Pacers & Thunder face off in NBA Finals! Who has the upper hand? | The Big NumberNew Foto - Pacers & Thunder face off in NBA Finals! Who has the upper hand? | The Big Number

Dan Devine and Tom Haberstroh break down the historic matchup between the Indiana Pacers & Oklahoma City Thunder in the 2025 NBA Finals. With only a 1% chance of this pairing at the start of the season, the hosts dissect why both teams surged to the top, challenging long-held NBA assumptions about youth, roster continuity, and midseason trades. The conversation spotlights star performances from Tyrese Haliburton and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, plus the impact of strategic additions like Isaiah Hartenstein and Alex Caruso. The episode explores why these Finals are one of the most improbable in recent memory, what sets each team apart, and what this means for the future of team-building in the NBA. Don't miss the discussion on what's next for the Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks, and the unique blend of clutch play, defense, and team chemistry fueling this unlikely Finals. (1:10) - Pacers & Thunder defy all odds to face off in the NBA Finals (20:40) - Why Thunder excel at avoiding turnovers (26:15) - Caruso & Hartenstein fuel OKC's defensive engine (31:50) - Pacers: clutchest team in the NBA? (34:50) - Pacers & Thunder have both dominated in 2025 (43:20) - What's next for the Timberwolves? (50:00) - What's next for the Knicks? 🖥️Watch this full episode on YouTube Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atYahoo Sports Podcasts

Pacers & Thunder face off in NBA Finals! Who has the upper hand? | The Big Number

Pacers & Thunder face off in NBA Finals! Who has the upper hand? | The Big Number Dan Devine and Tom Haberstroh break down the historic ...
Caitlin Clark watches Pacers take down Knicks to earn trip to NBA FinalsNew Foto - Caitlin Clark watches Pacers take down Knicks to earn trip to NBA Finals

The Indiana Pacers are going to the NBA Finals after defeating the New York Knicks in the Eastern Conference Finals, and they had amarquee fanin attendance to watch it all go down. WNBA phenomCaitlin Clarksat courtside during the Pacers' 125-108 Game 6 victory alongside Indiana Fever teammates Sophie Cunningham and Aliyah Boston. Click Here For More Sports Coverage On Foxnews.com Clark is currently sidelined from the Fever due to a quad injury, but she has maintained a steady sports presence in the Indianapolis basketball scene during her absence. Clark has been an occasional guest at Pacers games since starting her WNBA career in Indiana last year, and has developed a strong friendship with Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton. Haliburton helped lead the Pacers in Saturday's victory with a 21-point, 13-rebound performance, while Pascal Siakam had 31 points. Read On The Fox News App The Pacers are now a perfect 7-0 in games that Clark attends as a fan. Thunder's Shai Gilgeous-alexander Wins First Career Nba Mvp Award After the Pacers came back from 14 points in the final three minutes of Game 1 of the series, Clark sent a celebratory post on X writing "PACERS ARE THE GREATEST COMEBACK TEAM IVE EVER SEEN." She then posted a celebratory post after Saturday's game as well. Now, she will get to watch the team compete against the Oklahoma City Thunder for a chance at the NBA championship. Meanwhile, the Knicks will head into the offseason with a long list of "what-ifs" after blowing the 14-point lead in Game 1 and missing out on a chance to reach the finals. The Knicks reached the conference final for the first time since 2000 this year. Follow Fox News Digital'ssports coverage on X,and subscribe tothe Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source:Caitlin Clark watches Pacers take down Knicks to earn trip to NBA Finals

Caitlin Clark watches Pacers take down Knicks to earn trip to NBA Finals

Caitlin Clark watches Pacers take down Knicks to earn trip to NBA Finals The Indiana Pacers are going to the NBA Finals after defeating the ...
2025 NBA Finals odds: Oklahoma City Thunder are biggest favorites in franchise history vs. Indiana PacersNew Foto - 2025 NBA Finals odds: Oklahoma City Thunder are biggest favorites in franchise history vs. Indiana Pacers

The Oklahoma City Thunder are in the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012 after dispatching the Minnesota Timberwolves in five games. They will face the Indiana Pacers, who knocked off the New York Knicks in six games on Saturday night, and the Thunder are overwhelming favorites in the series. In fact, Oklahoma City is the biggest Finals favorite in franchise history. The Thunder opened as -800 favorites in the NBA Finals atBetMGM, with the Pacers as +550 underdogs. Oklahoma City was a -175 favorite back in the 2012 NBA Finals against the Miami Heat, but ended up losing the series in five games. The Seattle SuperSonics were -140 favorites in the 1978 NBA Finals against the Washington Bullets, perSports Odds History. The biggest favorites in NBA Finals history were the 2001 Los Angeles Lakers, who were -2000 against the Philadelphia 76ers and won the series in five games. The 2018 champion Golden State Warriors were the second biggest of all time as -1075 favorites over the Cleveland Cavaliers. Who were the biggest favorites to lose in the Finals? Well, that again would be the Lakers, who fell as -700 favorites to the 2004 Detroit Pistons. Oklahoma City has arguably been the best team in the league all season, going 68-14 in the tough Western Conference to earn the No. 1 seed, which included a historic55-23-4 record against the spreadin the regular season — the best ATS mark in 35 seasons. While the Thunder have struggled against the spread in the postseason (7-9 ATS), they have been impressive and won games when it has mattered most — winning Game 7 against the Denver Nuggets in the conference semifinals and hitting clutch shot after clutch shot in Game 4 against the Timberwolves in the last round. The Pacers are in the NBA Finals for only the second time in franchise history (in 2000 they lost to the -800 favorite Los Angeles Lakers in six games) and have been impressive in the postseason, winning seven games outright as underdogs. Indiana was a -190 favorite at sportsbooks in its Round 1 series against a banged-up Milwaukee Bucks team, before being underdogs (+425 series price) against the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Knicks (+135) in the last two rounds. Game 1 of the NBA Finals is 8:30 p.m. ET Thursday on ABC. The Thunder are 9-point home favorites with a total of 229.5.

2025 NBA Finals odds: Oklahoma City Thunder are biggest favorites in franchise history vs. Indiana Pacers

2025 NBA Finals odds: Oklahoma City Thunder are biggest favorites in franchise history vs. Indiana Pacers The Oklahoma City Thunder are in t...
Pascal Siakam, Pacers knock out Knicks in Eastern Conference finalsNew Foto - Pascal Siakam, Pacers knock out Knicks in Eastern Conference finals

Pascal Siakam already owns one NBA championship ring and he now has a chance to win another. Siakam was the biggest hero as the Indiana Pacers earned their first NBA Finals appearance since 2000 with a solid 125-108 victory over the visiting New York Knicks in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday night at Indianapolis. Siakam recorded 31 points and three blocked shots to finish off a stellar series in which he was named MVP of the series. He was 10-of-18 shooting while notching his third 30-point outing of the series. "So deserving," Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said of Siakam. "The guy has been a rock of consistency all year." Indiana will face the Western Conference champion Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals. Game 1 is Thursday night at Oklahoma City. Siakam, a nine-year veteran, won a title in 2019 with the Toronto Raptors. Now he'll be the guy fielding questions from his teammates about what to expect. "That year was my third year, I was this young kid. I thought it was going to be easy (to get back)," Siakam said. "I appreciate it even more now because I know how hard it is to get here." Tyrese Haliburton added 21 points, 13 assists and three steals for fourth-seeded Indiana. Obi Toppin added 18 points off the bench and Andrew Nembhard had 14 points and six steals for the Pacers. "It's a special feeling to do it with this group," Haliburton said. "We got to the same spot last year and we fell short. We worked our tails off to get back here." OG Anunoby scored 24 points and Karl-Anthony Towns added 22 points and 14 rebounds for third-seeded New York. Jalen Brunson had 19 points and seven assists and Mikal Bridges had 15 points for the Knicks. Indiana had a 25-10 edge on fastbreak points to finish the series with a dominating advantage 106-48 in that category. New York committed 18 turnovers in the finale, including five apiece by Brunson and Bridges. "I saw a lot of breakaways on their part," Brunson said. "It was the reason why they would extend the lead throughout the series. It's something I have to be able to control. ... It's terrible on my part." The Pacers shot 54.1 percent from the field, including a solid 17 of 33 from 3-point range (51.5 percent). Myles Turner and reserve Thomas Bryant had 11 points apiece and Aaron Nesmith added 10 for the Pacers. New York made 47.7 percent of its shots and was 9 of 32 (28.1 percent) from behind the arc. Landry Shamet had 12 points on four treys off the bench. It was the first appearance in the Eastern Conference finals for the Knicks since 2000 when they also lost to the Pacers. "I'm proud of what these guys did," Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said. "There was a lot that we had to get through and I thought we handled that part well. "The playoffs are hard-fought and these games can go either way. There's the disappointment of falling short of the ultimate goal but still proud of what we accomplished." New York trailed by 15 entering the final quarter but a basket by Towns and two in a row by Anunoby pulled the Knicks within 92-83 with 10:15 remaining. Haliburton then took over as he scored 11 points on 5-of-6 shooting in the final stanza. The Pacers pushed the lead back to 14 on a basket by Nembhard with 8:26 left. Later, a basket by Haliburton and a 3-pointer by Nembhard made it 113-94 with 4:22 left. Siakam later made two free throws to make it 120-99 with 1:52 left as New York waved the white flag. Indiana led by four at the break but started the third quarter with 3-pointers by Siakam and Nesmith and a three-point play by Siakam to take a 67-54 lead. The Knicks were within 69-61 after Brunson's basket with 8:53 left in the period before Bryant (two) and Nembhard (one) combined for three treys in 86 seconds as the Pacers grabbed a 78-63 advantage with 6:44 remaining in the quarter. Haliburton later ended the third with a dunk as the Pacers had a 34-23 edge over the 12 minutes to expand their lead to 92-77. Siakam scored 16 first-half points to help the Pacers hold a 58-54 lead at the break. Anunoby scored 14 in the half for New York. Though the Knicks saw their season end, Towns is convinced the team will make more deep postseason runs in the near future. "It hurts not to bring an opportunity to the city for a championship," Towns said. "We have a lot of great guys in this locker room. The plan now is to put ourselves in this position again and succeed next time." --Field Level Media

Pascal Siakam, Pacers knock out Knicks in Eastern Conference finals

Pascal Siakam, Pacers knock out Knicks in Eastern Conference finals Pascal Siakam already owns one NBA championship ring and he now has a ch...
How a banner honoring PSG manager Luis Enrique's daughter put the Champions League final into perspectiveNew Foto - How a banner honoring PSG manager Luis Enrique's daughter put the Champions League final into perspective

Arguably the most memorable moment of Saturday'sChampions League finalhad nothing to do with soccer at all. That's not to say the action on the pitch didn't live up to expectation, because it did. Paris Saint-Germain made history with a record-breaking 5-0 win over Inter Milan, claiming the club's very first European Cup. There were great moments and magical performances, notably from teenager Désiré Doué, who introduced himself to the world with two goals and one assist on the grandest stage of all. But all of that paled into insignificance when the PSG fans unfurled a banner behind the goal, as the players and staff celebrated with the trophy in front of them. The image on the banner was one that sent goosebumps around Munich's Allianz Arena and undoubtedly made millions of viewers around the world pause for a moment. The picture on the banner was of PSG managerLuis Enrique and his daughter Xana, who died when she was just nine years old in 2019. The scene depicted was one from 2015, after Enrique had just won the Champions League as the manager of Barcelona. Together the pair had celebrated by planting a Barcelona flag in the middle of the pitch, a moment and an image that has taken on extra significance since Xana's death six years ago. Earlier this year, with the final still a long way away, Enrique told reporters that he one day wanted to recreate that moment after winning the Champions League trophy in honor of his daughter. In the end, he didn't need to; his fans did it for him. "It was very emotional," a very composed Enrique told reporters after Saturday's win. "It was beautiful to think that the supporters had thought about me and my family." At the full-time whistle, all that emotion was clear to see on Enrique's face. He almost stumbled onto the pitch with a beaming smile, seemingly overcome with the emotion of winning the Champions League trophy for a second time. During the celebrations, Enrique also put on a black T-shirt with the image of him and his daughter, a sobering moment that put everything into perspective. His other daughter, Sira Martínez, also posted photos on her Instagram Story of fans wearing PSG shirts with Xana's name on the back. The family tragedy six years ago happened when Enrique was manager of Spain. In June 2019, he stepped away from the role to spend more time with his family. In August that year, he announced that Xana had died. But speaking to reporters after the game, Enrique said he didn't need a soccer match, or a trophy, to make him think of his daughter. "My daughter is always with me. She's here, she's supporting our family and I feel her presence even when we lose," he added. "It's just about grouping everything we went through together and really taking the positives out of a negative situation. "That's our mindset, that's my mentality, it's my family's mentality and I was delighted, but I don't need a trophy to think about my daughter. She's always here with me." Regardless of his personal situation, what Enrique has done to this PSG side has been nothing short of astonishing. When he took over last season, the club was still bloated, left dealing with the consequences from the club's previous tactic of spending money on superstar players it probably didn't need. And then he was dealt another blow, when striker Kylian Mbappé finally left the club to join Real Madrid for the start of this season. In many ways, though, those hardships turned out to be a blessing in disguise. Instead of managing personalities and transfer sagas, Enrique was allowed to focus purely on the pitch. It allowed him to develop a young team, and establish a unity that was tested several times during this Champions League campaign. Time and time again, the players responded to whatever he asked, and the deep respect they have for their manager was clear to see after the club made history on Saturday. "Luis Enrique is the man who changed all of PSG, he made it so this team looks at football another way," PSG star Achraf Hakimi told Spanish TV after the game. "He's a loyal human, after everything that's happened to him. One of the few left in this world. He deserves it more than anyone." It was a similar message from Saturday's player of the match, Doué, who praised his manager for connecting on a more human level. "He's been here for two years and he has made history for the club," the 19-year-old said, per Reuters. "Tactically and mentally, he is a really good coach, unbelievable, and as a human being too. It is a pleasure to work with him. I don't know how we'll celebrate but it's going to be crazy." So in a few years' time, when we all look back of this year's Champions League final, it will likely be the image of Enrique and his daughter that is remembered most. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

How a banner honoring PSG manager Luis Enrique’s daughter put the Champions League final into perspective

How a banner honoring PSG manager Luis Enrique's daughter put the Champions League final into perspective Arguably the most memorable mo...
Pascal Siakam beats out Tyrese Haliburton by a single vote for Eastern Conference finals MVPNew Foto - Pascal Siakam beats out Tyrese Haliburton by a single vote for Eastern Conference finals MVP

The closest battle at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Saturday wasn't the Indiana Pacers' game against the New York Knicks. It was Pascal Siakam vs. Tyrese Haliburton for Eastern Conference finals MVP. The Pacersfinished off the Knicks in emphatic fashion in Game 6 in a 125-108 win. After the game, Siakam was named MVP for the series, and it turned out he beat Haliburton for the honor by a single vote. Five journalists voted for Siakam, while Haliburton got four votes. Pascal Siakam received five of the nine votes for Eastern Conference Finals MVP from a media panel covering the series. Tyrese Haliburton received the other four votes.pic.twitter.com/ZdpvJsRaTf — NBA Communications (@NBAPR)June 1, 2025 Across six games in the series, Siakam averaged 24.8 points, 5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1 turnover per game while shooting 52.3% from the field. Haliburton averaged 21 points, 6 rebounds, 10.5 assists and 1.7 turnovers per game while shooting 45.5% from the field. Both players came up huge in Game 6, with Siakam scoring 31 points to lead all scorers, and Haliburton posting 21 points and 13 assists. Haliburton did contribute what will be the most lasting moment of the series, ashis bouncing buzzer-beater in Game 1,and ensuing choke gesture to channel Reggie Miller, to send the game to overtime gave Indiana all the momentum it needed to stay ahead of New York. However, Siakam came up bigger in the rest of the Pacers' wins, posting at least 30 points in Games 2, 4 and 6. As the voting reflected, both players had a standout showing in the series, and will need to be even better in the NBA Finals if they want totake down the heavily favored Oklahoma City Thunder. The Pacers acquired both players in blockbuster trades, and the franchise's current era revolves around them. The Pacers blew up a core that had previously reached the playoffs by sending star big man Domantas Sabonis to the Sacramento Kings in exchange for Haliburton, then a promising but unproven point guard. Once Haliburton started to emerge as an All-Star, the Pacers sought out a co-star and paid heavily for one with Siakam, sending a trio of players and a trio of first-round draft picks to the Toronto Raptors in exchange for a big man who helped win a championship in 2019. The postseason hasso far been a small-market success story. Its next chapter begins Thursday in OKC (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC).

Pascal Siakam beats out Tyrese Haliburton by a single vote for Eastern Conference finals MVP

Pascal Siakam beats out Tyrese Haliburton by a single vote for Eastern Conference finals MVP The closest battle at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on ...
Dodgers rout Yankees in epic fashion, make another statement in World Series rematchNew Foto - Dodgers rout Yankees in epic fashion, make another statement in World Series rematch

LOS ANGELES —DodgersMVP Shohei Ohtani didn't homer, or do anything spectacular, but his bat certainly made a fabulous first impression. Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy, who fans were trying to run out of town just a few weeks ago, had the game of his life. Hyesong Kim, the Dodgers' free-agent signing who drew barely any attention, showed why the Dodgers think he'll be a star. And, there was Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman, who is quickly establishing himself as the ultimate Yankee killer, performing his magic again. By the end of Saturday night, the Dodgers showed theNew York Yankeesthat the World Series runs through Los Angeles, routing the Yankees,18-2, in front of 51,746 fans screaming like it was October once again. It was the Yankees' most-lopsided loss since 2019, and 16 years since they've lost by a bigger margin. "You could say it was a statement," said Muncy, who hit two home runs and drove in a career-high seven runs. "And for us to do it without [injured] Mookie [Betts] also is huge for everyone trying to pick up the slack in the lineup. It's big for the boys." Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who celebrated his 53rdbirthday Saturday, wasn't about to create any back-page material for October, but acknowledged the impact of knocking off the Yankees in consecutive games, picking up right where they left off last October. "It's certainly sweet to win any game,'' Roberts said, "but to beat those guys is always good. It always feels good to beat the Yankees. You know, they're the class of the American League right now, and anytime you can beat those guys, you feel good.'' The terrifying aspect for everyone else is that if the Dodgers can pummel the Yankees with 14 pitchers currently on the injured list, withBetts out for the series with a broken toe, and Ohtani not expected to resume pitching until after the All-Star break, how powerful will they be when they get the band back together? The Dodgers came into the weekend series having lost seven of their last 12 games, and were just 26-22 since their 8-0 start. Yet, they turned around and beat up Yankees ace Max Fried and starter Will Warren on back-to-back nights, outscoring the Yankees 24-2 in the last 13 innings. They've suffocated everyone in the Yankees' lineup but Aaron Judge, who has hit three homers this series. "You know the last couple of weeks has certainly been a grind with all of the stuff we've been going through,'' Roberts said. "But obviously when you get the Yankees and fans get into it, it just kind of infuses some excitement into the clubhouse and guys showed up and given what these fans want. It's been a fun series for us. ... It's kind of like that playoff environment.'' So, considering theyknocked off the Yankees in the World Serieslast season, are the Dodgers making a powerful statement by whipping them again? "No, I wouldn't say statement, that's a good club over there,'' Roberts said. "I'm just happy with the process and how we're taking the field and going about playing baseball ... "We've sort of been playing middling baseball for a while now, so maybe it took a club like the Yankees to get us reset and step our game up.'' The truth is that the Dodgers offense has been lethal since April 22, scoring 240 runs — 51 more than any team in baseball, averaging 6.9 runs a game. Ohtani tied a franchise record with 15 homers in May. Kim, who opened the year in the minors, reached base in all five plate appearances with two singles, double, homer and walk. Muncy, who was hitting .190 with one homer and a .599 OPS before May 14, has since hit .298 with a 1.048 OPS, including four homers and 22 RBI. "Max, it's been a tough one to start,'' Roberts said, "but I give him a lot of credit. He hasn't wavered from the work. He hasn't run from the criticism. And he's showing up every day to play and help us win a ballgame. And, of course, there's Freeman, who's hitting a National League-leading .374 with a 1.078 OPS. This is a guy who turned the World Series upside down a year ago when he pulled offhis Kirk Gibson momentwitha walk-off grand slamin the 10thinning, hitting .300 with four homers and 12 RBI while winning the World Series MVP. Now, he's performing an encore. Freeman went 2-for-3 with an RBI, hitting his 525thcareer double that tied Hall of Famers Willie Mays and Ted Williams for 46th place on the all-time list, while continuing to torment the Yankees. In his last seven games against the Yankees, he is hitting .407 with four homers, three doubles, one triple and 14 RBI. "I mean, he handles everything in the zone,'' Yankees first baseman Paul Goldschmidt said. "He's so short to the ball, fastballs, off-speed pitches. He's always in a good position to hit. "That's why he's one of the best hitters in the league and has been for 10 or 15 years. …I can go on and on, he's such a professional hitter, and a lot of those guys are in that lineup.'' That, of course, is why the Dodgers have won two World Series in the past five years, with 11 division titles in the last 12 years. "I mean, there's a lot of guys in this clubhouse that never really cease to amaze me,'' said Muncy, who was presented the lineup card for hitting his career 200thhomer. "You can go up and down the lineup. It's really special when you see the names that are in this clubhouse, and see how hard they work every single day. "When you have an entire clubhouse of guys that are going to be Hall of Famers, and they're still showing up every day working like they're a young guy, I think that just rubs off on everybody.'' Yep, just ask rookie catcher Dalton Rushing, who hit his first career homer Saturday, with the help of Ohtani's bat. While Ohtani had retreated to the clubhouse after being taken out of the game, Rushing grabbed one of his bats, seeing if it had the same kind of magic that has helped Ohtani win three MVPs. Lo and behold, he swung at the first pitch thrown by infielder Pablo Reyes, and sent it 393 feet over the right-field fence. "He hits plenty of home runs, so I'm sure it can work for someone else, too,'' Rushing said laughing. "It worked out in my favor. "Now, I look forward to getting my first one off a real pitcher.'' For the Dodgers, it has been that kind of weekend. Follow Bob Nightengale on X@BNightengale. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dodgers rout Yankees behind Max Muncy's huge game

Dodgers rout Yankees in epic fashion, make another statement in World Series rematch

Dodgers rout Yankees in epic fashion, make another statement in World Series rematch LOS ANGELES —DodgersMVP Shohei Ohtani didn't homer,...
Nationals use a 10-run first inning to beat the reeling Diamondbacks, 11-7New Foto - Nationals use a 10-run first inning to beat the reeling Diamondbacks, 11-7

PHOENIX (AP) — Luis García Jr. had a double and three RBIs during a10-run first inningfor the Washington Nationals, who held on late to beat the reeling Arizona Diamondbacks 11-7 on Saturday night. Washington has won 11 of 15 games and scored at least nine runs in four straight games. Arizona has dropped nine of 10. The Nationals' first 11 batters reached base and they scored nine runs before the D-backs recorded an out, which was the second-most in the big leagues since 1961. The Boston Red Sox scored 10 runs before the Florida Marlins got an out in a game on June 27, 2003,according to Elias Sports. Arizona's Brandon Pfaadt (7-4) lasted just eight batters, giving up eight earned runs on six hits. He also hit two batters. The Nationals sent 16 batters to the plate in the first and it took 30 minutes for the D-backs to get three outs. Arizona rallied with two runs in the fourth and five more in the sixth. Randal Grichuk's two-run homer cut it to 11-7. He finished with three hits. Washington starter Michael Soroka (2-3) retired the first 11 batters he faced before Geraldo Perdomo hitting a looping single into right field in the fourth. Josh Naylor followed with a two-run homer. Soroka gave up four runs on six hits and a walk through 5 1/3 innings. He struck out three. Washington's C.J. Abrams was hit by a pitch three times. James Wood, Robert Hassell III, Keibert Ruiz and Daylen Lile all had two hits. Key moment Pfaadt recorded two strikes on Abrams — the game's leadoff hitter — before hitting him on the foot with a pitch, starting the 10-run avalanche. Key stat Pfaadt's ERA ballooned from 3.90 to 5.05. D-backs pitchers hit five batters. Up next The D-backs send RHP Corbin Burnes (3-2, 2.72 ERA) to the mound Sunday while the Nationals counter with LHP Mitchell Parker (4-4, 4.65). ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Nationals use a 10-run first inning to beat the reeling Diamondbacks, 11-7

Nationals use a 10-run first inning to beat the reeling Diamondbacks, 11-7 PHOENIX (AP) — Luis García Jr. had a double and three RBIs during...
Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, manager Rocco Baldelli ejected in tense walk-off loss vs. MarinersNew Foto - Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, manager Rocco Baldelli ejected in tense walk-off loss vs. Mariners

Things got fiery between the Minnesota Twins and Seattle Mariners on Saturday. After a controversial strike turned into a heated argument with the umpire, Twins shortstop Carlos Correa and manager Rocco Baldelli were both ejected in the seventh inning. The Mariners went on to win, 5-4, in 11 innings, with second baseman Cole Young getting the game-winning RBI in his major league debut. After a borderline pitch to third baseman Brooks Lee was called a strike, Correa stepped out of the on-deck circle, seemingly expressing his opinion to home-plate umpire Austin Jones. Jones promptly ejected Correa, infuriating the shortstop, who had to be held back from Jones by his teammates. Meanwhile, Baldelli, similarly furious, came over to argue his case. Jones quickly ejected him as well. Carlos Correa was ejected from the on-deck circle by home plate umpire Austin Jones. Twins manager Rocco Baldelli was also tossed from the game.📺: FOXpic.twitter.com/yTr7HaR35Y — FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX)June 1, 2025 Twins first baseman Ty France, a former Mariner, stepped in for Correa in the batting order. Lee moved to take over Correa's position at shortstop. Minnesota took an early 3-0 lead in the second inning. But in the third inning, Cal Raleigh got the Mariners on the board with a two-run homer — his 22nd of the year, tying him with Shohei Ohtani at the top of the league. Seattle shortstop J.P Crawford then hit another two-run bomb to give the Mariners the lead, celebrating with a nasty bat flip — and taking out a chunk of the scoreboard in the process. J.P. Crawford just took a piece out of the scoreboard with this go-ahead home run 🤯pic.twitter.com/XEeALg5LGN — MLB (@MLB)June 1, 2025 But the Twins didn't let Seattle end things there, with Trevor Larnach getting an RBI single in the top of the ninth to tie things up at 4-4. After another scoreless inning, the Mariners finally finished the game in the 11th. Young hit a bouncing shot in the infield that was easily fielded by France, but his throw didn't reach home plate in time. Pinch-runner Miles Mastrobuoni slid in for the winning run and the 5-4 Seattle victory. WHAT A MOMENT!Cole Young wins it for the@Marinersin his Major League Debut 👏pic.twitter.com/YRv8TKPKcS — MLB (@MLB)June 1, 2025 The Twins and Mariners will complete the three-game series on Sunday.

Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, manager Rocco Baldelli ejected in tense walk-off loss vs. Mariners

Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, manager Rocco Baldelli ejected in tense walk-off loss vs. Mariners Things got fiery between the Minnesota Twi...
Knicks offseason outlook: New York's top-heavy roster could really use some supportNew Foto - Knicks offseason outlook: New York's top-heavy roster could really use some support

It took the Knicks less than a year to acquire OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns. The mission was clear: Put significant talent around the scoring proficiency and playmaking acumen of point guard Jalen Brunson. For the most part, it's worked. They wouldn't have made the Eastern Conference finals if it hadn't. Yet, in the process of gathering this All-Star team of starters, the Knicks relinquished depth — virtually all of it. That lack of depth ultimately put them at a disadvantage against the Pacers, who kept throwing bodies at the stretched-out Knicks andwore them down in six games. In the middle of it all stands Tom Thibodeau, the highly competent yet superbly stubborn head coach who played all of his starters more than 35 minutes per game in the regular season. (Before you ask, no he did not scale down those minutes in the playoffs. To the surprise of absolutely no one, he went in the opposite direction.) As New York now heads into the offseason, it at least has its ducks in a row in regard to its collective talent level. The Knicks' best players are in place, and they are dangerous when applied accurately. What the organization needs now is a heightened focus on the bench and to identify role players who can help the starters get more rest and perhaps elevate them to a higher level in pursuit of a title. Record:51-31, third in the Eastern Conference. Lost to the Indiana Pacers in six games in the East finals. The nine-game winning streak in December, when the Knicks played like a well-oiled machine. Some will argue they beat up on bad teams, but that's what they were supposed to do, and during that stretch it seemed near impossible for them to play down to the level of competition. Karl-Anthony TownsOG AnunobyJalen BrunsonMikal BridgesJosh HartMitchell RobinsonMiles McBrideTyler KolekPacome Dadiet Precious Achiuwa (UFA)Landry Shamet (UFA) $194,354,847 No. 50 Draft focus:Look, at No. 50 it's hard to find someone to crack the rotation. But it's not impossible. If the Knicks target the best defender left on the board, that player stands a reasonable chance of endearing himself to Thibodeau, potentially leading to minutes. Due to New York's expensive roster, it doesn't have a lot of leeway financially. It could use the tax MLE, but that would hard-cap it, possibly preventing the Knicks from making additional moves. Obviously, the Knicks are looking to build on this season. They've fully embraced a win-now approach, and that's not changing anytime soon. If they succeed in adding some quality depth, they could be a powerhouse next season.

Knicks offseason outlook: New York's top-heavy roster could really use some support

Knicks offseason outlook: New York's top-heavy roster could really use some support It took the Knicks less than a year to acquire OG An...
Indiana Pacers eliminate New York Knicks to advance to first NBA Finals in 25 yearsNew Foto - Indiana Pacers eliminate New York Knicks to advance to first NBA Finals in 25 years

The Indiana Pacers defeated the New York Knicks 125-108 to win the best-of-seven Eastern Conference Finals in six games and advance to the franchise's first NBA Finals since 2000. It was another hard fought battle between two teams with a storied past that was a tight game until the Pacers pulled away in the final quarter. Just like most of the playoffs, the duo of Pascal Siakam and Tyrese Haliburton led the way for Indiana, finishing with 31 points and 21 points respectively. It was Siakam's third game this series with at least 25 points which garnered him the Larry Bird Trophy – awarded to the MVP of the Eastern Conference Finals. "It's been such an amazing experience for me so far," Siakam told the TNT Sports broadcast about his time in Indy. "From the first day I landed here like the love has been amazing. … First class organization. I'm just so happy to be here. I mean tonight, after a bad Game 5, we wanted to bounce back, I have like 100% belief in my teammates. Whenever we are down, we always find a way." The game also marked a historic moment for the broadcast; the Pacers victory was the last game in the long-standing relationship between the NBA and TNT. While "Inside the NBA" will continue on ESPN, the NBA on TNT ended at the culmination of the Eastern Conference finals. Both teams kept it close in the first half, trading baskets despite the Knicks' turnover issues that plagued them the whole game. It was a quick 9-0 run from three consecutive 3-pointers to open the third quarter that made the difference for a fast-paced Pacers squad. From there, the crowd on hand at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, which featured WNBA star Caitlin Clark, roared the Pacers to the very end. Haliburton said he was "really proud" of the way his team played. "We had a tough showing last game as a group so we wanted to respond. We did a great job at that," Haliburton told the TNT Sports broadcast. "I don't even have words. It's really exciting. We will enjoy this one for now and theres a lot more work to do against a really tough team. Just really proud of this group." It was a tough night for the Knicks All-Star duo of Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns. Towns finished with 22 points and 14 rebounds, while Brunson added 19 points. New York struggled with the pestering Indiana defense, leading to 17 turnovers as a team. Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard had a game-high six steals. Despite the Knicks appearing to inch their way back into the game multiple times, Indiana proved to be too much to handle as New York's attempt to become the 14th team in NBA history to come back from a 3-1 series deficit fell painfully short. The Knicks, who haven't won a title since 1973, let alone advance to the Finals since 1999, again were eliminated by a team they consider one of their greatest rivals. The two teams met in the playoffs eight times in their histories including six in eight years between 1993-2000. Last year, Indiana defeated New York in Game 7 at Madison Square Garden, setting an NBA record for the best field goal percentage ever in an NBA game, converting 67.1% of their shots. Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau pointed to all the adversity the team faced this season with injuries and late additions to the rotation when asked how they can take the next step and get to a Finals. "I'm proud of what these guys did," Thibodeau told reporters. "There was a lot that we had to get through and I thought we handled that part well. … A lot of moving parts but they kept fighting and moving forward. And I've got great respect for that." The 28-year-old Brunson didn't mince his words about another loss to the Pacers, saying it "sucked" but expressed the confidence in how the team will rebound in the future. "The most confidence. Overconfident. Seriously. There's not an ounce of any type of doubt that I'm not confident with this group," Brunson said. Towns added that the moves the Knicks have made were to "win." "It hurts not to bring an opportunity to the city for a championship," Towns said. "We got a bunch of great guys in that locker room and we hope to – the plan now is to put ourselves in this position again and succeed next time." The Pacers face a tall task next, playing the NBA's best regular season team – the Oklahoma City Thunder, playing in their second-ever Finals appearance – which starts on Thursday at the Paycom Center. This story has been updated with additional reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Indiana Pacers eliminate New York Knicks to advance to first NBA Finals in 25 years

Indiana Pacers eliminate New York Knicks to advance to first NBA Finals in 25 years The Indiana Pacers defeated the New York Knicks 125-108 ...
Pacers' Walker injures right ankle, leaving his availability for the NBA Finals uncertainNew Foto - Pacers' Walker injures right ankle, leaving his availability for the NBA Finals uncertain

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Pacers forward Jarace Walker was on crutches with a right ankle injury following Indiana's125-108 victoryover the New York Knicks in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday night and coach Rick Carlisle said he was uncertain of Walker's availability for the NBA Finals. Walker will have four full days to recover with Game 1 set for Thursday night at Oklahoma City. "He's young so that's good," Carlisle said. "I did not see a replay so I don't know how much, how far it turned over, how much weight he had on it. But when a guy goes down and stays down like that, you're always holding your breath." Walker was injured early in the fourth quarter while defending a drive. His right leg appeared to bend awkwardly, and he stayed down for two more possessions before crawling off the court. He needed help from two trainers to get off the floor and he went straight to the locker room. Walker did not return. He did not play much in the Knicks series but he made his only shot Saturday, finishing with two points in seven minutes. He was Indiana's first draft pick in 2023, No. 8 overall. ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/nba

Pacers' Walker injures right ankle, leaving his availability for the NBA Finals uncertain

Pacers' Walker injures right ankle, leaving his availability for the NBA Finals uncertain INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Pacers forward Jarace Walk...
2025 NBA Finals: It's Pacers-Thunder! Here are three things to know about the unexpected matchupNew Foto - 2025 NBA Finals: It's Pacers-Thunder! Here are three things to know about the unexpected matchup

With ablowout victoryagainst the New York Knicks in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals, the Indiana Pacers clinched a berth in the NBA Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves in five games of the Western Conference finals. Here are three things to know about the 78th edition of the NBA Finals ... Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is the first point guard to win MVP since Russell Westbrook won the award for the Thunder in 2017. The 6-foot-6, 200-pound Gilgeous-Alexander is a surgical superstar, knifing his way to his spots, drawing contact along the way. Some people call hima free-throw merchantwhen he might be the most complete scoring guard since Michael Jordan — at least since Kobe Bryant. Gilgeous-Alexander averaged a league-leading 32.7 points per game (on 52/38/90 shooting splits) in the regular season, adding 6.4 assists, 5 rebounds, 1.7 steals and a block a night. He is averaging a 30-6-7 in the playoffs, numbers matched en route to an NBA Finals only by Jordan, LeBron James and Nikola Jokić. In the other corner is Indiana's Tyrese Haliburton, a supreme playmaker who has been every bit as good in these playoffs. His style could be described as chaotic if it were not so mistake-free, and the Pacers as a team have adopted it. His32 points, 15 assists and zero turnoversin Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals were a prime example of the kind of impact he is capable of having as both a scorer and facilitator. Haliburton averaged 18.6 points (47/39/85), 9.2 assists, 3.5 rebounds and 2.1 combined steals and blocks a game in the regular season. He has increased his production in the playoffs, averaging a 19-6-10, numbers matched en route to an NBA Finals only by Jokić, Magic Johnson and Bob Cousy. No two players have been more valuable to their teams in this postseason than Gilgeous-Alexander and Haliburton, and their contrasting styles will be on display opposite each other on an NBA Finals stage. It did not go well for Haliburton during the regular season, as the Thunder swept the season series, 2-0. Gilgeous-Alexander outscored him in their first meeting, the day after Christmas, 45-4. It was one of SGA's highest-scoring outputs of the season and one of Haliburton's lowest. Haliburton was involved in just 8.3% of Indiana's scoring opportunities, his lowest usage rate in any single game this season. The Thunder will force the ball from his hands, similar tohow it just handled Minnesota's Anthony Edwards. Things did not go much better for Haliburton in the second meeting in late March. Gilgeous-Alexander outscored him in that one, 33-18. Only one other time this season has Haliburton had fewer assists than the three he had that night. His usage rate (17.1%) was again well below his season average (21.6%), and whenever his usage rate is that low the Pacers are 7-13 across both the regular season and the playoffs. It is important to note that Haliburton rarely defended Gilgeous-Alexander and vice versa. Andrew Nembhard drew the bulk of the assignment for the Pacers against SGA, who scored 27 points on 11-for-18 shooting over 12:38 opposite Indiana's primary defender, according to the NBA's tracking data. The Thunder netted 124.3 points per 100 possessions over that span, equivalent to the best offense ever. Indiana is known for its fast-paced brand of basketball, which has generated 117 points per 100 possessions in the playoffs, 1.1 points better than the Oklahoma City Thunder and best of any team but the 64-win Cleveland Cavaliers, whom the Pacers eliminated, 4-1 — with a more effective offense. Forget for a moment that Oklahoma City played at a faster pace in the regular season and focus on the Thunder's defense for a moment. On that end they held opponents to 104.7 points per 100 possessions, best in the NBA. The difference between them and the second-best defense was equal to the difference between the second-best defense and the eighth-best outfit. Which is to say: The Thunder are a wagon. Led by Haliburton, the Pacers play fast and efficiently, a deadly combination, which means they rarely turn the ball over. Their turnover rate during the regular season (13.1%) ranked as the league's third-best, behind only the Thunder and the Boston Celtics, and they have been better with the ball in the playoffs. Oklahoma City's defense, however, has forced more turnovers than any other team in the NBA, both in the regular season and the playoffs. Their pressure is relentless. They won the turnover battle in their two games against the Pacers in the regular season, 24-13, outscoring them off of those turnovers, 27-10. They have Lu Dort, a member of the All-Defensive first team. Cason Wallace and Alex Caruso could have cracked that roster, too, if either had been Oklahoma City's primary point-of-attack defender. They have Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams, a pair of stars taken to defense. And they have Isaiah Hartenstein and Chet Holmgren, two of the game's best rim protectors. It is an embarrassment of defensive riches. It is concerning, then, that the Pacers owned a 105.7 offensive rating when Haliburton was on the floor against the Thunder in the regular season. That figure would rank as the NBA's worst offense if averaged over a full season. Haliburton's offense was worse against only one team this season, the Charlotte Hornets, who snuck up on Indiana for a pair of victories — two of the Pacers' worst losses of the season. Few NBA teams are in smaller media markets than the Pacers of Indianapolis and the Thunder of OKC. We will hear plenty about this, as if we should care about how many people are watching along with us. The television ratings will not be a referendum on the popularity of the league. Nor will they do much to impact the league's bottom line, as the NBA's new TV rights package — an 11-year, $76 billion deal with ESPN, NBC and Amazon — is set to begin next season. The NBA, for allthe hullabaloo, is doing just fine. We should be concerned with whether we get to see competitive basketball at the league's highest level, and this has a chance to be that. The Thunder and Pacers are two teams who like to get up and down. There will be a lot of offense. One team boasts a historically great defense, and that is why the Thunder are favored to win the series,according to BetMGM. But do not underestimate Indiana's hard-hat guys — Nembhard, Aaron Nesmith and Myles Turner among them — or their ability to make this a feisty series. We should care about how these teams built sustainable winners in their small markets, for variety among the league's contenders should be a good thing. Indiana built from the middle, remaining competitive, stacking quality draft picks, making moves on the fringes, and they nailed their two big swings, identifying Haliburton as their franchise savior and Pascal Siakam as a complementary star. The Thunder similarly identified Gilgeous-Alexander as the future of their franchise, acquiring him, along with five first-round draft picks, in exchange for Paul George. Two of those picks became Williams, an All-Star, and Wallace, a rotational mainstay. They tanked for two seasons, landing Holmgren in the process, stockpiling draft picks, and team president Sam Presti has made far more good decisions than bad ones. Funny enough, the Pacers built from trading George, too. George, who led the Pacers to two Eastern Conference finals but never an NBA Finals, begot Domantas Sabonis, who begot Haliburton. All the Philadelphia 76ers have to do to reach the NBA Finals, then, is trade George. We are kidding, of course. But there are multiple paths to the NBA's biggest stage, even for small markets, and that is a positive.

2025 NBA Finals: It's Pacers-Thunder! Here are three things to know about the unexpected matchup

2025 NBA Finals: It's Pacers-Thunder! Here are three things to know about the unexpected matchup With ablowout victoryagainst the New Yo...
Washington's first 11 batters reach base in 10-run first inning vs. DiamondbacksNew Foto - Washington's first 11 batters reach base in 10-run first inning vs. Diamondbacks

PHOENIX (AP) — The Washington Nationals had their first 11 batters reach base during a 10-run first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday night. The Nationals scored nine runs before the D-backs got an out, which is the second-most in the big leagues since 1961. The Boston Red Sox scored 10 runs before the Florida Marlins got an out in a game on June 27, 2003,according to Elias Sports. Luis Garcia Jr. had a double, fielder's choice and three RBIs as the Nationals sent 15 batters to the plate. It took the Diamondbacks 30 minutes to get three outs. Arizona starter Brandon Pfaadt was pulled after the first eight batters reached base. He gave up eight earned runs and his ERA jumped from 3.90 to 5.05. The reeling Diamondbacks have lost eight of their past nine games. Washington has won 10 of its past 14 and scored at least nine runs in each of the past four games. Washington led 11-0 after two innings. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Washington's first 11 batters reach base in 10-run first inning vs. Diamondbacks

Washington's first 11 batters reach base in 10-run first inning vs. Diamondbacks PHOENIX (AP) — The Washington Nationals had their first...
Small-market Pacers party down in big way with NBA Finals tripNew Foto - Small-market Pacers party down in big way with NBA Finals trip

Sigh of relief. Exhale of joy. Probably a bit of both for theIndiana Pacers, and the percentage of relief vs. joy depends on the person. No matter how one dissects the emotion, the Pacers did what they needed to do andeliminated the New York Knickswth a125-108victory in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals Saturday night. Indiana avoided a Game 7 at Madison Square Garden and bypassed the prospect of blowing a 3-1 series lead in advancing to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2000. Indiana has never won an NBA championship. It lost to the Lakers in six games in 2000 and won three ABA titles in 1970, 1972 and 1973. It joined the NBA in 1976. The Pacers have had quality squads with Larry Brown, Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas, Rick Carlisle and Frank Vogel coaching. But until Saturday, only Bird, with Reggie Miller starring on the court, took the Pacers to the Finals. Owner Herb Simon has been an outstanding steward. Despite no championship for the franchise, the Pacers have been a competitive mid/small-market team for decades. They have had fewer than 35 victories just four times since 1990. It's a small-market dream, in part due to the NBA's collective-bargaining agreement with players that aimed to give more teams the opportunity to compete for a title – if well managed. Indiana and Oklahoma City are exactly that. This Pacers squad earned this Finals appearance, beating Milwaukee and Giannis Antetokounmpo in the first round, No. 1 seed Cleveland and their All-Stars (albeit injured) in the second, and then dismissed New York, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns. That's an impressive run for a No. 4 seed. Of course, that four seed is not representative of how the Pacers finished the season. From Jan. 1 through the end of the regular season, the Pacers were one of the best teams. They had the fourth-most victories, the No. 7 offense, the No. 9 defense and the No. 6 net rating. AsCavalierscoach Kenny Atkinson pointed out multiple times: "They press for 48 minutes and they run faster than anybody in the league. We have the data." The Pacers have the personnel – starters and reserves – to play that style. Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam are All-Stars. In Game 6, Siakam had 31 points, five rebounds, three assists, three blocks and a steal, and Haliburton had 21 points, 13 assists, six rebounds and three steals – his ninth double-double in 16 playoff games. They went 10-deep against the Knicks and regularly beat them down the court for open shots. And they made 3-pointers – 17-for-33 in a close-out game while holding the Knicks to 28.1% shooting on 3s. In 2½ decades, Carlisle ‒ in his second stint with the Pacers after 13 seasons with Dallas that yielded a title in 2011 ‒ has proven himself one of the NBA's best coaches, adapting to different eras, styles and personnel. As he has gotten older and wiser, he has ceded control, allowing a star like Haliburton to run the offense without Carlisle dictating every possession. The reward for winning the East? A Finals matchup against Oklahoma City, the best team in the league. The Pacers are underdogs. But with the Knicks behind them, they're not just relieved or overjoyed to be there. Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media@JeffZillgitt This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA Finals: Pacers vs. Thunder is small-market dream matchup

Small-market Pacers party down in big way with NBA Finals trip

Small-market Pacers party down in big way with NBA Finals trip Sigh of relief. Exhale of joy. Probably a bit of both for theIndiana Pacers, ...
Teagan Kavan leads Texas softball to WCWS win vs Oklahoma hours after grandmother diesNew Foto - Teagan Kavan leads Texas softball to WCWS win vs Oklahoma hours after grandmother dies

Teagan Kavan's right arm was dominant Saturday in helping herTexas softball team earn its first-ever winagainst rivalOklahomain theWomen's College World Series. Her excellence inside the pitching circle, however, came with a heavy heart. Kavan's complete-game performance in the Longhorns' 4-2 win against the four-time reigning NCAA championSoonerscame only hours after her grandmother diedSaturday morning at 97 years old. REQUIRED READING:Texas vs Oklahoma softball score: Longhorns score first ever WCWS win vs Sooners Kavan's grandmother was an instrumental force not only in her life, but her softball career. The 6-foot sophomore from West Des Moines, Iowa wears No. 17 in honor of her grandmother, who was born on Nov. 17, 1928. Despite being hundreds of miles away from Texas' campus, her grandmother watched every Longhorns game. When she'd get too nervous in a given moment to watch it live, she'd watch a replay of it later. As Kavan once said, "softball is her favorite part of most days. Her love and support for me knows no bounds." "My grandma, she's got the best seat in the house,"Kavan said in a postgame interview with ESPN. "This is where she wants me. She's rooting for us all the way. This is where she wants us." all heart from@teagan_kavan🤘#HookEm|@NCAASoftballpic.twitter.com/0ir1ghqfiu — Texas Softball (@TexasSoftball)May 31, 2025 In Saturday's win, Kavan kept one of college softball's most potent lineups largely in check, giving up two runs, only one of which was earned, and striking out eight in seven innings of work. In just her second college season, Kavan has been the ace of a Texas team that will be one of just two remaining unbeaten squads left in the WCWS by the end of the day on May 31. The win against the Sooners improved her record to 26-5 this season, and she leads all Longhorns pitchers with a 2.40 ERA and 221 strikeouts. She was named a second-team All-American this season by Softball America, D1Softball and the National Fastpitch Coaches Association. WCWS SCHEDULE:Scores, start times, TV channels for Saturday NCAA softball games On Saturday, she saved her best, and certainly guttiest, performance of the season for her team's biggest game. "Through her, my teammates, they all have my back," Kavan said to ESPN. "All 21, 22 of us, they all have my back. … It was all for her. It was beyond me, honestly. Just relying on them, looking at them in the eyes and getting confidence from them." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Teagan Kavan keys Texas WCWS win vs Oklahoma after grandmother's death

Teagan Kavan leads Texas softball to WCWS win vs Oklahoma hours after grandmother dies

Teagan Kavan leads Texas softball to WCWS win vs Oklahoma hours after grandmother dies Teagan Kavan's right arm was dominant Saturday in...
Maja Stark up 1 entering final round at U.S. Women's OpenNew Foto - Maja Stark up 1 entering final round at U.S. Women's Open

Sweden's Maja Stark continued her impressive play at the U.S. Women's Open on Saturday, shooting a 2-under 70 to take a one-shot lead entering the final round at Erin Hills in Erin, Wis. Stark, who sits at 7-under 209 through three rounds, posted three birdies and one bogey as she moved up one spot after Friday's 69. The 25-year-old is seeking just her second victory on the LPGA Tour, having won the 2022 ISPS Handa World Invitational. "Probably going to go work out in the morning to try to get some nerves out, but I think just keep having fun with it because when I play scared, that's when I mess up, and you can't really play scared at a course like this," Stark said about her mindset heading into the final round. Julia Lopez Ramirez of Spain is one shot back after shooting the best round of the day, a 4-under 68. Ramirez, who opened her round with an eagle before adding three birdies and a bogey, rebounded after a 74 on Friday. "Honestly, it's very exciting," Ramirez said of being in position to win for the first time on the LPGA Tour. "I'm very excited for tomorrow. I'm just going to keep playing my game, have a lot of fun out there and play my game." A trio from Japan -- Rio Takeda (70 on Saturday), Hinako Shibuno (72) and Mao Saigo (75) -- are tied for third at 5-under 211. World No. 1 Nelly Korda is three shots off the lead following a 1-over 73 and is at 4-under 212. Saigo, who fired the best round of the championship so far (6-under 66) on Friday and held the lead by three shots, stumbled on Saturday with four bogeys on her first six holes. She finished with three birdies, but bogeyed her final two holes as she seeks her second major victory of the season (Chevron Championship). "The first thing is that I would like to rest well and then tomorrow refreshed," Saigo said. "I would like to start from zero. ... That result was not that good, but I don't think that I have to change anything. I just want to focus on my play." Takeda opened her third round on a strong note with an eagle on the par-5 hole and added two birdies while bogeying the par-4 No. 5 hole and the par-3 No. 16 hole. She has two LPGA Tour wins to her credit, but this would be her first major victory. Shibuno, who was tied for second after the second round, is chasing her first major and second LPGA Tour win after notching a pair of birdies and bogeys on Saturday. She was the runner-up at the 2024 U.S. Open, but she doesn't think that will give her much of an advantage. "Maybe my advantage just as little as one millimeter, so that would be very nervous from the -- probably I'll be very nervous from the beginning to the end," Shibuno said. "So I might not be able to take advantage being runner-up last year." Korda was in a tie for second after her impressive second-round 67 but posted four bogeys on the front nine before collecting three birdies on the back nine to stay within striking distance. "I've done it enough where it's just -- it's all about being patient," said Korda, who is pursuing her third career major and first win on the LPGA Tour this season. There's just so many ups and downs, and you just have to kind of stick with it. ... Anything can happen. It just takes one shot." Minjee Lee of Australia (71 on Saturday), Linn Grant of Sweden (73) and Sarah Schmelzel (74) are tied for seventh, four shots back at 3-under 213. --Field Level Media

Maja Stark up 1 entering final round at U.S. Women's Open

Maja Stark up 1 entering final round at U.S. Women's Open Sweden's Maja Stark continued her impressive play at the U.S. Women's ...
Music City set for encore after 2024's five-OT thrillerNew Foto - Music City set for encore after 2024's five-OT thriller

As the NASCAR Cup Series moves to Tennessee for Sunday night's Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway, former series champion Brad Keselowski still was thinking about the just-completed visit to Charlotte. After battling late into last Sunday night in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the RFK Racing driver said he could have used more laps to score his first win of 2025. In Keselowski's estimation, 100 more miles would have helped to improve on a fifth-place finish that gave him his first top-10 result of 2025. "We got mixed up in some of the different stuff in the midpoint of the race and just clawed our way out," said Keselowski, who led five laps. "I feel like if we could have got to the lead, we could have won the race. "I wish it was a 700-mile race." The night got better for Keselowski as the race went longer, which is pretty much how the season has played out for the Rochester Hills, Mich., native. The first third of the season is far from what was expected from the No. 6 Ford. After the dust had settled in Kansas on May 11 and Kyle Larson had pulled into a tie with Christopher Bell for the series lead with three wins, Keselowski found himself in a wretched locale in the standings -- 33rd out of 36 drivers. He is currently in 32nd, just ahead of Shane van Gisbergen, Riley Herbst and Cole Custer. The trio slotting in front of Keselowski are Ty Dillon, Daniel Suarez and Justin Haley. It is far from the glory days for Keselowski, who won five races during his 2012 title year and six two years later. Since his four-victory showing during the shortened 2020 COVID season, he has won just twice in 157 races: Talladega in 2021, Darlington last May. In four career starts at Nashville, Keselowski has posted a best finish of 11th two seasons ago and was 25th last year, although he has won in support races. RFK Racing received good news this week when a portion of the penalty on the No. 17 Ford driven by Chris Buescher was rescinded. While crew chief Scott Graves has already served the two-race suspension for the front bumper cover infraction discovered at Kansas, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel reduced Buescher's 60-point penalty in half Wednesday, allowing the Texas driver to advance from 23rd to 16th in the standings. Toyota driver Chase Briscoe continued his hot qualifying by claiming the Busch Light Pole on Saturday, touring the 1.33-mile concrete oval with a track-record lap of 164.395 mph. That time was good enough by 0.049 seconds to beat Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin, whose wife is expecting a baby boy on Sunday. It was Briscoe's second consecutive time qualifying in the No. 1 spot and third this season. William Byron, Tyler Reddick and last week's winner Ross Chastain rounded out the top five qualifiers. Last Sunday, Chastain ran down Byron over the final 37 laps to capture the longest race of the season and become the ninth different winner in the past nine races at Charlotte. After fending off a battle with Hamlin, Byron withstood a charge from Chastain until six laps remained. Chastain picked up his first win of the season by a mere 0.673 seconds and did it in a backup car while starting 40th and last in the field. While Chastain led just eight laps in Charlotte, Joey Logano led just nine laps while winning at Nashville last year in a fifth overtime. Logano held off Zane Smith and Reddick while running the last 110 laps on a single tank of fuel. Byron leads the current points standings with one win and six top-5 finishes, while Larson trails by 29 points after three wins and eight top 5s. Larson leads in playoff points with 23. --Field Level Media

Music City set for encore after 2024's five-OT thriller

Music City set for encore after 2024's five-OT thriller As the NASCAR Cup Series moves to Tennessee for Sunday night's Cracker Barre...
From Galacticos to glory: How Luis Enrique transformed PSG into Champions League winnersNew Foto - From Galacticos to glory: How Luis Enrique transformed PSG into Champions League winners

PARIS (AP) — Luis Enrique got rid of theGalacticosat Paris Saint-Germain and then became one himself. The Spanish coach, or perhaps he should be called an architect or a visionary, orchestrated a5-0 destructionof Inter Milan in Saturday's Champions League final. The match was so clinically one-sided that it resembled a training session against an amateur team, rather than a three-time European Cup winner. Passing, movement, energy. Tireless pressing, forwards dropping back to defend, wingers protecting fullbacks. Was this really PSG? Yes. All of these attributes were on display in Munich as Luis Enrique joined an elite list of coaches to win the Champions Leaguewith multiple clubs. His other success was with Barcelona in 2015 — a 3-1 win against Juventus — but Saturday was sweeter. "This is the time for a great party and to make the most of this moment," Luis Enrique said. "I felt this connection with the players and the fans, I think it was a very strong connection throughout the season. " Before Luis Enrique's arrival at the start of last season, such teamwork and unselfishness were not the hallmarks of PSG. Far from it. PSG had become increasingly complacent with star names like Neymar, Thiago Silva, Lionel Messi, Edinson Cavani, Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Kylian Mbappé. All fine players, some even great, yet all came and went without winning Europe's biggest club prize. Consequentially, the impatience of the club's Qatari owners led to amerry-go-round of coaches. When Luis Enrique took charge he boldly went against what PSG's owners had done since taking charge 14 years ago. It was no longer about pandering to star power and, even more importantly, it wasn't about who the new coach signed but rather who he sold. Out wentNeymarand midfielderMarco Verratti, who made too many headlines off the field amid regular reports about their lifestyle and a penchant for partying. Then, during the offseason, came the biggest jolt of all as Mbappé — theclub's record scorer— joined Real Madrid. How would PSG cope in the French league, let alone the Champions League, without a player they hadoverly relied onfor so long? Rather well it turns out, although it took time and courage. What were the turning points in PSG's season? On a rainy autumn night in London,Ousmane Dembélé was droppedby Luis Enrique and PSG lost to Arsenal 2-0 in a dismally poor performance. Luis Enrique made it clear he was looking for dedication in his squad and this was non-negotiable, which is why he dropped Dembélé. Critics lambasted his decision and doubts continued as PSG struggled in the new-look Champions League, losing to Atletico Madrid and Bayern Munich. As baffling a decision it was to some, it nevertheless showed that Luis Enrique was not going to give in to player power, like so many of his predecessors. Instead of demanding a transfer or moaning, Dembélé said nothing. A few months later, he was transformed intoa prolific scorerand is now apotential Ballon d'Or winner. The other turning point came on Jan. 22. PSG faced possible elimination from the Champions League group stage if it lost at home to Manchester City, the 2023 champion. The nightmare scenario saw PSG trailing 2-0, with no Mbappé to bail the team out. What happened next ultimately defined their season, as the club'syoung playerstook the initiative and turned an inevitable-looking defeat into a 4-2 win. Noticeably, PSG's redesigned attack clicked with four different scorers rather than relying too heavily on one. The young guns carried on as a resurgent PSG added to its domestic double with the Champions League title for a remarkable treble — which Luis Enrique first achieved with Barcelona 10 years ago. It was deeply symbolic that PSG's best player against Inter was 19-year-old Désiré Doué, who set up the first goal and then scored twice. Also, there were four different scorers on the night — just like against City. The last PSG goal was scored by Senny Mayulu, a 19-year-old talent who grew up in the northeastern Parisian suburb of Le Blanc-Mesnil. In memory of his daughter Luis Enrique's daughter, Xana,died six years agoat the age of nine. When he was asked about his daughter by broadcaster Canal Plus after the match, Luis Enrique pointed to his heart and said: "It's here every day of my life, whether we win or lose." PSG fans held up a banner with Xana's name after the match, and Luis Enrique changed his clothing to put on a T-shirt of the foundation he started in her memory. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

From Galacticos to glory: How Luis Enrique transformed PSG into Champions League winners

From Galacticos to glory: How Luis Enrique transformed PSG into Champions League winners PARIS (AP) — Luis Enrique got rid of theGalacticosa...
Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each score to lift Charlotte FC over Toronto FC 2-0New Foto - Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each score to lift Charlotte FC over Toronto FC 2-0

TORONTO (AP) — Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each scored a goal in the second half to lift Charlotte FC over Toronto FC 2-0 on Saturday night. Charlotte (8-8-1) won for just the second time in eight games. Toronto (3-10-4) had two wins and five losses in the month of May. Biel opened the scoring in the 56th minute. Liel Abada cut inside the penalty box to draw defenders and fed an unmarked Biel for a tap-in. Agyemang scored his sixth goal of the season in the 90th. Charlotte outshot Toronto 18-7 (9-2) in shots on target. David Bingham, making his first league start since October 2023, replaced Kristijan Kahlina, last year's MLS Goalkeeper of the year, in the Charlotte goal. Charlotte entered with a 1-6-1 record on the road, while Toronto's 1-6-2 home record ranked 29th in the league. A 2-0 victory over D.C. United on May 10 remains Toronto's lone home win of the season. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/soccer

Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each score to lift Charlotte FC over Toronto FC 2-0

Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each score to lift Charlotte FC over Toronto FC 2-0 TORONTO (AP) — Pep Biel and Patrick Agyemang each scored a...
Scottie Scheffler emerges as leader at Memorial after Round 3New Foto - Scottie Scheffler emerges as leader at Memorial after Round 3

Even as the world's No. 1 golfer, Scottie Scheffler keeps finding ways to take pride in his accomplishments on a week-by-week basis. Scheffler charged into the lead in the third round of the Memorial Tournament on Saturday, posting birdies on four of the final five holes for a 4-under-par 68 at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. "I was definitely proud of the way I finished, and it was really challenging," he said. Scheffler, at 8-under 208 going into Sunday's final round, is one shot ahead of Ben Griffin, who had a bogey on the last hole. Griffin, who was the second-round co-leader and built his advantage to five strokes, notched 72. "I did see that Ben got to 10-under, but ... it's not going to change my play in the middle of a Saturday," Scheffler said. Canada's Nick Taylor holds third place at 5 under after shooting 74. Scheffler had a pair of 70s in the first two rounds and then had 13 straight pars to begin his round Saturday. "Around this golf course, even par, I think, today would have been a pretty solid score," Scheffler said. "Like I said, I felt like I could have gotten a little bit more out of the round, but I felt like I was playing nice and just a couple lips here and there would have changed the score a little bit." Scheffler has won two of the last three tournaments he entered, including the PGA Championship three weeks ago. Griffin is aiming to win for the second week in a row after his first PGA Tour individual championship at the Charles Schwab Challenge. They'll be paired together, and there's familiarity between the two. "We played a lot of junior golf together," Scheffler said. "He played at (North Carolina), I played at Texas, so we didn't see too much of each other in college. But I feel like we played a lot of junior golf together and saw each other at the amateur circuit throughout the summer, a lot of those tournaments." Griffin had four consecutive bogeys -- Nos. 9-12 -- before later registering consecutive birdies to get back on track. Taylor's erratic back nine included a double bogey on No. 12 followed by a bogey and then a 117-yard shot from the fairway for an eagle to conclude an eventful three-hole stretch. Yet when the round concluded, he figured he was in a fortunate position. "I'll be trying to chase him down," Taylor said of Scheffler. "He's obviously playing phenomenal, so I'll have to play some of my best golf to be in the hunt there with the last few holes to go." Griffin and Taylor were tied for the lead when the third round began, but through nine holes Saturday, the gap was four strokes despite Griffin's bogey on the ninth hole that reduced the margin from five shots. Taylor began with a pair of bogeys before settling in with nine consecutive pars prior to his wild sequence. Jordan Spieth (72), Keegan Bradley (68) and Austria's Sepp Straka (66) are tied for fourth place at 3 under. "I feel like I got myself back in the tournament," Bradley said. Spieth said he's looking to add to his recent uptick. "A course like this, no matter what happens (Sunday)," Spieth said, "I know if I'm able to play consistent golf on a course like this, then I'm heading the right direction." Akshay Bhatia, who was two shots behind Griffin and Taylor through the second round, tumbled to a tie for 23rd with a birdie-less 80 that included two double-bogeys. --Field Level Media

Scottie Scheffler emerges as leader at Memorial after Round 3

Scottie Scheffler emerges as leader at Memorial after Round 3 Even as the world's No. 1 golfer, Scottie Scheffler keeps finding ways to ...
2024 Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan snaps 5-race losing skid with win in Blame at Churchill DownsNew Foto - 2024 Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan snaps 5-race losing skid with win in Blame at Churchill Downs

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Mystik Dan snapped a five-race losing streak with a 1 1/4-length victory in the $270,000 Blame Stakes on Saturday at Churchill Downs, wherehe won the 2024 Kentucky Derby. Mystik Dan won the 150th Derby by a nose in the closest three-horse photo finish since 1947. After that, his skid included a second in the Preakness, an eighth in the Belmont at Saratoga and a ninth in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational. "In hindsight, I wish I could take away a couple of those races after the Triple Crown," trainer Ken McPeek said. "We got him back to his old self." Reminiscent of that race, Mystik Dan relaxed off the pace along the inside rail, cut the corner at the top of the stretch and powered home Saturday under Brian Hernandez Jr. "When Mystik Dan is right, he's such a fun horse to ride because he makes my job so easy," Hernandez said. Mystik Dan 1 1/8 miles in a stakes record time of 1:48.45. He paid $8.12 to win as the 3-1 third choice. Antiquarian was second and 2-1 favorite Post Time was third. The victory, worth $166,710, increased Mystik Dan's career earnings to $4,417,570. ___ AP horse racing: https://apnews.com/hub/horse-racing

2024 Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan snaps 5-race losing skid with win in Blame at Churchill Downs

2024 Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan snaps 5-race losing skid with win in Blame at Churchill Downs LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Mystik Dan snappe...
Messi's brilliance continues with two goals and an assist for Miami against ColumbusNew Foto - Messi's brilliance continues with two goals and an assist for Miami against Columbus

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Lionel Messi scored for the fifth time in three Major League Soccer matches to put Inter Miami up 3-0 early against the Columbus Crew on Saturday night. Messi scored twice — in the 15th and 24th minutes — giving him 10 goals this season, which leads his team and is tied for third in MLS. He also assisted on Tadeo Allende's goal in the 13th minute. That makes it two straight matches that the eight-time Ballon d'Or winner has recorded two goals and an assist. Miami was the more aggressive team early. The Herons had seven shots — four on goal — in the first 25 minutes the match against a Columbus team that does not give up many goals. The Crew entered Saturday ranked eighth in MLS with just 19 goals allowed. Allende opened scoring early in the first half with a cross-body finish set up by Messi's long ball over the top. A few minutes later, Messi took advantage of a poor decision by goalkeeper Nicholas Hagen and lofted the ball over despite the keeper getting a hand on it. On Messi's second goal, Sergio Busquets set up his former Barcelona teammate for the second straight game, sending a long pass to a streaking Messi for the finish over Hagen. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Messi's brilliance continues with two goals and an assist for Miami against Columbus

Messi's brilliance continues with two goals and an assist for Miami against Columbus FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Lionel Messi scored fo...
Caitlin Clark among stars at Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks Game 6New Foto - Caitlin Clark among stars at Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks Game 6

TheIndiana Pacersare hosting theNew York Knicksin Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday, and many stars are in attendance, including WNBA starCaitlin Clarkof theIndiana Fever. The Fever guard was in the crowd to witness what she has described as the "greatest comeback team" she has ever seen. Her admiration for the Pacers' relentless spirit was evident as they rallied four times to come back and win in this year's playoffs. Clark has expressed how it feels to be in Indianapolis as a WNBA player and during the Pacers' NBA playoff run, saying it is fun to be a part of it. "It's great being in Indianapolis right now,"Clark told ESPN. "People are loving basketball. It's always been a basketball state. It's just fun to be a part of." Clark was seated alongside teammates Aliyah Boston and Lexie Hull. PACERS ARE THE GREATEST COMEBACK TEAM IVE EVER SEEN — Caitlin Clark (@CaitlinClark22)May 22, 2025 More:New York Liberty value soars. Time for WNBA owners to invest or get out of the way The Fever will host the Washington Mystics on Tuesday, June 3 at 7 p.m. ET. The game will be broadcast on NBA TV, WNBA League Pass, MeTV (Indianapolis), Monumental Sports Network (Washington) Indiana lost to the Connecticut Sun on Friday in Indianapolis. Clark did not playdue to a left quad strain. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Caitlin Clark among stars at Pacers-Knicks Game 6

Caitlin Clark among stars at Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks Game 6

Caitlin Clark among stars at Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks Game 6 TheIndiana Pacersare hosting theNew York Knicksin Game 6 of the Easte...
Girma returns, LaBonta makes historic debut in U.S. women's 3-0 win over ChinaNew Foto - Girma returns, LaBonta makes historic debut in U.S. women's 3-0 win over China

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Naomi Girma returned to the national team and Lo'eau LaBonta became the oldest player to make her international debut for the U.S. in a 3-0 win over China on Saturday. Catarina Macario, Sam Coffey and Lindsey Heaps scored while goalkeeper Phallon Tullis-Joyce got her second shutout in as many appearances. LaBonta, the 32-year-old midfielder for the Kansas City Current in the National Women's Soccer League, came on as a second-half substitute. The match also marked Girma's first appearance for the national team this year. The 24-year-old defender has beennursing injuriesbut recently returned to help Chelsea win the Women's Super League title and the FA Cup. Girma commandeda record $1.1 transfer feewhen she moved from the San Diego Wave to Chelsea earlier this year. Tullis-Joyce, who plays for Manchester United, started in goal in just her second U.S. appearance as coach Emma Hayes looks to replace goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, who retired from the national team last year. Macario scored her 11th international goal after Alyssa Thompson kept the ball alive in a tumble in front of the net in the 28th minute. Coffey made it 2-0 in the 35th minute, taking a pass from Macario out front and banging her second goal for the U.S. past goalkeeper Pan Hongyan with her left foot. Heaps, the U.S. captain, scored on a header in the 54th minute. The United States is currently missing several key contributors from last year'sOlympic gold medal-winning squad. Sophia Wilson and Mallory Swanson are both on maternity leave. Trinity Rodman is dealing with a nagging back issue. The United States famously defeated China on penalties in the 1999 Women's World Cup final. The teams last met in 2023, with the Americans winning both games. The Americans have a 39-9-13 overall record against China, including five straight. The United States was coming off a2-1 loss to Brazilon April 8. China defeated Thailand 5-1 in its last outing. The U.S. faces Jamaica on Tuesday in St. Louis. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/soccer

Girma returns, LaBonta makes historic debut in U.S. women's 3-0 win over China

Girma returns, LaBonta makes historic debut in U.S. women's 3-0 win over China ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Naomi Girma returned to the nation...
How PSG and its masterful coach tore down a superteam to build a Champions League winnerNew Foto - How PSG and its masterful coach tore down a superteam to build a Champions League winner

In the penultimate month of Paris Saint-Germain's superteam era, Kylian Mbappé sat motionless in a mostly dark room, and endured a rant that explainsPSG's 2025 Champions League triumph. It began with a lesson about Michael Jordan. "Michael Jordan," PSG's first-year head coach, Luis Enrique,told Mbappé in expletive-laden Spanish, "would grab his teammates by the balls and defend with them." Mbappé, soccer's golden boy, wasn't doing that. And so, for a minute and a half, with his hands gesticulating and his animated body leaning in toward PSG's last megastar, Enrique delivered a lecture that might as well have been a manifesto. "You think that you only have to score goals," Enrique told Mbappé. " ... But that's not enough for me." He explained that his striker also had to lead an impassioned, coordinated press. And if Mbappé would lead it, "you know what we'll have?" Enrique asked. "A f***ing machine." This aged well, Luis Enrique was rightpic.twitter.com/fHuMTCgvQY — ♔ Inactive ♔ (@BxciiNG)April 9, 2025 That's what Enrique envisioned when he took charge of PSG in the summer of 2023. But with pampered phenoms, he couldn't quite build it. For more than a decade, PSG's stars — such as Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Neymar and Lionel Messi — had been "treated like gods," Enrique explained in a 2024 docuseries. By the time he arrived, only one remained; but one was enough to corrupt his vision. Because a ferocious press doesn't function with 10 or 10-and-a-half players. Mbappé, of course, was brilliant, and unbenchable, "the cornerstone of the team" for a reason. But he was also a burden. "We defend in a way to avoid him tiring, and attack to give him freedom," Enrique said last year. "The moment he leaves, the team becomes the cornerstone. I think we can be even better next season." That, in a nutshell, is the prologue to a fascinating story that culminated Saturday in Munich.Mbappé left, PSG improved andwalloped Inter Milan 5-0 to win its first European title. Enrique, the story's primary author, bounded around like a little boy, andhonored his late daughter, and twirled his shirt in ecstasy. And none of it, he knows, would have been possible with the type of players that PSG chased for a decade. "PSG would never have been an option for me with the previous policy of signing superstar players," Enrique said last year. "The PSG with Neymar, Messi, Mbappé ... no chance." The PSG with Neymar, Messi and Mbappé captivated global soccer. But it didn't win a single Champions League knockout game. For all their individual skill and accolades, as a team, they were stale and stodgy. And they were disjointed. Most of all, they were fragmented. Messi was too old to press; Neymar was too fragile to press; Mbappé often chose not to. So they defended with eight, and attacked with maybe four or five. They were everything that modern soccer isn't. The sport's best teams defend with 11, attack with 11, transition with 11 and move as one. The striker sprints at the opposing goalkeeper, and the winger charges down the next pass, and the fullback follows. They stifle opponents, and perhaps they don't always win the ball, but they tilt the field and play the vast majority of games in enemy territory. This, in two years, is what Enrique and PSG built. First, theyspent around $800 millionof Qatari money — but not like the club used to. They spent most of it on young legs and impressionable minds, on talented but not-yet-heralded players Désire Doué and João Neves. They spent it on teens and hungry 20-somethings who, sans ego, would heed Enrique's demands. And then, all together, they became the "f***ing machine" by committing to the press — by running, a lot, but also by adhering to principles, refining angles and internalizing triggers. Theywent right at Liverpool in the Round of 16. "They did exhaust us a bit by constantly pressing us," Liverpool coach Arne Slot admitted. They did the same to Aston Villa and Arsenal. And then, on Saturday, they crafted a masterpiece. They'll be celebrated for what they did with the ball, which was, of course, wondrous. They'll be hailed for their positional play and, most of all, theirlightning-quick attacks. But they won the Champions League final in the first 20 minutes. With the very first kick of the game, rather than use the ball to fashion an attack, they simply dumped it into Inter's end, and dared the Italian team to play through them. ¡Arranca la transmisión! PSG vs. Inter en directo aquí#PorLaChampionspic.twitter.com/l3JRkIrq3o — TUDN USA (@TUDNUSA)May 31, 2025 Again and again, they pressed ferociously, as high up the field as Inter allowed them to go. Around the 11-minute mark, Marquinhos, a center back, followed his man deep into Inter's half; midfielders hunted the ball; Inter turned it over, and eight passes later, it was in the back of the net. ACHRAF HAKIMI OPENS THE SCORING FOR PSG 💥pic.twitter.com/6XhdwkegVR — CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo)May 31, 2025 This is what Enrique envisioned. On Saturday, and throughout a season that also yielded Ligue 1 and French cup titles, the vision came to fruition. No Kylian Mbappés or Michael Jordans necessary.

How PSG and its masterful coach tore down a superteam to build a Champions League winner

How PSG and its masterful coach tore down a superteam to build a Champions League winner In the penultimate month of Paris Saint-Germain...
Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — 'We still got a ways to go'New Foto - Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — 'We still got a ways to go'

LOS ANGELES — Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani threw a two-inning, 30-pitch live batting practice against minor league hitters before Saturday's game against the Yankees. It was Ohtani's second time throwing live BP as the three-time MVP slowly goes through his progression and pitching rehab from elbow surgery in order to return to the Dodgers' rotation. "[He] used his entire mix, take some hitters up, down and came out of it well, which is most important," manager Dave Roberts said. "I think he wishes his command would have been a little bit better. But a really positive day for Shohei. "You still got to get to five or six innings, so we still got a ways to go. … I didn't ask what the velocity was, I would think a safe guess is somewhere in the mid 90s." Ohtani, who hasn't pitched in a regular-season game since Aug. 23, 2023, won't pitch for the Dodgers until the second half at the earliest. Los Angeles' rotation has dealt with several injuries this season. Starters Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are currently on the 60-day IL while rookie Roki Sasaki is on the 15-day IL. The world's best player has shown no signs of slowing down while he's been rehabbing from elbow surgery, entering Saturday hitting .294 with an MLB-leading 22 homers this season, including two against the Yankees on Friday night. He started Saturday's game with a leadoff single and later scored on a Will Smith RBI-single. The Dodgers have not been lucky with their health for quite some time and were hit with another injury as shortstopMookie Betts is dealing with a fractured left toe, Roberts confirmed Saturday. Betts, who was not in the Dodgers' lineup in their8-5 win over the Yankees, injured the toe in the dark at his home and reported the pain and swelling to L.A.'s medical staff and Roberts before Friday's series opener. "It's a fracture at the tip of his toe, so basically it's kind of what he can tolerate," Roberts said. "And the last couple days, it's been hard for him to even put on his shoe. So that's obviously why he's not in the lineup. But I still don't believe it's going to be an IL stint." While the injury isn't expected to keep Betts out long-term, the Dodgers may have to reevaluate that plan should Betts' pain and swelling in the toe not improve. He wasn't in the starting lineup Saturday against the Yankees for the second straight game. The Dodgers are currently playing with just 12 position players, but have several players with plenty of experience at shortstop including Tommy Edman, Miguel Rojas and Hyeseong Kim, who got the nod at short on Saturday.

Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — 'We still got a ways to go'

Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — 'We still got a ways to go' LOS ANGELES — Dodgers superstar Shohei Oht...
Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBINew Foto - Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBI

Baltimore Orioles rookie Coby Mayo's first MLB RBI turned into an adventure of his own making on Saturday. In his 22nd career game, the top-100 prospect finally plated a run with an RBI single to score Ryan O'Hearn from second base in the fourth inning. However, the play went sour when Chicago White Sox third baseman Josh Rojas cut off a throw from left fielder Joshua Palacios and caught Mayo trying to sneak into second base. The play turned into a rundown between first and second. Mayo was caught quickly, and responded by giving Lenyn Sosa a hard shove before first baseman Miguel Vargas tagged him out. Both Sosa and Vargas took exception to the shove, confronting Mayo as he laid on the ground. Mayo didn't appreciate the treatment, pushing Sosa as he walked away. Cue the benches clearing. The benches clear in Baltimore between the Orioles and the White Soxpic.twitter.com/AnFMHOieT3 — Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia)May 31, 2025 Viewed charitably, the 23-year-old Mayo's shove could be seen as him attempting to draw an interference call on Sosa while running out of the baseline to avoid the tag. However, that tactic doesn't work so well when you instigate the contact with your outstretched arms, with a fielder who has run out of the basepath. Mayo confirmed that's what he was doing after the game, viaMASN's Roch Kubatko: "Yeah, obviously, just trying to get to second base and trying to get into scoring position for Heston (Kjerstad)," Mayo said. "Cuts it off and got into a rundown. Obviously, just being told in the minor leagues to try to stay in a rundown, and I thought he was in the base line and trying to get some contact. Didn't mean for it to escalate. I wasn't trying to do that. It just did. "The guys always have your back. I think everyone in here will fight for one another - not literally, but, you know, everyone has each other's back. I think that's just what happened. Looking out for teammates, and we'll do the same thing for them." Orioles interim manager Tony Mansolino provided a little more detail behind the play, but ultimately agreed with the umps for not buying Mayo's attempt: "Now he's an infielder, right? So when we're in spring training talking about rundowns, one of the things that we constantly talk about with our infielders is not crossing the line because if there's contact with the infielder then it's a, I think they call it a Type 2 obstruction, and then you automatically get second base. "So, I think instinctually Coby kind of sought out the contact right there with the infielder, which, visually, it probably didn't look the best but I think most coaches will probably go, 'Not a bad baseball play.' Just didn't work (in) our favor. Umpire made a good call." Ultimately, it was a rookie moment for a player whose career hasn't started off on the best foot. Mayo is one of the shinier prospects in the Orioles' youth movement — MLB Pipeline ranked him as the No. 14 prospect in baseball entering the season — but he entered Saturday hitting .094/.186/.094 in 59 plate appearances between 2024 and 2025. Mayo, whose power is graded as plus-plus by Pipeline, is still waiting for his first extra-base hit in the big leagues. He has every opportunity to become an everyday player in the Orioles' infield, as soon he starts hitting like he has in the minors. Unfortunately, even his first RBI showed he still has some learning to do.

Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBI

Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBI Baltimore Orioles rookie Coby Mayo's first MLB RBI turned ...
Here's dirt in your eye. Freak pitch strikes airborne clod, and Oregon softball catcher pays priceNew Foto - Here's dirt in your eye. Freak pitch strikes airborne clod, and Oregon softball catcher pays price

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — As Oregon's catcher, Emma Cox knows All-American Lyndsey Grein throws lots of filthy pitches. Grein outdid herself Friday night at the Women's College World Series when she kicked up a clod of dirt with her cleats during her pitching motion against Mississippi. The clod was in the air when it was struck by the ball, breaking it into pieces. The 67-mph pitch ended up in Cox's glove andone of those dirt chunks in her eyes.She immediately came out of her crouch and went to her knees, reaching for her eyes through her mask. She was able to stay in the game. "I thought it was dirt from my glove that must have hit me,"Cox said in an interview with an Oregon in-house reporterSaturday. "And I was like, 'OK, whatever.' And then the umpire was like, 'No, it was a bug that flew into it and then the ball hit you, or the bug hit you in the face.' " The dirt-in-the-eye pitch was one of those freak moments that probably couldn't be repeated, akin toRandy Johnson hitting a birdwith a pitch in 2001. "I didn't believe it until I saw the video," Cox said in the interview. The Duckswon 6-5 in 10 inningsand will play Oklahoma on Sunday in an elimination game. ___ AP college sports:https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

Here's dirt in your eye. Freak pitch strikes airborne clod, and Oregon softball catcher pays price

Here's dirt in your eye. Freak pitch strikes airborne clod, and Oregon softball catcher pays price OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — As Oregon's ...

 

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