Post a Free Blog

Submit A Press Release

At CWEB, we are always looking to expand our network of strategic investors and partners. If you're interested in exploring investment opportunities or discussing potential partnerships and serious inquiries. Contact: jacque@cweb.com

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Action
Animation
Anime
ATP Tour (ATP)
Auto Racing
Baseball
Basketball
Boxing
Breaking News
Business
Business
Business Newsletter
Call of Duty (CALLOFDUTY)
Canadian Football League (CFL)
Car
Celebrity
Champions Tour (CHAMP)
Comedy
CONCACAF
Counter Strike Global Offensive (CSGO)
Crime
Dark Comedy
Defense of the Ancients (DOTA)
Documentary and Foreign
Drama
eSports
European Tour (EPGA)
Fashion
FIFA
FIFA Women’s World Cup (WWC)
FIFA World Cup (FIFA)
Fighting
Football
Formula 1 (F1)
Fortnite
Golf
Health
Hockey
Horror
IndyCar Series (INDY)
International Friendly (FRIENDLY)
Kids & Family
League of Legends (LOL)
LPGA
Madden
Major League Baseball (MLB)
Mixed Martial Arts (MMA)
MLS
Movie and Music
Movie Trailers
Music
Mystery
NASCAR Cup Series (NAS)
National Basketball Association (NBA)
National Football League (NFL)
National Hockey League (NHL)
National Women's Soccer (NWSL)
NBA Development League (NBAGL)
NBA2K
NCAA Baseball (NCAABBL)
NCAA Basketball (NCAAB)
NCAA Football (NCAAF)
NCAA Hockey (NCAAH)
Olympic Mens (OLYHKYM)
Other
Other Sports
Overwatch
PGA
Politics
Premier League (PREM)
Romance
Sci-Fi
Science
Soccer
Sports
Sports
Technology
Tennis
Thriller
Truck Series (TRUCK)
True Crime
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC)
US
Valorant
Western
Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA)
Women’s NCAA Basketball (WNCAAB)
World
World Cup Qualifier (WORLDCUP)
WTA Tour (WTA)
Xfinity (XFT)
XFL
0
Home Blog Page 8628

OTHER News: Tire strategy leads Casey Kirwan to eNASCAR win at Darlington

0


With the cars in front of him either staying out or taking two tires, defending series champion Casey Kirwan used a four-tire pit stop under a late caution to overtake the field and win the 2023 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series race at a virtual Darlington (S.C.) Raceway on Tuesday.

When a caution came out with 26 laps to go, race leader Garrett Lowe and second-place driver Malik Ray stayed out to maintain track position. Collin Bowden and Bobby Zalenski took two tires and came out third and fourth, respectively, leaving Kirwan the first car on fresh tires, restarting fifth with 23 laps to go.

After another caution put Kirwan’s No. 95 XSET Chevrolet fourth at the final restart with 17 laps to go, the Matthews, N.C., native was in the lead within two laps then held off a late charge from Nick Ottinger of Claremont, N.C.

“Obviously we came down pit road, tried to loosen this thing up as much as we could without doing too much to try and hold off Nick and (the rest of the top five),” said Kirwan, who won for the second time this season. “I was starting to hang on for dear life those last few laps.”

Ottinger, the 2020 series champion looking for his 20th career win, was closing in on Kirwan as the laps ticked down, but he ultimately finished 0.325 seconds back in his No. 25 William Byron Esports Chevy for second place.

“I could’ve navigated the positions a little bit better, second through fourth,” Ottinger said of his biggest challenge at the end of the race. “Secondly, I just needed to get around the 7 (Ray) a lot quicker. Casey was able to get around him while I was just stuck beside him side-by-side for two laps. So that hurt me a little bit more than I wanted to (and) used a little bit more of (my) tires trying to get by him.”

Michael Conti, another two-time winner this season, finished third in his No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, 1.671 seconds back. Graham Bowlin in the No. 48 Charlotte Phoenix Toyota took fourth, followed by Ray and his No. 7 Jim Beaver eSports Ford in fifth.

Kirwan, sporting a Tony Stewart throwback paint scheme for Darlington, sits third in the season standings at 216 points. Conti leads with 244 points, followed by Ottinger at 230, despite not winning a race yet this season. Ottinger’s eighth-place average finish is tied with Conti for the best mark in the series.

The series will return at virtual Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 30.

–Field Level Media

CSGO News: FaZe Clan, Breach, Apeks advance at BLAST.tv Paris Major


Apeks, Into the Breach and FaZe Clan won their do-or-die matches Tuesday to become the final three teams to advance to the Champions Stage at the BLAST.tv Paris Major 2023 in France.

FaZe rallied from a map down to defeat Natus Vincere, ITB did the same to Fnatic and Apeks swept Ninjas in Pyjamas in Round 5, the final day of the Legends Stage.

Champions Stage action begins Thursday.

Apeks needed overtime to dispatch NiP 19-17 on Vertigo and 19-16 on Ancient. Norway’s Joakim “jkaem” Myrbostad led Apeks with 64 kills and a plus-13 kills-to-deaths differential.

Into the Breach lost the opening map to Fnatic, 16-12 on Inferno. However, ITB rebounded to win 16-8 on Overpass and 16-4 on Vertigo. Joey “CRUC1AL” Steusel of the Netherlands paced ITB with 58 kills and a plus-23 K-D differential.

Likewise, FaZe found themselves in major battle after dropping the first map — Overpass — to Natus Vincere, 16-13. FaZe responded with a 16-5 win on Mirage before taking Anubis in overtime, 22-19. Latvia’s Helvijs “broky” Saukants powered FaZe with 78 kills on a plus-28 differential.

The $1.25 million BLAST.tv Paris Major runs May 8-21, with 24 teams playing offline in Paris. The champion will earn not only a $500,000 payday and 3,500 BLAST Premier points, but also automatic qualification into both IEM Cologne 2023 and the BLAST Premier World Final.

The Challengers and Legends Stages used the Swiss System format, in which teams are divided after opening-match results into “high” and “low” matches. Elimination and advancement matches were best-of-three, and all other matches were best-of-one. The top eight teams in the Legends Stage advanced; the bottom eight were eliminated.

The Champions Stage will be a single-elimination bracket with all matches best-of-three. The final is scheduled for Sunday.

The Champions Stage begins Thursday with two matches:
–Heroic vs. FaZe Clan
–Into The Breach vs. Team Vitality

BLAST.tv Paris Major 2023 standings, prize pool, BLAST Premier points
1. $500,000, 3,500 points, IEM Cologne and BLAST Premier World Final
2. $170,000, 2,750 points
3-4. $80,000, 1,775 points
5-8. $45,000, 1,050 points
9-11. $20,000, no points — Natus Vincere, Fnatic, Ninjas in Pyjamas
12-14. $20,000, no points — ENCE, Bad News Eagles, G2 Esports
15-16. $20,000, no points — 9INE, FURIA Esports
17-19. $10,000, no points — FORZE Esports, Grayhound Gaming, paiN Gaming
20-22. $10,000, no points — Complexity Gaming, The MongolZ, OG
23-24. $10,000, no points — MOUZ, Fluxo

–Field Level Media

Report: UConn, Gonzaga to begin series in 2023-24


Defending national champion UConn will begin a multi-year nonconference series with Gonzaga in 2023-24, College Hoops Today reported Monday.

UConn will meet Gonzaga next season at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, home to the NHL’s Kraken and WNBA’s Storm. The 2024-25 return game will be played at Madison Square Garden in New York.

The dates and times of these games are not yet set.

The 2023-24 meeting figures to be a Top 25 game and serves as a rematch of last season’s Elite Eight, in which the Huskies whipped Gonzaga 82-54 in Las Vegas en route to their fifth national title.

Despite a target on the Huskies’ back, UConn coach Dan Hurley is not shying away from tough competition. Previous media reports revealed the Huskies will face North Carolina in the Jimmy V Classic at Madison Square Garden and headline the Empire Classic in a field that includes Indiana, Texas and Louisville.

The Huskies also drew a road trip to Kansas in the annual Big East-Big 12 Battle. That game will pit the two most recent national champions.

Gonzaga’s nonconference schedule includes a road game against Kentucky. The Bulldogs are slated to play in the Maui Invitational, and Kansas is one of the other teams in the prestigious November tournament.

–Field Level Media

Spurs win NBA draft lottery; Victor Wembanyama on the way


The San Antonio Spurs may have lost 60 games this season, but they were huge winners Tuesday night in Chicago when they prevailed in the Victor Wembanyama sweepstakes.

The Spurs were one of three teams with a 14 percent chance of landing the top pick in the NBA draft lottery and now will surely use the pick on Wembanyama, the 19-year-old French sensation, in the June 22 draft.

San Antonio has landed big-time stars with the No. 1 overall choice in the past, selecting David Robinson first in 1987 and Tim Duncan 10 years later.

“It’s a really special moment that I will remember for the rest of my life,” Wembanyama said from Paris on ESPN. “… I’m trying to win a ring ASAP.”

The 7-foot-4 Wembanyama is considered the best NBA prospect since LeBron James went No. 1 overall in 2003.

“I might faint, I’m so excited,” Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt said on ESPN’s broadcast. “The city of San Antonio, our fans, we just have so many people that love the Spurs. We’re pumped.”

The Charlotte Hornets will select second, followed by the Portland Trail Blazers and Houston Rockets. Houston also had a 14 percent chance of winning the lottery.

The Detroit Pistons, the third team with a 14 percent chance of landing the first pick, will choose fifth.

Scoot Henderson of G League Ignite and Alabama’s Brandon Miller are the leading candidates to be the No. 2 and 3 picks.

Wembanyama played his final regular-season game in France on Tuesday and scored 22 points as Boulogne-Levallois recorded a 93-85 win over Paris Basketball. He scored 14 of his points in the fourth quarter for the Metropolitans 92.

“He’s 19 and his life is going to totally change,” Metropolitans 92 coach Vincent Collet told reporters afterward.

Wembanyama will have to adjust to living in a foreign country as well as playing against the best men in the world. Though if he lands with the Spurs, he will be coached by legendary Hall of Famer Gregg Popovich.

“I can’t wait to meet the fans and the team I’m about to join in June,” Wembanyama said.

Only time will tell whether the Spurs hit the No. 1 overall pick jackpot again.

Robinson and Duncan are both members of the NBA’s 75th anniversary all-time team and have been inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. They both were the key figures of numerous championship teams, with Duncan earning five title rings and Robinson winning two.

Spurs general manager Brian Wright, who was in the drawing room in Chicago, immediately felt the impact of winning the lottery.

“I’m excited for the city, for the franchise,” Wright told reporters. “Tonight was a great start. It’s the beginning, not the end. There is still a lot of work to do.”

San Antonio has missed the playoffs in four straight campaigns and the 22-60 record this season was the third-worst in franchise history.

The Orlando Magic own the sixth and 11th picks, the latter coming from the Chicago Bulls as part of the package for acquiring Nikola Vucevic in 2021.

The Indiana Pacers will pick seventh, followed by the Washington Wizards, Utah Jazz and Dallas Mavericks. Dallas landing the 10th pick was crucial for the franchise: If the pick had been 11th or lower, it would have gone to the New York Knicks as part of the 2019 deal for Kristaps Porzingis.

The Oklahoma City Thunder will select 12th, followed by the Toronto Raptors and New Orleans Pelicans.

–Field Level Media

Familiar foes clash again as Celtics, Heat meet in ECF


Heat star Jimmy Butler is known for speaking his mind, and he didn’t disappoint Tuesday, one day before eighth-seeded Miami visits the second-seeded Boston Celtics for the opener of the Eastern Conference finals on Wednesday.

Butler insisted this Miami team will not be deterred on its way to the NBA title.

“This year is our year,” Butler said. “We’re going to go into this Game 1 and do what we’re supposed to do and be the first one to four (victories). We are very capable of it.”

This is the third time in the past four seasons that the Celtics and Heat have met in the East finals. And it will be a different Boston coach on the sideline for the third occasion.

Miami eliminated Brad Stevens’ Boston team in six games in 2020 before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals. Last season, the Ime Udoka-coached Celtics ousted the Heat in seven games before falling to the Golden State Warriors in the championship round.

Udoka was fired prior to the season due to a workplace affair and was replaced by Joe Mazzulla, a first-time head coach who gets to match wits against Miami’s well-respected Erik Spoelstra.

“It’s definitely going to be a challenge for Joe, but I think he’s going to handle it well,” Boston star Jaylen Brown said. “He’s handled it well all season. He’s been scrutinized, but he’s done a good job. He is a rookie coach, but he’s taken a championship-caliber team and now we’re back in the Eastern Conference finals.

“He deserves some credit for that. But he’s going against one of the greatest coaches of all time, and I think there’s a level of respect there and understanding that Spoelstra is going to make adjustments.”

Brown averaged 24.1 points in last season’s matchup with the Heat, just behind star Jayson Tatum’s 25 per game.

Tatum is coming off a performance for the ages. He poured in a Game 7-record 51 points as the Celtics pounded the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to reach the Eastern finals.

“It’s a big movie,” Boston guard Marcus Smart said of Tatum’s show. “Being able to just sit back, eat your popcorn and watch. Sometimes we do get in that mode where we forget that we’re on the court playing with him.”

Tatum has quickly put that epic effort behind him and is focused on competing against the Heat.

“A team that we’re extremely familiar with,” Tatum said about the matchup. “A very well-coached team, they compete with the best of them, play hard. They defend, they make plays and they figure out a way to win games. It’s going to be fun. It’s going to be highly competitive and I’m looking forward to it.”

The intensity level is always high when Butler is on the floor. He averaged 25.6 points against Boston in last season’s series.

He also produced a milestone effort in this season’s playoffs with 56 points in a first-round victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. The 56 points tied for fourth most in an NBA playoff game.

Butler was plagued by an ankle injury in the conference semifinal series win over the New York Knicks. The ankle is feeling better, and so is Butler’s outlook about Miami’s supporting cast.

“Guys are playing some incredible basketball,” Butler said. “I like our chances, as does everyone in this organization.”

Heat center Bam Adebayo hasn’t forgotten the critics that pounced when the team lost to the Atlanta Hawks in its first play-in game before beating the Chicago Bulls to move into the playoffs.

“It’s a crazy story being written,” Adebayo said. “Through all the ups and downs of this season, a lot of people counting us out and saying we weren’t even going to make it past the first round and now we’re in the Eastern Conference finals. It just shows the determination and the will that this team has.”

Boston and Miami split four regular-season meetings. Each club split the two games on its home floor.

–Field Level Media

Ja Morant takes ‘full accountability’ for latest misstep


Ja Morant, suspended by the Memphis Grizzlies following the emergence of a second online video showing him brandishing a gun, took responsibility in a statement Tuesday night.

His first public comments came after NBA commissioner Adam Silver said on ESPN that he was shocked by Morant’s latest actions and that the league was conducting an investigation.

In an Instagram Live video that appeared last weekend on the account of Morant’s friend Davonte Pack, Morant was seen flashing a handgun as a song by rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again plays. The Grizzlies announced on Sunday that he was suspended indefinitely from all team activities.

Morant said in his statement, “I know I’ve disappointed a lot of people who have supported me. This is a journey and I recognize there is more work to do. My words may not mean much right now, but I take full accountability for my actions. I’m committed to continuing to work on myself.”

Two months earlier, Morant served an eight-game suspension issued by the NBA after he was seen on social media flashing a handgun at a Denver nightclub. Following an investigation, the league announced that Morant was “holding a firearm in an intoxicated state,” with Silver adding that “Ja’s conduct was irresponsible, reckless and potentially very dangerous.”

Morant subsequently underwent counseling at a Florida facility.

Upon his return to the team, Morant said of his intentions moving forward, “Just being more responsible, more smarter. That’s pretty much it for me. Obviously, I made mistakes in the past, caused a lot of negative attention not only for me, but my family and my team and the organization, and I’m completely sorry for that. So my job now is, like I said, to be more responsible and more smarter and don’t cause any of that no more.”

Silver, in his Tuesday interview with ESPN, referenced his meeting with Morant after the March incident.

“We talked directly about the consequences first,” Silver said on ESPN. “Before we got to a subsequent potential to have done something wrong, we were very focused on the misconduct that was in front of us at the time. Frankly, most of our conversation was about how incredibly serious the first incident was of waving a firearm on social media.

“Again, the consequences there — an eight-game suspension — was pretty serious and something that he, at least to me, seemed to take incredibly seriously in that time. And we spoke for a long time about not just the consequences that could have on his career, but the safety issues around it — (Morant) could’ve injured, maimed, killed himself, someone else with an act like that — and also the acknowledgment that he’s a star.

“He has an incredibly huge following, and (we discussed) my concern — and I thought he shared with me — that millions, if not tens of millions, of kids globally would have seen him do something that was celebrating in a way that act of using a firearm in that fashion. So I at least was left with the sense that he was taking this incredibly serious.”

Morant, 23, averaged 26.2 points, 5.9 rebounds and 8.1 assists in 61 games (59 starts) in the 2022-23 season. Memphis was eliminated in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs by the Los Angeles Lakers.

Morant has a franchise-record, five-year $193 million contract extension that will begin with the 2023-24 season. Because he did not make an All-NBA team this year, he did not qualify for a supermax contract worth $231 million.

–Field Level Media

Nuggets ride Nikola Jokic’s triple-double to Game 1 win over Lakers


The Denver Nuggets tried to run the Lakers out of the arena early behind another big game from Nikola Jokic, but the experienced Los Angeles team didn’t flinch — and nearly stole Game 1 of the Western Conference finals.

The Nuggets built an 18-point halftime lead in front of their home crowd and were up by 21 in the third quarter but had to hold off a furious Los Angeles rally to pull out a 132-126 win on Tuesday night.

Jokic had 34 points, 21 rebounds and 14 assists for his third straight triple-double, and teammate Jamal Murray scored 31 points despite battling an ear infection.

“The whole playoffs he is playing amazing,” Jokic said jokingly of Murray. “Maybe he faked it, he doesn’t want to practice just to get a couple of days off.”

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope contributed 21 points, Bruce Brown had 16, Michael Porter Jr. added 15 points and 10 rebounds and Aaron Gordon finished with 12 points for the Nuggets.

Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is Thursday night in Denver.

Anthony Davis had 40 points and 10 rebounds, LeBron James finished with 26 points, 12 rebounds and nine assists, Austin Reaves scored 23 points and Rui Hachimura put up 17 points for the Lakers, whose second-half rally came up short.

“We’ll go back and look at the film, see what we need to clean up,” Los Angeles coach Darvin Ham said. “Take a good look at that second half, see what went well, try to sustain the good stuff and alleviate and repair the bad stuff.”

The Lakers lost Game 1 for the first time this postseason.

“It’s the playoffs, we need to be aggressive, we need to win the game, especially in front of the home crowd,” Jokic said. “They won two Game 1s.”

Los Angeles chipped away at the large deficit, getting within three points three times in the final four minutes. Denver responded by scoring the next points each time.

The Lakers opened the fourth on an 8-2 run to pull within 108-100 with 10:10 left.

Porter and Jeff Green hit corner 3-pointers and Murray scored on consecutive possessions to make it 118-104.

Los Angeles got within 124-118 with 3:53 left, and a Nuggets turnover led to a Reaves 3-pointer that made it a three-point game. Denver got the margin back to six, but another Reaves 3-pointer made it 127-124 with 2:18 left.

James had a chance to tie with 45 seconds left but missed a 3-point attempt, and Jokic closed it out at the line.

“I think we did a good job of just making shots and weathering the storm,” Murray said. “But that’s why it’s a series. Both teams will make adjustments.”

Denver used a 36-13 edge in rebounding to take a 72-54 lead into halftime. Jokic had 12 rebounds in the first quarter and finished with 16 for the half to go along with 19 points and seven assists.

“It took us a half to get into the game, and that was pretty much the ballgame,” James said.

Murray hit a pair of 3-pointers at the start of the third, giving the Nuggets a 78-58 lead. Jokic notched his triple-double when he fed Caldwell-Pope for a floating jumper midway through the third quarter. It is his 12th postseason triple-double, the most by a center in NBA history.

Jokic put the Nuggets ahead 93-72 with a 3-pointer and fed Caldwell-Pope for another before Los Angeles closed the third strong. The Lakers went on a 16-7 run, but Jokic drained a 28-footer at the quarter buzzer to make it a 14-point game entering the fourth.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Brewers overcome loss of Wade Miley to end Cards’ streak


The visiting Milwaukee Brewers lost starting pitcher Wade Miley in the second inning but nonetheless defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 3-2 on Tuesday behind home runs by Joey Wiemer and Brian Anderson.

The Brewers won for the fourth time in five games and snapped the Cardinals’ four-game winning streak.

Miley exited the game with two outs in the second inning with what the team called a lat strain. He allowed one run on one hit — Nolan Arenado’s home run leading off the second.

Relievers Elvis Peguero and Hoby Milner followed Miley and each pitched 1 1/3 scoreless innings. Joel Payamps (2-0) blanked the Cardinals for 1 2/3 innings, then Peter Strzelecki got four outs.

Devin Williams pitched the final 1 2/3 innings to earn his sixth save.

Cardinals starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery (2-6) allowed three runs on eight hits in 5 1/3 innings. He struck out seven and walked one.

Milwaukee took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Owen Miller hit a leadoff double and Willy Adames drove him in with a one-out double.

Arenado tied the game 1-1 with his eighth homer of the season, which ran his home run streak to five games.

The Cardinals moved ahead 2-1 in the fourth inning when Tommy Edman hit a two-out double and scored on Brendan Donovan’s single.

Wiemer tied the game 2-2 with a fifth-inning homer. Miller and William Contreras followed with singles and Adames walked, but Montgomery struck out Mike Brosseau and got Darin Ruf to fly out to leave the bases loaded.

Anderson hit a homer leading off the sixth inning to put the Brewers up 3-2.

Nolan Gorman and Edman hit one-out singles in the bottom of the sixth inning. Gorman advanced on a flyout and Edman stole second base, but Andrew Knizner struck out to strand them.

With one out in the eighth inning, Gorman walked and raced to third on Edman’s single. But Williams relieved Strzelecki, struck out Donovan and then retired Alec Burleson on comebacker.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Veteran RHP Anibal Sanchez announces retirement


Anibal Sanchez, who threw a no-hitter as a rookie and pitched in the major leagues for 16 seasons, announced on Tuesday night that he was retiring from baseball.

“Baseball has been my great passion since I was a child, and I am extremely grateful to have been able to make that dream a reality,” Sanchez wrote on Instagram in both English and Spanish.

The 39-year-old from Venezuela was not on a team to start the 2023 season.

Most recently, Sanchez played for the Washington Nationals for three seasons, sitting out 2021 before returning in 2022. He started 14 games for Washington last season and went 4-6 with a 4.28 ERA.

After 16 seasons with the Florida/Miami Marlins (2006-12), Detroit Tigers (2012-17), Atlanta Braves (2018) and the Nationals, Sanchez retires with a career 116-119 record and a 4.06 ERA in 364 games (341 starts).

His best season was 2013, when he won a career-best 14 games for Detroit and led the American League with a 2.57 ERA. He finished fourth in AL Cy Young Award voting that year.

Sanchez no-hit the Arizona Diamondbacks when he was with the Marlins on Sept. 6, 2006. He walked four and struck out six in that game.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Isaac Paredes, Rays batter Justin Verlander, Mets


Isaac Paredes hit two homers Tuesday night as the visiting Tampa Bay Rays spoiled Justin Verlander’s home debut for the New York Mets by earning an 8-5 win.

The Rays improved to 4-4 on a season-high, 10-game road trip. The Mets fell to 5-11 this month.

Paredes hit a three-run homer off Verlander to break a scoreless tie in the third and added a two-run homer to extend the Rays’ lead to 6-0 in the fifth. The multi-homer game was the fourth of Paredes’ career and his first since he went deep twice against the Boston Red Sox last Aug. 28.

In addition, the five RBIs tied a career high for Paredes, who collected five against the Chicago White Sox on April 27.

Harold Ramirez had three hits, including a pair of RBI singles, for the Rays, and Jose Siri hit a solo homer in the sixth.

Bulk reliever Yonny Chirinos (2-1) earned the win after allowing three runs on three hits and one walk while striking out two over 4 2/3 innings. Jalen Beeks opened and gave up one hit while striking out two over two scoreless innings.

Brett Baty homered in the fifth and Pete Alonso hit a two-run homer deep to left in the seventh for the Mets. Alonso socked his 14th of the season, tying him with Max Muncy of the Los Angeles Dodgers for the major league lead.

New York’s Eduardo Escobar had a pinch-hit, two-run homer in the ninth, and Jeff McNeil had two singles.

Verlander (1-2), who signed a two-year deal worth $86.6 million in December but missed the first five weeks with a teres major strain, allowed six runs on eight hits and two walks while striking out three over five innings. He didn’t have a 1-2-3 inning in his first appearance against the Rays since Game 4 of the 2019 American League Division Series, when he took the loss for the Houston Astros in Tampa Bay’s 4-1 win.

–Field Level Media