• SPORTS.YAHOO.COM
    Truth stranger than fiction as O'Neill leads Celtic from hostility to happiness
    On a grim Sunday at Tannadice in March, Celtic lost 2-0 to Jim Goodwin's Dundee United, a defeat that put them five points behind Hearts, and two behind Rangers.Martin O'Neill, a strange amalgam of dejection and defiance, didn't mince his words about how wounding the defeat was, but he was strong on all hope not being lost. Celtic, he said, would have to win seven out of seven on the run-in."We disappointed an awful lot of people today," he remarked. "It's been difficult since I've set foot in the place. This is a blow but we're not finished yet."The truth was that O'Neill and Celtic were only getting started. He asked for seven wins on the bounce and, up until Saturday's endgame in Glasgow, he had six. Tense, nervous, only occasionally impressive and frequently a grind, but 18 points from a possible 18 while in chasing mode.It was an illustration of a doggedness that wasn't there in the final weeks of Brendan Rodgers' time and that was embarrassingly absent during the calamitous weeks of Wilfried Nancy's period in charge.Now they've made it 21 points out of 21 and they're champions again. They've hunted down and overtaken a Hearts side that has done very little wrong all season. After walking into a shambles, exiting and then re-entering an even bigger shambles, O'Neill has won 19 of his 23 Premiership games with just two losses.They are not impressive winners but they are worthy winners. They've triumphed on the back of spirit rather than class. They've benefitted from some extremely controversial calls along the way - particularly in recent weeks - but a race is run across an entire campaign and their fans will not be slow in telling you about decisions they felt went against them, and for Hearts, over the past 10 months. That's a wearying game to play, not that it's stopping people from playing it.Celtic stun Hearts with late double to snatch title in astonishing finaleLatest Celtic news, analysis and fan viewsTitle only masks season of discontentTheir victory merits proper analysis, though. The Celtic board should be doing a deep dive on this stuff rather than solely basking in their win and concluding that another title shows that not much is wrong at Celtic Park, when it plainly is.After the cheering they need to do some serious analysing. They need some brutal honesty.Celtic won the league with 82 points - 10 fewer than last season, 11 fewer than the season before, 17 fewer than the season before that. If you have high standards, then that direction of travel should be seen as a challenge. They scored 73 goals - a massive reduction on last season's 112 and on the 95, 114, 92 and 92 in the seasons that went before. It's their lowest tally of league goals in 19 years. That's a stark reflection on their lame search for a striker to replace Kyogo Furuhashi, who left well over a year ago. His countryman, Daizen Maeda, coming good at the end of the season was enormously significant.They conceded 41 league goals - their highest total in 33 years. That is, in part, a consequence of something outside their control. Cameron Carter-Vickers and Alistair Johnston only played 13 league games between them. Celtic might well end up with a double that nobody saw coming. That's on O'Neill and his ability to navigate his way through the toxicity that's existed in the club all season.For O'Neill, this is fairytale stuff. A gap of 20 years and another title. At the start of the season, with Rodgers' seemingly imperious, the notion that the septuagenarian was going to return to Parkhead not just once but twice and steer home a troubled club would have been outlandish. Truth, sometimes, is stranger than fiction.And Celtic's truth has been wild. O'Neill has ensured a happy ending, but so much of what went before was angry and divisive. Hostility reigned supreme until an uneasy truce towards the end of the season.It all kicked off with that Champions League exit at the hands of Kairat Almaty. Two games, zero goals and a transfer window that enraged the supporters. Celtic won four games out of 12 in Europe.The summer arrivals: Kieran Tierney, Isaac English, Ross Doohan, Benjamin Nygren, Callum Osmand, Hayato Inamura, Shin Yamada, Jahmai Simpson-Pusey, Michel-Ange Balikwisha, Marcelo Saracchi, Sebastien Tounekti and Kelechi Iheanacho.Only five of those made it into double figures in league appearances. Others rarely, if ever, featured. Rodgers said a few of them were "club signings" the inference being that they weren't his choices. His rhetoric caused ructions behind the scenes. It would spill out in public soon enough.Rodgers, agitated and agitating about the business done in the market, infamously likened his squad to a Honda Civic rather than the Ferrari he wanted to drive. In October, Celtic lost 2-0 to Dundee and 3-1 to Hearts and he resigned.On his way out he received a verbal blast the like of which has never been seen before in Scottish football. Dermot Desmond, the major shareholder, issued a statement that filleted Rodgers in the most brutal way. The former manager had been "divisive, misleading, and self-serving," said Desmond. He had "contributed to a toxic atmosphere and fuelled hostility towards members of the executive team and the board. Some of the abuse directed at them, and at their families, has been entirely unwarranted and unacceptable."Table when O'Neill first took charge [BBC]Venom cranked back up amid Nancy messThe surreality of the situation - the raging fans, the vengeful Desmond and the fallen former hero Rodgers - was enough to be getting on with, but it was also revealed that O'Neill was on his way back as interim manager two decades after he left the club and more than six years since he'd managed at any level.O'Neill had been on radio tipping Hearts to win the league earlier in the day. Now his job was to restore order amid the chaos. A footballing civil war had been raging. Rodgers had lived through it and now it was O'Neill's turn.He was in charge for five league games and won all five. Then Nancy took over, championed by Paul Tisdale, the lesser-spotted head of football operations.The decision to appoint Nancy - and Tisdale, too - was a monumental and needless punt and it blew up in Celtic's face literally on day one when they lost 2-1 to Hearts then 2-1 at Dundee United in the next league game. In between the two, Nancy lost the League Cup final to St Mirren. If O'Neill had managed to dial down the venom a touch in his brief first spell, it was now cranked right back up again, with added poison.Table when O'Neill returned for second stint [BBC]Supporters railed against the problems that were, in their view, destroying the club; Nancy and Tisdale, hapless transfer windows, lousy communication, indifference to the thoughts of fans, a sense of drift and a feeling of a hierarchy asleep at the wheel.Banners and songs eviscerated the decision-makers. At November's agm, Desmond's representative - his son Ross - castigated fans, saying the board would not be "bullied by aggressive and irrational criticism."While a small element of the support at the meeting shouted him down - it was then abandoned - he spoke of attempts to "dehumanise and vilify" chairman Peter Lawwell and chief executive, Michael Nicholson. He called it "shameful."Desmond Jnr's comments were like petrol on a fire. Relationships between club and board were torched. Lawwell resigned the following month saying that he'd had enough of the abuse and the threats from sinister elements.Nancy was put out of his misery in the first week of January after Motherwell had embarrassed his side 2-0 at Fir Park before Rangers went to Celtic Park and won 3-1. Tisdale exited, too.There was now no permanent manager, no permanent chairman, no sporting director or head of football operations and nothing much in the way of a properly-functioning recruitment department. The team looked beaten.Old bhoy O'Neill proves he's still got itIn a vaguely comical scene, O'Neill was sent for again. He had a mighty job on his hands.That January transfer window was supposed to be a massive one. O'Neill was grilled about targets in every interview. He understood why the questions were being asked but he looked exhausted when trying to answer them.Celtic made desperately heavy weather of getting new blood in the building. They arrived in trickles: Julian Araujo, Tomas Cvancara, Junior Adamu, Benjamin Arthur, Joel Mvuka and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain - five loan signings and a free transfer. Araujo did well before his injury and Oxlade-Chamberlain scored winners against Livingston and St Mirren, but the rest of them have hardly been mapped.Fan unrest continued. Statement wars. The Green Brigade ultras were banned amid allegations of assault of a steward. Part football manager, part peace envoy, O'Neill looked, at times, like Canute trying to hold back the tide.After Celtic lost 2-1 to Hibs in late February, they were in third place. When O'Neill's team fought back to get a 2-2 draw at Ibrox on March 1, they were eight behind Hearts, albeit with a game in hand.In the 10 games before the United loss he won seven, drew two and lost one, but that kind of points haul wasn't going to be enough and O'Neill knew it. That's why he said they needed seven wins from their next seven. Few thought they would do it.Only one or two of the seven were comfortable, five of them were by a goal, three won by a goal late on. The penalty decision at Fir Park on the penultimate game of the season was an enormously contentious call by referee John Beaton.A clear penalty through one lens and an abomination (and worse) through another. Two camps entrenched in their own certainty. The fallout has been indiscriminate and nasty. A police intervention was required to ensure Beaton's safety in his own home. The most dramatic season was never likely to end with a whimper.O'Neill triumphed in the end. He cut through the bedlam of fans versus board, he galvanised a team that looked dead to the world, he spoiled the story that so many people wanted. It was easy to doubt him in the dog days, but as he proved in the most stressful final months of the campaign, the old bhoy's still got it.
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    Paul Boutilier, Stanley Cup champ and former curling executive, remembered for his humility
    A Nova Scotian who won a Stanley Cup and a World Junior Hockey Championship and also worked as a university professor and curling executive is being remembered for his humility. Paul (Boots) Boutilier was 63.
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  • WWW.FOXSPORTS.COM
    Rain Delays Indy 500 Qualifying
    Indianapolis Motor Speedway (Speedway, Ind.) Qualifying for the Indianapolis 500 has been delayed because of rain. Heavy rains drenched the flat 2.5-mile oval Saturday morning, where qualifying was scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. ET. FOX Weather predicts the rain to end in early afternoon and when it ends will determine whether cars will get on track to reach speeds of possibly 240 mph. All 33 drivers need to post a time Saturday for the opening round of qualifying to be complete. If all 33 drivers do not get to post a qualifying lap, INDYCAR is expected to invalidate all times and start all over Sunday. Each qualifying run is four laps, so it would take about three hours if there are no accidents to complete an entire round. With it taking more than two hours to dry the track and typically track officials not wanting to go much beyond 8 p.m. (that gives an hour of daylight that makes it a little easier for the massive crowd to leave). That would require rain to end by around 2 p.m. to have drivers on track Saturday. INDYCAR officials are not expected to try to start qualifying if rain appears imminent for two reasons: They wouldnt want a driver to make a qualifying run with it most likely being invalidated because not all the cars make an attempt and the conditions would be different if they were to resume after a storm. If Saturday does get washed out, it is still to be determined how INDYCAR would handle qualifying Sunday, which was set aside to determine the starting order for the top 15 cars from Saturday. INDYCAR could do all four sessions the first session of all 33 cars that sets spots 16-33, the session for those 10-15 to determine the final three spots for the next session, that is the top 12, and then the final session of the Fast Six for the pole that sets the first two rows. Typically, if weather was not an issue, drivers would post a qualifying time and if it was slower than what would advance them to the rounds for the fastest drivers, they would go out again after every driver has the opportunity to qualify once. That might not be an option this weekend, putting the pressure on them to post a time quick enough to make the next round or at least start near the front. Drivers will focus on their jobs and not as much as how the cars might need to be adjusted. Temperatures on Sunday are expected in the 80s, potentially 20 degrees higher than Saturday. "As drivers, ... we just need to focus on driving and making sure we do our stuff right," said defending race winner and four-time INDYCAR champion Alex Palou, who drives for INDYCAR staple Chip Ganassi Racing. "We have an amazing group of mechanics and engineers that will get it right [depending] on conditions." Once they do get to qualifying, here is the qualifying order: 1. Scott Dixon 2. Christian Lundgaard 3. Ryan Hunger-Reay 4. Ed Carpenter 5. Rinus VeeKay 6. Scott McLaughlin 7. Nolan Siegel 8. Graham Rahal 9. Josef Newgarden 10. Will Power 11. Felix Rosenqvist 12. Santino Ferrucci 13. Marcus Ericsson 14. Conor Daly 15. Mick Schumacher 16. Romain Grosjean 17. Marcus Armstrong 18. Pato OWard 19. David Malukas 20. Alexander Rossi 21. Dennis Hauger 22. Sting Ray Robb 23. Kyle Kirkwood 24. Caio Collet 25. Helio Castroneves 26. Takuma Sato 27. Christian Rasmussen 28. Louis Foster 29. Kyffin Simpson 30. Jack Harvey 31. Alex Palou 32. Jacob Abel 33. Katherine Legge
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  • Ravichandran Ashwin Fumes At Ex-team Punjab Kings' Decision Amid Slump: "It Is Wrong"
    Punjab Kings find themselves in the middle of an extraordinary slump. After an unbeaten run of seven matches that saw the 2025 runners-up reach 13 points and looking primed for the playoffs, they are now on a five-match losing streak
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    Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano odds, prediction, time: Netflix MVP MMA picks for May 16 fight card by top expert
    SportsLine's Josh Nagel reveals his picks for the Netflix MVP MMA card, which also features Francis Ngannou vs. Philipe Lins and Nate Diaz vs. Mike Perry on Saturday
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    Michigan football recruiting class jumps to No 13
    With the commitment of Charles Woodson Jr. to Michigan football on Friday, Michigan football stayed put at No. 17 in the 247Sports team rankings after having moved up from No. 29 earlier in the week when wide receiver Quentin Burrell committed. But with the latest pledge that the Wolverines received, from 2027 Jackson (Miss.) Brandon four-star running back Tyson Robinson, the maize and blue are sniffing the top 10.Robinson pledged to Michigan football on Saturday afternoon, vaulting the program from No. 17 to 13th in the 247Sports team rankings via the composite rankings. The Wolverines now have 11 commits in the class, and Michigan has moved ahead of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Texas, and Washington, and sits just behind Texas Tech, Kentucky, and No. 10 Ohio State, which also has 11 commits. 247Sports has Michigan as having eight four-stars and three-stars.The Rivals rankings saw Michigan move up from 13th to 12th with the pledge, having also leapfrogged the Longhorns in the process. UCLA is No. 11, LSU is 10th, Oregon is ninth, and Ohio State is eighth. Rivals has Michigan as having seven four-stars and four three-stars.Here is the full list of commits ranked by the Rivals Industry Ranking:Chicago (Ill.) Mount Carmel four-star WR Quentin Burrell (No. 85 overall)Houston (Tx.) South four-star DL Xavier Muhammad (No. 102 overall)Kalamazoo (Mich.) Loy Norrix four-star OT Jakari Lipsey (No. 104 overall)Salt Lake City (Utah) West four-star QB Kamden Lopati (No. 119 overall)Muskegon (Mich.) four-star EDGE Recarder Kitchen (No. 134 overall)Jackson (Miss.) Brandon four-star RB Tyson Robinson (No. 212 overall)Indianapolis (Ind.) four-star EDGE Jayce Brewer (No. 361 overall)Gatineau (Quebec) Brook Hill three-star IOL Sidney Rouleau (No. 424 overall)Saline (Mich.) three-star IOL Louis Esposito (No. 601 overall)Orlando (Fla.) Lake Nona three-star S Charles Woodson Jr. (No. 617 overall)Las Vegas (Nev.) Centennial three-star S Maxwell Miles (805 overall)Michigan is expecting more good news in short order, with 2027 Chicago (Ill.) Mount Carmel four-star safety Tavares Harrington planning his commitment for May 22. At the moment, the Wolverines are the predicted landing spot.This article originally appeared on Wolverines Wire: Michigan football recruiting class climbs rankings after Robinson pledge
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    Semenyo wins FA Cup for treble-chasing Man City
    Manchester City kept alive their hopes of winning a domestic treble as Antoine Semenyo's sensational second-half finish broke Chelsea's resolve to settle the FA Cup final 1-0 at Wembley.
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  • Sustaining Corporate Excellence: The Intersection of Auditing and Financial Accounting
      Establishing a resilient commercial presence in a premier global financial center requires an unyielding dedication to compliance, precise corporate tracking, and operational transparency. For businesses striving to secure market leadership, managing specialized accounting frameworks and fulfilling statutory obligations are critical components of long-term stability. Engaging an...
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    Last Night In Baseball: Pirates Implode Against Phillies
    There is always baseball happening almost too much baseball for one person to follow themselves. Don't worry, we're here to help you by figuring out what you missed but shouldn't have. Here are all the best moments from last night in Major League Baseball: This one stings for the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Pirates put six runs on the board in the bottom of the sixth against the Philadelphia Phillies, with center fielder Oneil Cruz hitting a two-run single and both second baseman Brandon Lowe and designated hitter Marcell Ozuna hitting two-run home runs. Philadelphia got on the board with a sacrifice fly in the top of the fourth and later got a two-run home run from designated hitter Kyle Schwarber in the fifth, but Pittsburgh got one of those runs back on a solo homer from Lowe in the bottom of the fifth and another run back on an infield error in the sixth. In the top half of the seventh, Schwarber got the Phillies back within three runs (8-5) on a two-run home run, his second long ball of the game and MLB-high 20th of the year. The Pirates entered the ninth inning with a three-run lead, but then the Phillies evened the score. After Schwarber walked in a run, first baseman Bryce Harper who had a game-high four hits hit a game-tying, two-run double off the right-center field wall. The game went to extra innings, where the Phillies built a lead to last. Outfielder Brandon Marsh led off the top of the 10th with an RBI double. Two batters later, pinch hitter Rafael Marchn had a two-run single, which would help Philadelphia win, 11-9. With two runners on the basepath, two outs in the bottom of the eighth and trying to keep a 2-0 lead, the San Diego Padres called on Mason Miller to get a four-out save against the Seattle Mariners. Did he make things interesting? You bet! But the hard-throwing right-hander got the job done. After giving up a single to load the bases, Miller got pinch hitter Connor Joe to strikeout looking to end the eighth. Then, Seattle got two of the first three batters on-base in the bottom of the ninth, but Miller responded by striking out both Mitch Garver and Brendan Donovan to end the game. Each of the four outs that Miller recorded were strikeouts. Across 21.0 innings pitched (20 appearances), Miller, a 2024 All-Star, has posted an 0.86 ERA, an 0.76 WHIP, 44 strikeouts, a 483 ERA+ and 1.3 wins above replacement. He leads MLB with 14 saves and is yet to blow a save opportunity. Prior to Miller entering the game, San Diego got six shutout innings from Randy Vsquez, a scoreless inning from Adrian Morejon and Jason Adam got the first two outs in the eighth. The Padres got their two runs on an RBI double from designated hitter Miguel Andjar who was one of four San Diego players to log two hits in the top of the fourth and an RBI ground out from second baseman Sung-Mun Song in the seventh. The Minnesota Twins took a 2-1 lead into the eighth inning, but then the Milwaukee Brewers flipped the script. Milwaukee led off the top half of the inning with back-to-back singles from center fielder Jackson Chourio and second baseman Brice Turang. Then, catcher William Contreras who had an RBI single in the top of the first brought home a run on a force-out, which first baseman Jake Bauers followed with a go-ahead, RBI double. Granted, the Brewers stranded two runners in scoring position with nobody out. Minnesota put two runners on the basepath in the bottom half of the inning, but reliever Abner Uribe induced a double-play to end the inning, and Trevor Megill pitched a one-two-three ninth to give Milwaukee a 3-2 road victory. The Brewers are figuring it out. After a rough start that saw it be last in the National League Central, Milwaukee has won seven of its last eight games, improving to 25-17 and second place in the division. The New York Yankees got a convincing Game 1 win over the New York Mets in Act 1 of this year's Subway Series. In the top of the third, Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger had an RBI double, which second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. followed with a two-run double. Later, designated hitter Spencer Jones singled in a run in the fifth and first baseman Ben Rice gave the Yankees more wiggle room with a solo home run in the ninth, helping them get a 5-2 win. The Mets, who had just five hits, got their two runs on a seventh-inning solo home run from left fielder Juan Soto and an RBI single from third baseman Brett Baty in the bottom of the ninth. Rice and Chisholm each had a game-high three hits for the Yankees, who got 6 innings from starter Cam Schlittler; the right-hander posted nine strikeouts and surrendered just one run and four baserunners (two hits and two walks). On the season, Rice has totaled 14 home runs and 30 RBIs, while boasting a .314/.418/.686 slash line. Rice leads the American League with a .686 slugging percentage, a 1.104 OPS and a 204 OPS+. Meanwhile, Schlittler, who's averaging six innings per start, leads the AL with a 1.35 ERA, an 0.78 WHIP, six wins, a 310 ERA+ and 2.8 wins above replacement among pitchers. Losing eight of their last nine games, the Detroit Tigers needed a win and they got one. With a runner on first and two outs in the bottom of the ninth in what was a 2-2 game, the Toronto Blue Jays decided to intentionally walk Tigers right fielder Zach McKinstry, and first baseman Spencer Torkelson made them pay, hitting a walk-off single to right-center field. Detroit scored its other two runs on a wild pitch in the bottom of the third and an RBI double from left fielder Riley Greene in the sixth, while Toronto got its two runs on a two-run double from shortstop Andrs Gimnez in the top of the second. The Tigers rolled with a bullpen day, as six pitchers (Brenan Hanifee, Brant Hurter, Ty Madden, Burch Smith, Drew Anderson and Kenley Jansen) combined to give up just five hits and two walks. One day after scoring two runs in the top of the ninth to take the lead and beat the Athletics, the St. Louis Cardinals walked off the Kansas City Royals. After trading runs in the 10th inning, St. Louis kept Kansas City off the board in the top of the 11th, and with two outs in the bottom half of the inning, pinch hitter Yohel Pozo sent everybody home on a walk-off single to right field. Elsewhere for the Cardinals, right fielder Jordan Walker hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the fourth and had a game-high three hits; catcher Pedro Pags hit a solo homer in the fifth; first baseman Alec Burleson singled home the ghost runner in the 10th; right-hander Dustin May gave up three runs through six innings. St. Louis has won three of its last four games. Spencer Arrighetti is the story of the night in H-Town. The Houston Astros' right-hander carried a no-hitter into the top of the eighth and was promptly relieved, thereafter. Bryan King picked up where Arrighetti left off, pitching 1 shutout innings and finishing off a 2-0 win for the Astros over the Texas Rangers. Through his first six starts (Arrighetti began the 2026 season in Triple A), Arrighetti has posted a 1.50 ERA, a 1.19 WHIP, a 280 ERA+ and 1.6 wins above replacement across 36.0 innings pitched. As for the slim offense in this matchup, the Astros got a solo home run from third baseman Isaac Paredes in the bottom of the third and an RBI single from infielder Braden Shewmake who's batting .366 with three home runs and seven RBIs across 41 at-bats in the eighth. Want some bizarre history? The Astros and Rangers are now 150-150 against each other all time, according to MLB Stats. Last year, the Los Angeles Angels went 6-0 against the Los Angeles Dodgers. That will NOT happen this season, as the Dodgers, ironically, defeated the Angels in Angel Stadium, 6-0. The bulk of the Dodgers' offense came in the top of the fourth, as center fielder Andy Pages hit a three-run home run, which was followed by third baseman Max Muncy hitting a solo shot. Left fielder Teoscar Hernndez joined the long-ball party in the sixth with a two-run homer. Muncy and Hernndez each had two hits for the Dodgers, who used a whopping eight pitchers (left-hander Blake Snell was scratched from his outing) and held the Angels to just two hits. Angels shortstop Zach Neto was the only player for Mickey Mouse's favorite team (one would hope, at least) who made some hay, as he singled and drew two walks. Pages is tied with Miami Marlins catcher Liam Hicks for the MLB lead in RBIs (38), while Muncy leads the Dodgers with 12 home runs and Hernndez has driven in 20 runs, which is good for a three-way tie for second on the team. Merrill Kelly posted a 9.95 ERA and gave up six home runs over his first four starts. Over his last two outings, Kelly has been exceptional. The Arizona Diamondbacks' right-hander went the distance on the road against the Colorado Rockies on Friday night, giving up just one run and four baserunners (four hits) and throwing 100 pitches over nine innings in an overwhelming, 9-1 victory. He has given up just two runs over his last two starts, combining to throw 16.0 innings. Moreover, this marked Kelly's seventh consecutive quality start (giving up no more than three earned runs over at least six innings) at Coors Field, which is an MLB record, according to MLB Stats. The Rockies' one run came on a first-inning solo home run from catcher Hunter Goodman. What happened in the top half of the inning? The Diamondbacks scored six runs: an RBI single from first baseman Ildemaro Vargas, a two-run single from catcher Gabriel Moreno, an RBI double from designated hitter Jos Fernndez and a two-run single from center fielder Ryan Waldschmidt. Vargas, who finished with a game-high four hits, had another RBI single in the fourth and scored two runs in the eighth on a Lourdes Gurriel Jr. sacrifice fly and an RBI double from Moreno. The Atlanta Braves, who were originally the Reds at their 1876 induction, played in Boston before the Red Sox, who were founded as the Boston Americans in 1901. Its relevance to the Friday night game between the two teams? Minimal, if any, but it was an exciting game. After keeping Boston off the board in the top of the 10th, the Braves walked off the Red Sox in the first at-bat of the bottom half of the inning, with outfielder Mike Yastrzemski lacing a walk-off double to left-center field for a 3-2 win. Designated hitter Drake Baldwin got the Braves on the board in the bottom of the first with a solo home run, which was his 12th homer of the year, with center fielder Michael Harris II, who sports a .308 batting average and a .510 slugging percentage, hitting a solo home run of his own in the fourth. Boston's two runs came on a sixth-inning RBI single from designated hitter Mickey Gasper and a solo home run from second baseman Marcelo Mayer in the seventh. The Braves have won five of their last six games. The Cincinnati Reds led the Cleveland Guardians 6-1 entering the bottom of the eighth, but then the latter struck for five runs over the next two innings. Granted, the Reds scored a needed run in the top of the ninth. Nevertheless, Cincinnati escaped Progressive Field with a one-run victory after second baseman Matt McLain made a diving stop on a ground ball hit by Guardians rookie Travis Bazzana in the outfield grass, got to his feet and just made the throw to first base to end the game. McLain reached base safely three times (two hits and one walk) and drove in a game-high three runs, highlighted by a two-run home run in the top of the eighth. Reds left fielder JJ Bleday had a team-high three hits, while right fielder Spencer Steer tallied two hits. After left-hander Andrew Abbott pitched five innings, the Reds used five relievers to get a 7-6 win.
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  • PGA Championship Shockers: Bryson DeChambeau, Tommy Fleetwood Crash Out While Rory McIlroy Keeps Major Dream Alive
    Bryson DeChambeau, Tommy Fleetwood and Viktor Hovland crashed out of the PGA Championship as Aronimink punished golfs biggest stars before the weekend.
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