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PHOENIX (AP) Valeriane Ayayi had 18 points and 10 rebounds and the Phoenix Mercury snapped a four-game losing streak by extending the Seattle Storm’s skid to 10 straight in a 93-73 victory on Saturday.
Kahleah Copper added 17 points for the Mercury (5-12), who pulled away with a 14-0 run to start the third quarter.
Phoenix got double-doubles from Noemie Brochant with 16 points and 10 assists, and Natasha Mack – 10 points and 10 rebounds. Lexi Held scored 11 in her first career start, while DeWanna Bonner added 10 points.
Natisha Hiedeman led the Storm (3-14) with 20 points and rookie Flau’jae Johnson scored 13. Dominique Malonga and reserve Zia Cooke added 10 points each.
Seattle led 24-19 after one quarter on 48% shooting, but finished at 36%.
Ayayi hit a 3-pointer and Copper added two free throws to finish off a 13-0 run in the second quarter for a 43-29 lead. Seattle went on a 12-5 run behind seven points from Malonga to cut it to 48-41 at halftime.
Seattle: Hosts Dallas Wings on Monday.
Phoenix: At Indiana Fever on Monday.
—
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.
| TOP SCORERS | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
2
|
N. Hiedeman G | 20PTS | 0REB | 4AST | |
|
11
|
V. Ayayi G | 18PTS | 10REB | 0AST | |
| STARTERS | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| N. Hiedeman | 20 | 0 | 4 | 4 |
| F. Johnson | 13 | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| D. Malonga | 10 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
| A. Fam | 5 | 10 | 3 | 2 |
| J. Melbourne | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
| BENCH | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| Z. Cooke | 10 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| K. Samuelson | 7 | 5 | 3 | 1 |
| S. Dolson | 6 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
| M. Holmes | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| T. Thierry | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 73 | 29 | 17 | 24 |
| STARTERS | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| K. Copper | 17 | 7 | 2 | 1 |
| N. Brochant | 16 | 2 | 10 | 4 |
| L. Held | 11 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| N. Mack | 10 | 10 | 2 | 2 |
| A. Thomas | 8 | 3 | 9 | 1 |
| BENCH | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| V. Ayayi | 18 | 10 | 0 | 2 |
| D. Bonner | 10 | 4 | 1 | 0 |
| K. Linskens | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| S. Carter | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Total | 93 | 39 | 26 | 13 |
Wyndham Clark entered Saturday’s third round at the 2026 U.S. Open with a four-shot lead, and after it became clear early in the day that Shinnecock Hills Golf Club was playing much harder than the first two days, all eyes were on how the 36-hole leader would handle a tougher test.
The answer was better than everyone but two players in the field, as his even-par 70 was more than enough, as he opened up a six-shot advantage over the field going into Sunday’s final round. With only two players — Emiliano Grillo (67) and Scottie Scheffler (69) — breaking par, all Clark needed to do was tread water, and he did so in thrilling fashion.
Clark got off to an inauspicious start, making a three-putt bogey on the 1st that signalled nerves might come into play. His lead was trimmed to two, and with the 2nd and 3rd playing as two of the hardest holes on the golf course, there was a real chance for him to open the door for the chase pack behind him. Instead, he steadied himself with three straight pars and extended his lead back to three with a birdie on the 5th.
Things started to teeter again on the 8th hole when he found the right bunker from 117 yards out in the fairway, calling it “the worst shot of my life.”
That led to his second bogey of the day, and the confidence he displayed on the first few days with his ball-striking began to dissipate. However, while he tried to get himself settled with his swing, he was able to do what no one else could on Saturday — consistently scramble for pars. Throughout the course, players were struggling to hit putts from outside 4 feet, as the USGA increased green speeds and heavy winds early in the morning dried the greens out considerably, reducing friction and making them tough to judge.
Clark avoided those issues and managed to grind out pars, first with a two-putt from 73 feet on the 9th, then with an up-and-down from over the green on the 10th — a spot that was almost an auto-bogey for most of the field. Finally, he got up and down from the bunker short and right of the treacherous 11th, dripping in a ticklish 5-footer down the hill.
After a more straightforward par on the 12th, he again found himself in trouble on No. 13. He initially pulled iron on the short par 4 but opted to try and drive the green instead. He sprayed his drive into the right fescue and could only get the ball to the bunker short, ultimately leaving a 14-footer for par. Once again, Clark stepped up and poured it in.
While Clark was scrambling his way around Shinnecock, his top competitors were struggling to keep up. Rory McIlroy made a front-nine charge to reach 2 under, but came home with five bogeys on his back nine, unable to produce the same kinds of up-and-downs Clark was. Scottie Scheffler caught fire in the middle of his back nine with three consecutive birdies from No. 14 to No. 16, but that included failing to pay off a 13-footer for eagle on the 16th after what looked, at the time, like the shot of the tournament — and then he closed bogey-par, with a missed 5-footer for birdie at the last.
Clark birdied the 14th and gave it back with a bogey on the 15th, finally missing one of those 5-footers like everyone else. On the 16th, he had the exact same number Scheffler did, 275 yards, and one-upped the world No. 1 by stuffing a cutting 3 wood inside 5 feet, which he naturally cashed in for his eagle, the first of the week on No. 16.
Eight holes after hitting the self-proclaimed worst shot of his life, he’d pulled off arguably the best of his career to open up a seven-stroke lead. With that performance, Clark has set up a final round where his only real opponent will be himself. He will be paired with Scheffler, who will do his best to apply some pressure, but Sunday will be all about Clark — as was the case on Saturday.
His final two holes offered a glimpse at the high-wire act he may perform on Sunday. He parred the 17th after a double cross into the right fescue off the tee, getting a break by landing near a camera tower and getting relief. Then on t
| POS | CTRY | NAME | TO PAR | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | TOTAL | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
-7 | 64* | 69 | 70 | 2:30 PM | 203 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-1 | 72 | 68* | 69 | 2:30 PM | 209 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-1 | 68* | 69 | 72 | 2:08 PM | 209 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-1 | 72 | 67* | 70 | 2:19 PM | 209 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-1 | 70* | 67 | 72 | 2:19 PM | 209 | ||||
| T6 |
|
E | 71* | 68 | 71 | 1:57 PM | 210 | ||||
| T6 |
|
E | 70* | 70 | 70 | 1:57 PM | 210 | ||||
| T6 |
|
E | 73* | 70 | 67 | 2:08 PM | 210 | ||||
| T6 |
|
E | 71 | 66* | 73 | 1:46 PM | 210 | ||||
| T10 |
|
+1 | 73* | 65 | 73 | 1:35 PM | 211 | ||||
| T10 |
|
+1 | 67* | 70 | 74 | 1:35 PM | 211 | ||||
| T10 |
|
+1 | 70* | 71 | 70 | 1:46 PM | 211 | ||||
| T13 |
|
+2 | 70 | 71* | 71 | 1:19 PM | 212 | ||||
| T13 |
|
+2 | 69 | 72* | 71 | 1:19 PM | 212 | ||||
| T13 |
|
+2 | 68* | 72 | 72 | 1:08 PM | 212 | ||||
| T13 |
|
+2 | 71* | 69 | 72 | 1:08 PM | 212 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 71 | 71* | 71 | 12:46 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 70* | 70 | 73 | 12:13 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 71 | 71* | 71 | 12:46 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 69* | 71 | 73 | 12:13 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 71 | 72* | 70 | 12:57 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 67* | 73 | 73 | 11:57 AM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 71 | 69* | 73 | 11:57 AM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 72* | 68 | 73 | 12:24 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 69* | 71 | 73 | 12:24 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 74* | 67 | 72 | 12:35 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 71* | 70 | 72 | 12:35 PM | 213 | ||||
| T17 |
|
+3 | 74* | 68 | 71 | 12:57 PM | 213 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 74* | 68 | 72 | 11:35 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 71* | 70 | 73 | 11:24 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 71 | 68* | 75 | 11:02 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 72 | 70* | 72 | 11:35 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 70* | 70 | 74 | 11:13 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 66* | 77 | 71 | 11:46 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 72* | 71 | 71 | 11:46 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 71 | 70* | 73 | 11:13 AM | 214 | ||||
| T29 |
|
+4 | 68 | 73* | 73 | 11:24 AM | 214 | ||||
| T38 |
|
+5 | 70* | 71 | 74 | 10:35 AM | 215 | ||||
| T38 |
|
+5 | 78* | 65 | 72 | 10:51 AM | 215 | ||||
| T38 |
|
+5 | 72 | 70* | 73 | 10:51 AM | 215 | ||||
| T38 |
|
+5 | 72 | 72* | 71 | 11:02 AM | 215 | ||||
| T42 |
|
+6 | 72* | 72 | 72 | 10:35 AM | 216 | ||||
| T42 |
|
+6 | 73* | 70 | 73 | 10:24 AM | 216 | ||||
| T42 |
|
+6 | 71* | 68 | 77 | 10:13 AM | 216 | ||||
| T42 |
|
+6 | 74 | 68* | 74 | 10:13 AM | 216 | ||||
| T42 |
|
+6 | 72 | 71* | 73 | 10:24 AM | 216 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 71* | 70 | 76 | 9:29 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 72 | 71* | 74 | 9:51 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 69* | 74 | 74 | 9:40 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 75 | 69* | 73 | 10:02 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 70 | 74* | 73 | 10:02 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 70 | 73* | 74 | 9:40 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 69* | 72 | 76 | 9:29 AM | 217 | ||||
| T47 |
|
+7 | 72 | 71* | 74 | 9:51 AM | 217 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 72 | 72* | 74 | 9:18 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 73* | 71 | 74 | 9:18 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 74 | 68* | 76 | 9:02 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 68* | 74 | 76 | 8:51 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 70* | 72 | 76 | 8:51 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 69* | 73 | 76 | 9:02 AM | 218 | ||||
| T55 |
|
+8 | 69* | 72 | 77 | 8:40 AM | 218 | ||||
| T62 |
|
+9 | 71 | 73* | 75 | 8:29 AM | 219 | ||||
| T62 |
|
+9 | 75 | 69* | 75 | 8:40 AM | 219 | ||||
| T62 |
|
+9 | 71* | 71 | 77 | 8:29 AM | 219 | ||||
| T65 |
|
+11 | 71 | 73* | 77 | 8:18 AM | 221 | ||||
| T65 |
|
+11 | 71* | 73 | 77 | 8:18 AM | 221 | ||||
| 67 |
|
+12 | 74* | 70 | 78 | 8:07 AM | 222 | ||||
| T68 |
|
+13 | 72* | 71 | 80 | 8:07 AM | 223 | ||||
| T68 |
|
+13 | 70 | 73* | 80 | 7:56 AM | 223 | ||||
| 70 |
|
+14 | 74* | 70 | 80 | 7:56 AM | 224 | ||||
| 71 |
|
+15 | 71 | 72* | 82 | 7:45 AM | 225 | ||||
| 72 |
|
+16 | 73* | 71 | 82 | 7:45 AM | 226 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 74 | 71* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 76* | 69 | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 71 | 74* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 70* | 75 | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 74 | 71* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 75 | 70* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 72* | 74 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 75 | 71* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 77* | 69 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73 | 73* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74 | 72* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73* | 73 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74* | 72 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 76* | 70 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 68* | 78 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74* | 72 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73 | 73* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 70* | 76 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74 | 73* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 72* | 75 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 78 | 69* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 77 | 70* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74 | 73* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74* | 73 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 73 | 74* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 73* | 74 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 72* | 75 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 74 | 74* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 73 | 75* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 78 | 70* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 78 | 70* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 77 | 71* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 74* | 74 | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 77 | 71* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 72* | 77 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 72 | 77* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 74 | 75* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 76* | 73 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75 | 74* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75* | 74 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 77 | 72* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75 | 74* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 74* | 75 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 77 | 72* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 76* | 73 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 78 | 71* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 73 | 77* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 77 | 73* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 75 | 75* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 78* | 72 | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 76* | 74 | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 74 | 76* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74 | 77* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 77 | 74* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74* | 77 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 76 | 75* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 79* | 72 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 79* | 72 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 81* | 70 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74 | 77* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 77 | 74* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 76* | 76 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 75 | 77* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 72* | 80 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 75 | 77* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 76* | 76 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 79 | 73* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+13 | 82* | 71 | – | – | 153 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+14 | 77* | 77 | – | – | 154 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+16 | 79 | 77* | – | – | 156 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+16 | 77* | 79 | – | – | 156 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+17 | 81 | 76* | – | – | 157 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+19 | 82* | 77 | – | – | 159 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+20 | 80 | 80* | – | – | 160 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+21 | 84 | 77* | – | – | 161 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+21 | 79* | 82 | – | – | 161 | ||||
| WD |
|
– | 46* | – | – | – | – | ||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16 | 20 | 0 | |
| 8 | 8 | 0 |
|
PHOENIX (AP) Byron Buxton hit a grand slam in a 10-run fifth inning and the Minnesota Twins clobbered the Arizona Diamondbacks 16-8 on Saturday night.
Buxton has 24 homers to tie Houston’s Yordan Alvarez for the American League lead. He has three career grand slams.
The Nos. 6-9 batters combined for 13 of the Twins’ 20 hits, with Brooks Lee having four and missing a cycle by a home run. Victor Caratini, Luke Keaschall and Ryan Kreider each had three hits.
The Twins had 16 hits in the fourth and fifth innings when they sent a combined 24 batters to the plate.
Minnesota started the fifth with three hits to chase Zac Gallen (3-6), who was charged with nine runs and 12 hits – both career highs – in four-plus innings to raise his ERA to 6.10.
Buxton’s home run, to right-center, came off Yilber Díaz, who gave up seven hits and seven runs. He threw 44 pitches and recorded two outs. Philip Abner relieved and got the final out of the inning.
Taj Bradley (6-3) went five innings, giving up three hits and two runs – both on Jorge Barrosa’s second homer of the season. The Twins have won five of their last six games.
Ildemaro Vargas’ three-run double was the big hit in the Diamondbacks’ five-run seventh against reliever Justin Lawrence.
Vargas, who entered mid-game for defense as both teams went to the benches, eventually finished the game on the mound for Arizona, pitching 1 2/3 hitless innings.
Minnesota’s Mike Paredes (0-0, 4.20) was set to face Arizona’s José Cabrera, making his MLB debut, in the series finale Sunday.
—
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 16 | 20 | 0 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 8 | 8 | 0 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T. Larnach LF | 5 | 2 | 2 | 2 | .277 |
| T. Gray 2B | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .241 |
| B. Buxton CF | 4 | 1 | 1 | 4 | .273 |
| a- K. Fedko PH-CF | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
| K. Clemens RF | 5 | 0 | 1 | 1 | .248 |
| A. Martin RF-LF | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .236 |
| J. Bell DH | 5 | 2 | 2 | 0 | .247 |
| R. Lewis 1B | 5 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .200 |
| B. Lee 3B | 6 | 3 | 4 | 2 | .245 |
| V. Caratini C | 5 | 3 | 3 | 3 | .241 |
| L. Keaschall 2B-RF | 6 | 3 | 3 | 0 | .259 |
| R. Kreidler SS | 4 | 2 | 3 | 4 | .270 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K. Marte 2B | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .257 |
| a- T. Tawa PH-2B | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .164 |
| G. Perdomo SS | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | .240 |
| C. Carroll RF | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .280 |
| I. Vargas P | 3 | 1 | 1 | 3 | .262 |
| L. Gurriel DH-LF | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .211 |
| P. Smith 1B | 5 | 0 | 2 | 1 | .205 |
| N. Arenado 3B | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .238 |
| L. Groover 3B | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .162 |
| A. Del Castillo C | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | .189 |
| J. Barrosa CF-RF | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | .184 |
| T. Troy LF-CF | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | .254 |
| PITCHERS | IP | H | ER | BB | SO | ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T. Bradley(W, 6-3) | 5.0 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4.11 |
| A. Banda | 1.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4.35 |
| J. Lawrence | 0.2 | 2 | 5 | 4 | 2 | 8.04 |
| E. Orze | 1.1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 4.75 |
| Y. Gomez | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3.75 |

Getty Images
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Isn’t it funny how history repeats itself? Eight years after Dustin Johnson entered the weekend at the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills with a four-stroke lead, another former champion will look to convert the same advantage at the same golf course in the same championship.
Wyndham Clark hopes for a different fate.
Clark, the 2023 U.S. Open champion, has blitzed this field (and this golf course) across 36 holes, setting a scoring record for a U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills with his tally of 7 under. One hand may be reaching for the trophy, but it is best to resist temptation as zero prior 36-hole leaders at Shinnecock Hills proved to be the eventual leader after 72 holes.
It’s one part pressure and one part golf course as Shinnecock Hills has yet to bite back like players know it can. The United States Golf Association has expressed caution all week, and even with some poorly forecasted winds, the lever has not been pulled to the fullest extent.
“I truly believe if the USGA wanted to have some fun and with the wind coming through and firm up the greens,” Xander Schauffele said. “I mean, over-par will win this golf tournament again, sitting at whatever all these guys under par. I do believe this course can be that way.”
More U.S. Open 2026: Complete tee times list for Saturday at Shinnecock Hills
Syringing has been the word of the week up this point, and while humidity may keep moisture in the greens the rest of the way, the USGA still has setup options to give players fits. The plan has always been to build this golf course up as the championship progresses — a crescendo of sorts you could say — and the weekend should put that on full display.

“I think Brooks [Koepka] was pretty far back going into the weekend in 2018,” Rory McIlroy said. “So, yeah, if there’s a course where you feel like you still have a chance if you’re seven back going into the weekend like I am, it’s definitely this one.”
Let’s get into whether or not those off the pace will be able to make up the difference over these next 36 holes and identify the contenders and pretenders this weekend at Shinnecock Hills.
The guy is a cockroach in the best way imaginable. When it hits the fan (which it may this weekend), Schauffele has an uncanny ability to emerge unscathed, crawl around and stay alive. He struck the ball beautifully on Friday hitting 16 of 18 greens in regulation, and if that carries into the rest of his championship, he has a fantastic opportunity to snag the third leg of the career grand slam.
Verdict: Contender
The Englishman has the most wins on the PGA Tour this season and seems to have not played his best golf yet this week. That is dangerous. Fitzpatrick is humming in most aspects of his game, and should the driver start to cooperate a hair more (ranks outside the top 110 in strokes gained off the tee to this point), he will have the full bag in control. While that is in question, what isn’t is Fitzpatrick’s mettle. His mindset was built for the U.S. Open.
“I think being comfortable in the moment is the big thing,” Fitzpatrick said. “I know I’m four behind, but might be one of the last few groups tomorrow. I feel like, A, I’ve obviously been in that situation before, and B, having the game to match. You know, I feel like maybe 2017 if I had managed to find myself in a position like that, I probably wasn’t ready. I didn’t hit it far enough or didn’t hit my irons well enough, whatever it may be. 2022 with the way I was playing, I felt very comfortable to be in that position, and obviously the same today.”
Verdict: Contender
Very quietly finished inside the top 10 at the U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club but hasn’t done much else in this championship. Sprinted up the leaderboard late on Friday amid some difficult conditions, but this Kim is not the Kim that came out of the PGA Tour gates blazing en route to securing records alongside titans of the game. The iron play has been better in 2026, but he is doing the job so far in spite of it.
Verdict: Pretender
Thought it was a really impressive second round, more than just the score of 1 under. Having to sleep with your name on the first page of the leaderboard knowing that your recent play has not been your best and producing a round that keeps you well in this tournament is ballsy stuff. He’s 2 under on the par 3s thus far, which is tough to do, but with so much cream around him, Stevens doesn’t seem like the name that will rise to the top.
Verdict: Pretender
Changed wedges after switching to a different bounce on Monday, and it proved to be a fruitful decision. Morikawa is the second-best ball striker among this list even without his full arsenal at his disposal. The question is whether that catches up to him over the weekend. Couple that with the old adage of it being difficult to follow up a low round with another — Morikawa fired a second-round 65 tying Joaquin Niemann for low honors on Friday — and questions start to form, but I think he has the answers.
“It’s still a little uncomfortable,” Morikawa said. “I’m hitting it a lot better. Last week was huge for me. I felt like I made progress after that. I mean, took a little bit of time off with the baby. You know, I can’t hit every shot that I want to hit. Usually my go-to shot with right-to-left wind with an iron would be to cut something up, know how it’s going to spin, and just play that shot. I can’t quite cut it as much as I want.
“Thankfully the greens are soft enough right now where I don’t have to hit the high spinner, but I’m able to hit enough shots. I think I proved it to myself today that I have enough tools to go out and play well. Thankfully I’m moving a little bit better. So the driver, I’m getting a little bit more distance out of it. I don’t feel like I have to play it too low. But I can’t hit the high bomb that I wish on some holes I could unleash.”
Verdict: Contender
He’s a two-time major champion. He is starting to play much better golf. He was the clubhouse leader for a few hours Sunday at the PGA Championship. Thomas’ short game and creativity are such X factors, but it felt like so much work watching him on Friday. He put his touch on display numerous times and scrambled his butt off from places that have a big X in the yardage book. Ultimately, the rope he is balancing on is going to give out.
Verdict: Pretender
Hand up, I have never been much of a Sam Burns guy, but he is starting to turn me. His game is beginning to translate on these more difficult golf courses and although he has not won in years (!), Burns will get to Sunday with a chance. His Sunday performances have not been great — remember what happened last year at Oakmont! — but the fact that he continues to put himself in this position feels like invaluable experience. He is going to put that to good use eventually, and it may be this weekend.
Verdict: Contender
I want nothing more to be wrong. Higgs was the last man in the field, thought about quitting golf and has not finished inside the top 10 on either the PGA Tour or Korn Ferry Tour since last year’s Myrtle Beach Classic. He is playing with house money, and sometimes those players are the most dangerous. He’s got nothing to lose!
Verdict: Pretender
The mindset for those seven off Clark’s pace is to realize they are only three strokes behind second place. With 36 holes left to play, that deficit is extremely manageable. Scheffler looked very much like the Scheffler on Friday evening as he peppered fairways, peppered greens and was a few burned edges and bad bounces on the bumpy poa annua greens away from putting together a truly special round.
| POS | CTRY | NAME | TO PAR | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | TOTAL | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
-7 | 64* | 69 | 3:45 PM | – | 133 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-3 | 68* | 69 | 3:34 PM | – | 137 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-3 | 70* | 67 | 3:23 PM | – | 137 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-3 | 67* | 70 | 3:45 PM | – | 137 | ||||
| T2 |
|
-3 | 71 | 66* | 3:34 PM | – | 137 | ||||
|
|
|||||||||||
| 6 |
|
-2 | 73* | 65 | 3:23 PM | – | 138 | ||||
| T7 |
|
-1 | 71 | 68* | 3:12 PM | – | 139 | ||||
| T7 |
|
-1 | 71* | 68 | 3:01 PM | – | 139 | ||||
| T7 |
|
-1 | 72 | 67* | 3:01 PM | – | 139 | ||||
| T7 |
|
-1 | 71* | 68 | 3:12 PM | – | 139 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 72 | 68* | 2:01 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 70* | 70 | 2:50 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 70* | 70 | 2:23 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 68* | 72 | 2:50 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 70* | 70 | 2:23 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 69* | 71 | 2:12 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 71* | 69 | 1:50 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 67* | 73 | 2:34 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 71 | 69* | 2:34 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 72* | 68 | 2:12 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T11 |
|
E | 69* | 71 | 2:01 PM | – | 140 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 71* | 70 | 1:01 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 70* | 71 | 1:12 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 71* | 70 | 1:12 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 70 | 71* | 1:01 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 69 | 72* | 1:28 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 71 | 70* | 1:50 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 68 | 73* | 1:39 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 70* | 71 | 12:50 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 69* | 72 | 12:39 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 74* | 67 | 1:28 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 71* | 70 | 1:39 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T22 |
|
+1 | 69* | 72 | 12:50 PM | – | 141 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 74* | 68 | 11:39 AM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 72 | 70* | 12:17 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 71 | 71* | 12:17 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 72 | 70* | 11:50 AM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 74 | 68* | 11:39 AM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 71 | 71* | 12:28 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 68* | 74 | 12:06 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 70* | 72 | 12:39 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 74 | 68* | 12:28 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 69* | 73 | 11:28 AM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 71* | 71 | 12:06 PM | – | 142 | ||||
| T34 |
|
+2 | 74* | 68 | 11:50 AM | – | 142 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 72 | 71* | 10:17 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 78* | 65 | 10:55 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 69* | 74 | 10:44 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 66* | 77 | 11:06 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 72* | 71 | 11:28 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 72* | 71 | 10:33 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 73* | 70 | 10:55 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 70 | 73* | 11:17 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 70 | 73* | 11:06 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 71 | 72* | 10:06 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 73* | 70 | 10:33 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 71 | 72* | 10:44 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 72 | 71* | 11:17 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T46 |
|
+3 | 72 | 71* | 10:17 AM | – | 143 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 72* | 72 | 9:55 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 71 | 73* | 9:44 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 75 | 69* | 9:22 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 72 | 72* | 9:33 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 71 | 73* | 9:44 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 73* | 71 | 9:00 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 75 | 69* | 9:11 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 70 | 74* | 9:33 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 73* | 71 | 9:00 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 74* | 70 | 9:11 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 71* | 73 | 9:55 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 74* | 70 | 9:22 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| T60 |
|
+4 | 72 | 72* | 10:06 AM | – | 144 | ||||
| OFFICIAL CUT LINE +4 | |||||||||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 74 | 71* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 76* | 69 | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 71 | 74* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 70* | 75 | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 74 | 71* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 75 | 70* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 73 | 72* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+5 | 72 | 73* | – | – | 145 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 72* | 74 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 75 | 71* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 77* | 69 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73 | 73* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74 | 72* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73* | 73 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74* | 72 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 76* | 70 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 68* | 78 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 74* | 72 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 73 | 73* | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+6 | 70* | 76 | – | – | 146 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74 | 73* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 72* | 75 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 78 | 69* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 77 | 70* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74 | 73* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 74* | 73 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 73 | 74* | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 73* | 74 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+7 | 72* | 75 | – | – | 147 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 74 | 74* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 73 | 75* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 78 | 70* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 78 | 70* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 77 | 71* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 74* | 74 | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+8 | 77 | 71* | – | – | 148 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 72* | 77 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 72 | 77* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 74 | 75* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 76* | 73 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75 | 74* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75* | 74 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 77 | 72* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 75 | 74* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 74* | 75 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 77 | 72* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 76* | 73 | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+9 | 78 | 71* | – | – | 149 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 73 | 77* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 77 | 73* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 75 | 75* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 78* | 72 | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 76* | 74 | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+10 | 74 | 76* | – | – | 150 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74 | 77* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 77 | 74* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74* | 77 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 76 | 75* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 79* | 72 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 79* | 72 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 81* | 70 | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 74 | 77* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+11 | 77 | 74* | – | – | 151 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 76* | 76 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 75 | 77* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 72* | 80 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 75 | 77* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 76* | 76 | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+12 | 79 | 73* | – | – | 152 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+13 | 82* | 71 | – | – | 153 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+14 | 77* | 77 | – | – | 154 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+16 | 79 | 77* | – | – | 156 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+16 | 77* | 79 | – | – | 156 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+17 | 81 | 76* | – | – | 157 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+19 | 82* | 77 | – | – | 159 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+20 | 80 | 80* | – | – | 160 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+21 | 84 | 77* | – | – | 161 | ||||
| CUT |
|
+21 | 79* | 82 | – | – | 161 | ||||
| WD |
|
– | – | – | – | – | – | ||||
SEATTLE – Hours before a noon kickoff on a picture-perfect summertime day in Seattle, U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino had news to break in the routine team meeting. Christian Pulisic would not be available to start in the team’s 2-0 win over Australia, a calf issue ruling him out of a clash he had worked all week to take part in despite training on his own. It was not a cause for concern, though.
“To play with Pepi today wasn’t a shock,” Folarin Balogun said post-match, of the man who started in place of the injured star. “It wasn’t like a Plan B because CP was out. It didn’t feel like that to me. It just felt like another solution to win the game.”
Four years after receiving an unwanted phone call from then-coach Gregg Berhalter that he would not be making the trip to Qatar — and then promptly hanging up on him — Pepi was not only on a World Cup team but was poised to make his first start at the tournament, one that took place on home soil. Balogun’s perspective has some credence, too. Pochettino’s starters had been fairly well-defined heading into the World Cup, but if anyone outside of the group was pushing for a spot in the lineup, it was Pepi. The forward kept the vibes high as the U.S. team slumped their way to a lopsided loss to Belgium in March, but pressed and got the assist to Patrick Agyemang’s goal right at the end. He played a big role in the build-up of two goals in their 3-2 win over Senegal last month. If anyone was poised to work his way into that core group, it was Pepi.
The strategy was ultimately a smart one. Australia played with five defenders, and having two strikers to oppose them meant one was there to keep the opponents busy leaving the other one free to do whatever else was needed.
“I felt like we gave them a hard time,” Pepi said. “I felt like it was a difficult game, to be able to get a lot of shots, a lot of spaces in between, so they really closed down the middle, but at the end of the day, we got the win, we got the goals and we did our job…it’s always good to be able to have those two strikers. If a defender is marking me, then the other one is always free, so it’s a good thing that we were able to play like this and it just shows what the team has.”
Pepi allowed the USMNT to show a different side of their attacking prowess, Pochettino doing well in recent weeks to take advantage of the group’s deep pool of talent in those positions. The player had an unglamorous showing, but he did exactly what was needed of him, pressing until he came off in the 74th minute for Sebastian Berhalter as the coach decided to hold things down with a range of defensive substitutions. He seized the opportunity in front of him and looks to be an important option for the U.S. team going forward, especially now that their trip to the knockout rounds is confirmed. It was already clear before the USMNT’s World Cup got started, but even more so after Friday’s win over Australia, they are certainly not a one-note team that unravels when Plan A goes out the window.
“When we start[ed] the game, did you see how Pepi and Balo go to press,” Pochettino said. ” When that happens, the will to go, to do and to make the effort, to try [to] knock them … They don’t play long balls. They play passes, long passes and I think we forced them to play long and because in the way that their players are so good, the way that we worked, putting pressure starting with our two strikers and behind – Weston [McKennie], Sergino [Dest], Malik [Tillman], Tyler [Adams[, Antonee [Robinson[ – I think it was a very good job and made [it] easy for our defensive line to control and after have the capacity to play.”
Pepi was hardly the only one to benefit from the opportunity in front of him. Alex Freeman was also one of the standouts on Friday, especially when realizing the difference a year can make. Freeman had zero caps in June 2025 but now has two World Cup starts under his belt and a goal, the second in Friday’s win in Seattle. Coupled with a wintertime move from Orlando City in MLS to Spain’s Villarreal, Freeman has been on a quick upward trajectory since Pochettino first called him in a year ago.
“I want to give the credit to Orlando the player is doing a fantastic job. The evolution is massive. He’s [such] a humble guy. He has an amazing profile. He wants to learn. He always listens. He’s a player that you really, being with, not only coaching … he’s a lovely guy and an amazing player. For me, [he] has the potential to be one of the best players in his position [in] the world.
“And Oscar Pareja and the coaching staff because when we arrived here and to build our relationship with all the clubs in MLS, I think [about] how important it is now to enjoy the player that we really only saw a few clips [of] but to trust in the player and to give the possibility to come with us,” Pochettino said, referencing Freeman’s former coach at Orlando.”
Freeman has enjoyed the quick transition from little-known MLS prospect to World Cup goalscorer, unfazed by the tasks in front of him.
“I think it’s hard for me to take it all in, but I think it’s good also to go through these challenges at such a fast pace at a young age,” Freeman said. “I feel like for me, it’s just going to make me an even better player to be able to adjust to different atmospheres and be able to adjust to different circumstances, and now that I’m here, it’s just: How can I give 100% and do it for my country and how can I make everyone proud?”
In some ways he takes after his father Antonio, a former NFL player.
“I think for me that’s kind of a full circle family moment,” he said. “I think for me, it just shows how great the family tree is and I think that just shows how he can be great, but I can be great in my own way as well, and I think that just shows how amazing it is to have a dad who’s successful and that can mentor me to be able to be ready for moments like these.”
He remains the poster child for Pochettino’s experimentation process, the coach calling in upwards of 60 players before settling on his 26 members of the World Cup team. Two games in, the tournament has offered validation of many sorts to Pochettino and his processes, something Freeman acknowledged after a celebratory afternoon.
“I think that just shows how [deep] our roster is, how [many] good players we have,” he said. “On the field, whenever they get a chance and in fact, that just shows for us – never not be ready because you don’t know when your chance is going to get called up and be able to play and Pepi did that today and he was able to contribute in a very, very amazing way today and I think that just shows that [you need to] be ready and be able to contribute any way you can.”
| T | |
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2 |
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0 |
| T | |
|---|---|
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0 |
|
|
1 |
| T | |
|---|---|
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|
3 |
|
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0 |
| T | |
|---|---|
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0 |
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1 |