Blog

  • Dbacks recap and notes

    • Diamondbacks’ Pavin Smith: Swats homer in win

      Smith went 2-for-4 with a solo home run in Monday’s 4-3 win over the Angels.

      Smith launched a solo home run in the seventh inning off the foul pole in right field to give Arizona a 3-2 lead. It was the first home run he’s hit in 357 days. Smith has struggled since coming off the injured list and entered Monday’s contest batting .087 (2-for-23) over 11 games since his return. Despite the grind, manager Torey Lovullo still plans to give him opportunities at first base or designated hitter when the Diamondbacks face right-handers.

    • Diamondbacks’ Geraldo Perdomo: Back to second in order

      Perdomo batted second and went 1-for-2 with two walks, an RBI and a run scored in Monday’s 4-3 win over the Angels.

      Perdomo, who had spent the previous 10 games lower in the order, was moved back to the two hole among a slew of batting order changes enacted by manager Torey Lovullo. The shortstop had gone 12-for-34 (.353) with six walks and three steals during his brief time in the lower third of the order.

    • Diamondbacks’ Ryan Waldschmidt: Adjustments needed

      The Diamondbacks want Waldschmidt to work on hitting breaking stuff in the minors, Alex Weiner of Arizona Sports reports.

      Waldschmidt initially handled MLB pitching with aplomb, but the league adjusted with heavy doses of spin and the strikeouts piled up. The prospect carried a 56.2 percent whiff rate against breaking balls and a 32.8 percent strikeout rate back to Triple-A Reno. “The league made a little adjustment, started spinning a lot of pitches, making it tougher for him at a level of which he’s never seen,” Diamondbacks hitting coach Joe Mather told Arizona Sports. In addition to getting better against breaking stuff, manager Torey Lovullo wants Waldschmidt to improve at controlling counts and not swing at pitcher’s pitches.

    • Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Notches 18th save

      Sewald earned a save against the Angels on Monday, allowing one run on one hit while striking out two batters over one inning.

      Sewald entered in the ninth frame with Arizona up 4-2. He retired the first two batters he faced before Donovan Walton tagged him for a solo homer. Sewald was able to shake off the long ball, though, and struck out Oswald Peraza to slam the door shut. The veteran closer picked up his second save in as many days to push his season total up to 18, tied for third-best in the majors. Since his last blown save (May 13 versus Texas), Sewald has allowed just two runs across 12 appearances spanning 12 innings, going 9-for-9 in save chances during that span.

  • FIFA World Cup Scores

    FT
    T
    soccer team logoSpain
    0
    soccer team logoCabo Verde
    0
    Group Stage, Atlanta Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoBelgium
    1
    soccer team logoEgypt
    1
    Group Stage, Seattle Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoSaudi Arabia
    1
    soccer team logoUruguay
    1
    Group Stage, Miami Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoIran
    2
    soccer team logoNew Zealand
    2
    Group Stage, Los Angeles Stadium
  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins36-37
    0 5 0
    7 10 1
    Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
    • W: Z. Wheeler  (6-1)
    • L: R. Gusto  (0-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals29-44
    3 8 0
    7 8 0
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: B. Lord  (5-0)
    • L: M. Spence  (0-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Mets32-40
    0 6 0
    Reds34-37
    12 9 0
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: C. Burns  (8-1)
    • L: T. Myers  (0-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Padres37-34
    0 1 0
    3 8 0
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: D. May  (5-6)
    • L: L. Giolito  (2-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rockies27-46
    4 7 1
    Cubs38-35
    5 10 0
    Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: D. Palencia  (2-1)
    • L: J. Mejia  (1-6)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Twins34-40
    4 4 0
    Rangers35-37
    2 5 0
    Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX
    • W: T. Rogers  (3-3)
    • L: M. Gore  (4-6)
    • S: Y. Gomez  (6)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers30-42
    9 11 0
    Astros33-41
    3 7 0
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: K. Finnegan  (2-0)
    • L: K. Teng  (3-6)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Angels29-44
    3 10 1
    4 8 0
    Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
    • W: R. Nelson  (3-5)
    • L: W. Urena  (4-5)
    • S: P. Sewald  (18)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Pirates36-37
    2 8 1
    11 15 1
    Sutter Health Park, West Sacramento, California
    • W: J. Ginn  (5-3)
    • L: J. Jones  (1-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rays41-28
    3 8 0
    Dodgers46-27
    4 7 0
    Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
    • W: K. Hurt  (2-1)
    • L: S. Matz  (4-4)
    • S: T. Scott  (8)
  • Pavin Smith’s 1st homer of the season lifts the Diamondbacks over the Angels 4-3

    PHOENIX (AP) Pavin Smith hit a tiebreaking solo homer off the right-field foul pole, Ryne Nelson threw seven quality innings and the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Los Angeles Angels 4-3 on Monday night.

    Smith broke a 2-all tie in the seventh when he launched his first homer in nearly a calendar year. The veteran first baseman – who came into the game with a .103 batting average – has spent most of this season on the injured list after having surgery to remove bone chips in his left elbow.

    Geraldo Perdomo added an RBI double later in the seventh that made it 4-2. Paul Sewald gave up a solo homer to Donovan Walton with two outs in the ninth, but struck out Oswald Peraza to earn his 18th save in 19 chances.

    Nelson (3-5) allowed two runs over seven innings, scattering nine hits and striking out five. The right-hander has thrown at least seven innings in five of his last seven starts.

    Los Angeles slugger Mike Trout hit his 16th homer – an opposite-field shot – to tie the score at 2 in the fifth. It was the three-time MVP’s 420th career home run.

    Walbert Ureña (4-5) threw seven innings for the Angels, giving up four runs – three earned.

    The Angels grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first on Jo Adell’s double down the right-field line that brought home Trout. The D-backs tied it in the bottom half on Gabriel Moreno’s RBI single.

    Lourdes Gurriel Jr. returned to Arizona’s lineup after missing roughly three weeks with a strained left hamstring. He had an RBI single in the fourth.

    The Diamondbacks throw RHP Merrill Kelly (5-5, 5.46 ERA) while the Angels counter with LHP Reid Detmers (2-5, 4.00) on Tuesday.

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

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

    Expert Picks
    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Zack Cimini
    Zack CiminiContrarian with Chutzpah
    #2
    +480.5 (54%)
    Last 35 MLB
    L.A. Angels+110
    Money Line
    Picked Jun 15 @ 4:06 pm, 0.5 unit on Caesars
    LOSS
    The Arizona Diamondbacks have one of the strongest trends on the short season. After a road trip returning home they are 5-0 in the first game. Still, all good things come to an end, and the Dbacks will see an Angels team trending upward. They just had a season best four game win streak snapped yesterday by the Tampa Bay Rays. Take the Angels to snap Ryne Nelson’s four straight quality starts at home.

    Zack’s Pick

    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    #1
    +1553 (68%)
    Last 129 MLB
    Arizona-122
    Money Line
    Picked Jun 14 @ 8:30 pm, 1 unit on DraftKings
    WIN
    This seems like a too-cheap price for Monday’s series opener from the desert. Arizona, which might get Lourdes Gurriel back from the IL, hasn’t been that great of late but has played a pretty tough and road-heavy schedule. Monday starter Ryne Nelson has largely dominated in his past four home outings. The Angels are quite bad, especially away (12-23). Rookie pitcher Walbert Urena (2.44 ERA) has been a nice surprise and probably why this number is low, but his road splits are considerably worse.

    Matt’s Pick

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

    29-44

    1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3 10 1
    1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 X 4 8 0
    • W: R. Nelson (3-5)L: W. Urena (4-5)S: P. Sewald (18)
    • HR: LAA – D. Walton (2), M. Trout (16), ARI – P. Smith (1)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    Z. Neto SS 4 0 0 0 .220
    M. Trout CF 3 2 2 1 .230
    W. Meckler LF 4 0 1 0 .292
    J. Adell RF 4 0 2 1 .257
    N. Schanuel 1B 4 0 0 0 .254
    D. Guzman 3B 4 0 1 0 .231
    L. O’Hoppe C 4 0 1 0 .221
    D. Walton DH 4 1 2 1 .310
    O. Peraza 2B 4 0 1 0 .260
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 4 1 1 0 .255
    G. Perdomo SS 2 1 1 1 .246
    C. Carroll RF 4 1 1 0 .277
    G. Moreno C 4 0 1 1 .264
    L. Gurriel DH 4 0 1 1 .229
    N. Arenado 3B 4 0 1 0 .243
    J. Lawlar CF-LF 2 0 0 0 .296
    P. Smith 1B 4 1 2 1 .152
    I. Vargas 1B 0 0 0 0 .267
    T. Troy LF 3 0 0 0 .217
    J. Barrosa CF 0 0 0 0 .172
    BATTING
    • 2B – J. Adell (11), L. O’Hoppe (7)
    • HR – M. Trout (16), D. Walton (2)
    • RBI – M. Trout (33), J. Adell (41), D. Walton (5)
    • 2-Out RBI – M. Trout, J. Adell, D. Walton
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – N. Schanuel 3 (3), D. Walton
    BATTING
    • 2B – G. Perdomo (10)
    • HR – P. Smith
    • RBI – G. Perdomo (25), G. Moreno (24), L. Gurriel (12), P. Smith (4)
    • 2-Out RBI – G. Perdomo, G. Moreno
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – C. Carroll 2 (2), P. Smith
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – C. Carroll (9), N. Arenado (3)
    FIELDING
    • E – L. O’Hoppe (4)
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Arenado-Marte-Smith)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    W. Urena(L, 4-5) 7.0 7 3 2 3 2.60
    J. Fermin 1.0 1 0 1 0 5.06
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    R. Nelson(W, 3-5) 7.0 9 2 0 5 4.97
    J. Loaisiga(H, 5) 1.0 0 0 0 0 3.00
    P. Sewald(S, 18) 1.0 1 1 0 2 3.29
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – W. Urena 88-57, J. Fermin 18-10
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – W. Urena 14-5, J. Fermin 4-0
    • Batters Faced – W. Urena 30, J. Fermin 5
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – R. Nelson 95-68, J. Loaisiga 8-6, P. Sewald 20-12
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – R. Nelson 10-6, J. Loaisiga 3-0, P. Sewald 0-2
    • Batters Faced – R. Nelson 29, J. Loaisiga 3, P. Sewald 4
  • Meet Cabo Verde, World Cup darlings: Recruiting on LinkedIn, a 40-year-old GK and a belief in themselves

    cabo-verde.jpg

    Getty Images

    Cabo Verde at the 2026 World Cup is one of those stories that restores faith in the sport and perhaps in something deeper. It’s a story about soccer, yes, but also about the impossible dreams that can become a reality — something that in sports, and in particular at the World Cup, is even more meaningful. However, Cabo Verde are not just the second-smallest nation by population to ever qualify for the World Cup with just under 500,000 residents, or the smallest country by land area to ever qualify for the World Cup — it’s a sporting project that actually worked out and started off years ago.

    For sure, the first-ever World Cup with 48 teams helped them to be where they are right now, but it’s no coincidence at all. In fact, they managed to qualify despite being in the same group as Libya, Angola and most notably Cameroon, one of the historical African national teams at the World Cup. The question is: how did a nation of just nine inhabited islands, perched 385 miles off Africa’s west coast, make it to the World Cup and then mark its debut by shocking holding European champions Spain to a 0-0 draw? There are countless stories that define this Cabo Verde side. One of the most remarkable belongs to goalkeeper Vozinha, who, at 40 years old, became the oldest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet on his World Cup debut. His saves against Spain turned him into a national icon overnight and earned admiration far beyond the country. And his is just one of many stories behind Cabo Verde’s remarkable rise:

    The goalkeeper and new hero, Vozinha

    The story of the World Cup so far. Cabo Verde’s goalkeeper, Vozinha, made history in his World Cup debut as he became the oldest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet on his World Cup debut, making seven crucial saves against Spain at 40 years old. He immediately became a national hero but his story reached another level after the game, when he became a social media star. Before the opening game against Spain, his Instagram account only counted 50,000 followers, and after the whistle that number surpassed three million (and keeps increasing every second). In his post-match interview with CazeTV, which was the one that started driving his social media popularity, he said, “This is crazy.”

    Vozinha, who celebrated his 40th birthday earlier this month, plies his trade with Chaves in Portugal’s second tier, where the club finished 10th last season. His full name is Josimar Jose Evora Dias, but he’s called Vozinha due to a special link with the World Cup as he was born during the 1986 edition, played in Mexico and dominated by Diego Armando Maradona’s Argentina. His father actually wanted to call him ‘Valdano’, after the Argentina and Real Madrid player Jorge Valdano, but the authorities refused it and his father named him after Josimar after the Brazilian defender who was one of the key players of the Selecao at the 1986 World Cup.

    But then, why Vozinha? Which literally means ‘little grandma’ in English:.

    The nickname is because of my grandparents,” he told FIFA. “I never lived with my parents. When I was born, my father was in the military service and my mother had to work hard for something, so I always grew up with my grandparents. No one in Cabo Verde knew me like that [by name], but I didn’t like it at first, I went crazy. When I arrived in Angola, there was another goalkeeper named Josimar and I said I am not going put Josimar II on the shirt – if everyone knew me as Vozinha in Cabo Verde, that’s what I would be.”

    On the pitch, his performance against Spain was nothing short of remarkable. With 68 touches — the most by a goalkeeper in a regulation World Cup match since Croatia’s Drazen Ladic against the Netherlands in 1998 — Vozinha was the undisputed man of the match. His composure in possession and a string of crucial saves helped Cabo Verde secure a historic 0-0 draw against the reigning European champions. After the final whistle, however, Vozinha had no doubt about who deserved the credit for the result:

    “I cried because I grew up with my grandparents. Unfortunately, they were not here. They died a few years before. They were everything for me, everything for my life. And also because of my mom. She didn’t manage to be here because of the visa. Because of the money you have to pay for the visa, we didn’t manage on time,” he said. “I would like her to be here. Our best weapon is our unity. Regardless of the player who arrives today, or the player who is 10 or 15 years old, the way we treat our family is our greatest strength. Everyone thought that we came here just to enjoy the World Cup, but no, we know that we have teams that we will always respect, because this is our first time, but we are here to compete, and we are here to fight for our country.”

    Recruited via LinkedIn?

    If this story wasn’t great enough, wait to hear about the one of Roberto Lopes, the starting center back who had to face players such as Nico Williams, Lamine Yamal and Ferran Torres in his World Cup debut. Lopes, who previously worked in a bank, was recruited by the national team via LinkedIn, the most popular networking platform. Lopes, nicknamed Pico, was working as a mortgage adviser in Dublin, Ireland, and played part-time for the Bohemians in the League of Ireland. In 2017, Dublin rivals Shamrock Rovers offered Lopes the chance to become a full-time footballer and leave his day job behind. He accepted without hesitation.

    Two years later, another life-changing opportunity arrived in a far more unusual way. In 2019, Lopes made his international debut for Cabo Verde after receiving an unexpected message on LinkedIn. Rui Aguas, then head coach of the Blue Sharks, had discovered that Lopes’ father, Carlos, was born in Cabo Verde and realized the defender was eligible to represent the nation. What began with a message on a professional networking platform ultimately led Lopes to the World Cup.

    Aguas messaged Lopes in Portuguese asking if he was interested but he didn’t hear back until he had to resend another message months later on the same platform, as the same player told the BBC.

  • Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup, and their championship window is still wide open

    By Justin Pelletier from the Charlotte Observor

     

    The Carolina Hurricanes celebrate on the ice after defeating Vegas to win the Stanley Cup Championship. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com Key Takeaways AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom. The Carolina Hurricanes (Shop Canes Fan Gear) are Stanley Cup Champions, finally breaking through to win it all in their eighth consecutive trip to the NHL playoffs, and fourth trip to at least the conference final round in those eight years. The scary thing for the Canes’ divisional opponents — and perhaps for the NHL? They’re not even close to the end of their championship “window.” In fact, it may just now be opening. TOP VIDEOS It’s often suggested that in the NHL, a team has a particular span of time in which to win a championship — a window — affected by a confluence of factors that prove favorable to constructing a Stanley Cup-winning roster: equal parts talent, affordability, youth, coaching, and chemistry. The NHL, following its two most recent work stoppages, incrementally put rules in place, including its salary cap structure, to create parity, trying to ensure all markets — regardless of location, size or tax structure — have a chance to participate in the postseason. And, for the most part, it’s worked. With the Buffalo Sabres finally making the playoffs in 2026, the league’s longest playoff drought now stands at 10 years (Detroit, we’re looking at you). Anaheim and San Jose, who hold the next-longest current droughts at eight and seven years, respectively, have solid young cores and will be knocking on the playoffs’ door next season. The Hurricanes, of course, are on the flip side of that. They’ve been to eight consecutive NHL postseasons. Only Colorado and Tampa Bay with nine each have a longer running streak. But the Hurricanes’ streak will probably outlast them both, assuming relative health. Why? Because of the way Canes’ GM Eric Tulsky (and in part, his predecessor Don Waddell) constructed the roster, and worked the salary cap to their favor. “It’s been a long time coming,” Tulsky said Sunday, his team celebrating on the T-Mobile center ice around him. “This team has been built the right way for a long time, and just gotten better and better year after year, and we finally got where we wanted to be.” Hurricanes massage the salary cap Let’s start with next season: Thirteen of the Hurricanes’ 14 rostered forwards in the Stanley Cup Final, five of the seven defensemen and two of the three goalies are already under contract for 2026-27. That’s a far larger percentage of players returning than most Cup-winning teams face in the offseason following a title run, and it’s mostly because Tulsky chose not to complete a major trade at this year’s deadline. No expiring contracts allows for continuity. But it’s not just that they have the players locked up. The players who are locked up are on longer term, team-friendly contracts as the NHL salary cap continues to incrementally climb. For 2026-27, the cap ceiling jumped to $104 million from $95.5 million, allowing for the expansion of player salaries as league revenue increases. Half of the league’s 32 teams have at least one player making more than one-tenth of the team’s total salary allowance, more than $10 million. The Canes are not one of them, though they are spending to the cap limit. Sebastian Aho is Carolina’s highest paid player at $9.75 million, followed by Nikolaj Ehlers at $8.5 million, and Andrei Svechnikov at $7.75 million. Carolina Hurricanes left wing Nikolaj Ehlers (27) greets Carolina Hurricanes right wing Andrei Svechnikov (37) after his goal to give the Hurricanes a 4-1 lead in the third period in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against Vegas, on Thursday, June 11, 2026 at Lenovo Center in Raleigh, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com Aho and Ehlers are locked in to those salaries through 2031, Svechnikov through 2029, even as the cap rises, allowing the Canes more room under the cap to sign other players that fit their system, including younger players like Jackson Blake and Logan Stankoven and Seth Jarvis. Each of those players are also on deals with Carolina through 2031, creating a pack of five forwards and two defenders — K’Andre Miller and Jaccob Slavin — who are contracted to spend the next five seasons in Raleigh. With 20 players under contract through 2027, and 15 through 2028, the Hurricanes are in no hurry to “rebuild.” Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere (4) celebrates with teammates Logan Stankoven (22) and Jackson Blake (53), after scoring to tie Las Vegas 4-4 in the third period of Game 1 in the Stanley Cup Finals, on Tuesday, June 2, 2026 at Lenovo Center in Raleigh, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com Down on the farm And then there is the Canes’ farm system, which is overflowing with NHL-ready, or near-NHL-ready talent, as exhibited by the Chicago Wolves run to the Calder Cup Final in the AHL. We also saw that organizational depth on display during the NHL regular season, when the Hurricanes had multiple defenders down with injuries in October, November and December. Charles-Alexis Legault, Joel Nystrom, Dominic Fensore and Ronan Seeley all played in at least one game on the blue line.

    Read more at: https://www.newsobserver.com/sports/nhl/carolina-hurricanes/article316122890.html#storylink=cpy

  • Dbacks recap and notes

    • Diamondbacks’ Zac Gallen: Logs quality start vs. Reds

      Gallen did not factor into the decision Sunday against the Reds, allowing three runs on six hits and two walks over six innings. He struck out four.

      Gallen was solid overall against Cincinnati, as he logged his first quality start since May 18 — he struggled to a 6.97 ERA across 20.2 innings in four starts prior to Sunday. Overall, Gallen is 3-5 with a 5.35 ERA, 1.53 WHIP and 50:23 K:BB across 15 starts (75.2 innings) this season. He’s currently lined up to face the Twins at home his next time out.

    • Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Up to 17 saves

      Sewald earned the save in Sunday’s 5-3 win over the Reds, logging a strikeout and a walk in a scoreless ninth inning.

      Sewald has converted eight straight save chances while allowing just one run on four hits in his last 11 innings. He’s up to 17 saves overall this season, tied for third-most in the National League, while posting a 3.08 ERA with a 0.72 WHIP and 29:7 K:BB across 26.1 innings.

    • Diamondbacks’ Ryan Waldschmidt: Sitting amid cold spell

      Waldschmidt is out of the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Reds.

      The Diamondbacks will keep Waldschmidt on the bench for the second time in four games while the rookie has hit a bit of a rough patch over the past few weeks. Waldschmidt has struck out at least once in each of his last 10 games and is slashing .211/.250/.316 with no home runs or stolen bases and just one run and one RBI over that stretch.

    • Diamondbacks’ Pavin Smith: Heading to bench vs. lefty

      Smith is out of the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Reds.

      The left-handed-hitting Smith will head to the bench for the third time in four games while the Reds send lefty Andrew Abbott to the hill. LuJames Groover will get the nod at first base Sunday in place of Smith.

    Team Statistical Rankings

    AVG R HR ERA
    Team .238
    (20th)
    295
    (19th)
    61
    (26th)
    4.20
    (17th)

    Injuries

    PLAYER INJURY
    Corbin Burnes SP Elbow
    Lourdes Gurriel LF Hamstring
    A.J. Puk RP Elbow
    Justin Martinez RP Elbow
    Carlos Santana 1B Thigh

  • FIFA World Cup Scores

    FT
    T
    soccer team logoAustralia
    2
    soccer team logoTurkiye
    0
    Group Stage, BC Place Vancouver
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoGermany
    7
    soccer team logoCuracao
    1
    Group Stage, Houston Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoNetherlands
    2
    soccer team logoJapan
    2
    Group Stage, Dallas Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoIvory Coast
    1
    soccer team logoEcuador
    0
    Group Stage, Philadelphia Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoSweden
    5
    soccer team logoTunisia
    1
    Group Stage, Estadio Monterrey
  • 2026 RBC Canadian Open leaderboard, grades: Bud Cauley grinds to first PGA Tour win over Matt Fitzpatrick

    Amid a career that has spanned 239 PGA Tour starts and a fair share of hurdles, Bud Cauley has finally claimed his first victory. Entering the week at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open winless in his 238 prior tournaments, the 36-year-old was simply sensational Sunday at TPC Toronto, usurping 54-hole leader Jackson Suber and ultimately finishing two shots clear of a talented field.

    Cauley signed for a final-round 65 to reach 17 under for the tournament, good for a two-stroke victory over Matt Fitzpatrick, whose 64 tied for the lowest round of the day. Before his emotional triumph, Cauley had ranked fifth among active players for most starts on the PGA Tour without a win.

    By raising a trophy in the Great White North, however, Cauley will seize the riches. He climbs to No. 28 in the FedEx Cup standings, giving him the inside track to qualify for the season finale at the Tour Championship. Cauley also earns an invitation to the 2027 Masters, which will mark his first appearance at Augusta National Golf Club.

    More immediately, Cauley climbs inside the top 60 of the Official World Golf Rankings. Ranked No. 68 at the onset of the tournament, his move earns him an exemption into next week’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. The start will be Cauley’s second straight at the U.S. Open and fourth of his career. He will also be in the field at the 2026 Open Championship in July.

    Cauley’s journey to the winner’s circle has been just that, a journey. In 2018, Cauley was involved in a car crash the week of the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, where he suffered broken ribs, a broken leg and a collapsed lung. He underwent surgery that same year, which came with its own set of complications.

    He returned briefly that fall, played the 2020 season and then stepped away. In 2024, he made his first start on the PGA Tour since the 2020 Safeway Open. The next year, Cauley earned his PGA Tour card through a medical extension highlighted by a T6 finish at The Players Championship.

    His position on this leaderboard at the Canadian Open through 54 holes was the first time since that Players that he had been inside the top five with 18 holes to play. This time, he capitalized on the opportunity.

    Starting the day one stroke off Suber’s 54-hole pace, Cauley looked cool, calm and collected from the jump. He turned in 2 under to pull even with Suber by the time the final threesome made the turn, and only then did Cauley turn on another gear with three straight birdies from Nos. 11-13 and another for good measure on No. 15 to put the tournament on ice.

    In the blink of an eye, Cauley went from being a co-leader to commanding a four-stroke lead with only a few holes to play. While Fitzpatrick found a big bird on the last to post the clubhouse lead at 15 under, Cauley’s tournament was firmly in his hands, and he never let go. Grade: A+

    Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2026 RBC Canadian Open.

    2. Matt Fitzpatrick (-15): Looked to become the third European to win four times in a single PGA Tour season but will instead have to settle for his first top-10 finish since the Zurich Classic. Fitzpatrick leaned on both his iron play and putting amid a week where his driver continued to handcuff him ever so slightly. If that club had been under full control, the former U.S. Open winner may have had a more legitimate claim at the title. Alas, he instead garners some momentum ahead of his trip to Southampton, New York.

    “It’s a good week,” Fitzpatrick said. “I would have taken it at the start of the week. I felt like there was a lot of good stuff in there, just needed to sort of have it come out. I was just saying that my putting was a little bit of a struggle last week, and I feel like I got a bit of a better process for what I’m working on this week, and that showed today, I putted really solid. On a golf course like this, where there’s a lot of opportunities, you got to take advantage.” Grade: A

    3. Viktor Hovland (-14): Signs of life! Without a top-10 finish on the PGA Tour since the WM Phoenix Open, Hovland hovered, hovered and hovered some more for his best finish of 2026. Unsurprisingly, his effort came courtesy of elite iron play that was enough to overcome shortcomings elsewhere in the bag. In an odd trend, the Norwegian continues to bleed distance to his counterpart off the tee, but at least this week, his accuracy was sublime. Remember, it was the driver at last year’s U.S. Open that frustrated him during his contention run. Grade: A

    T11. Wyndham Clark (-11): Was the presence in the final threesome that many believed would make a move. Unfortunately for Clark, early in the final round, that move was in the wrong direction as he hit just one fairway on the front nine and turned in over-par fashion, no thanks to three bogeys from Nos. 2-6. Clark picked it up from there, but by then, it was too little too late for the man who has rediscovered his game across his last four events. On the week, Clark topped the field in terms of strokes gained around the green as his short game made up for a loose long-game performance. Grade: B

    T29. Collin Morikawa (-8): A lot is going on in the world of Morikawa as he welcomed his first child and returned to competitive action for the first time since the PGA Championship. Admitting he is still less than 100% ever since his withdrawal from The Players Championship in March, the two-time major champion played like it. He was field-average with his irons and short game, sneaking into the top 30 thanks to a decent putting performance. Grade: C

    MC. Justin Rose: The Englishman entered the Canadian Open with two straight top-15 finishes to his credit before the momentum halted in the form of an early exit. Rose continues to get up for the biggest events of the calendar and will be among the contenders next week at the U.S. Open, but consistency in this stage of his career continues to evade him. He was never able to get anything going as he put nine bogeys on his scorecard in just 36 holes. Grade: F

    Updates
    (41)
  • RBC Canadian Open Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR EARNINGS R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    USA
    -17 69* 63 66 65 263
    2
    ENG
    -15 67* 68 66 64 265
    3
    NOR
    -14 68* 69 64 65 266
    T4
    USA
    -13 65 67* 68 67 267
    T4
    USA
    -13 65 67* 67 68 267
    T4
    SWE
    -13 66* 65 68 68 267
    T4
    USA
    -13 66* 65 66 70 267
    T8
    ZAF
    -12 66* 67 70 65 268
    T8
    NZL
    -12 66 66* 68 68 268
    T8
    CAN
    -12 69* 66 65 68 268
    T11
    CAN
    -11 64* 69 69 67 269
    T11
    USA
    -11 70* 67 64 68 269
    T11
    ENG
    -11 67* 65 67 70 269
    T11
    USA
    -11 68 68* 63 70 269
    T15
    USA
    -10 67 68* 69 66 270
    T15
    KOR
    -10 67* 69 68 66 270
    T15
    USA
    -10 65 69* 69 67 270
    T15
    SCO
    -10 68 66* 67 69 270
    T15
    USA
    -10 66 70* 64 70 270
    T20
    FRA
    -9 67* 71 67 66* 271
    T20
    ZAF
    -9 65 71* 69 66* 271
    T20
    ENG
    -9 68 67* 70 66* 271
    T20
    ARG
    -9 64 69* 72 66* 271
    T20
    JPN
    -9 71* 66 70 64* 271
    T20
    USA
    -9 68* 67 67 69 271
    T20
    USA
    -9 68 66* 68 69 271
    T20
    ENG
    -9 65* 71 65 70 271
    T20
    USA
    -9 64 67* 69 71 271
    T29
    TWN
    -8 69 66* 69 68 272
    T29
    USA
    -8 67* 71 66 68 272
    T29
    USA
    -8 67* 64 72 69 272
    T29
    CAN
    -8 66* 67 70 69 272
    T29
    CAN
    -8 69 68* 69 66* 272
    T29
    JPN
    -8 68* 69 69 66* 272
    T29
    USA
    -8 70* 65 68 69 272
    T29
    CAN
    -8 67 70* 66 69 272
    T29
    USA
    -8 65 69* 73 65* 272
    T29
    IRL
    -8 65 69* 67 71 272
    39
    DNK
    -7 69* 69 67 68* 273
    T40
    USA
    -6 65 73* 66 70 274
    T40
    ENG
    -6 66* 67 72 69* 274
    T40
    CAN
    -6 69 68* 66 71 274
    T40
    ARG
    -6 66 69* 68 71 274
    T40
    USA
    -6 67 70* 66 71 274
    T45
    USA
    -5 68 69* 68 70* 275
    T45
    USA
    -5 68 68* 69 70* 275
    T45
    USA
    -5 65 73* 66 71 275
    T45
    USA
    -5 68* 68 71 68* 275
    T45
    USA
    -5 64* 69 68 74 275
    T45
    USA
    -5 65 71* 72 67* 275
    T51
    USA
    -4 66 68* 70 72 276
    T51
    USA
    -4 68* 70 66 72 276
    T51
    USA
    -4 66* 68 73 69* 276
    T54
    CAN
    -3 68 69* 69 71* 277
    T54
    USA
    -3 69 68* 69 71* 277
    T54
    ZAF
    -3 67* 70 69 71* 277
    T54
    USA
    -3 69 66* 67 75 277
    T54
    USA
    -3 67* 63 78 69* 277
    59
    USA
    -2 70 68* 74 66* 278
    T60
    USA
    -1 69* 69 70 71* 279
    T60
    NOR
    -1 68 70* 70 71* 279
    T60
    CAN
    -1 65* 72 71 71* 279
    T60
    CHN
    -1 67 64* 79 69* 279
    T60
    USA
    -1 68 70* 75 66* 279
    T65
    USA
    E 67* 71 71 71* 280
    T65
    CAN
    E 67 71* 78 64* 280
    T67
    CAN
    +1 69 69* 72 71* 281
    T67
    USA
    +1 67 70* 73 71* 281
    T67
    USA
    +1 65 70* 77 69* 281
    70
    USA
    +2 70 68* 72 72* 282
    T71
    USA
    +3 70* 64 72 77* 283
    T71
    JPN
    +3 69* 68 72 74* 283
    73
    USA
    +5 67* 67 80 71* 285
    74
    DEU
    +7 70* 68 76 73* 287
    CUT
    IRL
    -1 71* 68 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 70* 69 139
    CUT
    VEN
    -1 67* 72 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 69 70* 139
    CUT
    AUS
    -1 70 69* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 69 70* 139
    CUT
    DEU
    -1 67 72* 139
    CUT
    CAN
    -1 68* 71 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 66 73* 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 66* 73 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 69* 70 139
    CUT
    ZAF
    -1 67 72* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    ENG
    -1 67* 72 139
    CUT
    USA
    E 64 76* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 66 74* 140
    CUT
    CAN
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    AUS
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    DNK
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    NOR
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    CAN
    E 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    +1 73* 68 141
    CUT
    PHL
    +1 67* 74 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 67* 74 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 73* 68 141
    CUT
    COL
    +1 70 71* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 67* 74 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 70* 71 141
    CUT
    BEL
    +1 71 70* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 71* 70 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 70 71* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72 69* 141
    CUT
    CAN
    +1 68* 73 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 69 72* 141
    CUT
    CHN
    +1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    +2 74* 68 142
    CUT
    CAN
    +2 69 73* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 72* 70 142
    CUT
    DNK
    +2 69 73* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 71 71* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 69 73* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 69 73* 142
    CUT
    COL
    +2 68 74* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +3 70* 73 143
    CUT
    IRL
    +3 73 70* 143
    CUT
    CAN
    +3 71* 72 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 74* 69 143
    CUT
    AUS
    +4 68* 76 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 69* 75 144
    CUT
    CAN
    +4 70* 74 144
    CUT
    ZAF
    +4 69* 75 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 71 73* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 70 74* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 71* 73 144
    CUT
    SWE
    +4 73 71* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +5 75* 70 145
    CUT
    SWE
    +5 70* 75 145
    CUT
    CAN
    +5 74* 71 145
    CUT
    CAN
    +6 70 76* 146
    CUT
    PRI
    +6 71 75* 146
    CUT
    CAN
    +6 71 75* 146
    CUT
    CAN
    +7 70 77* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 70 77* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 76 71* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +8 73* 75 148
    CUT
    USA
    +8 69* 79 148
    CUT
    DEU
    +10 73* 77 150
    WD
    ENG
    WD
    USA
    204
    WD
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

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