 deficit to take Game 3, and now the Golden Knights have followed by rallying from another multigoal deficit – this time 2-0 in the opening period – against the team that finished second only to the Avs in the regular season.

    “It was a terrible start,” said center William Karlsson, who capped a run of three straight goals that pushed Vegas to a 3-2 second-period lead. “Just like it was against Colorado, a lot of time left. We always believe.”

    Things changed after Tortorella gathered his team around the bench during a TV timeout after the Hurricanes had sprinted out to their lead, coming as Vegas had a slow start out of its six-day break while waiting for Carolina to close out Montreal in a five-game Eastern Conference Final.

    “Just stick with the program, on our gameplan, and not get impatient,” said defenseman Brayden McNabb, who had three assists. “They pressure a lot and we want to keep the puck going north, and limit east-west plays.”

    Shea Theodore, Ivan Barbashev and Brett Howden also scored for Vegas, with Howden’s postseason-leading 11th score giving the Golden Knights a 4-3 lead just 1:21 into the third period. Carter Hart finished with 23 saves, including a key stop on Seth Jarvis only seconds before Hertl’s winner.

    Nikolaj Ehlers scored twice for the Hurricanes, the first coming 25 seconds into the game when he got loose on a rush and blasted one past Hart from the left side on the game’s first shot. He followed with a breakaway that gave Carolina a 2-0 lead and sent a charged home crowd into an eruption in the team’s first Stanley Cup Final game in two decades.

    Jordan Staal and Shayne Gostisbehere each scored tying goals after Vegas had pushed to a lead, with Gostisbehere skating in clean on the left side to blast one past Hart at 11:19 of the third period and tie it once more at 4. Andersen finished with 18 saves.

    “I thought they played just a little bit better than us,” Staal said. “They executed their game plan and aggressive on their forecheck and played in our end, and they buried their chances when they had them.”

    The Hurricanes went 12-1 through three rounds to get back to the Stanley Cup Final for the first time since coach Rod Brind’Amour captained them to the title in 2006. It also comes amid an eight-year playoff streak that has included at least one series win every time as a regular postseason contender.

    Carolina swept through Ottawa and Philadelphia before taking the last four games of a five-game win against Montreal to punch through an Eastern Conference Final roadblock. That made the Hurricanes the first team since 1983 to reach the Stanley Cup Final with one loss, and the first since the NHL went to best-of-seven series in all four rounds in 1987.

    Meanwhile, Vegas had been getting stronger with every playoff round, winning for 19 of 24 games going back to the unexpected late-season firing of Bruce Cassidy to hire Tortorella as coach. That included the shocking result against the Avalanche, who managed just seven goals in four games.

    Defense had been the standout feature for both teams, in fact, with Carolina having allowed two or fewer goals in 12 of 13 playoff games. But that wasn’t the case in Tuesday’s fast-paced series opener, with both teams capitalizing on their chances in an entertaining back-and-forth game before Hertl got Vegas the lead for good.

    “This is a totally different team, and that may be part of it too,” Brind’Amour said when asked about comparisons to the 6-2 loss to the Canadiens in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Final. “We’ve got to get up to speed on how this game and this series is going to go. I think we certainly got a taste of that now.”

    AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
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    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    +1794 (72%)
    Last 57 NHL ML
    Carolina-150
    Money Line
    Picked Jun 1 @ 2:12 pm, 1 unit on bet365
    LOSS
    Having had a week off, Vegas on Tuesday might be looking at the same rust problem the Hurricanes had in Game 1 of the last round. That remains their only loss. The Knights won both regular-season meetings, but Montreal had won all three vs. Carolina in the RS and that mattered little. Excluding the bubble Stanley Cup Final in 2020, the home team has won nine straight Game 1s in this round. If it gets to OT, I’ll feel pretty good considering the Hurricanes are 5-0 in OT playoff games this year. Trust Frederik Andersen more than Carter Hart.

    Matt’s Pick

    Jeff Hochman
    Jeff HochmanWest Coast Wiseguy
    #3
    +314 (58%)
    Last 40 NHL ML
    Carolina-149
    Money Line
    Picked May 30 @ 1:19 am, 1 unit on BetMGM
    LOSS
    Vegas enters this series after a week-long layoff following its sweep of Colorado, a pause that often leads to slow starts. Their high-octane, transition-based offense has leaned heavily on Carter Hart’s outstanding but unsustainable goaltending to mask defensive flaws, leading to a -45 postseason shot differential. In sharp contrast, Carolina’s disciplined, possession-driven approach has produced a +142 shot differential and is perfectly built for postseason resilience. The Hurricanes’ home-ice advantage is significant—29-10-2 at Lenovo Center in the regular season, with just one home loss this postseason. While Vegas is still adapting to John Tortorella’s system after taking over in late March, Carolina’s roster has mastered it over many months and years. A healthy Frederik Andersen has been huge for the Hurricanes.

    Jeff’s Pick

    1 2 3 T

    1-0

    1 2 2 5
    2 1 1 4
    STARS OF THE GAME
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    R. Andersson D 0 0 1 2
    I. Barbashev LW 1 0 0 3
    D. Coghlan D 0 0 -2 0
    P. Dorofeyev RW 0 0 -1 3
    N. Dowd C 0 0 0 0
    J. Eichel C 0 1 -1 3
    N. Hanifin D 0 0 0 0
    T. Hertl C 1 0 1 2
    B. Howden C 1 1 1 2
    W. Karlsson C 1 0 1 2
    K. Kolesar RW 0 0 1 0
    J. Lauzon D 0 0 -2 0
    M. Marner RW 0 1 0 1
    B. McNabb D 0 3 3 0
    C. Sissons C 0 1 0 2
    C. Smith LW 0 1 0 1
    M. Stone RW 0 0 1 0
    S. Theodore D 1 2 2 2
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    S. Aho LW 0 0 0 1
    J. Blake RW 0 0 0 2
    W. Carrier LW 0 0 -1 1
    J. Chatfield D 0 2 1 1
    N. Ehlers LW 2 0 2 2
    S. Gostisbehere D 1 0 -1 2
    T. Hall LW 0 0 0 2
    M. Jankowski C 0 0 -1 0
    S. Jarvis C 0 0 -1 3
    J. Martinook LW 0 0 1 2
    K. Miller D 0 1 0 1
    A. Nikishin D 0 0 -1 1
    E. Robinson LW 0 0 -1 1
    J. Slavin D 0 1 0 1
    J. Staal C 1 0 0 3
    L. Stankoven C 0 0 0 2
    A. Svechnikov RW 0 0 -1 1
    S. Walker D 0 0 -2 1
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    C. Hart 27 4 23 0.852 59:30
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    F. Andersen 23 5 18 0.783 58:14
  • MLB Scores

    8TH
    R H E
    0 0 0
    Cubs32-29
    0 0 0
    Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers24-38
    8 10 0
    Rays36-22
    0 5 0
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: J. Flaherty  (1-7)
    • L: S. Matz  (4-3)
    • S: E. De Jesus  (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. De Jesus DET P4.0 IP, 4 SO
    player headshot
    J. Flaherty DET P5.0 IP, 5 H, 6 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Padres32-27
    2 7 0
    3 9 0
    Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
    • W: J. Alvarado  (2-1)
    • L: J. Estrada  (2-2)
    • S: J. Duran  (13)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    A. Nola PHI P5.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 8 SO
    player headshot
    J. Duran PHI P1.0 IP, 3 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Orioles29-32
    4 9 0
    Red Sox25-34
    2 5 0
    Fenway Park, Boston, MA
    • W: S. Baz  (3-5)
    • L: C. Early  (5-3)
    • S: R. Garcia  (4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    S. Baz BAL P7.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    R. Garcia BAL P1.0 IP, 2 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins28-34
    7 8 1
    3 7 0
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: J. King  (2-1)
    • L: M. Mikolas  (1-5)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    H. Hernandez MIA DH2-5, 2 R, 2 HR, 3 RBI
    player headshot
    J. King MIA P1.2 IP
    FINAL
    R H E
    9 12 1
    Yankees36-24
    4 8 1
    Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
    • W: C. Holderman  (4-1)
    • L: C. Schlittler  (7-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    P. Goldschmidt NYY 1B3-5, 1 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    player headshot
    C. Holderman CLE P1.0 IP, 1 H, 2 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals23-38
    3 5 0
    Reds31-29
    4 4 0
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: B. Burke  (2-2)
    • L: J. Schreiber  (0-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    N. Cameron KC P7.0 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 8 SO
    player headshot
    S. Steer CIN LF2-4, 3 R, 2 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    3 9 0
    Braves41-20
    4 6 0
    Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
    • W: B. Elder  (5-3)
    • L: K. Gausman  (4-4)
    • S: R. Iglesias  (11)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    B. Elder ATL P6.2 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 6 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    M. Olson ATL 1B2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    4 8 0
    Twins29-33
    6 10 2
    Target Field, Minneapolis, MN
    • W: C. Prielipp  (2-3)
    • L: D. Martin  (8-2)
    • S: Y. Gomez  (4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Prielipp MIN P6.0 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 7 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    L. Acuna CHW SS2-3, 2 R
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants23-38
    3 10 3
    Brewers37-21
    8 11 0
    American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
    • W: K. Harrison  (7-1)
    • L: T. McDonald  (2-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    K. Harrison MIL P5.2 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 12 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    C. Yelich MIL DH2-3, 2 R, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rangers30-31
    7 9 0
    4 13 0
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: C. Quantrill  (3-0)
    • L: R. O’Brien  (3-3)
    • S: J. Junis  (4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. Junis TEX P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 SO
    player headshot
    D. May STL P5.2 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 9 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Pirates33-28
    10 13 1
    Astros27-35
    6 8 2
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: B. Chandler  (2-6)
    • L: M. Burrows  (3-7)
    • S: G. Soto  (8)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    E. Rodriguez PIT C2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    player headshot
    B. Chandler PIT P5.0 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 3 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rockies24-38
    8 12 0
    Angels23-39
    2 7 2
    Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, CA
    • W: T. Sugano  (5-4)
    • L: G. Rodriguez  (2-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Sugano COL P5.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 5 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    S. Aldegheri LAA P5.1 IP, 4 H, 5 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Dodgers39-22
    6 10 0
    5 11 0
    Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
    • W: B. Treinen  (2-1)
    • L: M. Soroka  (7-3)
    • S: T. Scott  (6)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Scott LAD P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 SO
    player headshot
    S. Ohtani LAD DH2-4, 2 R, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Mets26-35
    3 5 2
    8 11 0
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    • W: L. Gilbert  (4-4)
    • L: J. Tong  (1-1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    L. Gilbert SEA P5.1 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 8 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    C. Benge NYM RF2-3, 2 R, 2 HR, 3 RBI
  • Ohtani stays hot, Freeman hits 2-run homer and the Dodgers beat the D-backs 6-5

    PHOENIX (AP) Shohei Ohtani had a double, triple and two RBIs to stay hot at the plate, Freddie Freeman smacked a two-run homer and the Los Angeles Dodgers held on late to beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 6-5 on Tuesday night.

    Ohtani – a four-time MVP – is 12 for 26 (.462) over his last six games, including two doubles, a triple and two homers.

    Los Angeles has won 15 of its last 19 games.

    The Dodgers jumped ahead 2-0 in the first when Freeman launched his ninth homer of the season into the right-field seats, scoring Ohtani, who led off the game with a double down the right-field line. It was part of Freeman’s three-hit night.

    Ohtani was part of another offensive surge in the second, delivering a two-run triple to right that made it 4-0.

    Andy Pages added a sacrifice fly and Mookie Betts had an RBI single in the seventh to push L.A.’s advantage to 6-2.

    In the seventh, Nolan Arenado’s two-run double cut the deficit to 6-4 and Pavin Smith walked with the bases loaded to make it 6-5. Will Klein coaxed a groundout from rookie Tommy Troy to end the threat.

    Tanner Scott handled the ninth, working around a one-out single from Ildemaro Vargas, to earn his sixth save in seven chances.

    D-backs right-hander Mike Soroka settled down after a rough start, giving up four runs on six hits and a walk over six innings. He struck out six.

    Los Angeles lefty Eric Lauer gave up two runs on five hits and a walk in his second start with the Dodgers after being acquired in a trade with the Toronto Blue Jays on May 17. He lasted 4 2/3 innings.

    Arizona’s Corbin Carroll hit a solo homer in the third that bounced off the top of the left-field wall and into the bullpen.

    The Diamondbacks send RHP Zac Gallen (3-4, 5.16 ERA) to the mound on Wednesday night while the Dodgers counter with RHP Shohei Ohtani (5-2, 0.82).

    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.

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

    39-22

    2 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 6 10 0
    0 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 0 5 11 0
    • W: B. Treinen (2-1)L: M. Soroka (7-3)S: T. Scott (6)
    • HR: LAD – F. Freeman (9), ARI – C. Carroll (8)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    S. Ohtani DH 4 2 2 2 .293
    A. Pages CF 4 0 1 1 .293
    F. Freeman 1B 5 1 3 2 .274
    M. Betts SS 4 0 1 1 .198
    K. Tucker RF 3 0 0 0 .235
    M. Muncy 3B 4 0 0 0 .247
    R. Ward LF 4 0 0 0 .250
    A. Call LF 0 0 0 0 .290
    D. Rushing C 4 2 2 0 .264
    A. Freeland 2B 3 1 1 0 .236
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 3 1 0 1 .259
    C. Carroll RF 5 1 2 1 .289
    G. Moreno C 3 1 1 0 .260
    N. Arenado 3B 4 1 1 2 .269
    R. Waldschmidt LF-CF 5 0 2 0 .291
    I. Vargas 1B-LF 4 0 1 0 .290
    J. Fernandez SS 3 0 1 0 .258
    a- G. Perdomo PH-SS 1 0 1 0 .224
    J. Barrosa CF 3 1 1 0 .176
    b- P. Smith PH-1B 1 0 0 1 .111
    T. Troy DH 4 0 1 0 .308
    • a-singled for Fernandez in the 7th
    • b-walked for Barrosa in the 7th
    BATTING
    • 2B – S. Ohtani (14), D. Rushing (3)
    • 3B – S. Ohtani (2)
    • HR – F. Freeman (9)
    • SF – A. Pages (4)
    • SH – A. Freeland (3)
    • RBI – S. Ohtani 2 (33), A. Pages (51), F. Freeman 2 (32), M. Betts (17)
    • 2-Out RBI – M. Betts
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – F. Freeman, M. Betts, M. Muncy 2 (2)
    BATTING
    • 2B – N. Arenado (12)
    • HR – C. Carroll (8)
    • SF – K. Marte (3)
    • SH – G. Perdomo (4)
    • RBI – K. Marte (36), C. Carroll (29), N. Arenado 2 (30), P. Smith (2)
    • 2-Out RBI – C. Carroll, P. Smith
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – N. Arenado, J. Fernandez, J. Barrosa, P. Smith, T. Troy 3 (3)
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Betts-Freeland-Freeman)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    E. Lauer 4.2 5 2 1 1 5.74
    B. Treinen(W, 2-1) 0.1 0 0 1 0 3.00
    E. Henriquez(H, 4) 1.0 1 0 0 0 3.27
    K. Hurt 0.2 1 3 3 1 2.41
    W. Klein(H, 7) 1.1 3 0 1 1 1.78
    T. Scott(S, 6) 1.0 1 0 0 1 2.10
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    M. Soroka(L, 7-3) 6.0 6 4 1 6 3.49
    J. Loaisiga 1.0 3 2 2 1 3.18
    K. Ginkel 1.0 0 0 0 1 2.96
    J. Morillo 1.0 1 0 0 2 2.52
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – E. Lauer 70-45, B. Treinen 7-3, E. Henriquez 19-12, K. Hurt 24-9, W. Klein 23-16, T. Scott 20-12
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – E. Lauer 8-4, B. Treinen 0-1, E. Henriquez 2-0, K. Hurt 0-1, W. Klein 3-0, T. Scott 2-0
    • Batters Faced – E. Lauer 20, B. Treinen 2, E. Henriquez 5, K. Hurt 6, W. Klein 7, T. Scott 4
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – M. Soroka 100-66, J. Loaisiga 23-14, K. Ginkel 11-7, J. Morillo 19-12
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – M. Soroka 5-5, J. Loaisiga 2-1, K. Ginkel 1-0, J. Morillo 2-0
    • Batters Faced – M. Soroka 25, J. Loaisiga 8, K. Ginkel 3, J. Morillo 4
  • 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