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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