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    Saibari early strike gives Morocco World Cup win over Scotland
    Ismael Saibari (L) celebrates with teammate Bilal El Khannouss after scoring for Morocco against Scotland at the World Cup on Friday (FRANCK FIFE)Ismael Saibari scored the fastest goal of the World Cup so far after just 71 seconds as Morocco beat Scotland 1-0 on Friday to close in on a place in the knockout rounds.Saibari scored in Morocco's opening 1-1 draw with Brazil last weekend and his clinical finish with just over a minute gone settled a hard-fought, physical contest watched by a crowd of 64,146 at the Gillette Stadium near Boston.The 25-year-old, who was born in Spain and raised in Belgium, is reportedly on the brink of a 55 million-euro ($63m) transfer from Dutch champions PSV Eindhoven to Bayern Munich.The quality of his strike past goalkeeper Angus Gunn showed why he is attracting such interest, and it was telling that Scotland lacked the same quality in the opposition box -- that helps explain why Morocco are ranked fifth in the world, and Scotland 40th.With four points from two games, Morocco are now primed to advance to the last 32 as they aim to at least match their historic run to the semi-finals in Qatar in 2022.However, it was a sobering evening for Scotland and their army of fans who have taken over Boston during this World Cup, as their team never really tested Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou.The laboured 1-0 win over Haiti in their opening game at the same stadium last weekend -- which was their first victory at a World Cup since 1990 -- gave them a platform to build on and reason to believe they can progress beyond the group stage at a World Cup for the very first time.Another win here would have secured progress from Group C, but their chances of going further remain up in the air going into their next match against Brazil in Miami next Wednesday.Morocco, whose captain Achraf Hakimi started hours after it was confirmed he must stand trial in France on rape charges, face Haiti in Atlanta next.- Scots lack cutting edge -Moroccan coach Mohamed Ouahbi went with an unchanged starting line-up here following the Brazil clash, but opposite number Steve Clarke made three changes.Clarke sought to reinforce his defence, meaning striker Lawrence Shankland dropped out as defender Kieran Tierney came into the side to make a back five.But that was of little use as Morocco went ahead practically from kick-off.The assist came from Real Madrid's Brahim Diaz and Grant Hanley played Saibari onside as the latter latched onto the ball over the top, controlled and rifled high into the net.Morocco, who defeated Scotland 3-0 when the teams met at the 1998 World Cup, threatened to overrun their opponents every time they got forward but were wasteful, with Bilal El Khannouss squandering a good chance on 36 minutes.Scotland were as stodgy in attack as they have been for a long time, and it took until first-half stoppage time for them to create anything dangerous.That was a cross whipped in from the left by skipper Andy Robertson that John McGinn was unable to make anything of, and the opening period ended without Bounou needing to make a save.Morocco hit the woodwork five minutes into the second half as Saibari met a cutback by El Khannouss and his attempt was deflected onto the bar by Jack Hendry.Moments later Gunn made a fine stop to keep out an El Khannouss header from a corner taken by Hakimi, who was regularly booed by the crowd.Morocco nevertheless seemed content to see the game out and soak up what Scotland could throw at them.Ryan Christie fired over on 64 minutes after being teed up by Scott McTominay, who hit the side-netting late on, but a Scotland goal proved elusive.as/gj
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    Red Sox Urged Not To Rush Injured Stars Back Amid Recent Struggles
    Red Sox Urged Not To Rush Injured Stars Back Amid Recent Struggles originally appeared on NESN. Add NESN as a Preferred Source by clicking here.The Boston Red Sox's struggles continued during a sweep by the Toronto Blue Jays, leaving the team with a 29-43 record and at the bottom of the division. Expectations were high for the Red Sox this season, but injuries and offensive struggles have plagued the team. Two of Boston's top players, Roman Anthony and Garrett Crochet, have both missed over a month, with no definitive timeline set for their return. With the Red Sox at the bottom of the AL East and on the outside looking in for the playoffs, The Boston Globe's Chad Finn urges that the team not rush Anthony or Crochet back from injury and wait until each player is completely healthy. "They absolutely cannot attempt to rush back Roman Anthony and Garrett Crochet from injury in a desperate and transparent attempt to pretend this season is salvageable," Finn wrote on Friday. "Anthony is still feeling pain when he swings the bat, which is understandable given the injury to his carpometacarpal joint can take 8-12 weeks to heal. The Red Sox, whose initial description of his injury did no favors for the most important position player in the organization since Betts, would be fools to bring him back before there is 100 percent certainty he is ready."The same goes for the other most important player in the organization, Crochet. The story with Crochet should parallel what should be the imperative approach with Anthony. Neither one of the Red Sox’ most essential players should return until they are in full health."Even with the impact those two players could give the Red Sox down the stretch as the team strives toward a return to the postseason, the most important thing is their long-term health. Waiting until Anthony and Crochet are fully healthy is Boston's best option. More MLB: Red Sox's Lineup 'Not Repairable' This Season, Per Insider
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    Tah praises Rüdiger and Diomande and reflects on emotional Ivory Coast match
    Tah praises Rüdiger and Diomande and reflects on emotional Ivory Coast matchGermany centre-back Jonathan Tah is approaching Saturday's World Cup meeting with Côte d'Ivoire with a mixture of excitement and emotion."It's going to be a special game for me against Côte d'Ivoire, as I have a history with the country" Tah said during Friday's press conference. "I'm really looking forward to it."While attention around Germany has intensified following their strong start to the tournament, Tah revealed he has deliberately avoided becoming distracted by outside opinions."To be honest, I don't really listen to the noise from the media around the World Cup and around our team."Instead, the defender is focused on helping Germany continue their positive momentum and maintaining the strong atmosphere that has developed inside the squad.One of the most notable moments of the press conference came when Tah was asked about comments made by teammate Antonio Rüdiger.The FC Bayern defender responded with heartfelt praise for the Real Madrid star."It's quite special to hear that praise from him," Tah said. "He is a great player who has achieved a lot in his career."Yet it was Rüdiger's qualities away from the pitch that appeared to impress Tah even more."I'm even more impressed by him as a person. He contacted me when I was injured, he always pushes me to be the best version of myself. He is a great team player."Tah's admiration reflects the close bond within Germany's squad, which has repeatedly been highlighted as one of the team's strengths during the tournament.The defender also spoke about Côte d'Ivoire youngster Yan Diomande, whose personal story has attracted significant attention in recent days."He is so talented and his story in the last few days has moved me," Tah said. "Football unites and the players know how difficult those moments can be for your private life. I really wish him the best, he is a great player."Despite the emotional subplots surrounding the match, Tah's focus remains firmly on Germany's World Cup ambitions.With Germany aiming to secure another important result and move closer to the knockout stages, the experienced defender will be hoping his performance on the pitch can match the calm leadership and maturity he displayed in front of the media.For Tah, Saturday's encounter may be special on a personal level, but the ultimate objective remains simple: helping Germany take another step forward in their quest for World Cup glory.
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    Penn State wrestling's Luke Lilledahl falls to Spencer Lee at Final X
    This time, Luke Lilledahl couldn't keep pace with his older, stronger rival.There would be no dramatic save like in April.Lilledahl, the Penn State wrestling lightweight NCAA champion, gave up big scoring runs near the end of both of his Final X best-of-three series matches to Olympic silver medalist Spencer Lee on Friday, June 19.Lee pulled away to win both of their matches, even after being down 4-0 to start Round Two, in the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. Lee won the first match, 7-1, and the second, 8-4.The defeats denied the ultra-successful Lilledahl his first shot at making the U.S. Senior World Team and competing in the October world championships in Kazakhstan. He also will surely give away his No. 1 world freestyle ranking at 57 kilograms. He took over that top spot after pulling out a scintillating 5-4 victory over the No. 2 Lee in April's U.S. Open in Las Vegas.That was a breakthrough for Penn State's new NCAA champ. In their previous matches, Lilledahl, 20, struggled to even stay close to Lee, 27, who won three national titles at Iowa.Lee had swept him in last year's Final X series, winning 7-2 and 6-0. He also dominated Lilledahl, 11-0, in a 2024 tournament, just before his freshman season at Penn State.This time, Lee was the stronger, more resilient wrestler, again. Already competing with a wrapped right arm, Lee willed his way through the second match. He appeared dazed and dropped to his knees after butting heads with Lilledahl in the first period.Still, he would not be denied. He stepped up his pursuit and scoring and hit a big four-point move to go ahead and put things away.He wobbled as he walked off the match after the 8-4 victory.The showdown between Lilledahl and Lee was one of the top draws of the best-of-three qualifying event. Other Penn State Final X winners were Marcus Blaze over Jax Forrest at 61 kg, Zain Retherford at 70 kg and Levi Haines over Chance Marsteller at 79 kg. Nittany Lion Wrestling Club stars Kyle Dake (86 kg) and Kyle Snyder (97 kg) also won their third finals matches to make Team USA.Frank Bodani covers Penn State wrestling for the York Daily Record and USA Today Network. Contact him at fbodani@ydr.com and follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, @YDRPennState.This article originally appeared on York Daily Record: Spencer Lee beats Penn State wrestling star Luke Lilledahl at Final X
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    World Cup 2026: Morocco scores quickly versus Scotland, hangs on for 1-0 win in Group C
    Morocco took very little time to score the first goal of the match to take a 1-0 lead over Scotland. With 1:10 elapsed in the match, Ismael Saibari took a pass down the right side from Brahim Díaz and blasted a kick past Scottish goalkeeper Angus Gunn before the 2’ mark. It was the fastest goal scored thus far in the 2026 World Cup. However, as quickly as Saibari scored, his goal wasn’t among the 10 fastest scored in World Cup history. Here are the 10 quickest scores, led by Turkey’s Hakan Sukur scoring 11 seconds into its match versus South Korea in 2002.1. Hakan Sukur – 11 seconds in 20022. Vaclav Masek – 15 seconds in 19623. Ernest Lehner – 25 seconds in 19344. Bryan Robson – 28 seconds in 19825. Clint Dempsey – 30 seconds in 20146. Bernard Lacombe – 31 seconds in 19787. Arne Nyberg – 35 seconds in 19387. Emile Veinante – 35 seconds in 19389. Florian Albert – 50 seconds in 19629. Adalbert Desu – 50 seconds in 19309. Seung Zin Pak – 50 seconds in 196612. Celso Ayala – 52 seconds in 199813. Mathias Jorgensen – 55 seconds in 2018World Cup 2026: Daily schedule | Group schedule, results | StandingsAfter allowing that early goal so quickly, Scotland continued to look overwhelmed throughout the first half against Morocco’s attack. Saibari nearly got another scoring chance at the 10’ mark, while Bilal El Khannouss got a shot off but high and wide at 36’. Trailing 1-0 at the break, Scotland had never won a World Cup match after trailing at halftime. Presumably feeling the urgency of needing a win to advance past the group stage, Scotland was more aggressive in the Morocco zone and worked to control the ball. However, after Lewis Ferguson could do little with a free kick, Scotland’s advantage soon faded as Morocco shook off the early rush. Scotland never created a decent chance for the equalizer. At the 86’ mark, Scotland got two excellent chances for the tying goal, applying pressure in front of the Moroccan net. But Scott McTominay’s shot from the right box went into the outside part of the net. That was followed by Lyndon Dykes heading a shot toward the net off a corner kick, but the attempt went wide.Morocco improves to 1-1-0 in Group C play, while Scotland drops to 1-0-1.
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    A New Air Force One, via Qatar, Nears Its First Presidential Flight
    President Trump showed off the new red, white and blue Boeing 747, a gift from Qatar that prompted a storm of criticism from lawmakers, before a flyover on July 4.
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    US fans cheer on national team in Gillette Stadium before Scotland-Morocco match at the World Cup
    FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Even though Scotland and Morocco were the World Cup teams playing at Gillette Stadium on Friday, there were plenty of American fans inside the venue watching on TV as the U.S. beat Australia 2-0 across the country in Seattle.They were certainly outnumbered by the blue-shirted Tartan Army and the red-clad Moroccan supporters, but the ones cheering for the red, white and blue didn’t consider themselves isolated at the home stadium of the NFL's New England Patriots.“I don’t feel outnumbered at all,” said 39-year-old Boston resident Kaley Vescuso, who was wearing a blue USA jersey.“It’s like a family reunion,” she said, standing in the middle of a large group of Scottish fans. “Our cousins are here.”The TVs were on all around Gillette and when the U.S. scored to go up 2-0 a little over three hours before Morocco beat Scotland 1-0. A spattering of cheers echoed around the nearly empty stadium when Alex Freeman scored.“It’s the best. The atmosphere is amazing, and being around all these fans from all around the world is amazing,” said 20-year-old Calder Reynolds, who is from nearby Wellesley and was dressed in a No. 86 Jack Hughes hockey jersey.Reynolds brought along his 13-year-old sister Ellie, who admitted that she really didn’t watch soccer, but big brother convinced her to wear a Paul Revere-style three-cornered hat to go along with her red-and-white U.S. soccer shirt.“I think it’s cool,” she said of her brother sporting a hockey sweater to a soccer match. “He’s really into it.”Lots of U.S. fans were glued to the TVs to watch their team this year's World Cup, the first to have 48 teams in the field.“The way that it’s sweeping the nation has been awesome,” Calder Reynolds said.Sprinkled between many of the Scottish fans was 54-year-old Paul Schwerdt from Needham, Mass., who stuck out in his mostly white T-shirt with a USA logo.“We perfectly timed it to get in here to watch the game,” he said. “It’s a fun time and a fun season. My brother-in-law is a mad soccer fan, and now I’m here and the Pats aren’t even playing.”He did have on his baseball cap with a Patriots logo, though.___AP World Cup: https://apnews.com/hub/fifa-world-cup
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    Former Ohio State wrestler Kyle Snyder makes U.S. Senior team
    Former Ohio State wrestler Kyle Snyder has made the U.S. senior wrestling team once again, but this time it wasn't easy. Snyder lost to a fellow American for the first time in ten years in the best-of-three wrestle-off against James Buchanan in the 2026 Final X Trials, but then took care of business to make his 12th straight U.S. World Championship team.Snyder won the first match 5-2, then dropped the second match via a late takedown to force a third and deciding match. The former All-American won the final match easily, 9-3, to earn his way onto the team that will compete in the 2026 Senior Wrestling World Championships. That will be held in Astana, Kazakhstan, from Oct. 24 to Nov. 1. Snyder will wrestle at 97 Kg. and will face a formidable field once again.Kyle Snyder made the U.S. Senior World Team at 97 kg. He defeated Stephen Buchanan 5-2, lost 5-5, and won 9-3 at Final X. pic.twitter.com/XrEhlpU85R— FloWrestling (@FloWrestling) June 19, 2026Snyder is one of the best to ever wear the Scarlet and Gray singlet. He was a four-time All-American in Columbus, helping the Buckeyes to win the 2015 NCAA team championship, and was a three-time heavyweight Big Ten and NCAA national champion. He now trains with the Penn State Nittany Lions wrestling club.Snyder's main competition figures to be Iranian Olympic Champion Hassan Yazdani, who has successfully moved up to 97 Kg, and six-time world champion Abdulrashid Sadulaev of Russia, who has been the biggest rival of Snyder in the world for a few years now.Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes, and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on X.This article originally appeared on Buckeyes Wire: Former Ohio State wrestler Kyle Snyder makes U.S. senior team again
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    Pundits split over Scott McTominay penalty decision after Scotland suffer World Cup blow
    Scotland were enraged not to receive a late penalty in their World Cup defeat to Morocco though pundits could not agree on whether the decision was a correct one.In the 82nd minute, Scott McTominay went down under the challenge of Neil El Aynaoui, who stuck out a leg and tripped up the Scot as he carried the ball into the box, with Morocco leading 1-0.Replays showed that the Morocco midfielder did not make contact with the ball and only nicked the man, with ITV’s referee specialist Christina Unkel admitting that she thought the initial decision was incorrect, though not to a degree where VAR would overturn it and award a penalty.It was the third Scotland penalty appeal of the game but by far the most vocal one, with McTominay continually pleading with referee Igliz Tantashev as play moved down the other end.The denial would prove crucial as Morocco went on to hold onto their one-goal lead to win their first game of the World Cup, leaping above Scotland in the Group C standings and leaving them in a potentially precarious position going into their final group game against Brazil.Pundits were split on the decision after the final whistle, with former Scotland striker Duncan Ferguson claiming it was a “stonewall penalty”.“Absolutely, it was a penalty,” he said on ITV. “ There was a big touch and then McTominay goes down. He's running at that speed, and I think he can get in [on goal].”However, Roy Keane and Ange Postecoglou took an opposing view to Ferguson, feeling it would have been soft for Steve Clarke’s side to be awarded a penalty.“ I think he's looking to go down. There's a difference,” Keane said, before Postecoglou added: “The Moroccan player puts his leg out but I don’t think he gets enough of him for it to be a penalty. He does get across him, but not for a penalty. I think he was going down anyway - but Big Dunc says it’s a stonewall so I’m not going to disagree!”Unkel also noted that Uzbek referee Tantashev was known for needing more physical contact to be convinced of fouls, though Keane reiterated that “it’s a physical game”.The decisive moment in the clash proved to be Ismael Saibari’s lightning-quick strike, which put Morocco ahead inside 70 seconds in Boston.Scotland face Brazil in their final Group C game in Miami on Wednesday where they will hope to seal qualification to the knockout stages.
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    Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani a late scratch vs. Orioles, away from team on paternity leave
    Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani was an unexpected late scratch for Friday’s game against the Baltimore Orioles. But there’s no reason to worry in Los Angeles. In fact, it’s good news for Ohtani. Shortly after releasing a lineup card without Ohtani in it, the Dodgers announced that he’s away from the team on paternity leave. Per the team, he’s expected to return to the team “sometime this weekend.”
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    Henry Nicholls and Rachin Ravindra power New Zealand to 352-run lead over England after Day 3
    Henry Nicholls made an instant impact on his return to New Zealand colours, stepping in for the retired Kane Williamson and delivering a composed unbeaten century to push his side into a dominant position against England on day three of the Test at The Oval. By stumps on Friday, New Zealand had reached 252 for 3 in their second innings, effectively stretching their overall lead to 352 after bowling England out for 291 just before lunch. Nicholls remained unbeaten on 119, anchoring the innings alongside Rachin Ravindra, who made a fluent 76 before his dismissal after tea. The pair added 161 runs from 201 balls, setting a new record for New Zealand’s highest partnership at The Oval. Their stand first stabilised the innings, then steadily built control before shifting gears after tea, when they began scoring at nearly six an over with crisp timing and clean strokeplay. New Zealand’s position puts them firmly in charge of the match, with seven wickets still in hand and the opportunity to push towards a 500-run lead. That would leave England facing a steep fourth-innings challenge, especially given their history at the venue. Their highest successful chase at The Oval remains 263 against Australia in 1902, while their highest ever fourth-innings chase anywhere is 378 for 3 against India at Edgbaston in 2022 during the Bazball era. Nicholls, who arrived in London only last Sunday after Williamson’s shock retirement, admitted the transition was unexpected. “(Williamson retiring) was a bit of a shock to everyone,” he said. “I've been lucky enough to play a lot of my cricket with Kane. I wasn't ever going to be able to replace him. I just really enjoyed being back in test cricket, you want to contribute. It was fun, the partnership with Rachin and with Daryl (Mitchell) at the end there.” Walking in early at 8 for 1, Nicholls faced Jofra Archer bowling at high pace and had to settle quickly. He survived the initial burst, then rebuilt after Devon Conway’s dismissal alongside Ravindra, who played the more attacking role while Nicholls provided stability. There were a couple of early alarms, including a dropped chance on 7 by debutant wicketkeeper James Rew, who endured a difficult outing behind the stumps. England’s bowling struggled to break the stand through the middle session as the duo methodically drained energy from the attack and the crowd. After tea, however, the tempo shifted dramatically. Nicholls reached his half-century from 72 balls, with Ravindra following shortly after off 79 deliveries for his first fifty against England. Ravindra’s innings ended on 76 when he was trapped lbw by Jacob Bethell, who once again proved decisive after taking three wickets in the first innings. Nicholls brought up his century soon after, reaching the milestone off 133 balls with his 14th boundary, driven through midwicket off Bethell. It was his 11th Test hundred in his 59th match and his second against England, having previously scored a century in Auckland in 2018. He had also registered back-to-back hundreds recently, including an unbeaten 150 in Zimbabwe last August. He acknowledged the applause, raised his bat, and carried on with calm assurance. By stumps, he was unbeaten on 119 from 164 deliveries, with Daryl Mitchell alongside him on 32 not out as New Zealand added 63 runs in the final 86 balls of the day without losing control. Earlier in the day, New Zealand’s position was built on a strong bowling effort led by Matt Henry, who claimed 5 for 80 to secure his seventh five-wicket haul in Tests. Returning strongly after back spasms ruled him out of the first Test at Lord’s, Henry was supported by sharp catching in the field as England were restricted to 291. England’s lower order showed unexpected resistance, with Matthew Fisher and debutant Sonny Baker frustrating the attack and adding 53 runs for the final wicket. Fisher remained unbeaten on 50 off 77 balls, earning applause from the Oval crowd despite England slipping into a large deficit.
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    How Alex Freeman became a USMNT mainstay — and World Cup hero
    SEATTLE — Alex Freeman spent a few anxious seconds waiting to learn whether the biggest goal of his life would count. By the time video review confirmed the U.S. defender had been onside, his United States teammates were already sprinting toward him.Freeman's first World Cup goal ended up being the capper on the United States men's national team's 2-0 victory over Australia on Friday. The victory secured a berth in the Round of 32 for the U.S.Initially, Freeman — who followed through with the header after Sergiño Dest's shot was blocked by an Australian defender — was called offsides. But review determined Freeman had been onside when Dest made the shot, making it a good goal.That's when Freeman and the USMNT reserves ran over to the opposite side of the field, celebrating the young U.S. defender's goal."I was going to run to the side, and Cristian [Roldan] and some of the boys were like, 'No, no, come to this side, to this side,'" Freeman said of the celebration. "And when [the goal] got accepted I turned back and they were all running at me, I was like, 'I'm gonna run to the other corner flag.'""He was already kind of near us, so we're just kind of telling him, 'come, come, come, come, come,'" Auston Trusty confirmed to reporters after the game.In many ways, Freeman was an unlikely hero. The United States’ first goal was officially credited as an own goal by Australian defender Cameron Burgess after a dangerous run and cross from Folarin Balogun, leaving the 21-year-old defender as the only American credited with a goal in the 2-0 victory.Freeman is a relative newcomer to the U.S. squad: Friday was just his 19th cap, with the 21-year-old defender only a year or so removed from his first senior call-up. He started his career with the Orlando City academy, debuting for the senior team in 2022 at age 17, but completed a $7 million transfer to La Liga side Villarreal in January.And at the same time, Freeman has become a key piece of the U.S. back line in a short amount of time. Of his 19 matches, he’s played the full 90 minutes in 10, including both group stage games at this World Cup. Friday's goal wasn't Freeman's first — he scored twice for the USMNT during friendlies last year — but it was his most important to date.Freeman spoke about his own rapid rise for both club and country, noting that he's been moving at a "fast pace at such a young age.""I think it's hard for me to kind of take it all in," he said.USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino had high praise for the defender, and attributed some of Freeman's "evolution" to former Orlando City head coach Oscar Pareja and the rest of their coaching staff. (Pareja and Orlando mutually parted ways in March.)"If you don't have the support of the coaches like Oscar Pareja and the coaching staff in Orlando, and if you don't build that relationship and trust, it's difficult to make decisions," Pochettino said. "[Freeman has] an amazing profile. He want to learn, he always listens and he's a player that you really enjoy being with him, not only coaching, but being with him. He's a lovely guy and he's an amazing player for me. [He has] potential to be one of the best players in his position in the world."Freeman's father is former wide receiver and Green Bay Packers great Antonio Freeman, giving some context to the USMNT defender's ability to thrive at the other football. But Freeman made it clear he wanted to separate himself from his father's accomplishments."That just shows how he can be great, and I can be great in my own way as well," he said.That early glimpse at greatness was clear, not only in the goal, but with the rest of his play. Midway through the half, Freeman had an outstanding defensive play to tap the ball out of bounds and keep Australia from getting a very dangerous chance.Freeman also went down with a knock to the head shortly before his goal, but was able bounce back without issue. That doggedness was on display with his goal, with Freeman saying postgame that he was going to get the rebound on Dest's shot "any way I can" — a determination that led to glory, after a short break for VAR.Though the defender is still young, it was the realization of a lifelong goal for Freeman, who got emotional during the national anthem ahead of Friday's game."I think for me, it shows how I've made it, kind of in my way. I've been working my whole life to be able to go to that moment and hear the national anthem in front of the home crowd," he said.Freeman made a point to shout out that home crowd, which had Seattle Stadium shaking after both goals Friday — literally, as the stadium recorded seismic activity following the VAR decision. Still, Freeman said that he and his teammates didn't really get a chance to appreciate the fans until after the game was over."In a big game, you don't realize how much support you have in the stands, right? And after the game, we were just able to take it all in, and realize how much of a great support system that we have in the U.S. fans," Freeman said. "[It] kind of make us calm and make us accept the fact that we're here and we have such an amazing thing to do, and now we have more stuff to do."
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    Nagelsmann eyes same German lineup against I. Coast after Curacao trouncing
    Germany's head coach Julian Nagelsmann is looking to lead his side to the World Cup's group stage for the first time since 2014 (Paul ELLIS)German coach Julian Nagelsmann said Friday he sees no reason to change a lineup that hammered World Cup debutants Curacao last week for his side's second match against Ivory Coast.The West African side is likely to pose a much stiffer test for Germany in their match at Toronto Stadium on Saturday, but Nagelsmann said he was confident about his team's readiness."There's no obvious reason to change anything," he told reporters, adding: "We will sleep on it and see if everybody wakes up fit and well tomorrow, and then we'll take a decision."Nagelsmann came to the defence of Leroy Sane, whose performance against Curacao was questioned.The criticism "was really not justified after that game.""Some say he's not eager enough, but he really moved around a lot during that game," Nagelsmann said.Nagelsmann, who took over the German national team in 2023, is looking to lead his country out of the World Cup group stage for the first time since the 2014 tournament in Brazil, which Germany won.He said his team had to be ready for Ivory Coast's fitness, defence and speed."Their speed is one of their biggest strengths and that's what I think they do best," he told reporters, highlighting the French-born Ivorian winger Nicolas Pepe."During the last game, he was everywhere," Nagelsmann said of Pepe."We took some measures and prepared accordingly so we can take away as much strength as possible. We will not always be successful because they are just too good," Nagelsmann said of the West African side.The match will have particular significance for German defender Jonathan Tah, whose father was born in Ivory Coast."It's true that this is going to be something special," Tah told reporters ahead of Saturday's match.Ivorian coach Emerse Fae said his side was heading into the match eyeing a win and top place in Group E."I don't think that it's just about saving face. That's not what we're about, and that will never be the case," Fae said."We're coming to beat them."Asked what he was expecting from the Germans on Saturday, Fae said: "I'm hoping that they're going to let us win."bs/gj
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    Tigers' Tarik Skubal trash-talks with White Sox after clutch strikeout
    Detroit Tigers left-hander Tarik Skubal unleashed his emotions after a clutch strikeout.Not in the way he normally does.This time, Skubal exchanged words with Chicago White Sox left-handed reliever Mike Vasil as he walked to the dugout after striking out Colson Montgomery (for the third time in as many plate appearances) to strand the bases loaded in the top of the fifth inning Friday, June 19, at Comerica Park.OH NO: Justin Verlander opens up after setback: 'Maybe wheels are falling off'In Friday's game, Skubal allowed three runs on seven hits and one walk with eight strikeouts across 5⅔ innings, throwing 94 pitches. Not long after his trash talk, he surrendered a solo home run to Junior Perez with one out in the sixth inning.He also gave up a solo homer to Randal Grichuk in the first inning.Both homers occurred on his famous changeup.It marked Skubal's second start since returning from the injured list after missing 38 days due to a bone chip in his left elbow that required a minimally invasive surgery.He owns a 3.02 ERA in nine starts.pic.twitter.com/FGZeuvtX15— Sox On 35th (@VideosOn35th) June 20, 2026Typically, Skubal – the reigning two-time American League Cy Young winner – screams in celebration and backpedals off the mound after big strikeouts.Not this time.This story will be updated.Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Tarik Skubal trash-talks after strikeout in Detroit Tigers game
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    USA soak in Seattle’s familiar support en route to making World Cup history
    Weston McKennie applauded the fans along with other US players after a 2-0 win. Photograph: Jared C Tilton/FIFA/Getty ImagesOne does not have to go far in Seattle, Washington, to be reminded that it’s a soccer town. Two days before Friday’s 2-0 win for the US over Australia, all I had to do was get on the train.Riding the light rail to lunch on Wednesday and hopping off at Westlake Station, I was a few blocks from Pike Place Market, the city’s famous waterfront gathering spot. The train car I’d arrived on had been overflowing with US jerseys and Australia kits. Riding the escalator up into the resplendent afternoon sun, someone tugged at my bag.I’d been recognized, and it led to a few minutes of lovely conversation. Eventually the reader casually mentioned that he’d been a goalkeeper in the 1990s for the Seattle Sounders and the Portland Timbers, long before they joined MLS. It felt so random I couldn’t help but laugh.Related: World Cup 2026: USA reach knockouts with victory over Socceroos – in picturesIn this part of the country, though, interactions like these can seem like the norm; uniquely associated with teams like the Seattle Sounders and Reign, Portland Timbers and Thorns, and to a slightly lesser extent the Vancouver Whitecaps. The men’s clubs have existed in fits and starts since the 1970s and their fans have navigated some of the leanest years in the history of American soccer, the dark ages between the time the North American Soccer League came crashing down in 1984 and the birth of MLS in 1996.The Sounders eventually entered MLS in 2009 and were an immediate success. Along with teams like Toronto FC and a handful of others, they helped birth modern American supporters’ culture, and even in the early days their fans were never shy about taking credit, deserved or not. The phrase “Seattle invented soccer” became a running joke amongst MLS fans in other corners of the country. But like most good-natured ribs, there is a kernel of truth.“Seattle was the boost that showed the world that MLS can [have] a popular, viable and meaningful soccer team in the United States,” MLS commissioner Don Garber told media ahead of Friday’s match. “I never expected the fanbase that they had here from the very beginning and still do. They kind of launched, along with Portland and a handful of others, like Sons of Ben in Philly, this concept of ‘supporters’ culture … Soccer has been here for 50 years. MLS is not what it is without the Sounders. That’s what I’m seeing outside. There is just joy in the streets.”Related: Socceroos still believe despite ‘sluggish’ and ‘dull’ World Cup outing against USASeattle’s deep-seated appreciation for the American game gave Friday’s US vs Australia match a distinctly different feeling, obvious from the second one arrived at the stadium. The streets were flooded with US jerseys of every era, awash in denim, red, white and blue. The noise level inside the stadium was deafening even a half hour before kickoff, and the entire place was full well before the opening whistle. Amid discourse about empty seats at this World Cup, there was not a single one visible on Friday afternoon.The sight of a full stadium is nothing bizarre in Seattle. The Sounders have sold out Lumen Field (the usual name for Seattle Stadium) for big matches since their inception and have averaged between 30,000 and 40,000 fans a match during the entirety of their existence. Perhaps the more unusual sight on Friday was the USMNT themselves, who have not visited the place in nearly a decade, owing to the stadium’s usual artificial turf surface, which has been replaced for the World Cup with the real stuff. US goalkeeping legend Kasey Keller, a veteran of four World Cups, knows the turf surface well, having played for Seattle at the tail end of his career.“This is my dream,” said Keller. “People would ask me forever ‘Why isn’t the US team here more often?’ The answer to that question was always the artificial pitch. We can see now what’s possible. I’m hoping the [NFL’s Seattle Seahawks] look at that as well and says to themselves ‘we want to reduce a few injuries here’ and keep this grass pitch.’”American soccer’s defining visual moment for the last 30 years or so has been the sight of the US beating Colombia in the group stage at the 1994 World Cup, a result that shocked the footballing world. After the whistle of that match, players wandered the pitch at Stanford Stadium. They clutched American flags and, eventually, did a lap of honor, of sorts. There were tears of joy in the stands and on the field alike.Friday’s result lacked the shock value of the win over Colombia in ‘94 but shared much of the emotion. Players roamed the pitch waving at friends, family and everybody else in attendance. They gathered in a circle and bowed their heads, to the tune (quite aptly) of Bon Jovi’s Livin’ on a Prayer.Related: USA surge into World Cup knockout stage after dominant victory over Socceroos“Today, even if I am not American, after the game I was emotional,” Mauricio Pochettino told the Guardian when asked about the support. “The atmosphere was amazing, the warm reception and the way that they supported us and celebrated the victory, they made it very emotional. I think it was an amazing and perfect connection between the stands and the team. I think it made us feel very proud.”Nearly every US fan in attendance stayed put to soak in the result, eventually belting out a rendition of John Denver’s Country Roads, an ode to mountain life and a Seattle sports staple. Like everything else in the city, the stadium sits in the shadow of Mount Rainier and the lyrics felt apt. The sound, the visuals, all of it, felt beautiful, and at that moment, the idea of the US finding a better crowd to play in front of this summer felt a little hard to fathom.“[At that moment], it’s just being proud of your country, you know?” said defender Auston Trusty, who entered the match in the second half. “I think Country Roads is a very American song, and to hear it in that stadium, with everyone singing along, it’s a dream come true. It’s feelings that you can’t really describe.”
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    Scotland’s World Cup hopes dented as Saibari goal proves decisive
    Scotland’s spirited second-half rally was not enough to bring any World Cup joy as they suffered a frustrating 1-0 defeat to Morocco in Foxborough.After beating Haiti in their Group C opener, Steve Clarke’s side needed only a draw against the AFCON champions at the Boston Stadium to all-but guarantee a spot in the knockout stages.However, Morocco showed why they are ranked sixth in the world, scoring through Ismael Saibari after 70 seconds – the earliest goal Scotland have conceded at a World Cup, on their return to the big stage after 28 years.Clarke’s side rolled with the punches in a mostly one-sided first half but the confidence and composure returned after the break and there were a couple of penalty claims denied. However, despite the impressive turnaround they could not get back on level terms.Clarke switched up his side by bringing in Nathan Patterson, Kieran Tierney and Ryan Christie for Aaron Hickey, Ben Gannon-Doak and Lawrence Shankland, and moving to a 4-5-1 with Che Adams leading the line.Tierney was pushed left in midfield but the tactical and personnel tweaks went out the window when Morocco scored with barely a minute played.A long ball from Brahim Diaz found PSV’s Saibari running clear of the hesitant Scotland defence and he took a touch before lashing the ball past helpless keeper Angus Gunn.Scotland reeled from the blow. Diaz and then Neil El Aynaoui missed a cross from Azzedine Ounahi, who again found space down Scotland’s right flank, before Gunn had to make a crucial save from Morocco captain Achraf Hakimi, who got his foot in front of defender Grant Hanley following another fine pass from Diaz.El Aynaoui flashed a shot over the bar from the edge of the box just before the half-hour mark after being set up by Diaz and then Bilal El Khannouss, with plenty of space, carelessly curled the ball over with just Gunn to beat.A late first-half flurry saw midfielder John McGinn fail to connect sweetly with a cross from Andy Robertson and the ball flew behind.The Scots appeared to remonstrate with Uzbekistan referee Ilgiz Tantashev at half-time and Scotland were less than happy when the official ignored a penalty claim soon after the break as El Aynaoui sent McGinn tumbling in the box.Moments later, Saibari’s deflected strike hit woodwork and then Gunn made a great reaction save from an El Khannouss header.A decent Scotland move down the left in the 63rd minute ended with Christie driving over.In the 81st minute there was another penalty claim ignored when Scott McTominay was tackled by El Aynaoui inside the box.The Napoli midfielder and substitute Lyndon Dykes caused further problems but Scotland ran out of time – but not hope.
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    Lineker booked as guest pundit for ITV’s World Cup coverage
    Lineker booked as guest pundit for ITV’s World Cup coverageOllie Whitmore, Chief football news reporterGary Lineker is set to make a surprise appearance as a guest pundit on ITV’s World Cup coverage of the Ivory Coast’s Group E match against Germany on Sunday.It marks 13 months since the former England forward – who has been in New York recording daily episodes for his podcast The Rest is Football – left his role as the face of the long-running Premier League highlights show Match of the Day.Lineker has taken part in the coverage of six World Cups, and his booking may come as a welcome boost for ITV after taking a lead over the BBC in terms of TV ratings since the latest tournament began last Thursday.The broadcaster also recorded four of the five highest viewing figures for matches that took place in the first week of the tournament, according to The Guardian.The 65-year-old left Match of the Day at the end of the 2024/25 Premier League season without a payoff after he apologised for sharing pro-Palestine content on social media that featured an illustration with antisemitic connotations.Lineker said that he had not noticed the illustration in question, acknowledging his error of having amplified the material.The BBC’s then-Director General, Tim Davie said upon his departure: “Gary has been a defining voice in football coverage for the BBC for over two decades.“His passion and knowledge have shaped our sports journalism and earned him the respect of sports fans across the UK and beyond. We want to thank him for the contribution he has made.”Julian Nagelsmann’s Germany side take on Côte d’Ivoire at 21:00 (BST) at the BMO Field in Toronto, looking to make it two wins from as many group stage matches that would take them on their way to a place in the last 32 of the World Cup.For more detailed reports, reaction, and analysis of the World Cup as it happens, head to our website and favourite our page on OneFootball.
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    Ohio State assistant James Laurinaitis gives staff June Olympics win
    For the third year in a row, the Ohio State football program held a fun Olympics competition between the players and the staff, and it went down to the end as they almost always do.After several competitions that involved three-point shooting, pickleball, and other sports, the staff and players were tied at 4-4 heading into a soccer penalty-kicking contest that would determine the winner of the 2026 June Olympics. We're quite sure that head coach Ryan Day lured former All-American linebacker James Laurinaitis to Columbus for his coaching ability, but it might have swung the balance in this annual event, because he came up huge to give the staff a 5-4 overall victory.So, how did the "little animal" do it? According to video shared to the Ohio State Football X account, it appears as though Laurinaitis made several key saves as the staff's goalkeeper to deny the players a chance at taking home the title.The Staff takes the 👑 in June Olympics after a lights out performance from @JLaurinaitis55 ⚽️ Staff now owns the all-time record 2-1 🌰 pic.twitter.com/XFYsFuqWUc— Ohio State Football (@OhioStateFB) June 18, 2026While it looks like quarterback Julian Sayin had the players pumped up with a stirring speech, it was no match for the athleticism and competitive drive of Laurinaitis. With the victory, the staff now enjoys a 2-1 all-time record in June Olympics vs. the players.Chalk one up for the old guys.Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes, and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on X.This article originally appeared on Buckeyes Wire: Ohio State coach James Laurinaitis leads staff to June Olympics win
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    Iran's treatment at World Cup 'a dark point' for football: official
    Iran's World Cup team has been training in Mexico (Guillermo Arias)Iran's treatment at the World Cup in North America is a "dark point" in the history of the competition, a leading Iranian football official said Friday.Hedayat Mombeyni, the secretary general of the Iranian football federation, was speaking to reporters the day after his organization said it would lodge a complaint with FIFA, claiming the team was being subjected to travel restrictions that were jeopardizing its performance."This is a major international tournament. This sort of breaking of our rules and our agreements, in my opinion, calls football itself into question," Mombeyni told reporters at the team's training base in Tijuana, Mexico."I believe this will mark a dark point in the World Cup's recent history," Mombeyni added.Iran wanted to fly to the United States two days before their next match, against Belgium in Los Angeles on Sunday, because the match kicks off at midday local time.Iran's Belgian opponents were flying to California on Friday, two days before the game.But the Iranian federation said its request to follow suit was turned down.The US administration, which has just signed an interim deal to end its conflict with Iran, has pushed back against the Iranian claims.Andrew Giuliani, the executive director of the White House FIFA Task Force, said Iran had been informed in advance that they would only be allowed to enter the United States on the day before its games."The team will be allowed to come in, match day minus one, so the day before the match," Giuliani told CBS News on Monday.FIFA's rules for World Cups say teams should travel from their bases to the match venue on the day before a game, but can travel two days before "in exceptional cases".Mombeyni hit out at the US organizers."Rules must be followed. Seems to me that (Giuliani) should have studied the rules much sooner. And people who are not capable of carrying out FIFA's rules should not be hosting, and FIFA should not select them to be hosts," he said."In my opinion, he should have studied the rules sooner, checked with people from Team Melli of Iran, and he shouldn't have created these problems."The 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada, is the first in history in which a host nation must host on its soil the team of a nation it is at war with.rfo/jac/gj/msp
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    Rising three-star edge rusher picks Oregon over Washington football
    The Washington Huskies saw one of their few remaining uncommitted targets along the defensive line go elsewhere on Friday afternoon when three-star Josh Christensen announced his commitment to coach Dan Lanning and the Oregon Ducks.After also taking official visits to Illinois and Oklahoma, the 6-foot-6, 250-pound Christensen took a trip to Washington on June 5 and Oregon on June 12 in what was widely believed to be a battle between the two rivals in the Pacific Northwest, with the in-state program winning out for the product of Lake Oswego High School.In recent weeks, Christensen has experienced a major rise, now sitting as the nation's No. 627 overall prospect and No. 53 edge rusher in the 2027 class according to the 247Sports Composite. While he would have been a promising addition to Washington's defensive front, defensive line coach Jason Kaufusi's unit is quickly running low on spots.BREAKING: Class of 2027 DL Josh Christensen has Committed to Oregon, he tells me for @RivalsThe 6’6 250 DL chose the Ducks over Oklahoma, Washington, and Cal“Home Grown🏡 #scoducks”https://t.co/BIzTreBOAUpic.twitter.com/Yer8LRyj4P— Hayes Fawcett (@Hayesfawcett3) June 19, 2026The Huskies currently hold a pair of commitments from four-star defensive tackles Jon Ioane and Tevita Nonu, and a pair from similarly framed prospects in 6-foot-4, 250-pound four-star edge rusher Chaz Gray and 6-foot-3, 240-pound three-star defensive lineman Matamatagi Uiagalelei, both of whom have the potential to grow into interior players as their careers progress.While the long-term plan for Gray appears to be to let him develop on the edge, Uiagalelei, whose older brother Ta'ita'i started along the interior for defensive coordinator Ryan Walters in 2025, has all the makings of a versatile defensive tackle who can line up at several different spots across the front. With Christensen's announcement, that leaves just two uncommitted defensive linemen on the board who have taken official visits to Washington: four-star defensive tackle Sam LeJeune and three-star edge rusher Jag Ioane.This article originally appeared on Huskies Wire: Rising three-star edge rusher picks Oregon over Washington Huskies
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    Scotland star ‘baffled’ by ‘negative’ criticism of World Cup performances
    Scotland midfielder Lewis Ferguson admitted he was “baffled” by the reaction the Tartan Army’s opening World Cup win over Haiti after defeat to Morocco left their hopes of reaching the last-32 in the balance. Steve Clarke’s side could have progressed to the knockout stages of the World Cup with a point against Morocco but were unable to recover from Ismael Saibari’s strike after just 70 seconds in Boston. While Scotland fans celebrated through the night after beating Haiti - for their first World Cup win in 36 years - there was some concern afterwards about the manner of the performance with clashes against Morocco and Brazil to come. And Ferguson said it shows just how hard it is to win a game at the World Cup with Scotland still requiring a draw, or perhaps a one-goal defeat, if they are to progress from the knockout stages for the first time in their history. “Given how, how quality a side the Morocco are, it just shows you how difficult it is to win a game at the World Cup,” Ferguson said. “I've seen a lot of negative stuff about us winning against Haiti in the first game and it baffled me to be honest because it's so, so difficult. “Every team is of a top level and it shows you how hard it is to win games of football at this level. So, delighted with the response [in the second half] but gutted about the result. I think the performance probably deserved a point.”Ferguson, one of Scotland’s standout performances at the base of midfield at the World Cup, agreed that the defeat felt like an “opportunity missed” after a slow start. Scotland did not threaten Morocco’s goal until late into the second half. “I think we had the worst possible start,” Ferguson said. “We never wanted to start like that - we didn't touch the ball, to be honest. We gave away such a slack goal, it's really unlike us. But I thought the reaction after that defensively really sound and we just grew into the game, even in the first half. “I felt we were probably beginning to grow towards the end. Half-time probably came at a bad time for us, but we were growing in the game, we were starting to feel really comfortable. I thought the second half performance there was outstanding, although we've come away with nothing.”
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    U.S. Open 2026: Tee times, pairings, how to watch third round
    The 126th U.S. Open rolls into the weekend at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club.Wyndham Clark, the 2023 champion, holds a 4-shot lead over Matt Fitzpatrick, Sam Stevens, Xander Schauffele and Tom Kim."Live From the U.S. Open" kicks of Saturday coverage from 8-10 a.m. ET on Golf Channel. USA Sports will have live action beginning at 10 a.m., with NBC/Peacock going from noon-8 p.m ET. "Live From" will return to wrap up Moving Day after play concludes.You can also get live scores and watch "Live From" and USA Sports coverage on Golf Channel mobile.Here's a look at third-round tee times and pairings in Southampton, New York:TimeTeePlayers9:00 AMEDT1Dylan WuJacob Bridgeman9:11 AMEDT1Chris GotterupEric Lee(a)9:22 AMEDT1Peter UihleinCaleb Surratt9:33 AMEDT1Marek Fleming(a)Robert MacIntyre9:44 AMEDT1Nico EchavarriaHideki Matsuyama9:55 AMEDT1Bud CauleyNeal Shipley10:06 AMEDT1Laurie CanterMichael Kim10:17 AMEDT1Jackson Koivun(a)Miles Russell(a)10:33 AMEDT1Patrick RodgersEmiliano Grillo10:44 AMEDT1James NicholasAngel Hidalgo10:55 AMEDT1Jordan SpiethJoaquin Niemann11:06 AMEDT1Russell HenleyDustin Johnson11:17 AMEDT1Ryan FoxMichael Brennan11:28 AMEDT1Pierceson CoodyMax Greyserman11:39 AMEDT1Kurt KitayamaTyrrell Hatton11:50 AMEDT1Cameron YoungSungjae Im12:06 PMEDT1Adrien Dumont de ChassartSpencer Tibbits12:17 PMEDT1J.T. PostonBen Griffin12:28 PMEDT1Andrew PutnamJohn Parry12:39 PMEDT1Jackson Van ParisBen James12:50 PMEDT1Tommy FleetwoodLudvig Åberg1:01 PMEDT1Keegan BradleyJohnny Keefer1:12 PMEDT1Ben KohlesJustin Rose1:28 PMEDT1Corey ConnersAaron Rai1:39 PMEDT1Zac BlairMax McGreevy1:50 PMEDT1Niklas NørgaardAlex Fitzpatrick2:01 PMEDT1Scottie SchefflerBrian Harman2:12 PMEDT1Maverick McNealyRory McIlroy2:23 PMEDT1Keith MitchellAkshay Bhatia2:34 PMEDT1Gary WoodlandRyo Hisatsune2:50 PMEDT1Ryder Cowan(a)William Mouw3:01 PMEDT1Sahith TheegalaSam Burns3:12 PMEDT1Harry HiggsJustin Thomas3:23 PMEDT1Collin MorikawaTom Kim3:34 PMEDT1Sam StevensXander Schauffele3:45 PMEDT1Matt FitzpatrickWyndham ClarkWyndham Clark has climbed atop this U.S. Open, but can he be redeemed?As he sits atop this U.S. Open leaderboard having played his first 36 holes at Shinnecock Hills in 6 under, Clark views this latest ascent as his personal redemption tour. Brentley Romine, Brentley Romine,
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    Game #76: Angels at A’s Game Thread
    LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JUNE 14: Jeffrey Springs #59 of the Athletics throws a pitch in the second inning during a regular season game against the Colorado Rockies at Las Vegas Ballpark on June 14, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images The A’s came away with the first W in the first game of the series last night, riding a fantastic outing from their rookie starting pitcher to their 37th win of the season. They’ll have a chance to bump that number up a digit and get back to the .500 mark tonight. First they’ll have to take care of business against their division rival, the Los Angeles Angels.The team will turn to lefty Jeffrey Springs this evening, hoping the veteran can turn things around. It’s been a rough June so far for Springs as he’s allowed 15 runs over his past three starts.Here’s how the team will line up tonight:Springs start day 👊 pic.twitter.com/EC5nVQ5YVT— Athletics (@Athletics) June 19, 2026Why make major changes after yesterday? It’s the same batting order as last night, though with one change. Lawrence Butler returns to the starting nine, playing right field. That’ll send Carlos Cortes to the DH spot and send Jonah Heim to the bench. Other than that, same lineup as yesterday. Let’s hope for the same early result.Los Angeles will counter with their ace in Jose Soriano. The right-hander, now in his fourth season, has dominated this year and will bring a 2.79 ERA into this contest. He’s already successfully faced the A’s once this year so they’ll be hoping for some revenge tonight.And the Halo’s lineup this evening looks like this:Sori in Sactown 🌇📺: @WatchABTV📻: @AngelsRadioKLAA, AM830 app (Spanish)#RepTheHalo x @FBMSupplypic.twitter.com/0GvrIZFSlC— Los Angeles Angels (@Angels) June 20, 2026Let’s go A’s!Follow the Game:Watch:Athletics – NBCSCAListen:Athletics – Talk 650 KSTE, KVMX 92.1/105.5, A’s Cast
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    Ohtani not in Dodgers' lineup while away from team on paternity
    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Shohei Ohtani wasn't in the Los Angeles Dodgers' lineup on Friday night because he is “away from the team on paternity.”The team announced in a post on X that the two-way superstar is expected to return this weekend, meaning he wasn't placed on MLB's paternity list.The team's lineup for the series opener against the Baltimore Orioles came out less than an hour before gametime, with Ryan Ward listed as the designated hitter, and batting seventh.Asked three hours before the game about the delayed lineup, manager Dave Roberts said he was working out “some things with some position players” and made no mention of Ohtani.Roberts was asked about Ohtani's sore left knee and said he had not spoken to him Friday. “Just assuming that after the off day he's in a good spot,” the manager said.Roberts often mentions if a player is expecting a baby and the team typically announces they have been placed on paternity leave.Ohtani, who turns 32 on July 5, and his 29-year-old wife, Mamiko Tanaka, became first-time parents in April 2025 with the birth of their daughter. He first announced on social media in December 2024 that the couple was expecting. The famously private Ohtani has never publicly revealed her name and has carefully avoided showing her face in the rare family photos he posts to his social media.___AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
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    Class of 2028 defensive back Dwayle Smith commits to Iowa football
    IOWA CITY — Class of 2028 defensive back Dwayle Smith has committed to Iowa football, he announced June 19.Smith is the first commitment in the Hawkeyes' 2028 high school recruiting class.Smith, who attends Saint Frances Academy in Baltimore, held offers from Iowa, Florida State, Syracuse, Texas A&M, Wisconsin and others. The Hawkeyes offered in early May and Smith committed less than two months later.Smith is listed at 5-foot-11 and 175 pounds.Here are highlights from Smith's sophomore season:Sophomore Szn Tape!!https://t.co/fanvAvZYSl@CoachJdubSFA@CoachCammm@lbcoachchrispic.twitter.com/aNlscZnMe7— DWAYLE SMITH (@dwayle823) November 10, 2025Follow Tyler Tachman on X @Tyler_T15, contact via email at TTachman@usatodayco.comThis article originally appeared on Hawk Central: Class of 2028 defensive back Dwayle Smith commits to Iowa football
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    2026 Slovak Darts Open: Draw, schedule, prize money and format explained
    2026 Slovak Darts Open: Draw, schedule, prize money and format explained originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.The Euro Tour heads to Slovakia, with the Slovak Darts Open marking the ninth ET event of 2026.As usual, 48 qualifiers will battle it out, starting on Friday, in hopes of advancing to the final on Sunday night.What to know about the Slovak Darts OpenLet's take a look at some of the specifics of the tournament.MORE: 2026 Slovak Darts Open qualifiers2026 Slovak Darts Open draw & scheduleDay 1 - first round (afternoon session)MatchDateTime (local)Justin Hood vs. Benjamin PratnemerFri., June. 191:00 p.m.Karel Sedlacek vs. Tyler ThorpeFri., June. 191:30 p.m.Andrew Gilding vs. Mervyn KingFri., June. 192:00 p.m.Kevin Doets vs. Owen BatesFri., June. 192:30 p.m.Niels Zonneveld vs. HNQ4Fri., June. 193:00 p.m.William O'Connor vs. Jeffrey De GraafFri., June. 193:30 p.m.Ryan Joyce vs. Johan EngstromFri., June. 194:00 p.m.Dave Chisnall vs. Adrián DudekFri., June. 194:30 p.m.Day 1 - first round (evening session)MatchDateTime (local)Dirk van Duijvenbode vs. Madars RazmaFri., June. 197:00 p.m.Kim Huybrechts vs. Keane BarryFri., June. 197:30 p.m.Rob Cross vs. Juraj HolubFri., June. 198:00 p.m.Daryl Gurney vs. Jim LongFri., June. 198:30 p.m.Niko Springer vs. Tom SykesFri., June. 199:00 p.m.Cameron Menzies vs. Gabriel VáraljayFri., June. 199:30 p.m.Joe Cullen vs. Peter KelemenFri., June. 1910:00 p.m.Krzysztof Ratajski vs. Cristo ReyesFri., June. 1910:30 p.m.Day 2 - second round (afternoon session)MatchDateTime (local)Mike De Decker vs. William O'ConnorSat., June. 201:00 p.m.Damon Heta vs. Kevin DoetsSat., June. 201:30 p.m.Wessel Nijman vs. Benjamin PratnemerSat., June. 202:00 p.m.Danny Noppert vs. Madars RazmaSat., June. 202:30 p.m.Jermaine Wattimena vs. Dave ChisnallSat., June. 203:00 p.m.Chris Dobey vs. Tyler ThorpeSat., June. 203:30 p.m.Ryan Searle vs. Kim HuybrechtsSat., June. 204:00 p.m.Luke Woodhouse vs. Andrew GildingSat., June. 204:30 p.m.Day 2 - second round (evening session)MatchDateTime (local)Nathan Aspinall vs. Jim LongSat., June. 207:00 p.m.Martin Schindler vs. Tom SykesSat., June. 207:30 p.m.Gerwyn Price vs. Cameron MenziesSat., June. 208:00 p.m.Gian van Veen vs. Rob CrossSat., June. 208:30 p.m.Michael van Gerwen vs. Krzysztof RatajskiSat., June. 209:00 p.m.Jonny Clayton vs. Ryan JoyceSat., June. 209:30 p.m.Stephen Bunting vs. Niels ZonneveldSat., June. 2010:00 p.m.Ross Smith vs. Joe CullenSat., June. 2010:30 p.m.Day 3 - third round (afternoon session)MatchDateTime (local)TBDSun., June. 211:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 211:30 p.m.TBDSun., June. 212:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 212:30 p.m.TBDSun., June. 213:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 213:30 p.m.TBDSun., June. 214:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 214:30 p.m.Day 3 - quarterfinals (evening session)MatchDateTime (local)TBDSun., June. 217:00 pm.TBDSun., June. 217:30 p.m.TBDSun., June. 218:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 218:30 p.m.Day 3 - semifinals (evening session)MatchDateTime (local)TBDSun., June. 219:00 p.m.TBDSun., June. 219:30 p.m.Day 3 - final (evening session)MatchDateTime (local)TBDSun., June. 2110:10 p.m.Tournament bracketHere is the bracket for after the first round.Second roundGian van Veen vs. Rob CrossDamon Heta vs. Kevin DoetsRyan Searle vs. Kim HuybrechtsNathan Aspinall vs. Jim LongGerwyn Price vs. Cameron MenziesMartin Schindler vs. Tom SykesDanny Noppert vs. Madars RazmaJermaine Wattimena vs. Dave ChisnallMichael van Gerwen vs. Krzysztof RatajskiLuke Woodhouse vs. Andrew GildingChris Dobey vs. Tyler ThorpeRoss Smith vs. Joe CullenJonny Clayton vs. Ryan JoyceMike De Decker vs. William O'ConnorStephen Bunting vs. Niels ZonneveldWessel Nijman vs. Benjamin PratnemerPrize Money*Data via WikipediaStage (num. of players)Prize moneyWinner(1)£35,000Runner-up(1)£15,000Semi-finalists(2)£10,000Quarter-finalists(4)£8,000Third round losers(8)£5,000Second round losers(16)£3,500*First round losers(16)£2,000*Total£230,000Format48 players will be in action this weekend, with 16 seeded players receiving automatic byes into the second round action on Saturday.Each seeded player will play the winner of one of Friday's games, leaving 32 players left after Friday.Saturday will feature only round two games, determining which 16 players will advance to action on Sunday.The afternoon session on Sunday will consist of the round of 16 games.The evening session will consist of the quarterfinal, semifinal and final rounds.The first round, second round, round of 16 and quarterfinal round will all be played in a best-of-11-leg format.The semifinal round will be best-of-13 legs, and the final will be best-of-15 legs.More Darts Articles:Luke Littler contract details: Teenage phenom signs richest endorsement deal in darts historyPDC announces darts schedule for 2026: World Championship, Premier League and more7 darts players who could be in Premier League Darts one dayWatch: Luke Littler hits insane 170 'big fish' checkout to save World Cup of Darts quarterfinal match for England
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    ‘A Literal Coverup’: What Is the Kennedy Center Hiding Behind Those Tarps?
    The arts center says it pulled President Trump’s name from the building front. But the result remains hidden by tarps, prompting questions and speculation.
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    Blooper carries Tigers to victory in series opener over White Sox
    Jun 19, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers left fielder Riley Greene (31) dives safely into home plate to score a run against the Chicago White Sox in the sixth inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images | Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images After a less-than-stellar trip to Houston, the Tigers home and had an off day to sit there and think about what they’ve done, mister. But, since the sport rolls on, the American Central-leading Chicago White Sox came to town (and yes, that looks weird to me too) for the opener of a three-game weekend series on a windy Friday night which promised to make fly balls an adventure. After the lead changed hands a couple of times, a well-timed, well-placed, 2-run blooper was the difference in a 4-3 Tigers win.Tarik Skubal made his second start since coming off the Injured List; his first one wasn’t great, but there must have been some rust that he had to shake off. When healthy this year he’s usually been the same ol’ Cy Skubal, with an ERA of 2.81 (154 ERA+), a WHIP of 0.979, and seven walks given-out in 48 innings coming into tonight’s game.Brandon Eisert was an opener for Erick Fedde; Eisert’s in his second full season in the major leagues, after spending a bit of time with the Blue Jays in 2024. He’s opened a few times this year, so this wasn’t anything new for him. Fedde was drafted by the Nationals and spent several ho-hum years there; he then went to South Korea in 2023 and had an ERA of 2.00 with a 20-6 record. He came back to North America after that season and hasn’t been able to duplicate the success he had in Korea; maybe he can’t find any good japchae here.Randal Grichuk, who is only in the major leagues because he hits lefties, hit a lefty: a solo home run in the top of the first put Chicago up 1-0.Matt Vierling got that run back and added one with a two-run home run after a Dillon Dingler single, putting the Tigers up 2-1 in the bottom of the first.View LinkIn the top of the fourth Junior Pérez, in his fourth major-league at-bat, hit a single — his first major-league hit — to right field. Who fielded it? Trei Cruz, making his major-league debut tonight. That’s always nice to see. But then Pérez tried to steal second, forgot it was Dingler back there, and was thrown out stealing. Whoops! Pérez wasn’t done yet, though.Skubal got into a little trouble in the fifth: a pair of singles to start the inning put runners on the corners. Tristan Peters then hit a ground ball to second base; an on-the-field call of a 4-6-3 double play would have traded two outs for the runner from third scoring, but upon review the out at first was overturned, tying the game with only one out instead. A single and a walk loaded the bases; a grounder was hit to Colt Keith at third who came home with the throw for the second out. Skubal had Colson Montgomery at a 1-2 count and he pulled the string on a low changeup for strike three. A fired-up Skubal — always a sight to see — was seen shouting at the White Sox dugout after the strikeout, and I don’t think he was exchanging chocolate-chip cookie recipes.View LinkPérez, in his fifth major-league at-bat in the sixth, took Skubal deep to the left-centrefield seats for a solo home run to put Chicago up 3-2, which was surprising. With two outs in the sixth Skubal gave way to Drew Anderson, who got Luisangel Acuña to strike out looking. Skubal’s final line: 5 2/3 IP, 7 H, 3 R, 1 BB, 8 K. Not bad, but not very Skuballish.Meanwhile, Fedde was mowin’ ‘em down, retiring nine straight before a Dingler leadoff single in the sixth. A one-out Riley Greene walk put two runners on base for the first time all night for the Tigers; Spencer Torkelson popped up to second base for the second out. But Kerry Carpenter hit the bloopiest of bloopers to short centrefield, scoring both Dingler and Greene to put the Tigers up 4-3.View LinkI mean, that was a really bad decision for Peters to dive for that ball, but I will absolutely take it ten times out of ten.Anderson carried on and had a decently-uneventful seventh inning, and Will Vest came on for the eighth. He’s been shaky lately, and walking the leadoff batter in a one-run game isn’t quite what we all had in mind, but it happened (especially since Vest got ahead of him 0-2 first). Vest then got Edgar Quero to hit a perfect grounder to second base, and a crisp double play was turned to erase the baserunner. Another grounder to second base precipitated the third out of the inning, and whadda ya know, Vest got the job done.After failing to get any insurance runs in the bottom of the eighth, Kenley Jansen was brought in to try and nail down the save against the bottom of the order. He got a ground ball to first (and covered the bag himself), got a ground ball to second, and ended things with swinging strikeout of Peters. That’s how you do it, folks.Final score: Tigers 4, White Sox 3Notes and ObservanesAs you may have heard, Trei Cruz is a third-generation Major League Baseball player, following his grandfather José Cruz, and his father, José Cruz Jr. Welcome to The Show, young man!Tarik Skubal’s left-right splits are truly bizarre this year. It may be SSS (Small Sample Size) at work, but check this out: coming into tonight, righties (146 plate appearances) have hit .190 with a .512 OPS. Lefties (41 PA): .359 average, .954 OPS.You know that Family Guy scene in which Stewie (the baby) keeps irritatingly calling for his mom? Yeah, our kid is in that phase right now.Today is Juneteenth, a federal holiday in the United States which commemorates the end of slavery. On June 19, 1865, a major in the US Army in Texas ordered that the Emancipation Proclamation be enforced in that state, despite it being officially put into effect by the federal government on January 1, 1863. Since Texas was pretty far out west and there weren’t many Union troops out there during the Civil War, enforcement of Emancipation was pretty lacklustre, and it was on that date in 1865 that it was permanently enshrined in the state.
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    Texas A&M lands South Carolina LHP from transfer portal
    A position group that looked thin just a few weeks ago is suddenly becoming one of Texas A&M’s fastest‑growing strengths. On Friday night, the Aggies landed their fifth transfer‑portal pitcher, securing a commitment from former South Carolina left‑hander Logan Prisco the first lefty of the group and the second pledge of the day.Prisco worked primarily out of the bullpen for the Gamecocks, making 20 appearances with two starts across 28.2 innings. He posted a strong 3.45 ERA, striking out 34 while issuing 17 walks, good for a 2.00 K/BB ratio a solid indicator of his ability to compete in the zone.Before arriving in Columbia, Prisco was a standout at Florence‑Darlington Technical College, helping lead the program to the 2025 JuCo World Series. He earned First Team All‑Region 10 honors after recording the most wins in the region and finishing second in strikeouts.For Texas A&M, the past few days have been nothing short of productive. After emphasizing the need to add quality arms, the Aggies have quickly reshaped the pitching room with a mix of experience, upside, and strike‑throwing reliability. With momentum building and with recruiting ace Nolan Cain returning to the staff the next phase of portal activity will be fascinating to watch as the Aggies continue to fortify their roster.View this post on InstagramContact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.This article originally appeared on Aggies Wire: Texas A&M lands commitment from South Carolina LHP Logan Prisco
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    What happened to Raphinha? Why Brazil star was subbed off after apparent injury
    What happened to Raphinha? Why Brazil star was subbed off after apparent injury originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.Brazil had already taken a 2-0 lead against Haiti on Friday night in Philadelphia.But then Raphinha went down with an apparent injury, and he had to be subbed off.It was late in the first half, and the game wasn't really in question. The future of Raphinha's World Cup now is in question, at least a bit.MORE: How Folarin Balogun's mom being too pregnant to fly led him to USMNTWhat happened to Raphinha?Raphinha appeared to get injured while running hard on the right wing.The announcing team for Fox speculated that he had hurt his hamstring, because they spotted teammate Vini Jr. pointing to his own hamstring as the trainers came onto the field.Color commentator Landon Donovan noted that it's an injury that will take "7-to-10 days" minimum, and often more.MORE: Mexican goalie saves the day against South KoreaOf course, there's no way to know for sure that's what happened, but that was the early speculation.The substitution happened quite quickly, so either Brazil knew Raphinha was dealing with something, or Carlo Ancelotti simply knew there was no reason to take a chance on this night.Rayan subbed on, and Brazil will hope everyone else stays intact.And after the game, Brazilian fans will hope to hear better news about Raphinha.More FIFA World Cup news:USA, England can't actually play on July 4thWhy Norway brought 600 pounds of salmon to the World CupMessi, Mbappe, Haaland provide a World Cup day made in heavenCape Verde pulls off one of craziest results in World Cup historyPink cleats are everywhere at the World Cup
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    Detroit Tigers save Tarik Skubal in close win vs Chicago White Sox
    Tarik Skubal wasn't as sharp as he could've been.The reigning two-time American League Cy Young winner made too many mistakes in his second start since returning from the injured list, including a pair of changeups that stayed too close to the middle of the strike zone and resulted in solo home runs.Despite those mistakes, the Detroit Tigers prevailed in a 4-3 win over the Chicago White Sox on Friday, June 19, in the first of three games in the series at Comerica Park.WHAT DID HE SAY? Tarik Skubal trash-talks with White Sox after clutch strikeoutSkubal owns a 3.02 ERA in nine starts.A two-run sixth inning made the difference for the Tigers.The Tigers scored those runs on a two-out bloop double from Kerry Carpenter that was misplayed by White Sox center fielder Tristan Peters. He tried to end the inning with a diving catch, but he missed the ball.Both Dillon Dingler and Riley Greene scored.REELING IN THE YEARS: Justin Verlander opens up after setback: 'Maybe wheels are falling off'After Skubal, three relievers slammed the door on the White Sox: right-hander Drew Anderson for four outs, right-hander Will Vest for three outs and right-hander Kenley Jansen for three outs.It was Jansen's first save since May 10.On the moundThe Tigers have a 5-4 record in Skubal's nine starts.This time, Skubal allowed three runs on seven hits and one walk with eight strikeouts across 5⅔ innings, throwing 94 pitches. He gave up one run apiece in the first, fifth and sixth innings, with the solo homers occurring in the first and sixth.Skubal has failed to complete six innings in his two starts since returning from the injured list. The 29-year-old left-hander was sidelined for 38 days due to a bone chip in his left elbow that required minimally invasive surgery.Before surgery, Skubal took down at least six innings in six of his seven starts.In the first, Randal Grichuk – a right-handed hitter with a track record of crushing lefties – pulled Skubal's two-strike changeup for a solo home run, providing a 1-0 lead for the White Sox. The changeup was located at the bottom of the strike zone, but it was left over the middle of the plate.In the sixth, Junior Perez – a right-handed hitter in the second game of his MLB career – drove Skubal's one-strike changeup for a solo home run, providing a 3-2 lead for the White Sox. The changeup was located away on the outside part of the strike zone, but it was left up in the zone.Between those homers, the White Sox scored one run in Skubal's 26-pitch fifth inning.Two-out singles from Sam Antonacci and Luisangel Acuña set the tone for the White Sox, putting runners on the corners without any outs. Moments later, Peters grounded into a force out that drove in a run for a 2-2 tie.Skubal put himself in more trouble by loaded the bases, but he escaped further damage by striking out Colson Montgomery (for the third time in as many plate appearances) to end the fifth.After that strikeout, Skubal exchanged words with White Sox left-handed reliever Mike Vasil, who is sidelined for the entire season after undergoing Tommy John surgery.Skubal failed to compete the sixth inning.At the plateThe Tigers scored two runs in the first inning.All thanks to Matt Vierling.Vierling – a right-handed hitter who succeeds against left-handed pitchers – gave a ride to left-handed reliever Brandon Eisert's first-pitch fastball for a two-run home run.He came into Friday's game hitting .274 with an .816 OPS against left-handers.Next up: Melton on the moundThe Tigers (31-44) and White Sox (39-35) meet again Saturday (1:10 p.m., Detroit SportsNet) in the second of three games. Right-hander Troy Melton is the starter for the Tigers, but the White Sox haven't revealed their starter.Melton has a 2.81 ERA in four starts.There are some reasons to be concerned about his performance, including below-average marks in whiff rate (17.6%, fifth percentile) and strikeout rate (13.7%, third percentile). Opponents have averaged an 89.3 mph exit velocity against him, which ranks below average in the 40th percentile.His expected ERA based on underlying metrics?It's 4.34.Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers rally to take down Chicago White Sox
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    U.S. Open 2026: How safe is Wyndham Clark's four-shot lead? Here's what major history tells us
    SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — On Friday afternoon, it appeared very likely that someone would narrow the four-shot lead Wyndham Clark (seven under) held over Xander Schauffele and Matt Fitzpatrick (three under), all of whom finished in the morning wave. Sam Stevens, Sam Burns, Rory McIlroy, and even Tom Kim hovered at or near three under for hours, but none could reach four under. And in the end, only Kim even matched Schauffele or Fitzpatrick at three under. Which means that after 36 holes, Clark's lead remains four strokes.Does that mean it's over?Obviously, the answer is no—we've seen leads of that size vanish in a single round—but let's get down to the spirit of the question and take a deep dive into major championship history to see how other players with the same lead at the 36-hole juncture have fared. Maybe, in the process, we can learn something about Clark's chances to prevail at Shinnecock.(Before we get there, though, let's give a massive shout-out to Morgan Johnson at the PGA Tour, who came through with these stats on short notice.)Here's the headline: In the history of 72-hole major championships, there have been exactly 30 times when a player held a lead of exactly four shots, of which Clark is the most recent. Of the 29 players who came before him …*drum roll, please*… only 11 have won, for a pretty unimpressive winning mark of 38 percent. In other words, if you trust these stats, right now you'd be wise to pick the field over Clark.There have been larger midway-point leads in the majors, but somewhat surprisingly, the last time four- stroke margin in the U.S. Open was all the way back in 2018, when Dustin Johnson held a four-shot lead on this very course. Ominously for Clark, D.J. shot a 77 on Saturday and finished T-3.Even more surprising, this four-shot lead after 36 had only happened three times previously in the U.S. Open, and you have to go back pretty far to find them—James Barnes in 1921 (he won), and Tom McNamara in 1909 (second place).Despite being the youngest major, the Masters has seen the most four-shot leads after 36 holes, with 11 in its (relatively) short history. Only four of those leaders have won, including Arnold Palmer in 1964 and Seve Ballesteros in 1980, and among the losers is perhaps the most notorious major collapse of all—Greg Norman in '96.At the PGA, there seems to be a "four-shot lead curse"—none of the five players who held that lead won the event, and in 1967 Tommy Aaron turned in a 76-78 weekend to finish T-20—the worst of any player in this category.Finally, at the Open Championship, we have some success, with six of 10 players going from a four-shot lead after 36 to hoisting the claret jug, including Rory McIlroy in 2014, the most recent player in any major to win with this specific lead.So, does all this mean that Wyndham Clark has exactly a 38 percent chance to win? Probably not. In fact, there's a strange little statistical anomaly that throws it all into further confusion—according to Johnson, since 1934 there have been 24 instances of players with a lead of three shots after 36 holes, and 12 of those 24 have gone on to win.Which means, of course, that it's better to have a three-shot lead on Friday night than a four-shot lead, and that Clark made a serious mistake by making birdie on 18, when he should have taken a modest par and enjoyed the smaller, but safer lead. Where was his stats team???Or ... maybe that's an idiotic take, and it's just a statistical anomaly.We can say this, though—a five-shot lead would have been so much better. In major history, 10 of 12 players holding a five-shot lead through 36 holes have gone on to win, including Brian Harman at the '23 Open and Scottie Scheffler at the '22 Masters. Yes, we're dealing with small sample sizes here, but there does seem to be a huge drop-off from five strokes to four.What about leads higher than five? Well, Abe Mitchell holds the unfortunate distinction of being the only player with a massive 36-hole margin who didn't win. He led by six shots at the 1920 Open but shot a disastrous 84 in the third round and finished fourth. The players who have won with six-shot leads are McIlroy (2011 U.S. Open, 2026 Masters), Tiger Woods (2000 U.S. Open) and Martin Kaymer (2014 U.S. Open). Brooks Koepka prevailed when he led by seven shots at the 2019 PGA. Henry Cotton holds the 36-hole record with a nine-shot lead that he converted at the '34 Open Championship ... though he played with fire by shooting a final round 79.So, what's the conclusion? Basically, that the 2026 U.S. Open is still anyone's game. Clark is more likely to win than any other player, of course, but historically not more likely than every other player. His insecurity may be especially pronounced at a course like Shinnecock, where things can go south in a hurry and where the weekend weather promises tougher conditions than we've seen so far.Finally, for kicks, here's a complete list of the 29 players before Clark who held a four-shot lead, and how they finished in the end. Masters Henry Picard - 1935 - 4thEd Dudley - 1938 - t-6Jim Ferrier - 1950 - 2ndCary Middlecoff - 1955 - winKen Venturi - 1956 - 2ndArnold Palmer - 1964 - winSeve Ballesteros - 1980 - winJack Nicklaus - 1981 - 2ndGreg Norman - 1996 - 2ndMike Weir - 2003 - winChris DiMarco - 2005 - 2nd PGA Championship Tommy Aaron - 1967 - T-20Gil Morgan - 1976 - T-8Tom Watson - 1978 - T-2Greg Norman - 1986 - 2ndTiger Woods - 2009 - 2nd U.S. Open Tom McNamara - 1909 - 2ndJames Barnes - 1921 - winDustin Johnson - 2018 - 3rd Open Championship J.H. Taylor - 1900 - winHarry Vardon - 1902 - T-2Harry Vardon - 1903 - winGeorge Duncan - 1911 - 8thFred Daly - 1947 - winHenry Cotton - 1948 - winFred Daly - 1952 - 4thBilly Casper - 1968 - 4thTiger Woods - 2005 - winRory McIlroy - 2014 - winMORE GOLF DIGEST U.S. OPEN COVERAGEU.S. Open 101: Answering all your frequently asked questionsHow to watch the 2026 U.S. OpenPower Rankings: Every player in the U.S. Open field, rankedHere’s the record prize money payout for each golfer at the U.S. OpenVideo: Every hole at Shinnecock HillsWhy can't the USGA get Shinnecock Hills right? Our interactive guide explainsWhat’s a ‘good’ shot at Shinnecock? The difference between our editos and tour averageBreaking down Scottie Scheffler’s chances to complete the career Grand SlamEvery chip shot you’ll see at Shinnecock Hills, explained
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    Lebanon Emerges as Weak Link in U.S.-Iran Deal to End War
    The conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, once seen as a secondary front to the American-Israeli war on Iran, has become one of the main obstacles to ending it.
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    Lebanon Cease-Fire Bolsters U.S.-Iran Truce, After a Shaky Start
    Talks on a long-term peace deal were set to begin on Friday, but Iran pulled out, citing Israeli strikes in Lebanon. Hours later, diplomats say, Israel and Hezbollah agreed to halt fighting there.
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    USMNT redefining World Cup expectations — 'There’s something about this one that feels different'
    SEATTLE — The U.S. still has one World Cup Group D match left, but before Mauricio Pochettino’s merry men even arrive at SoFi Stadium next Thursday to face Türkiye, they will carry assurances of a place in the knockout stage.Make no mistake: This is not normal.The Americans are notorious for making things as difficult as possible before advancing to the next phase. Over the decades, they’ve had to sweat out results of other group matches and put their trust in Landon Donovan or Christian Pulisic meeting the dramatic moment.But through the first two games of this momentum-building jamboree on home ground, they have flipped the narrative.World Cup schedule | Group schedule, results | StandingsLet’s look at some of the ways:1. There is a different vibe with this group. Most other U.S. teams have united before and during a World Cup, but players here describe a unique and unbreakable bond.“There's something about this one that just feels different,” said Tim Ream, the 38-year-old captain who began his national team career in 2010. “As long as we continue to enjoy ourselves, we're going to be in a place where we want to be.”He continued by saying, “Just the different personalities, the way everybody meshes, the way everybody fits together, it's really enjoyable, as the old man in the group, to be a part of it and to see all of that flourish.”Chris Richards and Alex Zendejas of United States celebrate after the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group D match against Australia at Seattle Stadium on June 19, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. Jane Gershovich/ISI Photos via Getty ImagesThe camaraderie is playing out on the field for players that seem so connected. U.S. soccer has often been defined by its ability to grind out results — style points be damned.Known for hard work and a never-say-die attitude more than anything else, the U.S. is flashing something new and different and exciting.Through two matches this World Cup, the Americans have performed with grace in the attack and resolve in defense. They are also having a helluva lot of fun.2. They can win without Christian Pulisic.Pochettino told the team Friday morning that the star forward would not play against Australia. If this were a friendly, or even a CONCACAF tournament, it would not have made waves. But in a World Cup? Well, you could sense the anxiety as word spread among the masses streaming into Lumen Field.The U.S. will always miss a sidelined Pulisic. He is a dynamic presence who throws opponents off-balance and injects a level of skill that creates menace in the attack. And certainly Pulisic missing a match against Australia has fewer implications than against, say, France.But in the first half Friday, the Americans didn’t miss a beat. They set the terms, generated quality chances through build-up play and, for the second match, forced an early own goal.“The versatility of this team is insane, to be honest, because there's guys that aren't playing right now that can play a major role as well,” midfielder Tyler Adams said.Pulisic will continue his rehab work next week at base camp in Irvine, California, but if he’s not at, or close to 100 percent by Thursday, Pochettino is not going to risk aggravating his condition and risking him missing the Round of 32.Friday’s performance proved this team can handle his absence in a high-pressure match.3. Pochettino is adaptable. The general consensus entering the Australia match was Pulisic’s absence would open a starting slot for Tim Weah, Brenden Aaronson or Sebastian Berhalter. Instead, Pochettino went with a second striker, Ricardo Pepi.It worked. Pepi took pressure off partner Folarin Balogun and occupied defenders. He contributed to the high pressure that forced Australian giveaways. It was a different look, but the U.S. executed Pochettino’s modified plan.Malik Tillman of the United States is fouled by Paul Okon-Engstler of Australia during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group D match at Seattle Stadium on June 19, 2026 in Seattle, Washington.Emilee Chinn via Getty Images4. The second goal was scored by Alex Freeman, but the whole situation would not have been possible without Malik Tillman moments earlier.Upright and then on his knees, Tillman fought for the ball near the end line, shielding it from defenders before drawing a foul. On the ensuing free kick, Antonee Robinson picked out Sergiño Dest for a deflected shot that Freeman headed into the net.A natural attacking midfielder, Tillman has been a revelation as a link between the defense and the attack.5. Although the U.S. recorded a shutout for the first time since September — and has conceded just one goal through two matches — the collective defense has had some unsettling moments in the first two matches.Against better opponents, the Americans could pay the price.In desperation late in the match, Australia heaped on pressure that the U.S. struggled to alleviate. A two-goal lead offered little comfort as the Aussie opportunities grew.6. The country is getting behind this team.The U.S. felt it at SoFi Stadium last week, but even more so in Seattle, where the passion for soccer is almost unmatched in this country.“I am not American. After the game, I was emotional,” said Pochettino, a native of Argentina. “The fans were amazing … the warm reception in the way they support us and the way they celebrate the victory. The players were very emotional too. It was amazing and a perfect connection between the energy from the stands and the team.”After the match, Ream got emotional when the team gathered in a circle at midfield.“I'm pretty good at keeping composure, and I have no idea what that was, to be completely honest,” he said of his tears. “We've obviously clinched a spot in Round of 32 and that kind of wave hits you.”7. These victories were very nice — 94 years had passed since the U.S. last won two in a row at a World Cup — but greater goals and challenges await. Unless a quarterfinal is achieved — something the Americans have not done since 2002 — no one is going to celebrate.“We kind of need to put a 24-hour rule on things,” Adams said. “Enjoy the moment. We're going to have another day off. Enjoy your time with the families, disconnect a little bit, and then when it's time to work, we have got to go back to work. … Let's not get ahead of ourselves.”
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    Should Scotland have had two penalties & been playing against 10 men?
    Scotland claimed for two penalties in their 1-0 World Cup defeat by Morocco. Former referee Christina Unkel said they should have been awarded one of them. Pundits Roy Keane and Ange Postecoglou disagreed with their ITV Sport colleague.Scotland head coach Steve Clarke was diplomatic, saying he "wasn't too sure" about several decisions made by Uzbek referee Ilgiz Tantashev.Meanwhile, two former Scotland internationals were left bemused that Morocco defender Issa Diop was not sent off in the first half.Pat Nevin defended a "bizarre" refereeing performance, but were Scotland hard done by in Boston on a night of fine margins?Scotland's World Cup knockout hopes remain alive despite Morocco defeat - reaction & highlightsWho was Scotland's stand out? How the players rated'One or two decisions I'm not sure about'After Ismael Saibari had smashed Morocco into the lead after 70 seconds, it seemed it would be a long night for the Scots, who beat Haiti 1-0 in their opening match.However, they slowly grew into the contest and felt aggrieved not to get two second-half penalties after John McGinn and Scott McTominay went to ground.Referee Tantashev let plenty go through the game and there was obvious frustration from Scottish players and coaches alike at his performance."I think it is a penalty kick," Unkel said on ITV about the McTominay incident. "The referee is known for tolerating a higher level of physical contact but you don't need a lot to give a penalty."It's a simple foul, there's contact at the knee position and there's another angle that suggests there might be a step on the left boot."However, Clarke felt the earlier challenge on McGinn was the more egregious decision and he also felt Moroccan defender Issa Diop was fortunate to escape with just a yellow card in the first half when he felled Che Adams."There were one or two decisions that I'm not too sure about," Clarke said. "I thought the John McGinn one was more a penalty [than the Scott McTominay one]. On another day somebody could give that. "It's the same with the yellow card for the defender when Che Adams is going clean through on goals. On another day that could be a red."'Morocco got away with one'McGinn himself was in no doubt that he was fouled by Neil El Aynaoui, but insists Scotland cannot fixate on refereeing calls."We could have been helped at times by the ref with 50-50 challenges," the Aston Villa man said. "No problem with allowing things to flow but it has to be consistent."Out the corner of my eye, I could see [the Morocco defender] charging in. I got first contact to the ball and he took me out. It's a penalty kick for me. Sometimes you get them, sometimes you don't. If it was given on the field, no chance it's overturned."Morocco have got away with one there. But we need to be better and create chances from open play, not rely on referee's decisions."On the Diop yellow card, two former Scotland forwards believe it should have been a different colour of card."For me, it is [a red]," Kilmarnock manager Neil McCann said. "Che Adams is goal-side and he's clearly pulled back. I think with the flight of the ball, he's going to get onto it and there's no-one on the cover."James McFadden agreed. "He's running onto it, straight towards goal. It's 100% an obvious goalscoring opportunity. If the referee deems it a foul, he has to send him off."However, former Scotland winger Pat Nevin defended Tantashev's "bizarre" display."You put that referee in a game 10 years ago and he's perfectly normal," he said. "I'm all right with that. "He made a couple of mistakes but, in reality, I'd rather have him than most of the referees we get these days. We'd have a much more robust game where not every single time somebody nudged somebody and that person crumpled, it's a foul."What did you make of the incidents?World Cup fixtures and group standingsHow to watch the World Cup on the BBCEverything you need to know about the World Cup
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    Harry Higgs, ‘the Big Rig,’ trucks into the US Open weekend with the right attitude and right pants
    SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Harry Higgs was ready to quit golf, burned out by the mental beatings he gave himself, shortly before becoming what he believes was the last of the 156 players in the U.S. Open field.It was only Monday that he was added to the tournament as an alternate, so late that he never unpacked after arriving in New York. With his clothes still in his suitcase, he pulled the wrong item out Thursday morning, which is why he mistakenly showed up at Shinnecock Hills in shorts before a frantic wardrobe change allowed him to play.Good thing. The Big Rig is trucking into the weekend with his first made cut of the year on the PGA Tour.“I let the day build and build and build, and man, I felt like a rock star out there,” Higgs said Friday. “I felt like I could do anything.”Higgs shot a 2-under 68 in the second round, boosted by a 75-foot putt for birdie after missing the 11th green, the kind of bad miss that for so long caused him to spiral. Higgs acknowledged that his tee shot was “the worst place you can hit it” but said he only had about a “3 out of 10 freakout.”“That would have been, hell, even a week ago, that probably would have been an 8, 9, 10 out of 10 freakout that I would have blamed something or someone else,” Higgs said.Not this week. Higgs told himself he was going to stop berating himself and play like he belonged. He goes into the weekend at 1 under, six shots behind leader Wyndham Clark.“Again, there’s a lot of golf left, but I can just choose to be a factor,” Higgs said. “If the golf goes my way and the result goes my way, great, but I can choose to just, like, ‘Hey, you don’t have to be a small, insignificant piece of the 156 that was playing here,’ even though I think I was 156 of 156.”Higgs has seen the highs of golf, with a tie for fourth in the 2021 PGA Championship and a top-15 finish a year later at the Masters. But he was having trouble dealing with the lows, and lately there have been many of them as he plays on the Korn Ferry Tour, missing the cut in all six of his PGA Tour starts.He was ready to give it up while playing in a U.S. Open qualifier on June 8. He thought he was out of it early and this time perhaps never coming back.“Through six holes in the 36-hole day, I was really close to quitting golf,” Higgs said. “It went the same way as it’s always gone. I missed a bunch of putts from short range early for birdie and then made a terrible bogey on 6. Took my phone out, booked a flight back home to Kansas City from Charlotte.“We were playing just outside Charlotte and was, like, I’m just going to go home. I’m going to walk off after the ninth hole. I’m just going to go home. I don’t even know if I’m going to go to Amarillo and play the Korn Ferry, and I don’t know that I’m going to keep doing this.”He stuck around and played well over the final 27 holes. It wasn’t good enough to qualify, but he did secure one of the alternate spots. When Bud Cauley won the Canadian Open last weekend and became automatically into the field, Higgs got his spot, getting the official call when he was preparing to fly from Texas.The flight was delayed, so he didn’t get to Shinnecock until Monday afternoon. Then came the fashion faux pas, when he grabbed gray shorts instead of gray pants after his 3:30 a.m. wake-up Thursday. He borrowed a pair until his wife rushed his own to him, which was good, because the golfer who is listed at 235 pounds and leaves unbuttoned the top two on his golf shirt with the Dude Wipes logo thinks the other pair would have ripped.He stayed positive then and thinks that can continue.“I haven’t had that feeling in a while,” Higgs said. “I would love to recreate it over the next two days, and if I don’t, I’m just going to try my damnedest and see what happens.”Can anybody catch Wyndham Clark at Shinnecock? What U.S. Open odds say entering weekendWyndham Clark is looking to become a two-time U.S. Open champ. But do oddsmakers believe Shinnecock Hills is going to let him waltz into the winner’s circle without a pressure test? Steve Coulter, Steve Coulter,
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    ‘Have a bit of class’ – Ex-soccer pro unimpressed by Canada head coach Jesse Marsch
    Photo by Jon Hobley/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty ImagesAlan Cawley criticized Canada head coach Jesse Marsch for his post-match reaction following their 6-0 World Cup win over Qatar in Vancouver.Cawley’s issue was not with the celebration itself, but the tone, given Qatar finished the match with just nine men.While he acknowledged the result was historic for Canada, Cawley felt more restraint would have been appropriate.Photo by Ercin Erturk/Anadolu via Getty ImagesAlan Cawley unimpressed by Jesse Marsch reaction after Canada winSpeaking in a TSN clip, former Irish soccer player Alan Cawley questioned the way Marsch handled Canada’s win over Qatar.Canada had just claimed their first men’s World Cup victory, with Jonathan David scoring a hat trick in a dominant performance. Cawley, though, felt the reaction was over the top.“Have a bit of class and decorum of what you’ve just beaten. And in terms of, it’s only the second group game of the tournament. So just put a lid on it. Cool the jets a little bit.”Cawley also drew a comparison to Marsch’s time at Leeds United, suggesting this was not a new pattern of behavior.“He’s doing a rallying call every press conference. He does. It was the same at Leeds. It was the same everywhere. That’s the way he carries on, but it’s nonsense. It’s absolute nonsense.”To some, Marsch’s public calls for belief and unity can help shape identity. In this case, Cawley saw it as excessive given the circumstances.He did give credit to Marsch for the result, but did not hold back on his wider point. “Even if you listen to some of the stuff that’s coming out of his mouth, it’s ridiculous. So in fairness, as I said, I’m praising him on one hand, but just have a bit of class.”Jesse Marsch Canada closing in on World Cup knockout stageDespite the criticism, there is no denying the progress Canada have made under Marsch.The win put them top of Group B on goal difference, with four points from two matches and seven goals scored. Only Switzerland remain in the group stage.Marsch has brought energy and aggression to Canada’s approach, and that identity was clear in the way they dismantled Qatar, even if the opposition was weakened.Cawley’s comments reflect a divide in how Marsch is viewed. For some, his passion drives the team forward. For others, it can feel performative.The next match could shift the conversation. Another win would back Marsch’s methods. A slip-up might give critics like Cawley more to talk about.Read more:NFL legend Russell Wilson returns to Seattle with wife Ciara for USMNT World Cup clash vs AustraliaEx-Seattle Seahawks NFL great Marshawn Lynch spotted in new role as World Cup photographerZlatan Ibrahimovic has spoken, the USA can win this World Cup
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    Vierling and Carpenter homer as the Tigers beat the White Sox 4-3
    DETROIT (AP) — Matt Vierling and Kerry Carpenter hit home runs to lift the Detroit Tigers past the Chicago White Sox 4-3 on Friday night.Tarik Skubal allowed three runs and seven hits with a walk in 5 2/3 innings in the left-hander’s second start since returning from the injured list after having a loose body removed from his elbow last month.Drew Anderson (3-3) earned the win in relief, allowing one hit in 1 1/3 innings. Kenley Jansen got three outs for his eighth save for Detroit, which entered having lost four of five.Tigers rookie Trei Cruz struck in his three at-bats in his major league debut. He batted ninth and played right field joining grandfather Jose Sr. and father Jose Jr. as the fifth three-generation family in MLB history. They joined Gus, Buddy, David and Mike Bell; Ray, Bob, Bret and Aaron Boone; Joe P., Joe H. and Casey Coleman; and Sam, Jerry, Jerry Jr. and Scott Hairston.Randal Grichuk homered and doubled, and Junior Perez hit his first major league homer for Chicago, which had won five of its last eight.Erick Fedde (2-6) allowed two runs in 4 2/3 innings, entering the game after opener Brandon Eisert gave up two runs in 1 1/3 innings.The White Sox took a lead in the first on Grichuk's solo homer, but Vierling's two-run homer off Eisert in the bottom of the inning put Detroit up 2-1Chicago tied it at 2 when Tristan Peters grounded into an RBI force at second base. The White Sox loaded the bases with one out, but Chase Meidroth grounded into a force at the plate and Colson Montgomery struck out.Perez's solo homer gave Chicago a 3-2 lead in the sixth, but Carpenter blooped a two-run double into shallow center to put the Tigers back in front in the bottom of the inning.Up nextThe teams continue their weekend series on Saturday with Tigers RHP Troy Melton (3-0, 2.81) scheduled to face a Chicago bullpen game.—AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB
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    Seattle Is Now a World Cup Draw: ‘Just a Great Soccer City’
    Seattle has become a leading American soccer city with successful professional franchises and a devoted fan base.
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    Kiki Iriafen’s late layup lifts the Mystics past New York 86-83, snapping the Liberty’s streak
    NEW YORK (AP) — Kiki Iriafen scored 20 points, including a go-ahead layup with 27 seconds left to give the Washington Mystics an 86-83 win over New York on Friday night, snapping the Liberty's eight-game winning streak.With the game tied at 83, Iriafen was found under the basket by Sonia Citron for a lay-in. Breanna Stewart tried to even the score but missed a contested layup with 14 seconds left. Iriafen then hit oen of two free throws two seconds later. New York (11-5) had two chances to tie the game, but Sabrina Ionescu and Satou Sabally's 3-pointers were both off the mark.Iriafen had missed the last three games while dealing with an ankle injury she suffered against Indiana on June 8.The victory snapped a 10-game regular-season losing streak that the Mystics (7-7) had against New York. The Mystics' last regular-season win came in the finale of the 2023 season.Leonie Fiebich scored 19 points and Stewart had 16 points, 10 rebounds and six assists for New York.Trailing 77-71 midway through the fourth quarter, Kiki Iriafen scored six straight points to start a 10-2 run that gave the Mystics a 81-79 lead with 1:33 left. Ionescu tied the game a few moments later before Citron's two free throws put Washington back in front by two with 1:09 left.Sabally made two free throws with 48.6 seconds left to tie the game at 83.The teams played last Sunday and New York won 86-64, but the Mystics were missing Iriafen for that game.New York used its depth in the first half to keep pace with Washington. Satou Sabally and Han Xu each had eight points as the Liberty reserves scored 20 of the team's 43 points. New York 43-39 at the half.Up nextMystics: Washington starts a home-and-home with the Lynx in Minnesota on Sunday.Liberty: New York begins a four-game road trip in Los Angeles on Sunday. The game against Sparks is rematch of the first WNBA game 30 years ago.___AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball
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    Flawed but relentless Scotland show themselves as men of substance
    In his time as Scotland head coach, Steve Clarke has been pelted with flak for his risk-averse management, his innate caution, his reluctance to roll the dice. Whatever happened to that guy? Where did he go?In the closing stages of this thriller in Boston, Clarke was a footballing Amarillo Slim, a fearless gambler throwing on attacking players in pursuit of a point in a game that lurched from total Moroccan dominance to total Moroccan panic.Scotland lost, but in the grand scheme of things - where goal difference will be vital in determining the best third-placed teams - a 1-0 loss was no great letdown, not that it would have felt that way to the Scotland players at the end.In doing a television interview in the aftermath, Lewis Ferguson looked pained and upset. Others were just like him. Andy Robertson rubbed his hands over his face in frustration. Lyndon Dykes looked, for a second, as if he was going to throw up. Scotland had two penalty claims, one for Scott McTominay and another for John McGinn. Borderline, both. You've seen them given, as the mantra goes. A sense of injustice, justified or not, would only have darkened their mood.Scotland's World Cup knockout hopes remain alive despite defeatShould Scotland have had two penalties & been playing against 10 men?Who was Scotland's stand out? How the players ratedThe contrasting emotions were fascinating. Morocco were relieved men. For a long spell in the first half they looked like they were going to cut Scotland to smithereens with their movement and their class. At full-time they looked overjoyed at falling over the line.The Scots didn't manage a shot on target but, boy, did they show some bottle. Those closing minutes were frenetic. Clarke, as if playing poker in Vegas, sent on Ben Gannon-Doak, Dykes and Ross Stewart. By the end, Scott McTominay was virtually playing centre-forward. They left themselves hugely exposed at the back but the attitude was to hell with it. McTominay hit the side-netting, Dykes headed over, McTominay had a shot smothered. They pushed and pushed. At one point, seconds from the end, Chadi Riad, the Morocco centre-back, hoofed one out for a corner and screamed blue murder at his midfielders. Scots show they've learned lessons from EurosThis denouement was not what we were expecting. This gathering dream of a Scotland equaliser was so far our thoughts early on as to be non-existent.Just short of the hour-mark, two doughty Scots walked up the steep steps at the Boston Stadium in search of their seats in the gods. Can in hand, traffic cone hat on their head - the lads were full of the joys, laughing heartily, feeling no pain.To say they were the outliers in the Scotland support in those moments would be putting it mildly. Did they not know that Morocco had cut their team open to score after 71 seconds? Were they having a gargle on the concourse as Achraf Hakimi - right-back one minute, left winger the next - was making us wonder how many of him were actually out there?Morocco were as dangerous as everybody expected them to be. So comfortable with the ball at their feet, so much better than their underdog opponents. World number six after all. Unbeaten in two-and-a-half years, if you forget about the Africa Cup of Nations debacle. Scotland were chasing shadows.Clarke's masterplan, so to speak, was playing Kieran Tierney ahead of Robertson on the left, two vastly experienced operators to deal with the threat of Hakimi and Brahim Diaz. A risk, for sure. And so much for the thinking behind it. Just over a minute gone - Diaz assist, Ismael Saibari goal, the nightmare scenario come true.The traffic cone guys weren't letting such trifling issues dampen their day. Everybody else had a haunted look about them, their noise and passion reduced to soft groans, the lusty pride they all displayed with another thumping rendition of Flower of Scotland now replaced with shrieks as Morocco ran amok.Or threatened to run amok. Seventy seconds it took them to score. For much of the opening half they were like a cultured fighter, boxing the ears off an over-matched rival, bamboozling their punchbag with their movement before what felt like an inevitable knockout.Scotland were on the ropes, covering up and praying that the punishment would stop. And minute by minute, it did. Morocco's intensity was wonderful for half an hour and they could have been two or three ahead by then, but they weren't. They're terrific footballers, very easy on the eye, but they're not ruthless, not killers. Scotland's resilience kept them in it.When Morocco's energy started to dissipate, it became a contest. Scotland finished the opening half strongly, their confidence rising, those worried stares on the faces of their supporters giving way to blessed hope. It wasn't that they were making chances and causing problems, but they were working their way back into contention, asking a few questions, reminding Morocco that they weren't soft touches any more.It was impressive how Scotland dug in, defending brilliantly, bodies being thrown in the way of things. Jack Hendry had two huge moments, Angus Gunn had a major save. Clarke sprung the cavalry from the bench and Scotland pushed on.The lesson they have learned from Germany two years ago was to fire some shots, don't die wondering. They were drearily negative in the critical game against Hungary at the Euros and went out with a whimper. For two weeks they've told us that that won't be happening again. Here was the evidence of it.It was not to be, but in soaking up Moroccan pressure and then fighting back to scare the wits out of them, they showed themselves as men of substance, not in Morocco's league in pure footballing terms but battlers; flawed but relentless. They don't lack for heart and heart might yet take them through this group and into the promised land of the knockouts.They have Brazil to play and one point to find, maybe. They might not even need it if their goal difference remains strong, but they'll travel to Miami feeling sore but believing in themselves.Later, the traffic cone guys reappeared, still smiling, still singing, still carrying on like they were having the time of their lives, which they undoubtedly are. We could learn something from them. A life lesson. Stick a cone on your head and keep on keeping on.World Cup fixtures and group standingsHow to watch the World Cup on the BBCEverything you need to know about the World Cup
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    Who was Scotland's stand out? How the players rated
    [BBC]Ismael Saibari's second-minute goal condemned Scotland to a 1-0 World Cup defeat by Morocco in Boston and leaves their hopes of progression from Group C in the balance.BBC Sport Scotland's George O'Neill assessed how the players performed – and you can see how BBC Sport readers rated them at the bottom of the page too.Scotland starting XIAngus Gunn - No chance for Saibari's early goal. Strong saves to deny Achraf Hakimi and Bilal El Khannouss. 6Nathan Patterson - Off the pace early on and struggled against El Khannouss. One great cross that led to Scotland's best chance of the opening period. 5Grant Hanley - Caught out for the opening goal trying to play Saibiri offside. A mistake that ultimately proved costly. 4Jack Hendry - Brilliant block to deny Saibari a second goal, deflecting his shot onto the crossbar. Solid throughout and his pace and reading of the game averted danger on multiple occasions. 7Andy Robertson - Full of his usual energy and endeavour. Dealt well with Hakimi's threat and created a couple of half-chances. 6John McGinn - Tried too much on occasion, but won a couple of free-kicks in the first half. Wanted a second-half penalty after winning the ball back and driving forwards. 5Lewis Ferguson - Plenty of graft in the heart of Scotland's midfield. Kept things ticking over. 6Ryan Christie - Always wanted the ball, which was vital against Morocco's midfield quality. Fizzed a good chance over the bar. 6Scott McTominay - Struggled to get into the game at any stage. Could feel hard done by not to get a penalty late on. 5Kieran Tierney - Asked to play an unfamiliar role on the left-hand side of midfield. Came off injured and will be a doubt for the Brazil game on Wednesday. 5Che Adams - Largely isolated, but unable to hold the ball up and get his side up the pitch. Only managed 11 touches in 70 minutes, with more of those in Scotland's box than Morocco's. 4Scotland's World Cup knockout hopes remain alive despite defeatFlawed but relentless Scotland show themselves as men of substanceShould Scotland have had two penalties & been playing against 10 men?Scotland substitutesBen Gannon-Doak (60 mins) - Gave Scotland an out ball and some much-needed pace, but failed to carve out any meaningful chances. 5Kenny McLean (71 mins) - His usual reliable self in midfield. Happy to take the ball in tight areas. 5Lyndon Dykes (71 mins) - Headed wide when unmarked from a corner. Occupied Moroccan defenders better than Adams. 5Anthony Ralston (89 mins) - Not on the pitch long enough to have an impact. 5Ross Stewart (89 mins) - A similar story to Ralston. 5World Cup fixtures and group standingsHow to watch the World Cup on the BBCEverything you need to know about the World Cup
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    Cunha instantly answers Brazil call with clutch performance 🏄‍♂️
    Cunha instantly answers Brazil call with clutch performance 🏄‍♂️Carlo Ancelotti made a key change to Brazil's starting World Cup line up on Friday, and the man he entrusted has made a massive difference.Manchester United star Matheus Cunha wears the no. 9 for his country and scored not once but twice, with both Ronaldo and Ronaldinho watching on. Cunha first was in the right place at the right time to bundle home the ball for the opener after Vinicius' shot was initially saved.He then turned on the heat by running diagonally between two central defenders on the left, and struck the ball into the upright corner for 2-0 before half-time.It's his first brace for Brazil, and an excellent demonstration of stepping up when asked for your country.The last player to score a hat-trick for Brazil was Pelé all the way back in 1958. Whether he gets it or not, Ancelotti surely has to keep him in the starting XI, right?
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    World Cup: German-born superstar Yıldız starts for Turkey against Paraguay
    World Cup: German-born superstar Yıldız starts for Turkey against ParaguayTurkey and Paraguay hope to recover from their disappointing start to the 2026 World Cup when they meet at Levi's Stadium. Vincenzo Montella’s side were ineffective in their defeat to Australia, while Paraguay conceded four goals to co-hosts the United States.Former FC Bayern youth player Kenan Yıldız only played the second-half against Australia, but the Turkish star will now feature from the start as he returns to full fitness. Yıldız is among the five players in Turkey’s squad who were born in Germany, like his captain and former HSV and Bayer Leverkusen midfielder Hakan Çalhanoğlu.Meanwhile, Hoffenheim’s center-back Ozan Kabak and Eintracht Frankfurt’s sensation Can Uzun will hope for their first minutes of the tournament off the bench. Former Bundesliga players Çağlar Söyüncü, Kaan Ayhan, and Salih Özcan are also on the bench for Turkey, while ex-Hertha defender Omar Alderete starts for Paraguay.Confirmed Turkey vs. Paraguay LineupsTurkey: Çakır; Müldür, Demiral, Bardakcı, Kadıoğlu; Yüksek, Çalhanoğlu ©; Yıldız, Arda Güler, Akgün; AktürkoğluParaguay: Gill; Cáceres, Gustavo Gómez ©, Alderete, Alonso; Diego Gómez, Galarza; Cubas, Almirón; Pitta, Enciso
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    Cam Schlittler strikes out career-high 13 in 6 innings as Yankees blank Reds 5-0
    NEW YORK (AP) — Cam Schlittler struck out 13 in six overpowering innings for his first double-digit strikeout game in the regular season, and the New York Yankees beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-0 on Friday night.Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a solo homer and Ben Rice launched a three-run shot in the second against Rhett Lowder (3-4) as the Yankees won for the 10th time in 15 games since losing Aaron Judge to a fractured right rib. Anthony Volpe added a late RBI single.Schlittler (8-3) notched five strikeouts on his four-seam fastball that averaged 97.9 mph. He had four strikeouts apiece on cutters and sinkers.The right-hander threw first-pitch strikes to 15 of 23 hitters and eclipsed the 12 strikeouts he had over eight innings in the deciding Game 3 of last year’s AL Wild Card Series against rival Boston. At 25 years, 134 days, Schlittler became the youngest Yankees pitcher with 13 strikeouts since Al Downing (22 years, 359 days) also fanned 13 against the Chicago White Sox on June 21, 1964.Schlittler also became the youngest Yankees pitcher to strike out 13 without issuing a walk. He threw 66 of 96 pitches for strikes and got his 10th strikeout when Eugenio Suárez swung at a 99.1 mph sinker to end the fourth.Schlittler caught Matt McLain looking at a 100 mph fastball in the fifth and got his final strikeout with a 98 mph fastball against JJ Bleday in the sixth. Schlittler allowed four hits and exited to a standing ovation after stranding two runners in the sixth.He ended the night with a 1.71 ERA, the lowest for a Yankees pitcher through 16 starts in a season since Whitey Ford was at 1.47 in 1964.Three relievers finished a four-hitter as the Reds struck out 17 times in all.Cincinnati was beaten for the 11th time in 16 games since losing Elly De La Cruz to a strained right hamstring. De La Cruz hit a 441-foot homer in his first minor league rehab game for Triple-A Louisville.Lowder allowed four runs and six hits in 5 1/3 innings.Up nextCincinnati LHP Andrew Abbott (4-4, 3.95 ERA) faces New York RHP Will Warren (7-1, 3.47) on Saturday afternoon.___AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
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    Tunisia's new coach draws inspiration from Cape Verde's success ahead of Japan match
    MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) — Tunisia is looking to Cape Verde for inspiration ahead of the North African team’s next World Cup game against Japan, newly appointed coach Hervé Renard said Friday.The charismatic Frenchman, who was hired to save Tunisia after its 5-1 loss to Sweden in its opening match, said his side must earn at least a point against Japan to have any chance of qualifying for the knockout stage for the first time in its seven World Cup appearances.World Cup newcomer Cape Verde’s 0-0 draw against European champion Spain – the tournament’s biggest upset so far – “gives us hope,” Renard said.“When you are organized and together, you are able to compete. We have to follow this example and not be scared of defeat,” said Renard, who is at his third World Cup as coach after leading Morocco in 2018 and Saudi Arabia in 2022.Japan is ranked 17th in the world by FIFA, 37 spots higher than Tunisia. The Samurai Blue have not lost since falling 2-0 to the U.S. in a friendly on Sep. 9, 2025.Renard, 57, was hired to replace Sabri Lamouch after the loss to Sweden last Sunday. He has had only a few days to get to know the squad and prepare for the match Saturday in Monterrey.“I’ve met with an open-minded group,” Renard said. “They want their revenge. We know that we must go above and beyond against this Japanese team.”Japan head coach Hajime Moriyasu, who is the longest serving coach in the country’s history, expects a different Tunisia team from the one that lost to Sweden.“Renard will bring out the best in the players,” Moriyasu said. (Renard) is definitely firing up the players. I’m sure that comes through in their team talks, so we are prepared to face an entirely different team.”Renard is known for his fiery team talks, most notably in 2022 when his viral halftime speech preceded Saudi Arabia’s unexpected 2-1 comeback victory over eventual champions Argentina.After previous successes throughout his career, such as winning the Africa Cup of Nations with Zambia in 2012 and Ivory Coast in 2015, some began referring to Renard as the “wizard.” But Renard wouldn’t promise any magic.“I am no wizard,” he said. “The coach is not the key; the key is the players.”__Maya Koluder-Ramirez and Ethan Wilcox are students in the University of Georgia’s Carmical Sports Media Institute.
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    A classic Scottie Scheffler round puts the 4-time major champ in contention at the US Open
    SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) — Scottie Scheffler gritted and grinned his way into contention at the U.S. Open on Friday, bouncing back from a 2-over start at Shinnecock Hills with a classic Scheffler round: calm, patient and close to perfect.Scheffler's 2-under 68 put him at even par for the tournament, tied for 11th place and seven strokes behind leader Wyndham Clark, with two more rounds to go. If Scheffler wins Sunday, his 30th birthday, he'll become the seventh player to complete the career Grand Slam.The four-time major champion accomplished a different feat Friday, snapping his streak of 10 U.S. Open rounds without breaking par. Last year at Oakmont, he tied for seventh at 4 over.After an animated conversation on the driving range Thursday after the third round with coach Randy Smith, Scheffler was better and more relaxed from the start Friday.He birdied the 10th hole, his first of the day in the U.S. Open's split-tee format, after shooting par there on Thursday while playing in a morning wave of players that got the brunt of strong winds and tough conditions.Asked how he'd prefer the course be set up for the weekend, Scheffler said: "Doesn’t really matter to me. I just play."In all, Scheffler had three birdies and just one bogey in the second round, compared with four birdies, four bogeys and a double bogey on Thursday.“I did a good job of keeping a pretty clean card today,” Scheffler said. “I had the bogey there on my fourth hole, which was 13, but outside of that, no bogeys.”“That’s always nice when you’re coming around a U.S. Open golf course," he added, "especially one as challenging as this."Scheffler, who followed an over-par opening round with a under-par round three other times this season, showed flashes in Friday's round of his steady, methodical style in winning two Masters and last year's the PGA Championship and British Open.Overall on Friday, he hit 12 of 14 fairways off the tee and reached 15 greens in regulation. On Thursday, he hit 12 fairways on Thursday, but just nine greens in regulation.He came away wanting more. Scheffler buckled his knees and stared at the grandstand on Friday as his 17-foot birdie putt on No. 2 stayed just to the left of the cup. He slung his shoulders in disbelief as a 15-footer on No. 7 curled short.“I wish I could have made a few more birdies coming in, but I did a lot of good stuff out there,” Scheffler said. “Hit some nice shots. Hit a lot of good putts as well. They were just kind of right around the edge.”Scheffler, in prime position for a birdie on No. 4, swiped his putter at the green as his putt bobbled to a stop about a foot short of the hole. But in a moment of levity, he broke out into a smile when his caddie, Ted Scott, stated the obvious about what had happened.The golf ball bounced, Scott said, mimicking the movement with his arm.“Oh, it did?” Scheffler said, turning to him with a tinge of sarcasm in his voice.Scheffler’s bogey on No. 13, the shortest par 4 on the course, came after he bunkered his approach shot and missed a 10-foot par putt. After a par-saving up and down from the sand on the par-3 17th, Scheffler didn’t come close to trouble again.“I think the tournament is halfway done,” Scheffler said. “Yesterday was a day in which you could kind of shoot yourself out of the tournament. The conditions were really, really tough yesterday. Did a good job of hanging in there.”“I had a tough front nine yesterday, but battled back nicely on the back nine," he added. "Then had another solid day today to kind of back that up. You know, hopefully do more of the same over the next couple of days.”Throughout Friday's round, Scheffler and his playing partners — defending U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun and last year's U.S. Amateur champion Mason Howell — were forced to wait while groups up ahead played their shots.Standing on the tee box at No. 2, Scheffler pulled out a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and ate half, ignoring a fan's pressing query: “What's that? PB&J? Grape jelly kind of guy?”___AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
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    Oklahoma State football adds Choctaw LB Israel Hammons to Cowboys' 2027 recruiting class
    Choctaw’s Israel Hammons announced his commitment to the Oklahoma State football program on Friday. Hammons is a four-star prospect and the nation’s No. 11 linebacker in the 2027 class, according to 247Sports. A 6-foot-2, 226-pounder, he had 68 tackles and eight sacks as Choctaw went 9-5 and advanced to the Class 6A-II state championship game last season. Hammons is now the ninth 2027 recruit to commit to the Cowboys and third from Oklahoma, joining Broken Arrow defensive back Bryson Brown and Pryor receiver Cooper Hooker. Hammons has several Power Four offers, a list that includes programs such as Texas, Texas Tech and Ole Miss. First off I wanna thank God, My Coaches, Friends, and family for helping me to get to where I am today with that being said I’m announcing that I’m an 10000% committing to OKLAHOMA STATE 🧡🖤 #GoPokes#PistolsFiring@1COACH_CARTER@JakeCorbin@CoachBradClark@TheShaqMillerpic.twitter.com/1pkyJBNZbe— Israel Hammons (@israelhammons0) June 20, 2026Nick Sardis covers high school sports for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Nick? He can be reached at nsardis@oklahoman.com or on Twitter at @nicksardis. Sign up for The Varsity Club newsletter to access more high school coverage. Support Nick's work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Oklahoma State football adds Choctaw LB Israel Hammons to 2027 recruiting class
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    U.S. Open Round 3 tee times: Full Saturday pairings, featured groups and how to watch
    Round 3 of the 126th Open at Shinnecock Hills begins Saturday at 9 a.m. ET.Dylan Wu and Jacob Bridgeman, who both made the cut at 4 over, will start the day, and leader Wyndham Clark (7 under) and Matt Fitzpatrick (3 under) will be the last out at 3:45 p.m ET.Below are Round 3 tee times, pairings, featured groups and viewing information for Saturday's action in Southampton, New York.U.S. Open Round 3 featured groups9:11 a.m.: Chris Gotterup, Eric Lee9:44 a.m.: Nico Echavarria, Hideki Matsuyama10:17 a.m.: Jackson Koivun, Miles Russell2:01 p.m.: Scottie Scheffler, Brian Harman2:12 p.m.: Maverick McNealy, Rory McIlroy3:01 p.m.: Sahith Theegala, Sam BurnsFeatured group coverage will be on USOpen.com, the USGA App, Peacock, YouTube TV, DirecTV and Xfinity.U.S. Open Round 3 tee timesAll times ET. Bold = featured group.9:00 a.m.: Dylan Wu, Jacob Bridgeman9:11 a.m.: Chris Gotterup, Eric Lee9:22 a.m.: Peter Uihlein, Caleb Surratt9:33 a.m.: Marek Fleming, Robert MacIntyre9:44 a.m.: Nico Echavarria, Hideki Matsuyama9:55 a.m.: Bud Cauley, Neal Shipley10:06 a.m.: Laurie Canter, Michael Kim10:17 a.m.: Jackson Koivun, Miles Russell10:33 a.m.: Patrick Rodgers, Emiliano Grillo10:44 a.m.: James Nicholas, Angel Hidalgo10:55 a.m.: Jordan Spieth, Joaquin Niemann11:06 a.m.: Russell Henley, Dustin Johnson11:17 a.m.: Ryan Fox, Michael Brennan11:28 a.m.: Pierceson Coody, Max Greyserman11:39 a.m.: Kurt Kitayama, Tyrrell Hatton11:50 a.m.: Cameron Young, Sungjae Im12:06 p.m.: Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Spencer Tibbitts12:17 p.m.: J.T. Poston, Ben Griffin12:28 p.m.: Andrew Putnam, John Parry12:39 p.m.: Jackson Van Paris, Ben James12:50 p.m.: Tommy Fleetwood, Ludvig Åberg1:01 p.m.: Keegan Bradley, Johnny Keefer1:12 p.m.: Ben Kohles, Justin Rose1:28 p.m.: Corey Conners, Aaron Rai1:39 p.m.: Zac Blair, Max McGreevy1:50 p.m.: Niklas Nørgaard, Alex Fitzpatrick2:01 p.m.: Scottie Scheffler, Brian Harman2:12 p.m.: Maverick McNealy, Rory McIlroy2:23 p.m.: Keith Mitchell, Akshay Bhatia2:34 p.m.: Gary Woodland, Ryo Hisatsune2:50 p.m.: Ryder Cowan, William Mouw3:01 p.m.: Sahith Theegala, Sam Burns3:12 p.m.: Harry Higgs, Justin Thomas3:23 p.m.: Collin Morikawa, Tom Kim3:34 p.m.: Sam Stevens, Xander Schauffele3:45 p.m.: Matt Fitzpatrick, Wyndham ClarkHow to watch Round 3 of the U.S. OpenAll times ET.10 a.m. - 12 p.m. (USA)12-8 p.m. (NBC & Peacock)Featured group coverage will be on USOpen.com, the USGA App, Peacock, YouTube TV, DirecTV and Xfinity.
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