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Home Blog Page 10597

Charlotte scores late to deny Whitecaps road point

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Daniel Rios scored in the 85th minute as Charlotte FC extended the Vancouver Whitecaps’ road troubles in a 2-1 victory on a steamy Sunday.

Rios scored from close range because he was in the right place for a tap-in when the Whitecaps couldn’t gain possession of the ball. Christian Ortiz collected an assist on the winning play.

It was the 27-year-old Rios’ first goal in a Charlotte uniform. Rios was in the game as a substitute for Karol Swiderski, entering the game in the 82nd minute.

The outcome ruined the MLS debut for goalkeeper Max Anchor, a 17-year-old pressed into duty for a starting assignment because of the Whitecaps’ roster problems.

All the other scoring came in the early minutes. Andre Shinyashiki scored the other Charlotte FC goal. Tosaint Ricketts scored for short-handed Vancouver.

Charlotte FC (5-7-1, 16 points) improved to 5-2-0 in home games.

Vancouver (3-7-2, 11 points) was bidding for its first point in a road game, but instead fell to 0-6-0 in those games.

Charlotte goalkeeper Kristijan Kahlina made four saves.

Anchor was credited with four saves, though he had to be on full alert for much of the game. Charlotte FC held an overwhelming edge in possession time.

Vancouver was without 11 players, largely because of injuries or health and safety protocol.

Vancouver scored in the second minute when Ricketts blasted the ball into the goal, with an assist from Cristian Dajome. That came courtesy of some sloppy ball movement from Charlotte, resulting in a turnover.

Charlotte FC pulled even in the eighth minute on Shinyashiki’s header. Swiderski delivered a cross from the right side for an assist on the play.

With three goals, Shinyashiki trails only Swiderski (four goals) for the team lead.

–Field Level Media

Early Voting, Epicenter to skip Belmont Stakes

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Preakness winner Early Voting will not run in the Belmont Stakes on June 11, trainer Chad Brown said Sunday.

Epicenter, which finished second in both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, also won’t run in the third leg of the Triple Crown, trainer Steve Asmussen said.

The decision to have Early Voting skip the Belmont comes one day after the horse notched the biggest victory of his career while competing in just his fourth race.

Brown said he doesn’t yet know when Early Voting will next race.

“We are thrilled with the victory,” Brown told reporters. “I’m proud of the horse, proud of my team. It was a super memorable day. … Everything lined up. I’m just so appreciative for the day, the performance.”

Epicenter lost down the stretch of the Kentucky Derby when 80-1 longshot Rich Strike made a frantic late-race dash to record a memorable victory.

In the Preakness, Epicenter was unable to chase down Early Voting down the stretch.

“We’ll give him a little break,” Asmussen said of Epicenter. “We’re constantly evaluating the situation, but the plan is for him to go to Saratoga (N.Y.), and from here I’d suggest the Jim Dandy and the Travers (as possible next races).”

Rich Strike is currently at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., for workouts and early preparation for the Belmont Stakes.

“Skipping the Preakness was still one of the toughest decisions I had to make as a trainer,” Eric Reed said. “I just don’t think he would’ve been mentally ready to run against those horses again.”

–Field Level Media

Magda Linette, Kaia Kanepi score big French Open upsets


Magda Linette of Poland and Kaia Kanepi of Estonia recorded impressive comeback victories over top-10 seeds Sunday on the first day of the French Open in Paris.

Linette notched a 3-6, 7-6 (4), 7-5 victory over sixth-seeded Ons Jabeur of Tunisia, while Kanepi registered a 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over 10th-seeded Garbine Muguruza of Spain.

Jabeur has been one of the hottest players on tour in recent months but was unable to maintain an early lead.

Jabuer had more winners (35 to 32) but committed 47 unforced errors while Linette had 35.

It represented a nice turn of events for Linette, who lost to Jabeur in the third round of the 2021 French Open.

“I had so many tough matches with Ons, and last year here I lost to her in the third round so I knew how difficult it was going to be,” Linette said afterward. “I saw how well she was playing all this time, so I knew I have to be focused and play every single point and try to make her uncomfortable. I’m just happy I managed to fight for every single point.”

Kanepi’s knockout of Muguruza isn’t as stunning. According to the WTA, it is her 19th career win against a seeded player in the first three rounds of a Grand Slam event, fourth-most among active players.

“It’s not easy to play a tough opponent in the first round, but I think I enjoy playing Grand Slams more and I think the motivation is higher than smaller tournaments,” the 36-year-old Kanepi said. “I try to be more focused and not too emotional when I play in Slams.”

Fourth-seeded Maria Sakkari of Greece avoided the upset bug as she cruised to a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Clara Burel of France. Sakkari had 24 winners to Burel’s 13.

No. 14 seed Belinda Bencic of Switzerland had few issues while rolling to a 6-1, 6-1 win over Reka Luca Jani of Hungary.

Canada’s Leylah Fernandez, seeded 17th, staved off two set points in the second set while winning the last four games to finish off a 6-0, 7-5 victory over Kristina Mladenovic of France.

American Coco Gauff, seeded 18th, posted a 7-5, 6-0 win over Rebecca Marino of Canada.

No. 23 Jil Teichmann of Switzerland delivered an easy 6-2, 6-1 win over American Bernarda Pera (34 unforced errors), while No. 26 Sorana Cirstea of Romania beat Germany’s Tatjana Maria 6-3, 6-3 and 31st-seeded Elise Mertens of Belgium was a 6-3, 6-1 winner over Elena-Gabriela Ruse of Romania.

Unseeded American Sloane Stephens rallied from a set down to knock off German qualifier Julie Niemeier 5-7, 6-4, 6-2.

Belgium’s Alison Van Uytvanck advanced when American Ann Li retired with a shoulder injury. Li was leading 6-3, 3-2 when she decided she couldn’t continue.

–Field Level Media

Report: NFL owners ‘counting votes’ on Dan Snyder ouster


The string of negative headlines surrounding the Washington Commanders and their owner Dan Snyder is having a cumulative effect on Snyder’s standing with other NFL owners, USA Today reported.

“There’s growing frustration about the Washington situation and not over one issue, but over how much smoke there is,” an unnamed owner told the newspaper in Saturday’s report. “I think everybody’s getting tired of it.”

In February the NFL hired former U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White to conduct an investigation into more allegations against Snyder after the franchise had previously hired Beth Wilkinson to conduct a review of allegations of a culture of sexual harassment in the workplace.

Wilkinson’s findings were never released to the public, though the NFL has announced that White will issue a public report.

Also in February, a House Oversight Committee roundtable convened where six former team employees testified about Washington’s misogynistic workplace culture.

Shortly after that, multiple reports surfaced that revealed Congress was investigating whether Snyder’s Washington franchise had withheld money that should have gone into league revenue sharing.

It would take 24 votes to oust Snyder, and according to a different owner, those votes are currently being assessed behind closed doors.

“If (the revenue-sharing improprieties) happened, I think that’s the nail in the coffin,” the second owner said. “We are counting votes.”

–Field Level Media

Celtics need Jayson Tatum to impact Game 4 vs. Heat


Jayson Tatum had a pain the neck after Game 3 instead of being one to the Miami Heat.

After a subpar performance, the host Boston Celtics badly need their star forward to regain his form as they try to even the Eastern Conference finals at two wins apiece on Monday night.

Tatum never found a groove during Saturday night’s 109-103 loss to the Heat. He made just 3 of 14 shots and committed six turnovers while being limited to 10 points.

Tatum has committed a whopping 16 turnovers in the series. He briefly left the game in the fourth quarter of Game 3 after falling to the floor while committing a turnover and writhing due to a stinger in his neck and right shoulder.

“My neck got caught in a weird position,” Tatum said. “Obviously I went down and felt some pain and discomfort in my neck and down my arm, and then went to the back. I got it checked on, and started to gain some feeling back and got it checked by the doctors and ran some tests and decided to give it a go.”

Tatum is expected to be fine for Monday’s game. Realistically, it is the Heat facing a bigger injury dilemma.

Miami standout forward Jimmy Butler sat out the second half of Saturday’s game due to right knee inflammation.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said the training staff made the call on Butler. The coach said he likely would provide an update on Butler’s status on Sunday.

Butler had eight points in 20 minutes in Game 3 after averaging 35 points over the first two games.

It would rate as a huge loss if Butler can’t play Monday.

“That’s something we’re going to have to get to the drawing board and figure out,” guard Max Strus said of the possibility of not having Butler. “Obviously, losing a big piece like that is huge. We’ll figure it out. We have a lot of guys in this locker room that are willing and able to step up and we have a great coaching staff to put us in great situations.”

At least Miami has been reminded that it can rely on center Bam Adebayo.

After averaging just 8.0 points over the first two games, Adebayo was ultra aggressive in Game 3 and delivered 31 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and four steals. Adebayo was 15-of-22 shooting after attempting just 10 shots over the first two games.

Heat forward P.J. Tucker said Adebayo’s huge performance opened the entire floor up for the squad.

“We need Bam to be aggressive and make plays for himself and for everybody else,” Tucker said. “The way our team is built, he triggers the most out of everybody. His versatility just opens everything up for everybody. Offensive rebounding, he’s such a force.”

Miami racked up 19 steals while forcing 24 Boston turnovers. The Heat never trailed and led by 26 early in the second quarter.

Though the Celtics cut the lead to one in the fourth quarter, it was a disappointing night in the view of Jaylen Brown, who poured in a personal-playoff high 40 points.

“We didn’t come out with the same intensity as them as a unit, and it showed,” Brown said. “They came out all connected with urgency. Defensively, they were more physical than us.”

Boston badly missed big man Robert Williams III (knee), who was ruled out shortly before the game. The Celtics hope to have his services on Monday.

Boston point guard Marcus Smart also is banged up after sustaining a sprained right ankle in the third quarter. Smart left briefly before returning.

A good sight for the Celtics was seeing forward Al Horford contribute 20 points and 14 rebounds. Horford is counting on his team playing better Monday.

“Coach (Ime) Udoka has been doing a good job with us all year making adjustments, and especially in the playoffs from game-to-game,” Horford said. “We see things that we need to fix, so let’s figure it out, put it together, and move forward.”

Meanwhile, Miami will have a chance to take a 3-1 series lead on Monday and the task will be easier if both Butler and backup guard Tyler Herro (leg) are available.

“Jimmy is a warrior, Tyler is a warrior,” Heat point guard Kyle Lowry said. “But we have to continue to stay focused on what we did as a group (Saturday night) and hopefully those guys will be back and ready to go next game.”

–Field Level Media

Lightning topple Panthers for 3-0 series lead


Nikita Kucherov had a goal and three assists to help the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the visiting Florida Panthers 5-1 in Game 3 of their Stanley Cup playoffs second-round series on Sunday and move within one win of advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for a third straight season.

Steven Stamkos scored two goals and Corey Perry and Erik Cernak also scored. Andrei Vasilevskiy made 34 saves for the Lightning, the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions who will bring a 3-0 lead into Game 4 on Monday night in Tampa.

Vasilevskiy held the Toronto Maple Leafs to one goal in a 2-1 victory in Game 7 of their first-round series, and he has limited the Panthers to one goal in each of the first three games of this series.

Sam Reinhart scored and Sergei Bobrovsky made 31 saves for Florida, which had the best record in the NHL during the regular season.

Perry, who turned 37 earlier in the week, scored for the third straight game off a deflection in front of the net to give the Lightning a 1-0 lead at 13:21 of the first period.

Brandon Hagel was penalized for cross-checking Eetu Luostarinen into the end boards and the Panthers went on their first power play at 15:29 of the first.

Florida came in 0-for-25 with the man-advantage in these playoffs, but Reinhart scored on the ensuing power play to tie the score 1-1 at 16:07.

Cernak used Florida defenseman MacKenzie Weegar as a screen and scored with a wrist shot from the left circle to give Tampa Bay a 2-1 lead at 2:54 of the second period.

Aleksander Barkov hit the post for the Panthers at 5:59 before the Lightning stretched the lead to 3-1 on a one-timer from the left circle by Stamkos.

Kucherov scored into an empty net to make it 4-1 with 3:54 left. Stamkos then hit the empty net with 2:09 remaining.

–Field Level Media

Real Salt Lake rallies to beat CF Montreal

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Real Salt Lake scored twice in the second half to secure a 2-1 win against the host CF Montreal on Sunday.

It marked the first-ever win for Salt Lake (6-3-4, 22 points) in Montreal, having lost each of its four previous visits.

CF Montreal (6-5-2, 20 points) lost its second straight after an eight-game unbeaten run.

Djordje Mihailovic gave Montreal a 1-0 lead just 43 seconds into the first half. Joaquin Torres sent a behind-the-back heel pass to Ahmed Hamdi in the box, and Hamdi fed an uncovered Mihailovic for the strike from just below the penalty spot.

It was Mihailovic’s second opening-minute tally this season. He is the third player in MLS history to accomplish the feat.

Romell Quioto beat Real Salt Lake goalkeeper Zac MacMath in the 16th minute off but was offside, with the goal nullified after video review.

The visitors started to find their game as the half progressed.

In the 21st minute, Justin Meram headed a free kick that rolled wide right of the net, and three minutes later Meram tried to head in a corner that again redirected past the net.

Montreal goalkeeper Sebastian Breza was sharp as Real Salt Lake pushed. In the 28th minute, he got the tip of his hand on the ball for a diving stop on Bobby Wood to deflect it away. He denied Wood again in the 45th minute on a chance right in front.

In the 42nd minute, Meram eyed the equalizer from the top of the box, but his shot sailed over the net.

Real Salt Lake finally connected in the 54th minute when Justen Glad directed a header off a corner by a diving Breza to tie it 1-1.

Sergio Cordova nearly put the visitors ahead in the 57th minute, driving down the right side and drawing Breza out of his net, but his shot rolled just past the far post.

Cordova wouldn’t miss on his next attempt, giving Real Salt Lake a 2-1 lead in the 66th minute when his shot from the right side of the box at the edge of the goal area struck inside the far post.

–Field Level Media

Preakness winner Early Voting to skip Belmont

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Preakness Stakes winner Early Voting will not run in the Belmont Stakes, trainer Chad Brown confirmed Sunday.

Brown said Early Voting will skip the final leg of the Triple Crown on June 11 at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

Instead, Early Voting will gear up for the Travers Stakes on Aug. 27 at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Brown said the 3-year-old colt will run a prep race at either the Haskell Stakes on July 23 at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J., or the Jim Dandy Stakes on July 30 at Saratoga.

“We’ll evaluate later on and pick a race,” Brown said Sunday morning, per the Daily Racing Form. “We want to set him up for what lies ahead.”

Making only his fourth career start, Early Voting outlasted favorite Epicenter by 1 1/4 lengths on Saturday to win the Preakness.

Trainer Steve Asmussen said Epicenter will also pass on the Belmont.

“We’ll give him a little break,” Asmussen said. “We’re constantly evaluating the situation, but the plan is for him to go to Saratoga, and from here I’d suggest the Jim Dandy and the Travers.”

Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike skipped the Preakness but is expected to be a favorite at the Belmont.

–Field Level Media

FaZe Clan beats Natus Vincere to win PGL Antwerp


FaZe Clan swept Natus Vincere in Sunday’s grand final to claim the title at the PGL Major Antwerp in Belgium.

FaZe won the first map in overtime, 19-16 on Inferno, before finishing the job by beating NaVi 16-10 on Nuke to earn the $500,000 grand prize.

FaZe began their journey in the Legends Stage, the middle stage of the first major of the season. They went 3-1 to advance to this weekend’s Champions Stage with seven other teams.

After needing three maps to beat Ninjas in Pyjamas 2-1 in the quarterfinals, FaZe swept Team Spirit in Saturday’s semifinal match before doing the same to NaVi on Sunday.

Helvijs “broky” Saukants of Latvia led FaZe with 53 kills and a plus-16 kills-to-deaths differential, both game highs. Teammate Havard “rain” Nygaard of Norway scored 52 kills with a plus-12 K-D.

Russia’s Ilya “Perfecto” Zalutskiy posted 47 kills and a plus-7 for NaVi, which took home $150,000 for their second-place finish.

The Champions Stage was an eight-team single-elimination bracket played on the heels of the Challenger Stage (May 9-12) and Legends Stage (May 14-17). The Swiss System format was used to determine which eight teams would advance in each prior stage.

Champions Stage seeding was based on final standings in the Legends Stage. Champions Stage matches were all best-of-three.

PGL Major Antwerp prize pool:
1. FaZe Clan — $500,000
2. Natus Vincere — $150,000
3-4. Team Spirit, ENCE — $70,000
5-8. FURIA Esports, Ninjas in Pyjamas, Copenhagen Flames, Heroic — $35,000
9-11. G2 Esports, Team Vitality, Imperial Esports — $8,750
12-14. BIG, Cloud9, Outsiders — $8,750
15-16. Bad News Eagles, Team Liquid — $8,750
17-19. forZe, Astralis, MIBR — no prize
20-22. Complexity, Eternal Fire, IHC Esports — no prize
23-24. 9z Team, Renegades — no prize

–Field Level Media

Justin Thomas wins playoff to claim second PGA Championship

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Justin Thomas birdied the first two holes of a three-hole aggregate playoff to win the PGA Championship for the second time, topping Will Zalatoris in the extra holes Sunday at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.

Thomas, who also won the major in 2017, began the day seven strokes behind leader Mito Pereira of Chile. He shot a 3-under-par 67 to finish at 5 under, a mark matched by Zalatoris (71).

Thomas and Zalatoris played Nos. 13, 17 and 18 in the playoff. They both notched birdies on the par-5 13th and then Thomas went ahead with a birdie on the next hole. Thomas had a tap-in par at the 18th to clinch the championship.

Pereira, who led or shared the lead for most of the final two rounds, went to the 18th tee with a one-shot advantage. But his tee shot found a water hazard and he ended up with a double bogey and a final-round 75. He tied for third place with Cameron Young (71) at 4 under.

Thomas’ 67 matched the lowest round of the day. He went 4 under a cross a nine-hole stretch concluding on the 17th, but he managed only par on his final hole.

Zalatoris, the 36-hole leader, made a clutch par putt on the 18th hole to stay tied with Thomas. Yet they were both a shot off the pace until Pereira faltered.

Pereira began the round with a three-shot lead, only to slip into a tie with Zalatoris before building his edge back to three strokes. Later, Pereira stumbled again and fell into a tie with Young at 6 under.

But it was Thomas, a former world No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking, who ended up being the biggest threat. He was the only golfer among the late contenders who already owned a victory on the PGA Tour.

Young and Zalatoris, who were college teammates at Wake Forest and played in a final-round pairing, were doomed by mistakes on No. 16. Young was just one shot back when he took a double bogey. Zalatoris then missed a par putt from inside 5 feet for a bogey.

Chris Kirk (68) and Englishmen Matt Fitzpatrick (73) and Tommy Fleetwood (67) tied for fifth at 3 under. First-round leader Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland recovered with a final-round 68 and ended up eighth at 2 under.

The final day didn’t include Tiger Woods, who withdrew for the first time in a major in an announcement that came following the completion of Saturday’s third round. Woods was 12 over and tied for 76th after the third round.

–Field Level Media