ReportWire

Tag: APP Sports

  • Simone Biles secures third trip to the Olympics

    Simone Biles secures third trip to the Olympics

    [ad_1]

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Simone Biles is heading back to the Olympics. So are some of her friends.


    What You Need To Know

    • Simone Biles earned a third trip to her sport’s biggest stage by cruising to victory at the U.S. Olympic trials on Sunday night
    • Reigning Olympic champion Sunisa Lee, 2020 Olympic floor exercise champion Jade Carey, 2020 Olympic silver medalist Jordan Chiles and 16-year-old Hezly Rivera were also named to the five-woman team
    • Biles and the other four women who join her in France will be considered heavy favorites, particularly with defending Olympic champion Russia unable to compete as part of the fallout from the war in Ukraine


    The gymnastics superstar earned a third trip to her sport’s biggest stage by cruising to victory at the U.S. Olympic trials on Sunday night, posting a two-day all-around total of 117.225 to clinch the lone automatic spot on the five-woman team.

    Three years removed from the Tokyo Olympics — where she pulled out of multiple finals to prioritize her safety and becoming a touchstone on the importance of mental health in the process — Biles returns to the games looking perhaps as good as ever at 27.

    “Trusting the process and (my coaches), I knew I’d be back,” Biles said.

    Biles isn’t going alone.

    Reigning Olympic champion Sunisa Lee, 2020 Olympic floor exercise champion Jade Carey, 2020 Olympic silver medalist Jordan Chiles and 16-year-old Hezly Rivera were named to the five-woman team later Sunday night. Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong are the alternates.

    A trip to France has never really been in doubt for Biles since she returned from a two-year break last summer. All she’s done over the last 12 months is win a sixth world all-around title and her eighth and ninth national championship — both records — while further cementing her status as the best-ever in her sport.

    Biles will be a prohibitive favorite to bookend the Olympic gold she won in 2016, though there is plenty to work on before women’s qualifying on July 28.

    She backpedaled after landing her Yurchenko double pike vault, a testament to both the vault’s difficulty and the immense power she generates during a skill few male gymnasts try and even fewer land as cleanly.

    Biles hopped off the beam after failing to land her side aerial, though she wasn’t quite as frustrated as she was during a sloppy performance on Friday that left her uttering an expletive for all the world to see.

    Biles finished with a flourish on floor exercise, her signature event. Though there was a small step out of bounds, there was also the unmatched world-class tumbling that recently drew a shoutout from pop star Taylor Swift, whose song “Ready For It” opens Biles’ routine.

    She stepped off the podium to a standing ovation, then sat down atop the steps to take in the moment in what could be her last competitive round on American soil for quite a while.

    Next stop, Paris, where the Americans try to return to the top of the podium after finishing second to Russia three years ago.

    Yet the Biles that will step onto the floor at Bercy Arena in four weeks isn’t the same one that left Tokyo.

    She’s taken intentional steps to make sure her life is no longer defined by her gymnastics. Biles married Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens in the spring of 2023 and the two are building a house in the northern Houston suburbs they hope to move into shortly after Biles returns from Paris.

    Biles heads to France as perhaps the face of the U.S. Olympic movement, though she’s well aware that more than a few of the millions that will tune in to watch next month will be checking to see if the demons that derailed her in Tokyo resurface.

    And while there are still moments of anxiety — including at last year’s world championships — she has put safeguards in place to protect herself. She meets with a therapist weekly, even during competition season, something she didn’t do in preparation for the 2020 games.

    Biles and the other four women who join her in France will be considered heavy favorites, particularly with defending Olympic champion Russia unable to compete as part of the fallout from the war in Ukraine.

    The Americans will take their oldest women’s team ever to the games, as Biles’ unrivaled longevity — she hasn’t lost a meet she’s started and finished since 2013 — and the easing of rules around name, image and likeness rules at the NCAA level allowed Carey (24), Chiles (23) and Lee (21) to continue to compete while cashing in on their newfound fame at the same time.

    They have relied on that experience to get back to this moment during a sometimes harrowing meet that saw leading contenders Shilese Jones, Skye Blakely and Kayla DiCello exit with leg injuries that took them out of the mix weeks before opening ceremonies.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Lightning acquire rights to Guentzel on eve of free agency

    Lightning acquire rights to Guentzel on eve of free agency

    [ad_1]

    The Tampa Bay Lightning got a head start on free agency by acquiring the rights to high-scoring winger Jake Guentzel on Sunday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday got rights to Carolina Hurricanes winger Jake Guentzel in exchange for a 2025 third-round draft pick
    • The move allows the Lightning to sign Guentzel before the open market Monday
    • Guentzel won the 2017 Stanley Cup with Pittsburgh and averages almost a point per game in NHL playoffs

    The Lightning sent a 2025 third-round draft pick to Carolina. The move allows the Lightning to sign Guentzel before he hits the open market Monday.

    He is coming off scoring 30 goals this past season for the Hurricanes and Pittsburgh Penguins, his fourth time reaching that mark in an eight-year career that has included him getting to 40 twice. Guentzel, who turns 30 in October, won the Stanley Cup with Pittsburgh in 2017 and is nearly a point-a-game playoff performer in the NHL.

    That means everything to the Lightning, who won it all back to back in 2020 and ‘21, reached the final in ’22 and want to keep their contending window open as long as possible. To do so, general manager Julien BriseBois and his staff plotted to shift resources from a strong left side on defense to the forward group.

    This is all part of that process. Trading defenseman Mikhail Sergachev to Utah and depth forward Tanner Jeannot to Los Angeles on Saturday cleared more than $11 million in salary cap space over the next two seasons.

    “We have this cap space (and) we can allocate it in different ways by either getting volume or quality,” BriseBois said Saturday. “Now is that one player getting most of that cap space? Is it two players splitting it up? Three players splitting it up? It’s too early to tell at this point.”

    Guentzel should take up a nice chunk of it, with some left over for the Lightning to sign another free agent, while also signing cornerstone defenseman Victor Hedman to a long-term contract extension.

    Where that money will not be going, at least not right away, is re-signing Steven Stamkos, the longtime captain and face of the franchise who is expected to test free agency. BriseBois and Stamkos’ agent, Don Meehan, confirmed Saturday their stances on reaching an agreement on a new contract had not changed.

    “Steven’s earned the right to test free agency,” BriseBois said. “I didn’t go to him last season to get a deal done. I did go to him quickly after this season, and I was taking a risk by doing that that we may end up here, and now here we are.”

    Tampa Bay became the second team to acquire the rights to a pending free agent, after Toronto sent a late pick in the 2026 draft to Dallas for the ability to negotiate exclusively with 34-year-old defenseman Chris Tanev.

    “He’s just an elite defensive player,” Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving said of Tanev, whom he previously signed when running the Calgary Flames. “Listen, I know the age he’s at, but I think even in the last year he’s shown he’s one of the top shutdown defensemen, one of the top defensive players in the league.”

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Bye to the Big 12 and hello SEC: It’s party time for Texas and Oklahoma

    Bye to the Big 12 and hello SEC: It’s party time for Texas and Oklahoma

    [ad_1]

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Bye-bye Big 12, hello SEC. Texas and Oklahoma are finally making their long-awaited conference switch.


    What You Need To Know

    • The three-years-in-the-making switch to the Southeastern Conference for two programs that were co-founders of the Big 12 in 1996 officially happens Monday
    • And for their move to a league where “It Just Means More,” Texas and Oklahoma have scheduled big campus celebrations Sunday and Monday with carnivals, live music and fireworks. Oklahoma’s even stretches to events statewide
    • The Texas and Oklahoma break from the Big 12 helped trigger myriad conference shifts with more on the way. By the first kickoff of the 2024 season, 11 so-called Power 4 programs will be in new conferences
    • Between them, the Sooners (14) and Longhorns (four) won 18 Big 12 football titles in 25 years, with Texas winning the crown last season for the first time since 2009

    But first, it’s time to party with Bevo (the longhorn) and Pitbull (the human).

    The three-years-in-the-making switch to the Southeastern Conference for two programs that were co-founders of the Big 12 in 1996 officially happens Monday.

    And for their move to a league where “It Just Means More,” Texas and Oklahoma have scheduled big campus celebrations Sunday and Monday with carnivals, live music and fireworks. Oklahoma’s even stretches to events statewide.

    The SEC Network planned live programming from both campuses over the two days, and Longhorns and Sooners fans had their first chance to buy SEC-branded school merchandise.

    “This is a day we have been building toward for years,” Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte said.

    It’s a moment college sports in general has been building toward in the era of major realignment. The Texas and Oklahoma break from the Big 12 helped trigger myriad conference shifts with more on the way. By the first kickoff of the 2024 season, 11 so-called Power 4 programs will be in new conferences.

    The Big Ten will grow to 18 teams with USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington poached from the Pac-12. The beleaguered West Coast league also lost Arizona, Colorado, Utah and Arizona State to the Big 12, and California and Stanford to the Atlantic Coast Conference. SMU leaps from the American Athletic Conference to the ACC on Monday as well.

    As for Oklahoma and Texas, they originally planned to join the SEC in 2025, but ultimately reached a financial deal with the Big 12 for an early exit. And they leave with a whole lot of hardware.

    Between them, the Sooners (14) and Longhorns (four) won 18 Big 12 football titles in 25 years, with Texas winning the crown last season for the first time since 2009.

    In its final year in the league, Texas won 15 league regular season or tournament championships across all sports, and national titles in volleyball and rowing. Oklahoma capped its final season with its dominant softball program winning its fourth consecutive national title in May. The Sooners beat Texas in the final.

    “Texas brings more tradition, more talent, more passion and more fight,” to the SEC, the school said on its athletics website.

    All that winning will be much more difficult to duplicate in the SEC. Oklahoma opens its first SEC football schedule at home against Tennessee on Sept. 21. The Longhorns debut at Mississippi State on Sept. 28.

    Since the start of the College Football Playoff in 2014, SEC schools have won the championship six times.

    Texas (2005) and Oklahoma (2000) were the only two schools to win national titles in football while in the Big 12.

    Some traditional rivalries will be stitched back together, and some torn apart.

    The Texas-Texas A&M rivalry is reborn. It had been on hiatus since A&M left the Big 12 for the SEC in 2012. Oklahoma’s Bedlam rivalry with Oklahoma State is ruptured.

    Texas spiced things up with Texas A&M last week when it poached Aggies baseball coach Jim Schlossnagle to Austin. At his introductory news conference, Schlossnagle warned Longhorns fans that the SEC is the “major leagues” of college baseball. The league has won the past five national championships.

    Texas and Oklahoma planned for thousands of fans to join their celebrations.

    Texas set up a central campus carnival. Fans will get autograph sessions with team coaches, and a chance to pose with the Bevo longhorn mascot for photos in the afternoon.

    Sunday night includes a scheduled concert by “Mr. Worldwide” pop star Pitbull on a stage underneath the campus’ iconic clock tower.

    Oklahoma’s celebration started Sunday night with a “Race to the SEC” 5k race through the heart of campus, with midnight sales of SEC merchandise and fireworks.

    Monday morning, former Sooners coach Barry Switzer will co-host a celebration breakfast in Tulsa and Oklahoma will host a campus party at the football stadium with live music and entertainment.

    “We couldn’t be more excited to join the SEC. Our teams are poised for success and look forward to the competition with many of America’s most outstanding universities,” Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione said.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Reds beat St. Louis 9-4

    Reds beat St. Louis 9-4

    [ad_1]

    ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jonathan India doubled twice in his eighth consecutive multihit game, and the Cincinnati Reds beat the St. Louis Cardinals 9-4 on Saturday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Cincinnati Reds beat the St. Louis Cardinals 9-4 on Saturday
    • Paul Goldschmidt hit his 11th homer for St. Louis, which beat Cincinnati 1-0 on Friday
    • Austin Wynns hit three doubles for Cincinnati in his first major league game since Oct. 1
    • Reds RHP Hunter Greene (5-3, 3.79 ERA) will face Cardinals RHP Lance Lynn (3-3, 3.86 ERA) on Sunday

    India scored a run and drove in two more. He has at least one double in each of his last seven games. He is batting .512 (21 for 41) with one homer and six RBIs during an 11-game hit streak.

    “He just looks so good out there in every part of the game,” Reds manager David Bell said. “He’s moving well. Physically, he looks great, and we’ve always known he can hit. It seems like he’s been here for so long, and he’s still young and getting better.”

    Austin Wynns hit three doubles for Cincinnati in his first major league game since Oct. 1 for Colorado against Minnesota. Elly De La Cruz doubled and tripled, and Will Benson and Stuart Fairchild each had two RBIs.

    Paul Goldschmidt hit his 11th homer for St. Louis, which beat Cincinnati 1-0 on Friday. Sonny Gray (9-5) was charged with six runs, three earned, and seven hits in 4 1/3 innings.

    Cincinnati (39-44) broke it open when it sent 10 batters to the plate in a six-run fifth. With one out and the bases loaded, De La Cruz scampered home when third baseman Nolan Arenado mishandled a potential double-play grounder.

    “It just didn’t go our way,” Gray said. “Once that fifth inning kind of went the way it does, it kind of felt like after Marte’s at-bat the momentum was completely on their side. We were kind of flirting with it at the time. It kind of went to their side and then that inning kind of escalated on us.”

    Fairchild and Benson hit consecutive two-run singles off John King with two down, and Wynns doubled home Benson for an 8-1 lead.

    “The approach off Sonny was so good,” Bell said. “Staying through the middle of the field, hitting line drives. When we’re not hitting home runs, it’s nice to get rewarded by hitting doubles.”

    Reds starter Carson Spiers (2-1) allowed two runs, one earned, and three hits in six innings.

    “Utilizing both sides of the plate, that’s kind of what I did today,” Spiers said. “Very efficient, very effective early, especially setting the tone. I think that’s when I kind of get into a groove and things kind of start rolling. Changeups were working really good early and then spotted some cutters up and fastballs up so it worked out.”

    Goldschmidt went deep in the sixth, stopping Spiers’ streak of 43 consecutive innings without allowing a home run.

    Gray struck out and walked one in his shortest start of the season. It was his second career start against the Reds, who traded him to Minnesota in March 2022.

    “I thought Sonny actually did a good job,” Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said. “Overall man, he made his pitch there at the end, and it didn’t go our way.”

    Trainer’s room

    Reds: OF Jake Fraley (bruised right calf) returned to the lineup and started at designated hitter for the first time since being scratched before Wednesday’s game at Philadelphia.

    Cardinals: OF Lars Nootbaar (oblique strain) started in right field and went 0 for 3 while playing five innings for Double-A Springfield in the first game of a rehabilitation assignment on Friday night. Nootbaar is scheduled to play seven innings for Springfield on Saturday night.

    Up next

    Reds RHP Hunter Greene (5-3, 3.79 ERA) will face Cardinals RHP Lance Lynn (3-3, 3.86 ERA) on Sunday in the finale of the four-game set.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Mosley to coach, Suggs to play for 2024 Team USA Basketball Select Team

    Mosley to coach, Suggs to play for 2024 Team USA Basketball Select Team

    [ad_1]

    ORLANDO, Fla. — Magic coach Jamahl Mosley will coach the USA Basketball Men’s Select Team for a second year in a row and Orlando guard Jalen Suggs was selected to play for the team, which will train with the USA Basketball Men’s National Team as it prepares for the 2024 Olympic Games Paris 2024 next month.


    What You Need To Know

    • Orlando’s Jamahl Mosley will lead the coaching staff for the USA Basketball Men’s Select Team in July 
    • Magic guard Jalen Suggs was selected to play for the team, too
    • The select team will work with the USA Olympic team as it prepares for the 2024 Paris Games

    Plans call for the select team to work with the Olympic team head-to-head for the first three days of practice — July 6 through July 8 — in Las Vegas. What typically happens at that point is a handful of select teamers will be invited to remain with the Olympic team and travel with them to Abu Dhabi, where Olympic preparations will continue with more practices and two exhibitions.  

    Duke signee Cooper Flagg, the consensus national high school player of the year out of Montverde last season and a prospective top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, also was named to the Select Team. The other members of the Select Team are NBA champion Boston Celtics guard Payton Pritchard, Miami Heat guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., Detroit Pistons center Jalen Duren, Golden State Warriors teammates Trayce Jackson-Davis and Brandin Podziemski, Houston Rockets teammates Jabari Smith Jr. and Amen Thompson, Charlotte Hornets guard/forward Brandon Miller, New Orleans Pelicans forward Trey Murphy, Sacramento Kings forward Keegan Murray, Utah two-way player Micah Potter, Nigel Hayes-Davis of Turkish club Fenerbahce and longtime USA Basketball standout Langston Galloway. 

    A common attribute of most of the Select Team members is their gritty defensive player as the USA men try to get ready for the physical play of international basketball.

    Mosley, who was also head coach of the USA Basketball Men’s Select Team in 2023, served as an assistant coach on the 2021 USA Basketball Men’s Select Team and as an assistant coach at the 2018 USA Basketball Men’s National Team minicamp.

    Indiana Pacers assistant coach Jim Boylen and Purdue coach Matt Painter will be on Mosley’s staff. They’ll work in concert with the Olympic team coaching staff — head coach Steve Kerr of Golden State, assistants Erik Spoelstra of Miami, Tyronn Lue of the Los Angeles Clippers and Gonzaga’s Mark Few.

    Suggs, 6 feet 5 and 212 pounds, played and started in 75 regular-season games last season with Orlando, averaging 12.6 points, 3.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists and a team-high 1.41 steals in 27 minutes per game. He shot 39.7% (153-for-385) from 3-point range. Suggs was named to the 2023-24 NBA All-Defensive Second Team after tying for eighth in the NBA in steals and 12th in steals-to-turnover ratio (0.80, 106/132).

    Magic forward Paolo Banchero played for the 2023 USA Basketball Men’s National Team that placed fourth in the 2023 FIBA World Cup but is not playing this year. That team included many of the NBA’s rising stars as the league’s more experienced standouts declined to play.

    For the Paris Olympics, many of the league’s longtime established stars — including Warriors guard Steph Curry, who has never played on an Olympic team — said they wanted to play for the national team and were selected.  Many of this year’s national team members, such as Lakers forward LeBron James and Phoenix Suns forward Kevin Durant, have played for the United States on previous gold medal-winning Olympic teams.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Simone Biles moves closer to 3rd Olympic trip

    Simone Biles moves closer to 3rd Olympic trip

    [ad_1]

    MINNEAPOLIS — Maybe the most remarkable thing about Simone Biles’ decade-plus run redefining what’s possible in gymnastics is how she has managed to stay healthy while doing it.

    She is well-versed in the danger lurking at every turn, every twist, every landing. Blocking it all out and forging ahead may be her greatest skill, one that was put to the test on Friday night at the U.S. Olympic trials.


    What You Need To Know

    • Before Simone Biles hopped on the uneven bars in her first event, Kayla DiCello’s hopes of joining Biles in Paris ended with a torn right Achilles suffered a few feet away on vault
    • Biles will head to Paris heavily favored to bookend the Olympic all-around gold she won as a teenager in 2016
    • She took a two-year break from competition after returning from Japan but has looked as good as ever for most of the last 12 months, joking after her record ninth national title earlier this month she’s “aging like fine wine”
    • The biggest question heading into Sunday will center on who will land the fifth spot

    Before Biles hopped on the uneven bars in her first event, Kayla DiCello’s hopes of joining Biles in Paris ended with a torn right Achilles suffered a few feet away on vault.

    A short time later, Shilese Jones gingerly made her off the floor with a leg injury that left the six-time world championship medalist’s status very much up in the air.

    It’s a lot to take in, even for a 27-year-old who has made the impossible look impossibly easy so often for so long.

    The whole meet is, as she put it, “so stressful, so heavy.”

    Still.

    “If we can do this, we can do anything,” she added.

    So while there were some uncharacteristically sloppy moments early, there was a splash of Biles’ singular brilliance late on her way to an all-around total of 58.900 that put her position to lock up an automatic berth on the five-woman team that will be announced on Sunday night.

    Still, it was hard to shake the image of two of her peers exiting in tears, all of it accompanied by an ever-present fear that never really goes away no matter how long you do this for a living.

    “There is anxiety,” Biles longtime co-coach Laurent Landi said. “(It’s) all right am I the next one to get hurt? What’s going to happen to me?’”

    Landi’s advice was simple and direct, long the most effective way to communicate with the biggest star of the U.S. Olympic movement.

    “You can’t control this,” Landi told her. “So control the controllable.”

    She did. Even on a night when she wasn’t at her unparalleled best, she left little doubt she remains in control of her gymnastics and — perhaps most important of all — in control of her emotions.

    While there was an uncharacteristically sloppy and shaky balance beam routine that left Biles cursing for all the cameras to see, there was also a standing ovation that accompanied her Yurchenko Double Pike vault, the one that’s named after her in the sport’s Code of Points and is among the most difficult done in the world by anyone, man or woman.

    And so it goes for Biles, who will head to Paris heavily favored to bookend the Olympic all-around gold she won as a teenager in 2016.

    A lot has happened since then, marriage, a fistful of world titles and a memorable trip to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, where she removed herself from multiple finals to focus on her mental health.

    She took a two-year break from competition after returning from Japan but has looked as good as ever for most of the last 12 months, joking after her record ninth national title earlier this month she’s “aging like fine wine.”

    Biles hardly seems to be the only one.

    Jordan Chiles, 23, is surging toward an Olympic spot just as she did three years ago. She finished in the top six on all four events on Friday, heady territory considering injuries earlier this year appeared to dim her chances of making it to Paris.

    Now, not so much. Yet Chiles laughed when asked if her previous experience in this spot helped her navigate the complex emotions of a meet that can alter the life of the five women who hear their name called at the end of it.

    “No,” Chiles said. “I literally was saying this earlier this morning. I was like ‘No matter what meet I’ve done in my life, this is the most stressful one I’ve done in my whole entire career.’ Because it’s that one night it’s like you either find out you make it or you don’t.”

    Chiles appears on the verge of a return to her sport’s biggest stage. So does reigning Olympic champion Sunisa Lee.

    The 21-year-old Lee, who has spent most of the last two years battling kidney-related health issues, used a pair of excellent sets on uneven bars and balance beam in front of a hometown crowd to finish third.

    Behind Lee was 24-year-old Jade Carey, the reigning Olympic champion on floor exercise. Carey, who has spent the last three years deftly straddling the line between collegiate and elite gymnastics, finished second behind Biles on vault and fourth on floor.

    The biggest question heading into Sunday will center on who will land the fifth spot. Joscelyn Roberson — at 18 one of the younger athletes in the 13-woman field — used a powerful set on floor to finish fifth.

    Yet USA Gymnastics officials stress they are not married to the idea of taking the top five in rank order at the end of trials, which is what happened under previous leadership in 2021.

    Kaliya Lincoln put up the second-best score on floor. Hezley Rivera appears to be improving with each passing meet and 2020 Olympic alternate and four-time world championship medalist Leanne Wong has plenty of international experience.

    Jones, the top American gymnast not named Biles when healthy, has spent most of the last two years looking essentially like a lock. That likely ended before the competition even officially began

    The 21-year-old arrived at the Target Center already nursing a slightly torn labrum in her right shoulder. Then she landed awkwardly while warming up on vault, wrenching her left knee.

    She exited briefly but returned to be introduced with the rest of the field. She skipped the vault in the first rotation but returned to grit through the uneven bars, her best event.

    While Jones put together an excellent 14.625 even while doing a slightly watered-down routine, she gingerly made her way off the podium. She talked to medical staff for several minutes before leaving for good.

    Whether Jones tries to give it a shot on Sunday is unclear. What is clear — what has always been clear since making her senior debut in 2013 — is that there is Biles, and there is everyone else.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Triangle teens represent Team USA in overseas ultimate tournament

    Triangle teens represent Team USA in overseas ultimate tournament

    [ad_1]

    DURHAM, N.C. — The United States under-20 women’s world junior ultimate team is no stranger to success. It’s more accurate to say they’re no stranger to pure domination, having won the World Flying Disc Federation World Junior Ultimate Championships six times out of the last 10 tournaments.

    The times they didn’t come in first, they placed second or third.

    This year, as the team heads to Birmingham, England, it will bring three athletes from the North Carolina Triangle. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The 2024 World Flying Disc Federation World Junior Ultimate Championships will take place in Birmingham, England, on July 21-27
    • Grace McDaniel, Caroleen DeWolf and Isabella Russell will represent Team USA on the Under-20 Women’s team, holding three of the 25 total spots out of the entire country
    • McDaniel will be heading to App State to start college just 10 days after returning from England, where she will play on the club ultimate team for the Mountaineers
    • 300 women applied for Team USA


    Grace McDaniel (Hillsborough), Caroleen DeWolf (Durham) and Isabella Russell (Apex) own three of the 25 spots on a roster that represents the entire United States.

    The tournament takes place July 21 through 27 and the team heads across the Atlantic Ocean on July 19. Three hundred women applied to make the team, and 50 women from each geographical half of the country were then selected as contenders for the roster. From there, it was narrowed down even more, and North Carolina is heavily represented as the hotbed for ultimate continues to succeed. 

    “Playing overseas is so exciting because I get to meet other people from all over the world, who are also like the top in their country and just like, pushing myself and my team and really grinding it out and working with my teammates,” McDaniel said.

    Ultimate is a competitive team sport played with a flying disc that once originally called ultimate Frisbee.

    The world championships for ultimate is good practice for what both McDaniel and DeWolf hope is one day an Olympic sport in which they can further represent their country, while playing the sport they love. They’ve both been involved with the sport for over five years and say it is easy to access.

    “Hopefully one day we’re an Olympic sport,” DeWolf said. “I feel like there’s a really big range of levels to play, like you can just go out and play pickup, and be brand new to Frisbee and not know how to throw, but then also there’s like obviously all the way up to being able to play for the country, which is really great opportunity.”

    McDaniel says that while it’s great she gets to experience the trip of a lifetime to the United Kingdom, it’s also great to serve as a role model for younger girls who are getting involved with ultimate at a younger age with the Triangle Kitty Hawks, the team sponsored by USA Ultimate that serves girls 17 and under.

    “We really pushed this past winter to up our U-17 women players but our Kitty Hawks team are a U-17 team, and that’s really huge,” McDaniel said. “They’ve got like 30-35 girls, so it’s really exciting to start seeing that program build back.”

    McDaniel says when she returns, she’ll get packed for a new adventure just 10 days last. She will be attending App State, starting her summer semester. It’s in Boone that she will be furthering her ultimate game as she looks to join the App State club ultimate team. 

    To follow along with Team USA’s journey in the United Kingdom, check here

     

    [ad_2]

    Evan Abramson

    Source link

  • Royals hit 4 home runs and send Guardians to their 3rd straight loss, 10-3

    Royals hit 4 home runs and send Guardians to their 3rd straight loss, 10-3

    [ad_1]

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Salvador Perez, Hunter Renfroe, Kyle Isbel and Vinnie Pasquantino homered to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 10-3 win over the AL-leading Cleveland Guardians on Friday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Salvador Perez, Hunter Renfroe, Kyle Isbel and Vinnie Pasquantino homered to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 10-3 win over the AL-leading Cleveland Guardians
    • Perez hit his 13th homer of the season in the second inning, a 447-foot shot over the bullpen in left to tie the game at 1-all
    • Renfroe followed with his eighth homer of the season that put the Royals ahead to stay
    • Guardians starter Triston McKenzie (3-5) lasted just 2 1/3 innings, allowing five runs on five hits, with three strikeouts and three walks

    Perez hit his 13th homer of the season in the second inning, a 447-foot shot over the bullpen in left to tie the game at 1-all. Renfroe followed with his eighth homer of the season that put the Royals ahead to stay. Pasquantino added a two-run shot in the eighth inning, his ninth of the season that extended the Kansas City lead to 10-3. The KC trio went a combined 6 for 12 with six RBIs and five runs scored.

    “We have a great offense and it’s always great to show it,” Renfroe said. “Our bullpen has been great for us as well.”

    Guardians starter Triston McKenzie (3-5) lasted just 2 1/3 innings, allowing five runs on five hits, with three strikeouts and three walks.

    “I wasn’t commanding the zone early on, but I thought I did a good job working around that,” McKenzie said. “Some of those guys were able to put good swings on the pitches when they were ahead of the count. I thought my stuff looked good I just fell behind guys and never gave myself a chance to get ahead of guys.”

    Isbel hit his sixth homer of the season in the fourth inning, and Freddy Fermin added an RBI in the fifth.

    “I thought there was good discipline and good patience when we needed to be,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “And then to continue to expand later in the game was really good.”

    José Ramírez hit his 22nd homer of the season, a 436-foot blast in the first inning that gave Cleveland the early lead.

    Alec Marsh (6-5) gave up the homer to Ramírez and worked six innings, giving up four hits. He struck out five and walked two.

    Over the last 10 games, Royals starting pitchers have a combined 1.98 ERA and have thrown six quality starts.

    Kansas City has won four of its last five games. Cleveland dropped its third straight.

    “Every series is important for us no matter where we are playing,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said. “This is a very important series for us and we lost the first two but we’ve got two more to turn this around.”

    Up Next

    Cleveland sends RHP Tanner Bibee (6-2, 3.50 ERA) to the mound to face LHP Cole Ragans (5-5, 3.03) for Kansas City on Saturday.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Ryan Helsley, Alec Burleson spark the Cardinals to 1-0 victory over the Reds

    Ryan Helsley, Alec Burleson spark the Cardinals to 1-0 victory over the Reds

    [ad_1]

    ST. LOUIS (AP) — Ryan Helsley closed for his major league-leading 29th consecutive save and Alec Burleson drove in the lone run, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 1-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Friday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Ryan Helsley closed for his major league-leading 29th consecutive save and Alec Burleson drove in the lone run, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 1-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Friday night
    • Helsley pitched a 1-2-3 ninth inning
    • Left fielder Brendan Donovan made a leaping catch in front of the wall in left to end the game
    • Andre Pallante (4-3) pitched 5 1/3 scoreless innings, checking the Reds on four hits

    Helsley pitched a 1-2-3 ninth inning. Left fielder Brendan Donovan made a leaping catch in front of the wall in left on a ball hit by Stuart Fairchild to end the game.

    “I thought it had a chance to go,” said Donovan, a former utility Gold Glove winner. “I know how fly balls play in this ballpark. I got a good bead on it.”

    St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol was impressed.

    “He got a good jump. It went further than I thought,” Marmol said. “A really nice play. He’s made several good catches like that over the last few weeks. He’s been really good out there.”

    Cincinnati manager David Bell said he thought Anderson had tied it.

    “Off the bat, yeah, I thought it had a chance. This is a big ballpark,” Bell said. “All you can do is put a good swing on it. We came up short. We weren’t able to score. Give the Cardinals pitchers credit.”

    Helsley hasn’t blown a save since March 30, his first outing of the season against the Dodgers in Los Angeles. Helsley did earn the victory in that game.

    With one more save, Helsley will tie the 30 saves that Hall of Famer Lee Smith posted in 1993 before the MLB All-Star Game, a Cardinals record.

    Andre Pallante (4-3) pitched 5 1/3 scoreless innings, checking the Reds on four hits. He struck out five, walked three and hit a batter. Pallante has won all five decisions against the Reds in his career over his 14 appearances.

    “As long as I got the ball in decent spots, I had good results on it,” said Pallante, who developed a blister on his big toe in the third inning and worked through it. “It’s the command that’s important.”

    Pallante wriggled out of a two-out bases-loaded jam in the fifth by getting Elly De La Cruz to ground out.

    “I felt pretty confident there against De La Cruz,” Pallante said. “I thought my fastball was really good against him. I trusted it and got it inside.”

    Frankie Montas (3-6), who signed as a free agent in the offseason, allowed one run on two hits in six innings.

    “I thought it was a really good game by both sides,” Montas said. “I was throwing strikes today, attacking the hitters. I wasn’t being too predictable.”

    The Cardinals scored on a sacrifice fly to short center by Burleson in the third inning. Shortstop De La Cruz caught the ball with his back to the infield. Michael Siani led off with a double and took third on a ground out.

    “I’ve played with Elly,” Siani said. “I know how talented he is. I know he’s going after the ball. I know he was pretty far out there. In that spot, take a chance and go. I mean, he’s got to make a perfect throw to get me out. Play aggressive.”

    Transactions

    Reds: Selected C Austin Wynns from Triple A-Louisville. They also placed C Tyler Stephenson on the paternity list, and designated OF Peyton Burdick for assignment.

    Cardinals: Called up RHP Gordon Graceffo, the team’s No. 8 prospect and a fifth-round pick in 2021, from Triple-A Memphis. He was 8-5 with a 3.84 ERA in 14 starts. … Optioned RHP Kyle Leahy to Memphis.

    Trainer’s Room

    Reds: OF Jake Fraley (right calf contusion) and 3B Jeimer Candelario (hamstring tendinitis) each missed their third straight game. Neither player is expected to require an IL stint.

    Cardinals: OF Lars Nootbaar (oblique strain) began a rehab assignment at Double-A Springfield on Friday. He was hurt May 29.

    Up Next

    Cardinals RHP Sonny Gray (9-4, 2.81) was set to start Saturday against RHP Carson Spiers (1-1, 3.45).

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • One of N.C.’s top amateur soccer players is going to Spain to sharpen his skills

    One of N.C.’s top amateur soccer players is going to Spain to sharpen his skills

    [ad_1]

    RALEIGH, N.C. — A high school soccer star in Raleigh is going on an international trip to gain professional skills in the sport. 

    Cameron Williams, a recent Wake Forest High School graduate, wants to play professional soccer and will do whatever it takes to do that, including going overseas without family by his side.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Cameron Williams graduated from Wake Forest High School in 2024 and starred on the men’s soccer team
    •  Williams is going overseas to Spain in August to join FC Odisea to work on his futbol skills and earn a higher education
    •  FC Odisea is an international club and senior team for FC Odisea Academy 
    • FC Odisea trains players from across the world, and is located in Castellón, Spain (Eastern coast of Spain)


    Williams is one of the top amateur soccer players from North Carolina. That prefix “amateur” might disappear sooner than you think, however, because the 18-year-old is taking his talents to Spain, where the game of soccer is worshiped.

    “It’s not like any other sport,” Williams said. “It involves everybody in the world, not just 11 people. How just one little ball that someone thought of years ago could just stand on everybody in the world.” 

    College soccer certainly was an option for Williams, who will be heading to Spain in late August. He’ll be playing for FC Odisea Academy. The experience will allow him to pursue higher education, while also being shown to the top talent scouts in the world. 

    It’s not a professional deal yet, but it certainly puts him on the road for success, as he looks to become a star like one of his favorite players, Cristiano Ronaldo. The drive and commitment to the game is something he tries to emulate in his own game as he’s grown up in North Carolina. 

    “Coming out of high school and knowing that obviously the route my friends took when they went to soccer and played for college, I’d say that this is the best fit for me where I want to go later in life,” Williams said.

    MLS isn’t where his destiny lies, as the soccer player admits he wants to play with better players than he sees compete here in the United States. Williams wants to play for the best clubs in Europe. For an ambitious goal, Williams needed an experienced coach, and who better to guide the young star than the parent of three professional soccer players with ties to North Carolina. Hassan Pinto is the father of current N.C. Courage midfielder Brianna Pinto. Hassan Pinto says he sees aspects of his children’s game in Cameron’s.

    “I see the drive, the speed, the turnover, and in addition to that, I have another son who plays at FC Cincinnati in the MLS, Malik Pinto, and I see a little bit more of Malik in Cam,” Hassan Pinto said. “Super athletic, guys that love the game. Cam has all those attributes that you need to get to the next level. And I think his journey to Europe is going to help him with that.”

    Pinto himself played for UNC back in the day, and would also make the under-18 Men’s United States National Team. All three of his children play or played at one point professional soccer. Pinto knows what it takes to be a star, and is trying to instill those life lessons and ethics into Williams before he leaves for Spain in a few short weeks.

    With so many soccer players from around the world in academy systems and competing for so few starting positions on European clubs, there’s a question as to what will give Williams the edge he needs to succeed. 

    “One thing you look for in a star player is the ability to turnover,” Pinto said. “And he’s just a difference maker, a kid that can get on the flank and he has a speed that is just different. He has a turnover rate that is different, and it enables him to get into good spaces and score big time goals.”

    The path to becoming a professional athlete can be a tough one, and it doesn’t get easier if that career is overseas. However, Williams has the intellect, awareness and talent to make it to the top even if it means having to leave behind his family 4,000 miles and an ocean away.

    “When people graduate from high school, they think about, ‘oh, I’m ready to go into college, I’m ready to go major in this,’” Williams said. “I felt like that was kind of normal, and I kind of like the idea of doing something else, and I know it’s going to be a lonely path to take, but I know everybody supported me in this way and in their own way, and so yeah, I would say I’m more excited than scared.” 

    Williams will be over in Europe for an indefinite amount of time, however, he takes some solace in the fact that one of his friends who trains with him and has competed against him in the past is also heading to Spain to join an academy system. Jackson Standley will be completeing his high school degree online, while playing for the Fut Edu Spain Academy, just a couple hours away from where Williams will be located. 

     

    [ad_2]

    Evan Abramson

    Source link

  • Ohio University partners with local brewery for officially licensed beer

    Ohio University partners with local brewery for officially licensed beer

    [ad_1]

    ATHENS, Ohio — Ohio University Athletics is partnering with Jackie O’s Pub & Brewery in order to have an officially licensed Ohio Athletics beer.


    What You Need To Know

    • Ohio University Athletics is partnering with Jackie O’s Pub & Brewery in order to have an officially licensed Ohio Athletics beer
    • The beer will be sold in Ohio in mid-July
    • It will be twelve-packs of the Golden Ale called Ricky but will feature the official Ohio Athletics logo emblazoned on the side

    The beer will be sold in Ohio in mid-July. It will be 12-packs of the Golden Ale called Ricky but will feature the official Ohio Athletics logo emblazoned on the side.

    “Jackie O’s is a natural fit for a branded beer collaboration,” Director of Athletics Julie Cromer said in a press release. “We’re excited about the partnership with a Bobcat-owned, local brand that will resonate with our fanbase. Bobcat fans will be able to enjoy Ricky in Peden Stadium, the Convocation Center, and across the state of Ohio.”


    The release states that Ricky is the brewery’s No. 1 draft beer statewide and that it is also called Rick Bricks in reference to the “brick foundations that cover Athens.”

    The brewery, which has Athens and Columbus locations, is owned by Art Oestrike, a graduate of Ohio University and also an instructor.

    “I feel like I, personally, have come a really long way since my days in James Hall way back when,” Oestrike said in the release. “We are honored and feel very humbled by the opportunity for Jackie O’s to present this collaboration to alumni in and around the great state of Ohio with Ohio University!”

    The beer will be hitting store shelves in mid-July, found at locations serviced by Cavalier Distributing. It will also be available during football games at Peden Stadium as well as at the Convocation Center, according to the release.

    [ad_2]

    Cody Thompson

    Source link

  • Atlanta Hawks take Risacher of France first overall in NBA Draft

    Atlanta Hawks take Risacher of France first overall in NBA Draft

    [ad_1]

    The French Revolution has come to the NBA.

    French wing Zaccharie Risacher, 19, was selected by the Atlanta Hawks with the first overall pick in the 2024 NBA draft.


    What You Need To Know

    • French wing Zaccharie Risacher was selected first overall by the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday in the 2024 NBA Draft
    • Risacher’s selection marks the second-straight year that the top selection came from France after the San Antonio Spurs picked Victor Wembanyama first overall last year
    • Alexandre Sarr, another French player, was drafted second overall by the Washington Wizards
    • NBA commissioner Adam Silver kicked off the night by honoring the recent deaths of two NBA giants, Bill Walton, who died on May 27 at 71, and Jerry West, who died on June 12 at 86



    Risacher, who has been projected as one of the top defenders in this year’s rookie class, will join a once-exciting Hawks franchise that’s stumbled over the last few years despite the promise of star point guard Trae Young.

    His selection marks the second straight year that the top overall selection comes from France. 

    Last year, the San Antonio Spurs picked Victor Wembanyama first overall. Wembanyama, who was widely predicted as a potential franchise-changing talent, made good on that promise, winning the NBA’s Rookie of the Year award unanimously.

    Fellow Frenchmen Alexandre Sarr and Tidjane Salaun soon followed Risacher’s selection. 

    Sarr, a 7-foot-1-inch center most recently played in the Australian NBL, was selected second overall by the Washington Wizards. Salaun, a 6-foot 10-inch forward, was taken sixth overall by the Charlotte Hornets; he most recently played in France’s LNB. Later in the first round, the New York Knicks selected another French-born player, Pacome Dadiet,

    Their selections made NBA history multiple times over. 

    It’s the first time in NBA history that international players were taken with the top two picks and the first time three international players from one country were taken in the top 10 of an NBA Draft.

    Most of the excitement occurred less than 24 hours before the draft, as the New York Knicks went all in, trading a raft of draft picks and veteran player Bojan Bogdanovic to the Brooklyn Nets for Mikal Bridges. 

    Bridges, a 27-year-old wing, is renowned for his defense, though he foundered a bit after moving to Brooklyn from the Phoenix Suns two years ago. His move across the East River links him with a handful of former college teammates and friends from his alma mater, Villanova University. 

    NBA commissioner Adam Silver kicked off the night by honoring the recent deaths of two NBA giants, Bill Walton, who died on May 27 at 71, and Jerry West, who died on June 12 at 86. 

    Walton was a two-time NCAA champion and a two-time NBA champion, one each with the Portland Trail Blazers and Boston Celtics, a passing big man whose career was derailed by injuries. But he became beloved as a personality off the court and on the microphone, especially as he sought to boost the college game in his later years. 

    West, a singularly driven competitor, was one of the greatest players in the storied history of the Los Angeles Lakers and the league. A three-time inductee to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, he won only one championship as a player but contributed nine as a basketball executive, building dynasties with the Lakers and the Golden State Warriors.

    West also holds a singular honor: He’s the inspiration for the NBA’s logo.

     

    2024 NBA Draft First Round selections:

    1. Atlanta Hawks, Zaccharie Risacher

    2. Washington Wizards, Alexandre Sarr

    3. Houston Rockets, Reed Sheppard

    4. San Antonio Spurs, Stephon Castle

    5. Detroit Pistons, Ron Holland II

    6. Charlotte Hornets, Tidjane Salaun

    7. Portland Trail Blazers, Donovan Clingan

    8. San Antonio Spurs, Rob Dillingham (Traded to Minnesota)

    9. Memphis Grizzlies, Zach Edey

    10. Utah Jazz, Cody Williams

    11. Chicago Bulls, Matas Buzelis

    12. Oklahoma City Thunder, Nikola Topic

    13. Sacramento Kings, Devin Carter

    14. Portland Trail Blazers, Carlton Carrington (Traded to Washington)

    15. Miami Heat, Kel’el Ware

    16. Philadelphia 76ers, Jared McCain

    17. Los Angeles Lakers, Dalton Knecht

    18. Orlando Magic, Tristan da Silva

    19. Toronto Raptors, Ja’Kobe Walter

    20. Cleveland Cavaliers, Jaylon Tyson

    21. New Orleans Pelicans, Yves Missi

    22. Phoenix Suns, DaRon Holmes II (Traded to Denver)

    23. Milwaukee Bucks, AJ Johnson

    24. New York Knicks, Kyshawn George (Traded to Washington)

    25. New York Knicks, Pacome Dadiet

    26. Washington Wizards, Dillon Jones (Traded to Oklahoma City)

    27. Minnesota Timberwolves, Terrence Shannon Jr.

    28. Denver Nuggets, Ryan Dunn (Traded to Phoenix)

    29. Utah Jazz, Isaiah Collier

    30. Boston Celtics, Baylor Scheierman

    [ad_2]

    David Mendez

    Source link

  • Atlanta Hawks take Risacher of France first overall in NBA Draft

    Atlanta Hawks take Risacher of France first overall in NBA Draft

    [ad_1]

    The French Revolution has come to the NBA.

    French wing Zaccharie Risacher, 19, was selected by the Atlanta Hawks with the first overall pick in the 2024 NBA draft.


    What You Need To Know

    • French wing Zaccharie Risacher was selected first overall by the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday in the 2024 NBA Draft
    • Risacher’s selection marks the second-straight year that the top selection came from France after the San Antonio Spurs picked Victor Wembanyama first overall last year
    • Alexandre Sarr, another French player, was drafted second overall by the Washington Wizards
    • NBA commissioner Adam Silver kicked off the night by honoring the recent deaths of two NBA giants, Bill Walton, who died on May 27 at 71, and Jerry West, who died on June 12 at 86



    Risacher, who has been projected as one of the top defenders in this year’s rookie class, will join a once-exciting Hawks franchise that’s stumbled over the last few years despite the promise of star point guard Trae Young.

    His selection marks the second straight year that the top overall selection comes from France. 

    Last year, the San Antonio Spurs picked Victor Wembanyama first overall. Wembanyama, who was widely predicted as a potential franchise-changing talent, made good on that promise, winning the NBA’s Rookie of the Year award unanimously.

    Fellow Frenchmen Alexandre Sarr and Tidjane Salaun soon followed Risacher’s selection. 

    Sarr, a 7-foot-1-inch center most recently played in the Australian NBL, was selected second overall by the Washington Wizards. Salaun, a 6-foot 10-inch forward, was taken sixth overall by the Charlotte Hornets; he most recently played in France’s LNB. Later in the first round, the New York Knicks selected another French-born player, Pacome Dadiet,

    Their selections made NBA history multiple times over. 

    It’s the first time in NBA history that international players were taken with the top two picks and the first time three international players from one country were taken in the top 10 of an NBA Draft.

    Most of the excitement occurred less than 24 hours before the draft, as the New York Knicks went all in, trading a raft of draft picks and veteran player Bojan Bogdanovic to the Brooklyn Nets for Mikal Bridges. 

    Bridges, a 27-year-old wing, is renowned for his defense, though he foundered a bit after moving to Brooklyn from the Phoenix Suns two years ago. His move across the East River links him with a handful of former college teammates and friends from his alma mater, Villanova University. 

    NBA commissioner Adam Silver kicked off the night by honoring the recent deaths of two NBA giants, Bill Walton, who died on May 27 at 71, and Jerry West, who died on June 12 at 86. 

    Walton was a two-time NCAA champion and a two-time NBA champion, one each with the Portland Trail Blazers and Boston Celtics, a passing big man whose career was derailed by injuries. But he became beloved as a personality off the court and on the microphone, especially as he sought to boost the college game in his later years. 

    West, a singularly driven competitor, was one of the greatest players in the storied history of the Los Angeles Lakers and the league. A three-time inductee to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, he won only one championship as a player but contributed nine as a basketball executive, building dynasties with the Lakers and the Golden State Warriors.

    West also holds a singular honor: He’s the inspiration for the NBA’s logo.

     

    2024 NBA Draft First Round selections:

    1. Atlanta Hawks, Zaccharie Risacher

    2. Washington Wizards, Alexandre Sarr

    3. Houston Rockets, Reed Sheppard

    4. San Antonio Spurs, Stephon Castle

    5. Detroit Pistons, Ron Holland II

    6. Charlotte Hornets, Tidjane Salaun

    7. Portland Trail Blazers, Donovan Clingan

    8. San Antonio Spurs, Rob Dillingham (Traded to Minnesota)

    9. Memphis Grizzlies, Zach Edey

    10. Utah Jazz, Cody Williams

    11. Chicago Bulls, Matas Buzelis

    12. Oklahoma City Thunder, Nikola Topic

    13. Sacramento Kings, Devin Carter

    14. Portland Trail Blazers, Carlton Carrington (Traded to Washington)

    15. Miami Heat, Kel’el Ware

    16. Philadelphia 76ers, Jared McCain

    17. Los Angeles Lakers, Dalton Knecht

    18. Orlando Magic, Tristan da Silva

    19. Toronto Raptors, Ja’Kobe Walter

    20. Cleveland Cavaliers, Jaylon Tyson

    21. New Orleans Pelicans, Yves Missi

    22. Phoenix Suns, DaRon Holmes II (Traded to Denver)

    23. Milwaukee Bucks, AJ Johnson

    24. New York Knicks, Kyshawn George (Traded to Washington)

    25. New York Knicks, Pacome Dadiet

    26. Washington Wizards, Dillon Jones (Traded to Oklahoma City)

    27. Minnesota Timberwolves, Terrence Shannon Jr.

    28. Denver Nuggets, Ryan Dunn (Traded to Phoenix)

    29. Utah Jazz, Isaiah Collier

    30. Boston Celtics, Baylor Scheierman

    [ad_2]

    David Mendez

    Source link

  • Rays’ 9th-inning rally comes up short as Mariners avoid sweep 5-2

    Rays’ 9th-inning rally comes up short as Mariners avoid sweep 5-2

    [ad_1]

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.  — George Kirby allowed one run in six innings, Cal Raleigh hit a three-run homer, and the American League West-leading Seattle Mariners avoided a three-game sweep by defeating the Tampa Bay Rays 5-2 on Wednesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Rays tried to stage a rally in the ninth inning but lost to the Mariners 5-2
    • Seattle avoided a three-game sweep with its victory
    • Tampa Bay reached the midway point at 40-41. They were 54-27 at the same point last season
    • Rays starter Ryan Pepiot gave up one run and one hit over 5-1/3 innings

    Seattle went 3-6 on a trip to Cleveland, Miami and Tampa Bay and at 19-25 is the only division leader with a losing road record.

    “It’s just good to end the road trip on a good note.” Kirby said. “Happy flight.”

    Seattle closer Andrés Muñoz, who blew his second save in 15 chances on Monday, loaded the bases with no outs in the ninth on two walks and a hit by pitch with the Mariners ahead 5-1. Richie Palacios hit into a run-scoring forceout off Trent Thornton, who got his first big-league save when Amed Rosario grounded into a game-ending double play.

    “Muny didn’t feel good today,” Mariners manager Scott Servais said. “Just the whole body stuff, and that happens once in a while. You could tell right away he wasn’t on top of his game. A ton of credit to Thorny.”

    Kirby (7-5) scattered four hits and struck out seven, his sixth consecutive start giving up two runs or fewer.

    Raleigh put Seattle up 3-1 with his 14th homer, a sixth-inning drive off Shawn Armstrong (2-2). The reliever walked the struggling Julio Rodríguez, who had three hits in his previous 32 at-bats, before Raleigh connected on a 422-foot drive to right field.

    J.P. Crawford made it 5-1 on a two-run single in the seventh.

    “We had a bad trip,” Servais said. “It happens to the best teams in the league, and I do think we’re one of the best teams in the league.”

    Yandy Díaz extended his career-best hitting streak to 19 games with a first-inning single, tying the Rays’ record set by Jason Bartlett in 2009.

    Tampa Bay reached the midway point at 40-41 after losing for just the third time in 10 games. The Rays were 54-27 at the same point last season en route to an AL wild-card berth.

    “We got work to do,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “I think that’s the easiest way to put it.”

    Díaz also had a third-inning RBI infield single.

    Kirby fielded Díaz’s chopper between the mound and the first-base line but was unsuccessful in beating him to the bag with first baseman Ty France moving toward second on the play. José Caballero, who had doubled, scored from second base.

    Rays starter Ryan Pepiot gave up one run and one hit over 5-1/3 innings, with eight strikeouts and two walks.

    Trainer’s room

    Mariners: Outfielder Luke Raley was a late scratch.

    Rays: Rosario (facial lacerations) played for the first time since getting hit by a pitch on Saturday and went 0 for 4. … Second baseman Brandon Lowe (broken right pinky toe) was out of the lineup for the fourth game in a row.

    Up next

    Mariners: Right-handed pitcher Logan Gilbert (5-4, 2.71 ERA) will start Friday night against the Minnesota Twins.

    Rays: Right-handed pitcher Zach Eflin (3-5, 2.40 ERA) out of Hagerty High School in Oviedo will face Washington on Friday night.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Ramírez’s homer lifts Guardians to 6th straight win, 3-2 over slumping Orioles

    Ramírez’s homer lifts Guardians to 6th straight win, 3-2 over slumping Orioles

    [ad_1]

    BALTIMORE (AP) — José Ramírez hit a tiebreaking homer in the sixth inning, and the Cleveland Guardians won their sixth straight game, 3-2 over the Baltimore Orioles on Monday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • José Ramírez hit a tiebreaking homer in the sixth inning, and the Cleveland Guardians won their sixth straight game, 3-2 over the Baltimore Orioles
    • Tanner Bibee allowed one earned run in six innings for the Guardians, who were able to protect their slim lead without using highly worked closer Emmanuel Clase
    • Tim Herrin and Hunter Gaddis worked the seventh and eighth, and Scott Barlow struck out the side in the ninth for his second save
    • Since taking two of three in a big series at Yankee Stadium, Baltimore has dropped four in a row for the first time this year

    Tanner Bibee (6-2) allowed one earned run in six innings for the Guardians, who were able to protect their slim lead without using highly worked closer Emmanuel Clase. Tim Herrin and Hunter Gaddis worked the seventh and eighth, and Scott Barlow struck out the side in the ninth for his second save of the year.

    “I’ve had calmer games,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “But we’ve talked about it all year, that’s the beauty of this bullpen is every one of them can pitch in leverage. Mr. Barlow’s had his fair share of saves as well, so he’s in a very comfortable situation for him.”

    Since taking two of three in a big series at Yankee Stadium, Baltimore has dropped four in a row for the first time this year. Rookie Cade Povich (0-2) steadied himself after a 31-pitch first inning, but with the score tied at 2 in the sixth, Ramírez hit a 431-foot homer to center field.

    It was Ramírez’s 236th home run, tying Manny Ramirez for third on the team’s career list.

    This was the first meeting between these two franchises in which both were at least 20 games over .500, according to information from the Elias Sports Bureau via the Guardians. Cleveland (50-26) extended its lead in the AL Central to eight games over Minnesota, and the Orioles (49-29) fell to two games behind the AL East-leading Yankees.

    Cleveland’s Steven Kwan went 1 for 3, lowering his average to .389.

    Ramírez and Baltimore’s Ryan O’Hearn traded RBI singles in the first. Bo Naylor’s run-scoring double in the second gave the Guardians a 2-1 lead, but Anthony Santander hit a sacrifice fly in the third. Santander also threw out Cleveland’s Daniel Schneemann at the plate from right field in the fourth.

    “That was just a fun baseball play,” Vogt said. “Obviously I wish the result would have been different for us, but it was a great play.”

    Trainer’s Room

    Guardians: UT David Fry (right elbow inflammation) started Monday as the DH. … RHP Gavin Williams (elbow) is expected to make a minor league start Wednesday. … Cleveland optioned RHP Darren McCaughan and INF Angel Martinez to Triple-A Columbus. The Guardians recalled RHP Xzavion Curry from Columbus and activated INF Gabriel Arias from the family medical emergency list. Arias was ejected after striking out in the ninth.

    Orioles: Manager Brandon Hyde said RHP Dean Kremer (triceps strain) will probably make another rehab start after pitching 2/3 of an inning for Triple-A Norfolk on Saturday. … Baltimore recalled OF prospect Heston Kjerstad, the No. 2 pick in the 2020 draft, from Norfolk and designated INF/OF Nick Maton for assignment. Kjerstad doubled and singled in his first two plate appearances. He also had a 13-pitch at-bat in the eighth that ended in a flyout.

    Up Next

    Cleveland’s Logan Allen (8-3) faces Baltimore’s Cole Irvin (6-3) in a matchup of lefties Tuesday night.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • NCAA presents options to expand March Madness tournaments

    NCAA presents options to expand March Madness tournaments

    [ad_1]

    The NCAA has presented a plan to Division I conference commissioners that would expand the lucrative men’s and women’s basketball tournaments by four or eight teams alongside an option to leave each field at 68 teams, according to a person familiar with the details.


    What You Need To Know

    • The NCAA has presented a plan to Division I conference commissioners that would expand the lucrative men’s and women’s basketball tournaments by four or eight teams alongside an option to leave each field at 68 teams.
    • If approved, the NCAA would keep its 64-team bracket but would add play-in games involving the 10 through 12 seeds
    • The earliest the NCAA Tournament could expand would be the 2025-26 season and more meetings are scheduled
    • The men’s tournament last expanded in 2011 when it went from 64 to 68 teams, and the women’s tournament matched that in 2022

    The proposals were outlined to the commissioners this week by NCAA Senior Vice President of Basketball Dan Gavitt and NCAA Vice President for Women’s Basketball Lynn Holzman, the person told The Associated Press on Thursday on condition of anonymity because no official announcements have been made. The news was first reported by Yahoo! Sports.

    Under the proposal, expansion of the 68-team field included both four- and eight-team models. The NCAA would keep its 64-team bracket but would add play-in games involving the 10 through 12 seeds.

    If the men’s tournament were to expand, it is expected the women’s tourney would as well.

    “It is appropriate to look at expansion, and we need to do that,” Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner James Phillips said Thursday during the Associated Press Sports Editors summer conference. “We’re looking at it.”

    He didn’t go into details on the proposal, which he said now “goes in front of the basketball committee, basketball oversight.”

    “When do you get to the point when the regular season doesn’t matter?” he added. “Modest expansion is something I would prefer.”

    Many in college basketball have said they believe the 68-team fields and three weekends of play are ideal but pressure has grown to add teams and games to one of the most popular sports events on the U.S. calendar. Last year, the NCAA Division I board of directors approved recommendations that included allowing one quarter of teams in larger sports to compete in championship events; in that scenario, March Madness tourneys could expand to nearly 90 teams.

    The NCAA is currently in the midst of an eight-year extension of its TV deal for the men’s tournament worth $8.8 billion that runs through 2032. That would not be expected to change if a handful of teams are added.

    More games would provide a small boost through ticket sales and merchandise, but the pool of money the NCAA uses to pay out conferences and member schools would essentially stay the same. What could change, however, is how that money would be divided up if the tournament broadens.

    Expansion would also mean the men’s tournament would have to find an additional site besides Dayton for its First Four games. The Ohio city already has games on Tuesday and Wednesday and wouldn’t be able to host additional play-in games ahead of the tourney’s traditional first-round opening on Thursday. Women’s play-in games are at the same campus sites as the first two rounds of the tournament.

    Expansion is largely backed by larger conferences and smaller leagues do not want to lose the automatic bids that come with a conference tournament championship or face the prospect of always being slotted for the play-in games.

    The earliest the NCAA Tournament could expand would be the 2025-26 season, the person told AP. The NCAA basketball oversight committee meets next week, and the tournament selection committee has a meeting next month.

    The men’s tournament last expanded in 2011 when it went from 64 to 68 teams. The women’s tournament matched that in 2022.

    The women’s tournament is coming off its most successful year ever that included a record audience of 18.7 million for the title game win by South Carolina over Iowa, the highest for a basketball broadcast of any kind in five years. It outdrew the men’s championship game — UConn winning its second consecutive title with a win over Purdue — by nearly 3 million viewers. The women’s tournament also had record attendance.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Cleveland Monsters announce summer initiatives

    Cleveland Monsters announce summer initiatives

    [ad_1]

    CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Monsters are hosting a variety of initiatives this summer to bring more people, particularly youth, into the sport.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Cleveland Monsters are hosting a variety of initiatives this summer to bring more people, particularly youth, into the sport
    • These include their Summer Street Hockey Series, Monsters On-Ice Clinic, annual Summer Tour and Kivi Day goalie clinic, according to a team press release
    • The team will also be hosting an all-girls clinic

    These include their Summer Street Hockey Series, Monsters On-Ice Clinic, annual Summer Tour and Kivi Day goalie clinic, according to a team press release. The team will also be hosting an all-girls clinic.

    The street hockey series is open to those 11 and younger for a $5 donation to the team’s community foundation. In addition to a t-shirt and free ticket to the team’s home opener, participants “will receive USA Hockey-certified instruction in the fundamentals of stick-handling, shooting, and passing.”

    You can register for the street hockey clinic here.

    The On-Ice Clinic presented by Sugardale will occur from July 22-25 at the team’s practice facility at Brunswick Auto Mart Arena.

    While they welcome players of any skill, they recommend graduation from a Learn to Play Program and registration with a youth hockey association for 2024-2025 and require full equipment.

    “Participants will receive on-ice instruction from Stanley Cup Champion and Cleveland hockey legend Jock Callander, as well as goaltending classes from Monsters Goaltending Coach Brad Thiessen,” the release reads. “All skaters will receive an exclusive Monsters On-Ice Clinic jersey, specialty baseball hat and four tickets to the 2024-25 home opener.”

    You can register here. They accept skaters ages 5-10 and goalies ages 7-13.

    The summer tour will hit 10 stops in northeast Ohio.

    “This fan-interactive hockey tour will include photo opportunities, giveaways and special appearances from the Monsters mascot, Sully,” the release reads. “Full details of the dates and events on the 2024 Monsters Summer Tour can be found here.”

    The goalie clinic will be in late August, “in honor of Matiss Kivlenieks’ birthday to pay tribute to the late goaltender while also giving back to the local community.”

    [ad_2]

    Cody Thompson

    Source link

  • Florida State’s CWS run ends at the hands of No. 1 Tennessee

    Florida State’s CWS run ends at the hands of No. 1 Tennessee

    [ad_1]

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Tennessee fell flat in its two previous College World Series appearances and in between there was the crushing loss in NCAA super regionals as the No. 1 national seed.

    All that has led to this year’s Volunteers putting themselves in position to play for the program’s first national title beginning Saturday.

    Tennessee is heading to the CWS finals for the first time in the modern era after it knocked out Florida State with a 7-2 victory on Wednesday to win its bracket.

    Zander Sechrist held the Seminoles (49-17) scoreless for six innings and the Volunteers struck for four early runs to become the first No. 1 national seed since 2009 to advance to the best-of-three finals.

    “We always say before something happens, something happens,” coach Tony Vitello said. “There’s been a lot of build-up into the successes we’ve had this year and the failures, too, to be honest with you. And it’s been fun to be a part of.”

    Tennessee’s win assured an all-SEC finals for the second straight year and third time in four. The Volunteers (58-12) will play Texas A&M or Florida.

    The Southeastern Conference will have at least one team in the finals for the 15th time in 16 years. Seven SEC teams have made it since 2009. The fact Tennessee hadn’t been among them had become more frustrating on Rocky Top in recent years. The Vols’ 209 victories and 559 home runs since the start of the 2021 season are the most of any Division I program, after all.

    Tennessee made it to a one-game final in its first CWS appearance in 1951, losing 3-2 to Oklahoma. In those days, there were no preliminary rounds in the NCAA Tournament; teams were selected for the CWS based on regular-season performance.

    The Vols broke through under Vitello after winning a combined one of five games in trips to Omaha in 2021 and 2023. In 2022, they lost a three-game super regional to Notre Dame team at home.

    “That’s a good team in the other dugout, clearly,” said second-year FSU coach Link Jarrett, who coached the Notre Dame team that knocked out the Vols two years ago. “Well-constructed, variety of arms, physical offensively, dynamic, athletic. They made some exceptional plays. You could basically go around the diamond and make note of the exceptional plays they made.”

    FSU freshman John Abraham (5-2) was making his first start since April 9 and third of the season. He struggled with his control and faced only five batters before getting pulled with one out.

    Tennessee was up 4-0 when Burke singled in a run in the second and he finished the scoring in the ninth when he hit his 20th home run of the season. That made the Vols the first team in Division I history to have five players with at least 20 homers. They have a nation-leading 178, nine behind the Division I record set by LSU in 1997.

    Burke got a couple fastballs, a changeup and a surprise slider from Conner Whittaker.

    “It was nasty, a back-foot slider. I told him, ‘Good pitch,’” Burke said. “I did that just so I could get it again because I knew it was coming. I fouled a fastball off and I kind of knew that pitch was coming. I was prepared for it. I got my barrel on it.”

    Sechrist (5-1) came into the game 3-0 in his previous four starts with an 0.78 ERA and 18 strikeouts in 23 innings. His scoreless streak in the NCAA Tournament ended at 17 1/3 innings when Daniel Cantu and Alex Lodise hit back-to-back homers in the seventh.

    In a CWS marked by jaw-dropping defensive plays, Tennessee’s Kavares Tears made one equal to teammate Hunter Ensley’s against North Carolina on Sunday.

    Tears chased down Marco Dinges’ deep drive to right center to end the first inning, catching the ball while crashing into the wall, his sunglasses and hat flying off.

    Tears, the Vols’ regular right fielder, made his first start in center since April 23 because Ensley suffered a lower-body injury when he caught Antony Donofrio’s deep fly to center just before crashing into the wall. Ensley was the designated hitter against the Seminoles. and went 1 for 4.

    “K.T.’s catch set the tone, especially in the first inning,” Sechrist said. “I know our offense scored in the top of the first, but he set the tone right there.”

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Florida blows out Kentucky to set up showdown with Texas A&M

    Florida blows out Kentucky to set up showdown with Texas A&M

    [ad_1]

    OMAHA, Neb. — Brody Donay hit a grand slam for the first of his two homers, Jac Caglianone became Florida’s all-time home run leader, and the Gators rode a seven-run first inning to a 15-4 victory against Kentucky in a College World Series elimination game Wednesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida eliminated Kentucky with a 15-4 victory Wednesday in the College World Series
    • The Gators will have to defeat Texas A&M twice to stay in the tournament, starting Wednesday night
    • Brody Donay homered twice, including a grand slam, for Florida
    • Jac Caglianone hammered his 35th homer of the season to pass Matt LaPorta and become the Gators’ career leader

    The game had been scheduled for Tuesday night but was postponed because of rain.

    The Gators (36-29) return to the field Wednesday night to face another Southeastern Conference rival, Texas A&M.

    The victory over Kentucky was extra satisfying for the Gators because they lost a weekend series at home to the Wildcats a month ago.

    “We had to get some sort of revenge, I guess,” Caglianone said. “No better opportunity than to do it on this stage. All the guys were pretty pumped up about it.”

    Kentucky (46-16) went 1-2 in its first CWS appearance after giving up the most runs since it lost 16-6 to LSU on April 13, 2023.

    “This is not how you want to end your season, but this is where you want to end your season,” Kentucky coach Nick Mingione said. “Just so proud of our group of men. They’re unbelievable in every sense of the word. They made history. This hurts. It hurts a lot because this team is fully capable of accomplishing our goal of being national champions. That wasn’t the case this year. That’s not what the Lord planned.”

    This will be the second time Florida has had to play two games in a day in this year’s NCAA Tournament. The Gators won two games in regionals on June 2. They are 5-0 in elimination games in the tournament.

    Florida would need to beat Texas A&M on Wednesday and again Thursday to advance to the best-of-three finals for the second year in a row. The Aggies beat Florida 3-2 in their CWS opener Saturday.

    The Gators’ bats didn’t require a wake-up call for the morning game. They banged out 15 hits and finished with their third-highest run total of the season.

    They rocked Kentucky starter Dominic Niman a second straight time while putting up seven runs in the first. Niman faced six batters in his one-third of an inning. He allowed three hits and was charged with five runs. Niman gave up six runs in four innings in a 10-1 loss to the Gators last month.

    Niman (8-5) was gone by the time Donay came up with the bases loaded in the first. Dale Thomas greeted reliever Cameron O’Brien with a base hit before Donay hit his first pitch to him out to right field, barely clearing the fence with the aid of a light north wind on a 66-degree morning. The wind had not blown out at Charles Schwab Field the first five days of the CWS.

    Donay’s second homer was monstrous, a 414-footer that exited his bat at 118 mph and landed in the last row of the left-field bleachers. The homers were the 13th and 14th of the year for the No. 8 batter in the order, and his five RBIs were a career high.

    Pierce Coppola (1-4), who came back in April following back and shoulder injuries that caused him to miss the 2023 season, gave the Gators exactly what they needed in his career-long five innings. The left-hander struck out nine, and the Gators had a five-run lead when his day ended.

    “I thought this was the best Pierce had thrown all year long,” Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan said. “He was crisp. Him not throwing in (super regionals) probably helped.”

    The Gators, who entered the game batting .190 in Omaha, gave their batting order a makeover with four players in new spots.

    “Sometimes you make lineup changes and they work out, and sometimes they don’t,” O’Sullivan said. “We were at the point we had to do something because the first two games we weren’t very productive.”

    Most notably, O’Sullivan had Caglianone bat leadoff for the first time in his career. Caglianone, projected to be among the first players taken in the amateur draft, was intentionally walked six times in the regular-season series with the Wildcats.

    Kentucky again had no answer for Caglianone. The .400 hitter singled, hit his 35th homer of the season and 75th of his career to pass Matt LaPorta on the school career chart. Caglianone was walked three times, once intentionally.

    “I was all in on it — show off the bat, show off the wheels,” Caglianone said, smiling. “I embraced the role today.”

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Hults helps Florida State hold off North Carolina at College World Series

    Hults helps Florida State hold off North Carolina at College World Series

    [ad_1]

    OMAHA, Neb. — Connor Hults pitched 4-1/3 innings of shutout relief to thwart North Carolina’s comeback bid, and Jaxson West and Max Williams hit back-to-back homers in the ninth for insurance as Florida State defeated the Tar Heels 9-5 in an elimination game at the College World Series on Tuesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida State turned back North Carolina 9-5 in a College World Series elimination game
    • Connor Hults pitched 4-1/3 shutout innings in relief to keep the Tar Heels at bay
    • The Seminoles play another elimination game Wednesday against top-seeded Tennessee
    • Jaxson West of FSU had four hits in five at-bats

    The Seminoles (49-16) will play top-seeded Tennessee on Wednesday afternoon. They would have to beat the Volunteers then, and again Thursday to reach the finals for the first time since 1999.

    The Tar Heels (48-16) lost consecutive games for the first time since mid-April and went 1-2 in their first CWS since 2018.

    Though FSU and North Carolina are both from the Atlantic Coast Conference, this was their first meeting since the Tar Heels swept a three-game series to end the 2022 regular season.

    Florida State led 3-1 after chasing both Aidan Haugh (4-3) and Matthew Matthijs in the third inning. The Tar Heels called on Dalton Pence, who extended his NCAA Tournament shutout innings streak to 14-1/3 innings before five singles in six at-bats led to four runs in the fifth inning, giving the Seminoles a 7-1 lead.

    North Carolina scored four runs in the bottom half. With two runners on, Vance Honeycutt greeted Conner Whittaker with his fourth homer in five games, and Jackson Van De Brake followed with an RBI single to make it a two-run game.

    Hults (3-1) got the last out of the inning and retired 12 of 15 batters in his longest outing of the season. He never was in trouble. Honeycutt singled leading off the seventh, but was erased in a rundown between first and second base. After Van De Brake doubled in the eighth, Hults coaxed two groundouts. He walked Alex Madera to start the ninth inning but sandwiched a strikeout between two groundouts to end the game.

    West, the No. 9 batter for FSU, had a career-high four hits in five at-bats. His homer was his second in four games and just his third of the season.

    Williams hit his fifth homer in eight NCAA Tournament games and has 14 for the season.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link